Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, January 01, 1904, Special Annual Edition, PART ONE, Image 1

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PART; ONE
PAGES 1 TO
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VOL. XLIIL NO. 13,435.
PORTANL, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 1, 1904.
PRICE FIVE GENTS.
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N iEURPHERING the interests of the World's Fair that will be held in this city in igo& Pcrtfarid's people find their best opportunity to aid in the upbuilding of the. greats-states of Oregon, Washington, .
Cahprnia, Idaho, Montana and the other states of the Far West. As a movement that promises equal benefit to every part of the Pacific Coast states, the Lewis and Clark : Exposition and World's Faitp
calls for the best support of all that part of the West which maintains trade relations with the tide-water ports of the Pacific Ocean, included within the limits of the United States.
This issue of The Oregonian contains much historical matter relating to Portland's wonderful growth. An empire has been founded on the civilization that followed in the wake of Lewis.and Clark's
single journey of exploration and discovery. . '
The people of the United States as a whole are awakening to an appreciation of the possibilities of the great fair that will be held in Portland in igo5. The results of this fair, as they may affect the future
rapid advancement of that vast section of Uncle Sam's domains extending from the western slopes of the Rocky Mountains to the shores of the Pacific Ocean, will be far-reaching.
These people already know something of the promise of trade development by the Pacific Coast with the Orient. The growth of this trade during the next decade will be much greater, relatively,
than the growth noted in the trade of the Atlantic ports. When these same people visit Portland in 1905 they will hear much about the promise of this trade development that will open their eyes to the
possibilities of rapid growth of the Far Western States.
Visitors to Portland in 1905 will learn even much more than this. They will see how the business men of Portland, San Francisco, Seattle and Tacoma have already captured the Oriental and other
foreign markets for the export flour and wheat trade; they will note the mammoth cargoes of lumber that Portland and the other Northwest deep-water ports are now shipping to China, Japan, Siberia and
South America; they will find back of all this export trade a country wide in expanse and rich in promise, that in the diversity of its matchless resources is the most favored part of the American continent.
When to all this are added the charms of a perfect Summer climate, grandeur of the scenery of which a view is offered from any of the higher elevations of Portland, and the surroundings of an ideal home
city, every visitor from abroad who may be in Portland during 1905 will carry home with him the fullest appreciation of the merits of the Pacific Northwest States, an empire that some day will be the seat
of as dense a population as is now included within the limits of Massachusetts. 1 t
PUBLISHERS THE OREGONIAN We, the following citizens of Oregon, hereby subscribe to the sentiments expressed herein. We commend this effort of The Orjfin to the recognition of
people abroad who may want accurate information of Portland's great fair, and of the opportunities for rapid development which the Pacific Northwest States afford.
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Hon. Georro S.. Chamberlain, Governor of
Oregon, senior partner Chamberlain &
Thonms, lawyers, Portland.
Charles E. Ladd, of Ladd & Tllton, bankera,
Portland.
A. I Mohler. sresldent O. B. & N. Co.,
Portland. ,
A. B. Hammond, president Hammond Lumber
Oompasy, Portland; president Astoria & Co
lumbia Klver Railroad Companr; president
Corrallls ' & Eastern Railroad Comnany.
Theodore B. "Wlleox, president The Portland
Flouring Mills Company, Portland.
J, C Alnstrorth, president the United States
National Bank. Portland.
Xk A. Lewis, president Allen & Lewis, rhole-.
lale grocers, Portland.
H. C Campbell, general manager T. P. &
K. Co.; manager Columbia River & Northern
lallway Company; Portland.
Donald Mackay, president North Pacific Lura
r Company, Portland.
Charles F. Beebe, president Charles F. Beebe
Co.; secretary The Adamant Company; secre
tary Oregon XJme & Plaster Company, Port
land. R. Livingstone, manager The.JJregon ilort
t&gB Company (Ltd.); president Portland
Chamber of Commerce. Portland.
H. C Bowers, manager Portland Hotel Com
winy, Portland.
Hon. Z. F. -Moody, grain and trool commis
sion merchant; ex-Governor of Oregon; The
Dalles.
F. A. Scufert, Seufert Bros." Co., Balm on
lckers. The Dalles.
Hon. Thomas B. Kay. president -and manager
Thomas Kay Woolen Mill Company, of Salem;
member State Legislature.
L. Zimmerman, president The Lucky Boy
Mining Company; president of Portland City
Council.
Hon. Georgo H. "Williams, Mayor Portland;
ex-Congressman; member law firm Williams;
Wood & J.lnthlcum.
S. M. Mears, president Portland Cordage
Company; president Columbia Engineering
Works, Portland.
A. L. Craig, general passenger agent O. R.
& X. Co., Portland.
Samuel Elmore, salmon packer, commission
merchant and capitalist, Astoria.
W. J. Burns, resident partner Balfour.
Guthrie & Co.,; president Interior Warehouse
Company, Portland. ,
J. Frank Watson, president Merchants Na
tional Bank of Portland.
Henry Hahn, president Wadhams & Co.,
-wholesale crocers, Portland.
Bernard Albers, manager Albers Bros. Mill
ing Company, Portland.
R. D. Inman. president Inmnn. Poulsen &
Co., lumber manufacturers, Portland.
F. ,W. Leadbetter, Portland, proprietor Co
lumbia River Paper Company, of Camas, '
Wash. ,
J. Thorbum Ross, vice-president and manager
Title Guarantee & Trust Company, Portland.
W. II. Beharrell. manager Heywood Bros.
& Wakefield Co., -wholesale furniture dealers,
Portland. N-
E. O. McCoy, secretary and manager Wasco
Warehouse' Milling Company, Tho Dalles.
John S. Schenck, president First National
Bank, The Dalles.
J. W. Springer, manager The Citizens' Light
& Traction Company, of saiam,.
George W. Lloyd, president The Crystal
Consolidated Mining Company, Cottage Grove. 1
H. W. Goode, president and general manager
Portland General Electric Company; director
general Lewis and Clark Fair; Portland.
F. L Fuller, general manager Portland Rall
way Company, Portland.
It. Koehler, manager lines In Oregon, South
ern Pacific Company, Portland.
Asahel Bush,, -of Ladd & Bush, bankers,
Salem.
W. B. Ayer, president Eastern & Western
Lumber Company, of Portland,
R.. L. Durham, vice-president Merchant Na
tional Bank. . Portland.
William A. MacRae, manager London &
San Francisco Bank,' In Portland.
John F. OlShea. .president and- manager
Union Meat Company, Portland.
L.. J. Wentworth, vice-president and general
manager Portland Lumber Company, Portland.
W.,H. Hurlburt, president The Oregon Water
Power & Railway Company, Portland.
Edward Cooklngham, treasurer Equitable
Savings & Loan Association, Portland.
A. IT. Breyman, president Pacific Coast A.
G.- & Trust Company; secretary Breyman
Leather Company.
Clark W, Thompson, vice-president Wind
River Lumber Company, Cascade Locks. '
Leslie Butler, of Butler & Co., bankers. Hood
River.
L. Flinn, president The First National Bank,'
Albany.
F. J.' Hard, secretary .Oregon Mlnlns Stock
Exchange, Portland. - .
Jefferson .Myers, president Lewis and-Clark'
State Commission. Portland.
Paul Wesslnger, capitalist, Portland!
W. E. Coman, G. P. and F. A. lines la Ore
gon, Southern Pacific Company, Portland.
H. E. Ankeny, manager Sterling Mining
William D. Wheelwright, president and man
ager Pacific Export Lumber 'Company, Port
land. W. H.' Corbett, president and manager Wil
lamette Iron & Steel Works, Portland.
R. Lea Barnes, cashier Wells, Fargo "& Co.'s
Bank in Portland.
H. Wittenberg, vice-president and general,
manager Pacific Coast Biscuit Company, Port
land. W. E. Potter, agent In Portland Columbia
River Tie & Lumber Association.
J O. Humphry, manager Advance Thresher
Company, Portland.
J. L. Hartman, Hartman, Thompson &
Powers, Insurance, real estate agents and
brokers, "Portland.
J. E. HaselUne, president J. B. Haseltine &
Co. (Inc.). Portland.
Tl.
W. H. Eccles. vice-president and general
manager Mount Hood Lumber Company, Hood
River.
. H. F. Davidson, president Davidson Fruit
Company, Hood River.
T. G. Hendricks, president The First -National
Back, Eugene.
0.; M. Crouch, president Almeda Mining Com-;
pany, Portland. "
A. L. Mills, president Tho First National'
Bank of Portland; ; vice-president Security
Savings & Trust Company; second vice-president
Lewis and Cla k Fair.
Samuel Connell, manacer Northwest Door
Company; secretary The Portland Chamber of
Commerce; third vice-president Lewis and
Clark Fair.
E. E. Lytle, president Columbia Southern
Railway Company; president Columbia South
ern Irrigation Company, Portland.
Hen. R. A. Booth, manager The Booth-Kelly
Lumber Company, Eugene; State Senator.
H. Weinhard, proprietor City Brewery and
capitalist, Portland.
C F. Swigert, secretary and manager City
& Suburban Railway Company; president Pa
clflc Bridge Company, Portland.
E. A. Wyld, manager Canadian Bank of Com
merce In Portland.
E. M. Brannlck. vice-president and general
manager Studebaker Bros. Co., Northwest,
Portland.
D. C O'Reilly, president Oregon - Round
Lumber Company, Inc.; secretary Harney Val
ley Improvement Company, Portalnd.
O. M. Scott, manager Mollne-Bain Co., agri
cultural Implements and vehicles, Portland.
H. L. Powers, Hartman, Thompson &
Powers, Insurance, real estate agents and
brokers, Portland.
A. n. Jacobs, president and manager Oregon
City Woolen Mills, Oregon City.
Frank Davenport, general manager Daven
port Bros." Lumber Company, Hood River.
J. i Bradley,- treasurer and general man
ager Bridal Veil Luniberlng Company, Bridal
Veil.
T. R. Sheridan, president The- First Na
tional Bank. Roseburg.
. Jonathan Bourne,. Jr., mining operator, Port
land. - ' -
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