Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, June 10, 1909, Image 1

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    VOL. XL.IX XO. 15,143.
PORTLAND, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1909.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
pa dc pdhcu. r.Mtr !
AUTOS HIDDEN BY
COUNTLESS ROSES
CHARGE PROFESSOR
IS FOE TO CHURCH
PORTLAND IS HOST
MODJESKA GIVES
WILL READJUST
CANADIAN LOCK IN
RELICS OF STAGE
OF CREW MAY DIE
FOR FULLY 25
WESTERN TARIFFS
BAPTISTS SAY TJNIVEKSITX
TEACHER IS IXFIDEIi.
MANY MEMENTOS OF CAREER
HEAD-OX COLLISION" OCCURS OX
LEFT TO FRIENDS.
VXIOX AVEXI E.
Half Mile of Cars Is in
Multi-Hued Line.
Seven Counts Formulated, Which
Only One Article Sold Entire Role
Festival Draws Throng
of Visitors Here.
Interstate Board Is to
Hold New Hearing.
Motorman's Eye and Brain Pierced,
Two Vessels Sunk and
Professor Foster Must Answer.
Declare He Is Unitarian.
of Rosalind Given to
Gllda Varesi.
Skull Fractued, Leg Broken.
Passengers Escape.
Another Wrecked.
SOU G RUINED
CROWD EXTENDS MANY MILES
Lavish Decorations in Intricate
Designs Evoke Cheers.
FESTIVAL NOW AT ZENITH
Horae and Vehicle Fnrade This Af
ternoon Will' Be Great Feature
and Xtght Pageant Will Be
Splendid . Spectacle.
TODAY'S PROGRAMME, A'D
EVENTS OF FESTIVAL
WEEK.
8 A. M. Arrival of Chieaaro busins
mn.
A. M. Reunion Scottish Rite Ma
anna. 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. Loan exhibit of
patntlncs at Museum of Art. Fifth
and Taylor street, free.
10 A. M. Annual meeting Indian
War Veterans.
2 P. M. Oregon Agricultural Col
lege parade.
2 P. M. Decorated horse and vehi
cle parade.
8:80 P. M. Night pageant. "Spirit
of the Uolden Wwt."
Friday.
Reunion of Oregon Pioneer Associa
tion; Scottish Rite Masons: arrival of
M. JuMserand, French Ambassador;
Riverside Driving Club races at Coun
try Club track; children's parade. East
Portland.
Saturday.
Annual meeting of the Hunt Club;
6oott!nh Rite Masons: racing events
at Country Club; automobile road
raoea; electrical parade repeated at
night in farewell of the Festival King.
Enshrined on a regal cortege of auto
mobiles, the rose in myriad number was
paid befitting homage by the Festival
inousands yesterday afternoon. Two
and a half miles of decorated automo
biles, most every machine laden to the
limit by lavish floral designs, made up
the brilliant procession.
In that long line was every color,
very tint and hue, known to the realm
of the beautiful. A million and more
buds and blooms were woven into every
order of artistic design available to the
ingenuity of man. There were banks
and bowers, pyramids, clusters, coils,
lines, laterals, stars, crescents, columns.
In many of the floats there was archi
tecture as .intricate and marvelous as
that of an ancient temple.
Gay Throng Banks Route.
Back and forth along 20 miles of
streets, on both sides of the Willamette,
the triumphal cortege made its way,
exciting unrestrained appreciation and
applause from a gay Festival throng
that banked in every foot of the route.
The crowd distributed Itself with some
thing bordering on good Judgment after
the experiences in congested business
renters that deprived hundreds from
seeing anything at all Monday and
Tuesday nights. There were no fewer
than 100.000 people abroad, which is all
the more remarkable because of the
fact that the procession passed in the
busy hours of the early afternoon.
Wild Flowers Are Effective.
At 2:30 P. M. the column moved, half
an hour late. The first vehicle. Its
springs dipped by the weight of flow
ers, set off the limitless reservoir of
Festival enthusiasm. The succeeding
vehicles fanned it to continued in
tensity. Only for an instant, now and
.nen, u some vain person bent on
showing himself and who had forgotten
or neglected to decorate hove into
view, did the crowds pause in the cheer
ing to catch their breath. .
xtoses predominated in the proces
sion, but Oregon wild flowers were ar
ranged effectively on many cars. Golden
rod. carnations, snowballs and the lim
itless variety of wild flowers were used
In profusion, although the most superb
decorations, of course, were in roses.
Some Simple; Some Complex.
Many of the decorators effected a sin
gle tone pink. red. yellow or white.
Others laid on two or even three tones.
blending their medium into harmonious
and delightful contrasts.
Those who bore away the trophies
achieved honors to be listed among the
Important victories of a lifetime. No
machine that was not a thing of infinite
beauty In its cloak or bright flowers got
a trophy. Here is the list of those who
won. It Is printed elsewhere, but the
subject is big enough for repetition:
List of the Winners.
Class A, electric pleasure vehicles
Miss Mildred Keats, first; Mrs. J. Matth
leson. second; Gustav Friewald. third.
Class B, runabouts and roadsters O.
K. Jeffrey, first: K. Henry TVemme, sec
ond : C. J. Franklin, third.
Class C. private touring cars Gay
Lombard, first: car thus far of unknown
ownership, second; W. O. Van Schuyver,
third.'
Class P. clubs and organizations
(CoJUiluded on Pue 12. 1
CHICAGO. June 9 Rev. Johnstone
Meyers, the Chicago pastor who on Mon
day last insisted on the expulsion from
the Baptist conference of Professor
George D. C. Burnham Foster, of the Uni
versity of Chicago, author of "The Func
tion of Religion" and other works, said
today that SI ministers had agreed to
vote for the ousting of Foster -when the
question came up- next Monday.
Accusations that Professor Foster Is an
atheist and an Infidel will, it is said, be
presented in substance a follows:
"One Author of -The Function of Re
ligion in Man's Struggle for Existence.'
which shows its writer an atheist.
'Two Author of 'The Finality of Chris
tian Religion,' which brands its author as
an infidel.
Three Expelled from the faculty of
the University of Chicago divinity school
following the publication of 'The Finality
of Christian Religion." (This charge may
not -be brought, as Professor Foster de
nies it.)
'Fourth Excerpts from his latest book.
tending to show that he is an enemy of
the Baptist ministry: 'The man of today
who can believe in miracles is naive.
the ao-called church of Jesus Christ is
made up of lubbers."
"Five Views expressed in hie books are
a violation of the fundamental law of the
Baptist Ministers" Union.
"Six Admits he is a Unitarian.
"Seven Acts as pastor of a Unitarian
Church."
Professor Foster is quoted as saying
that he and his friends will make a de
termined fight against the proposed
action.
FUGITIVE FIRES AT CROWD
Supposed Burglar, Hatless and Left-
Jlandcd, Startles East Siders.
A man and a ' woman drew a large
crowd about 10 o'clock last night by
chasing a man from East Twenty-ninth
and East Pine streets to East Twenty-
eighth and East Ash streets', crying "stop
the thief." as loudly as they could. At
the last corner the fugitive turned, and,
drawing a revolver, fired at his pursuers.
The shot went wild and struck no one
in the crowd close at his heels.
The man and woman who had been
chasing him then turned and fled in the
opposite direction. The object of the
chase was last seen hatless running west
on East Ash street. The report spread
was that the fugitive was a burglar who
had been surprised in someone's house
and was trying to escape. . Patrolmen
were unable to verify this statement.
The police are trying to unravel the
mystery. B. El Eva, wno lives at mo
East Ash street, was on his porch when
the man ran by. It was in front of
Eva's house that the fugitive fired his
pistol. Eva says he was a tall, young
man about 25 years old and was dressed
In a long black coat, light trousers and
a black derby hat. He was smooth
shaven. A peculiarity of the supposed
burglar is that he is presumably left
handed, as he drew and fired his weapon
with that hand.
PLAN BIG NAVAL REVIEW
San Francisco Invites Javles of
World to Celebrate Rebuilding.
LONDON. June 9. A formal invitation
from America to Great Britain to par
ticipate in a naval review to be held in
San Francisco next October to celebrate
fhe rebuilding of the city after the earth
quake of April, 1906, has been presented
by Ambassador Reid. The question is
one for consideration by the Cabinet, and
it probably will be several days before
an answer is received.
There is, however, much likelihood of
acceptance, as there is a strong friendly
feeling in England at the present. T. C.
Core, who Is in London to arrange these
matters, has formed a small committee
of Californians to assist him. This com
mittee will go to all the capitals of
Europe and present similar invitations.
COLLEGE GIRLS ON TOUR
Two Hundred From Nashville,
Tenn., on Trip Along Coast,
SAN FRANCISCO. June 9. Two hun
dred girl students of Radnor College,
Nashville, Tenn., arrived this morning
on a sight-seeing tour, which is a part
of the school curriculum, and departed
tonight for Seattle to visit the Alaska
Yukon - Pacific Exposition. They are
garbed in blue uniforms and wear
"mortar board" caps.
President A. N. Jshman, of the col
lege, is in charge of the party, which
has already visited New York, Wash
ington, Philadelphia and other large
cities of the East.
WOMEN MOTOR TO COAST
Xew York to San Francisco by Auto.
Xo Male Help Needed.
NEW YORK, June 9. Four women left
New York today on a 4000-mile automo
bile trip to ban tTancisco. They are
Mrs. Alice R. Ramsey,' president of the
Women's Motoring Club . of New York,
who is at the wheel; Mrs. N. R. Powell,
Mrs. W. A. At wood and Mrs. H. Jahns.
The party will do a great deal of sight
seeing en route and hopes to arrive at
San Francisco about July 15. Mrs. Ram
sey intends personally to make all neces
sary repairs to the car during the trip.
DAILY ARRIVALS ARE 15,000
Railroad Men Declare 85,000
Strangers Will See Fete.
HOTELS TAXED TO UTMOST
Twenty Downtown Hosteiries Are
Turning Away Guests, hut All Are
Cared for and Charges Have
Not Been Raised. '
ee.ee.es
ROSE FESTIVAL VISITORS IN 1
PORTLAim.
Number of visitors in the city .. .25.000 !
Arrivals dally by trains 10.000
Arrivals dally by lnterurbans . 4.000
Arrivals dally by boats 1,000
Downtown hotels reported full
to capacity 20
Number of strangers who will
see Rose Festival S5.000
With the Rose Festival now well under
way, it Is estimated that there are at
least 25,000 visitors in Portland who have
been attracted to this city by the annual
floral event.
Approximately ta.uuo strangers are
pouring into the city daily by trains, in-
lerurDans and boats, and every one of
the hotels catering to this class of travel
is reported . full to overflowing.
Thousands Come for Day.
Thousands of these visitors arrive in
Portland on the early morning trains and
depart in the evening, many of whom,
living in nearby towns, return from day
to day. More thousands are spending the
weeK in Portland at the homes of friends.
or in lodging-houses, and can only be ac
counted for In the number of train ar
rivals.
iius excursion trave; exceeds all pre
vious Rose Festival records. This much
is known by railroad traffic managers.
but figures as yet can be based only on
estimates, because of the fact that the
excursion rates are still in effect, and
reports have not been made to the general
offices.
At tne O. R. & N. general offices it is
stated that all available equipment is in
use. Train No. 5 from the East arrived
in Portland yesterday in two sections of
seven cars each. All trains are crowded,
and the local excursion travel is coming
from as far south as the California line
and from as far east as Huntington.
Travel Heavy From East.
The increase in travel, however, is not
all due to local excursion rates. Many
tourists coming West to attend the Se
attle exposition are stopping off in Port
land en route. Frank R. Johnson, gen
(Continued on Page 14.)
'ON nHND7tnRLi"50 TO nm riUit UH WWiWifitfA J
I
LOS ANGELES, Cal., June 9. CSpe-
cial.) Madame Modjeska's theatrical
mementoes were disposed of by gift this
week. The prompter's copy of "As You
Like It," from which Modjeska's great
est part, Rosalind, was created, was
purchased for Robinson Locke, the
owner and editor of the Toledo (O.)
Blade. Everything else was given
away.
To a little actress now playing with
Mrs. Fiske, Miss Gllda Varesi, was vir
tually bequeathed the role of Rosalind.
L. E. Behymr, the theatrical manager
of this city, received the prompter's
books of "Frou-Frou," '"Delilah,"" "La
dies' Battle." "Diane de Lys." "Mistress
Betty," "Daniela," "Miriam the Jewess"
and "East Lynne."
To Charles F. Lummis the actress left
a manuscript copy of "Adrlenne Lecouv-
reur." The entire play was copied by
her and notes are in her handwriting.
Also to Mr. Lummis she left a prompt
er's book of "Frou-Frou," with stage
directions in her handwriting.
To a number, of Los Angeles friends
were left souvenirs of some sort.
To the Chicago Modjeskas ' were in
trusted 10 golden crowns that had been
presented by different countries. One
of the most gorgeous of these was the
gift of the x'olish people. These crowns
are to be presented eventually to public
institutions, such as museums of art.
SHERIFF IS SALOON KEEPER
Clark County Official Attaches
Property and Is in New Role.
VANCOUVER, Wash., June 9. (Spe
cial.) By serving a writ of attachment
for $950 against Charles. H. Keeler, half
owner of the Owl saloon, on Washington
tftreet, W. D. Sapplngton, Sheriff of
Clark County, finds himself in the liquor
business. The action was brought by
Mrs. Keeler to secure payment of a Judg
ment given when she secured a divorce
from Keeler, in Everett, Wash.
Sheriff Sappington served the papers
yesterday and attached one-half the stock
and fixtures in', the saloon and one-half
of $800 license money deposited in the
Vancouver Commercial Bank. Business
was not suspended, but J. A. Walters,
Deputy Sheriff, was detailed to watch
the cash register and collect one-half of
all receipts until the full amount of the
Judgment and costs -is collected.
LEGATION SECRETARY OUT
Algernon Sarroris Not in Favor
Washington, Says Report.
at
WASHINGTON, June 9. Algernon Sar
toris, secretary of the American Legation
to Guatemala, has resigned. The cause
assigned is ill health.
Mr. Sartorls is a grandson of the late
President Grant. That there may have
been other reasons than ill health for the
resignation was strongly intimated to
night. The Times is authority for the
statement that while he was on leave in
Paris recently he received from the de
partment in response to a request for ex
tension of leave a curt message inform
ing him that his resignation would be
most acceptable.
t
THE FESTIVAL MAKES EVERYONE HAPPY ,
COMMODITY RATES CONTINUE
Spokane Decision Practically
Reversed.
SETTLE WHOLE QUESTION
Relation Between Rates From Mis
souri River to Interior and
Rates From Pacific Coast
to Interior Points.
OREGON! AN NEWS BUREAU. Wash
ington, June 9. Under an order issued by
the Interstate Commerce Commission to
day all class rates fixed by Its recent de
cision In the Spokane case will be put
into effect July 1, but the commodity
rates, touched upon in that case will con
tinue as at present without change until
after the Commission has taken further
testimony and. given further considera
tion to such rates, both to the Coast and
from Coast points East. This order was
entered after a brief hearing this morn
ing, participated in by representatives
from Spokane, Portland and other inter
ested Coast and interior cities.
Spokane Decision Reversed.
This is a practical reversal of the.
famous freight rate case. While the
whole matter of graded rates and the
effort of the railroads to build up jobbing
centers in the Middle West to the detri
ment of the Pacific Coast is postponed
until the Fall for a full hearing and dis
cussion, the Commission has withdrawn,
tentatively at least, from the position it
assumed in the decision in the Spokane
case when it ordered reductions in class
and 82 commodity rates from Chicago to
Spokane.
Although the class rates ordered at
that time are to go Into effect, these
rates only affect less than carload lots
aai scarcely 15 per cent of the traffic
moves under them.
Action Pleases Railroads.
This action is considered to be of
momentous import to many interests. It
is now intimated in railroad circles that
the railroad traffic men were pleased
to see the Coast take up the fight
against the reduced rates from the Bast
to the intermountain territory, and
that they were glad to have had this
"assistance" in fighting the reductions
to Spokane.
In any event it is evident that the
railroads did all In their power to
make the decision unpopular, as they
carried the principle to an extreme in
their announcement that further re
ductions of a similar nature would be
put in effect which would have resulted
in the markets of the cities across the
Sierra being taken from the Coast
(Concluded on Pag. 4.)
An accident which may terminate in
the death of G. S. Shattuck. a motor-
man in the employ of the Portland Rail
way, Light & Power Company, occurred
shortly after last midnight at Union ave
nue and Monroe street. In a head-on col
lision between car No. 237, of the Unton
avenue line, and car No. 311. of the
Woodlawn line. Shattuck is unconscious
at the Good Samaritan Hospital and Is
not expected to live.
He received his Injuries through the
crashing of glass when the windows on
the front platform of his car. No. 237,
were smashed. In falling he struck his
head and received a probable fracture of
the skull. One of his legs was also
broken. There were a few passengers in
each of the cars, but none was injured.
Shattuck was In charge of the rear car
and it is believed grew confused on the
rapid approach of the other car and
failed to operate the proper controller.
tie had been working as a motorman
but a Bhort time. The front of the
Union avenue car was damaged slightly
but was not disabled.
Motorman Shattuck was carried to the
Rose City Pharmacy on the corner, where
he was hurried in the Red Cross am
bulance to the hospital.
STRIKE AGAINST SPANKING
California Children Forsake School
When Teacher Disciplines One.
faANTA BARBARA, Cal., June 9. Be
cause she severely spanked an obstrep
erous pupil, all of the 14 members of
the school taught by Miss Cavlta Lane
at the Santa Rose Rancho. across the
mountains, seven miles from this city,
are on strike, and for three months Miss
Lane has been daily holding school with
out scholars.
i!very day Miss Lane appears at the
door of the school room, rings the bell.
and then quietly seats herself at the
desk on the rostrum. No pupils put in
their appearance, and she whiles awav
tne day Bewlng and reading, and at 4
o'clock locks up and goes home.
Miss Lane does not want her salary to
stop so the daily sessions continue, re
gardless of the dearth of pupils.
OBJECT TO WHISKY TAX
John Redmond Raises Signal of Re
volt in Commons.
LONDON, June 9. John H. Redmond,
the Nationalist leader, hoisted a signal
of revolt In the course of the debate in
the House of Commons today on the sec
ond reading of the finance bill. He
notified the Government bluntly that the
Nationalist party would vote against the
budget on the ground that it was grossly
unfair ' to Ireland, and constituted
breach of the act of union. Mr. Red
mond's objection was to the proposed in
crease in the tax on whisky, which he
characterized as a crushing imposition
on one of Erin's few remaining indus
tries.
LEITER BABE PASSES AWAY
Child of Xoted Chicagoan Dies When
but Two Weeks Old.
CHICAGO, June 9. (Special.) The in
fant con of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph "Letter
Is dead at the family residence, 230
Lincoln Park boulevard. The child was
born two weeks ago and had been named
Joseph Leiter, Jr. He was to have been
baptized within 10 days at Holy Name
Cathedral. The child died Tuesday, Just
before noon, after an illness of less than
24 hours. The body was taken to Wash
ington, D. C, today for burial.
HENEY TO CONTINUE FIGHT
Will Run for District Attorney on
Anti-Graft Issue.
SAN FRANCISCO. June The an
nouncement is made positively this aft
ernoon that F. J. Heney will be a can
didate for District Attorney at the
coming election. He says he has con
sented to enter the fight, as he wishes
to continue the graft prosecution in
which he is now engaged. It is gener
ally understood that he will run as a
Republican.
LEARN ALCOHOL'S EFFECT
Health Authorities to Examine All
New York School ChlldreYi.
NEW YORK, June 9. The thousands
of public school children of New York
will be examined by the health author
ities in a general endeavor to ascer
tain whether there Is any basis for the
assertion made by Dr. T. C. Nicholl
before the American Medical Associa
tion at Atlantic City, that 78 per cent
of the pupils are victims of the alcohol
habit.
RESCUE COMES TOO LATE
Miner Entombed by Cave-In Dies
From Suffocation.
WALLACE, Idaho, June 9. The forces
of workmen who have been laboring to
reach Eric LTnd. a miner entombed In
the Morning mine by a ave-in, recovered
his lifeless body today. Llnd had ap
parently perished from suffocation.
MILLION AND QUARTER IS LOSS
Big Liner Rams Locks and
Current Sweeps Through.
BLAME PUT ON ENGINEER
Steamers Crescent City and Perry G.
Walker Lie , on Bottom, While
Assiniboia Is Badly
Stove In.
SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich., June .
Because the engineer of the Gilchrist
liner Perry G. Walker misunderstood sig
nals from the pilot this afternoon as the
vessel was off the Canadian locks of the
"Soo" canal, the $4,000,000 waterway is
damaged to the extent of $1,250,000; the
Perry G. Walker and the Crescent City
are sunken wrecks, the Canadian Pacific
steamer Assinlboia is badly damaged, and
two waterfalls and a giant whirlpool are
raging In what was formerly the great
canal.
The Walker, a steel steamer of over
4000 tons displacement, was approaching
the canal locks from Lake Superior, when
her captain signalled the engineer for
'half speed." The engineer misunder
stood the gongs and the big freighter
was sent forging ahead at top speed.
striking the leaf-gates of the high-level
chamber of the canal and crushing them
in like paper. Instantly the full force of
all the water in Lake Superior surged
Into the chamber, carrying the Walker
with it as if the big freighter were only
feather.
Two Other Vessels Caught.
At the same time the Crescent City,
of the Steel Trust fleet, was entering the
v (Concluded on Paga 3.)
INDEX OF, TODAY'S NEWS
The Weather.
YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 82.9
degrees; minimum, io.s degrees.
TODAY'S Fair; northwesterly winds.
Foreign.
Castro organizes filibustering expedition
against Venezuela. page 5.
British colonials willing to aid mother
countdy. but d err. and home rule. Page 3.
National.
Taft proposes corporation tax to unite party
cut botn .tactions oppose it. .Page o.
Senate turns down opposition to Dingley
tariff on wool Page 3.
Interstate Commission suspends main part
or to po Kane rate decision and decides
to hold hearings on Pacific Coast. Page X.
Domestic
California school children strike because
teacher spanks one of them. Page 1.
President Louis Hill refuses to submit Great
Northern records to Spokane grand Jury.
Page 3.
Two steamers wrecked in Canadian Soo
canal and lock badly damaged. Page 1.
Prosecution in Calhcun trial will end to
night. Page 5.
Modjeska's theatrical mementos given to
friends. Page 1.
Over SO Baptist preachers sign demand for
Foster's expulsion as infidel. Page 1.
St. Paul road to be free lance in freight
traffic Page 3.
Trial of smugglers of Chinese optns. Page 2.
Lawyers deny Mrs. Guggenheim's charge of
fraud. Page 3.
More Black Hand arrests In Ohio show com
, plete organization in West. Page 5.
Powerful American financial syndicate
backed by Government to take hand in
China. Page 2.
Sports.
Coast League scores: Portland 3, Sacramento
O ; Vernon 8. Los Angeles '2 ; San Fran
cisco 8, Oakland 4. Page 6.
Ketchel defeats O'Brien in three rounds.
Page 7.
Van Haltren offered job as umpire; also In
vited to join Portland and Galveston
teams. Page 6.
Northwestern League scores: Portland 5, Ta
coma O; Aberdeen 3. Spokane 2; Seattle
5, Vancouver 3. Page O.
Pacific Northwest.
"Warner will contest at Pendleton springs
new sensations. Page 8.
Investigating committee continues work at
State College. Page 9.
Contract let for construction " of Adrian-
Connell branch of Hill lines. Page 9.
Los Angeles woman comes to Marshneld
seeking husband, who disappeared.
Page 8.
Commercial and Marine.
Active demand for all kinds of fruit. Pag '
19.
New wheat offerings weaken Chicago mar
ket. Page 19.
Contrary movements in Harrixnan stocks.
Page 19.
Steamship Arabia brings big cargo from the
Orient. Page 18.
Portland and Vicinity.
Chambers of Commerce of Portland and Be
attle and the Tacoma Traffic Association
ignite to fight all Northwest transconti
nental lines for new distributive rates.
Page 18.
County Commissioners receive three bids for
old county poorfarm. Page 18.
High Masons gather for Scottish Rite re
union, page 11.
Hose l-'eetival.
Great crowd watches automobile parade
half-mile long. Page 1.
Portland host for 25,000 Festival visitors.
Page 1.
This to be day of parades, with grand pag-.
eant in afternoon, another at night.
Page 13.
Chicago business men's excursion to arrive
this morning- Page 11.
Riverside Driving Club announces speed pro
gramme for tomorrow. Page 12
Polo pony race will be feature of Hunt Club
meet. Page 14.
Carload of roses are given away each day
at depot. Page 13. ,
Formation and plan of East Side children's
parade announced. Page 13.
prizes are awarded to auto parade entrants.
tiny Mtss Mildred Keats winning the
first trophy. Page 12.
Throngs attend last day of the Rose Show in
the California building. Page 14.
Entries for Rose Festival automobile races
close. Thirty-five cars to participate.
Page 7.
United Commercial Travelers and Travelers
Protective Association unite in enter
tainment of out-of-town patrons at Ex
position Rink. Page 4.
TtfTI 1 05.0