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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1909)
12 THE MORXIX6 OBEGOXIAX, TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 1909. n p j& m m ncr U. II, U. II. IU UUL CLEARWATER LINE Hill and Harriman Reported to Have Come to Terms for Joint Operation. WILL BRING GRAIN HERE If Agreement Is Concluded Great Nm Perce Wheat District Will Be Made Largely Tributary to This City. Further Indications of the satisfac tory agreement regarding territory and the common Ufatre of lines in the Pa cific Northwest between James J. Hill and Edward H. Harriman are shown by the practically completed arrange ment between the Union Pacific and Northern Pacific that the Clearwater Short Line, built by the Northern Pa cific, shall be operated jointly by that company and the O. R. & N. The re ported agreement is similar to that in force between the Great Northern, Northern Pacitic and Union Pacific re garding the Portland-Tacoma tracks of the Northern Pacific. Despite repeated statements from the Harriman offices that General Manager O'Brien was in Chicago recently on private business. It is understood that the matter of the Clearwater Short I.lne has come under discussion and in all probability when the Portland-Tacoma track agreement goes into force a similar arrangement will take effect between Grangevllle and Lewlston. Intended for Joint Use. When the line from Rlparia to Grangeville was first projected it' was Intended to be for the Joint use of the K. P. and O. R. & N., and to this end it was agreed that the line from Riparia to Lewlston should be built by the Har riman interests, the Hill people build ing from Lewlston to Grangeville. About this time the .rival magnates dis agreed on a point of policy, and this, together with many similar agreements, found its way into the wastepaper basket. Since then the North Bank Road was extended up the Snake River from Pasco to Riparia, connections being made with the O. R. & N. at Texas City This left the Hill lines with the option of constructing a special track from Lewlston to Riparia or making an agreement with the O. R. & N. The present arrangement means that Portland will be placed at least on an equal footing with the Sound cities, say authoritative railroad men, in the matter of grain shipments from the Nez Perce preirtes, whereas previously all grain shipped from that territory has gone direct to Seattle to Tacoma. Many be lieve that Portland now has much the best of the deal, inasmuch as both the North Bank and O. R. & N. are water grade routes to this city, while the North ern Pacific tracks from Pasco to Seattle have heavy grades. Irregular Service Maintained. "While the Northern Pacific has been maintaining a somewhat Irregular serv ice hetween Grangeville and Lewlston,' the O. R. & N. has made the least pos sible effort to arrange connections from I-ewlston to Riparia and thence to Port land, owing to the endeavors made by the Northern Pacific to attract all pos sible grain away from the O. R. & N. tracks to Puget Sound. With the acknowledgment by Hill that Portland is the logical shipping point on the Northern Pacitic Coast, the out come of an agreement on this disputed territory was known to be in abeyance and its recent settlement is considered another indication of Portland's premier poriltlon as the grain shipping point o; the Northwest. Discussing the arrangement, D. A. Patullo. of Balfour, Guthrie & Co., said last night: "The arrangement will be a great thing for Pu;tland. It will mean probably an increas? of shipments here or from three to four million bushels of grain. Where as before this grain from the Nez Perce and Camas prairies hud perforce to go to Seattle, now It will have the option of going to either city at the wieh of th V'uyer or shipper. Either the North Bank or O. R. & N. can be used to ship the (train to Portland and I believe that it will be an Immense gain to the city." 1SKAC H SEUVICE RKGIXS JUNE 2 6 )inor on Kvenlng Astoria Train Not to Be Hun. Leaving off the diner on the evening Astoria and beach train. In future a stop will be made at Astoria of 20 minutes to permit passengers to ob tain a lunch-counter dinner. The eat ing room adjoining the station has been enlarged, according to R. H. Jenkins, assistant freight and passenger agent of the A. & C. R. Commencing June 26 the Summer beach service will be put on, the Sat urday beach special starting that day. The train leaves Portland at 2:30 and runs through to Seaside. Returning it leaves Sunday at 6:30 o'clock. The present Astoria service will be continued to the beach as usual during the season. To correspond with the local service between Seaside and As toria, the morning train from Seaside will leave at 7:20 o'clock in place of 6:50 o'clock, arriving in Portland at the same hour as before. O'Brien Coming Friday. General Manager O'Brien, of the Harriman lines in the Northwest, leaves Chicago for Portland tonight and is expected to arrive V'riday night. R. R. Miller, general freight agent, left Chicago yesterday, where he has been working on t!ie Spokane rate case. He is due to arrive here Thursday. J. M. Mulchay. chief freight clerk, will ac company him. Tunnel Being Rushed. l-'or the tunnel at Summit, on the United Railways line, grading ope $ i tions are being rushed on the far side of the tunnel about three miles from Burlington and construction will be continued the whole of this Summer that the track may settle thoroughly during the Winter rains. General Agent Holder Coining. W. Holder, general agent at Portland for the Chicago & Northwestern, will arrive in Portland Thursday, where he has been attending a conference of general agents and inspecting the Northwestern lines. United Buys Cars. Two new cars for the I'nlted Rail ways system to Burlington have been ordered and will be placed In service July 1. The American Car Company, of St. Louis, is the supplying concern and will furnish at the same time two trailers for use on the United Railways on occasions of special rush. The re cent order is considered an Indication of the growth of the country tributary to the United. New Bills Open at the Vaudeville Houses Orpheum. IT is not a pretentious bill at all at the Orpheum. and there are no big black letters on programme announc ing someone of great fame in the en tertainment field. Which probably is the reason the bill is so generally and generously good; the performers are actively engaged in the business of seeking reputations. There are several acts which run so close a race for first place in the public approval that it would be an ungrateful act to single any one of them out above the others. Drawing straws for the order of mention, the three acts are Laddie Cliff, the Three Leightons and the Eight Madcaps. The Leightons, for their part, accomplish the entirely novel feat of producing some brand new jokes. With fetching songs, plenty of action and a knack of keeping the merriment astir, their turn, "A One Night Stand in Minstrelsy," is worth while. Their song, "He Done Me "Wrong," brand new, is going to be the hit of the season. Laddie Cliff, despite the name, proved himself eminently able In the business of propagating mirth. His audience worked him half to death yesterday af ternoon, when he sang of the people who sat on a tack. He Is a lithe little fellow, an exceptional dancer and has tt manner all his own. Eight broilers are in the madcap en semble. Besides being agile and nimble the entire eight are good looking. They are the liveliest bunch of peaches in a decade, as the boy in the gallery said out loud. There isn't a great deal to the act but a display of such life and health and action is "worth the price of admission alone," as the press agents say. Ollie Young and three brothers, hoop rollers. " make hoops do pretty much anything they wish. It is vastly more entertaining than the Usual variety of acrobatic act such as every manager tacks onto most every week's bill. Max Witt's singing colleens, four winsome young women in green, sing prettily and their presentation of old and new Irish melodies is satisfactory. Gartelle Brothers do some dancing on skates and some tumbles that are lu dicrous. Unusually good pictures end a bill that it wouldn't be advisable to miss. Pantages. OVER at the Fourth-street house a bill is in evidence that bids fair to hold Itself through the new week. For those that are seeking novelty there is a real find in a nondescript aggregation of trained "animals." Instead of fierce tigers and the like, this -assortment con sists of rats, cats and dogs. Harmless and uninviting as the combination may sound yet it is a remarkable spectacle to behold three varieties of sworn enemies playing peacefully together. Adams and Mack deal out magic and fun, mostly the latter. Their magic is of the burlesque variety and they worked a lot of fun Into a very few minutes. The Terry twins defy anyone to tell them apart and the defi is not likely to be taken up. They put on a burlesque boxing bout which is a small whirlwind of "roughhouse" comedy. Gymnasts are as plentiful as good ones are scarce and therefore the act of the Four Bards Is worthy of more than pass ing notice. They add several new feats to the already long list of the seemingly impossible. Ella Garrison and company put on a comedy sketch, "Tony and Cleo," which is a sort of burlesque on "Antony and Cleopatra." The. sketch was greeted with liberal applause and laughter. Marie Hedlicks, billed as a "Bohemian lyric soprano." has a good voice in spite of all that, and succeeded in pleasing all concerned. LeflT White sings a new illustrated song as well as usual and the motion pictures are good. Grand. WHEN the manager at the Grand sat through the opening per formance of the new week's bill, yesterday afternoon, to get the rating of the various acts, he must necessarily have made two entries in the "extra good" column of his rate form: those two after the names of Mann & Franks and Clara Thropp. Mann & Franks, besides suggesting a local department store, manage to crowd an immense quantity of fun and brightness into ten or a dozen minutes of work. Their singing travesty, ' from me suDiime to the Ridiculous," is one of the good things in the local vaudeville field this week. Clara Thropp. billed as a singing comedienne, succeeds In confirming the characterization, which is saying much in these days of singing comediennes who have cruelly and wrongfully for saken the avocation of fille de chambre. Miss Thropp was the hit of the bill. The Grand features the Makerenko troupe of eight Russian Gypsy dancers. There are two men and six women in the group, and their act is graceful and full of color and action. It is really a good act. The Torleys, novelty cyclists, aren't anything extra. Faust Brothers, pantomlne comedians, have a lot of rather new comedy that Is good. Fred Bauer sings an illustrated song and the motion pictures are bet ter than usual. The bill, all in all, is one that recommends itself. LOVING TRIBUTES ARE PAID Throngs Attend Funeral Services of C. W. Henry. Seldom lias so beautiful and sincere a tribute been paid to the memory of the dead as was manifested yesterday hi tne tunerai services of Charles W. Henry, who died Sunday morning after a brief illness. As an expression of the .esteem in which the young man was held it was an occasion of rare impressiveness. Not often has the pass ing of men of mature years and high station in the community been marked with the same evidence of sincere re gret and popular regard. The house and grounds were crowded with not only the personal friends but also the business associates of the deceased, testifying eloquently to his endearing qualities and to the widespread sym pathy felt for the stricken young widow and parents. That the attendance was not even larger was due to the break down of the car srevice. The floral offerings were in unprecedented pro fusion and beauty. The brief services at the house were conducted by Rev. William G. Eliot. Jr. Vocal selections were rendered by the Boyer Quartet, composed of TV. H. Boyer. W. L. Montgomery, Dom J. Zan and H. A. Hogue. In spite of the fact that the services at the grave were an nounced as private, a large line of car riages followed the remains to River view Cemetery. Shipping at San Pedro. SAN PEDRO, June 14. The steamer Shoshone arrived from Portland today with ties and lumber. The schooner Louise arrived from the Umpqua River with lumber. The steamer Majestic cleared this afternoon for Portland, THREATS ARE MADE Discharged Pedagogue Says He Will Sue Directors. CLAIMS HISTORY BOOKLETS Professor S. H. Dodson, Dropped From High School, Tries to Take Away Copies or His Work but Is Prevented. Professor S. H. Dodson, principal of the" history department In the Washington High School, threatens to sue the Board of Education. The directors were not alarmed when apprised by the angry his torian of the threatened litigation yester- " day, and told him to sue away. The con troversy was precipitated by the action of the School Board recently in failing to retain Dodson in the employ of the dis trict, and it involves the possession of printed pamphlets on history to which Dodson asserts ownership. Professor Dodson has been in the em ploy of the district for about three years and during that time he compiled a syl labus on history which he declared yes terday is copyrighted. Some time ago, with the consent of Dodson. Superin tendent Rigler, under instructions from the Board of Education, caused copies of this work to be printed for use in the history classes. Several days ago. when Dodson learned that his services no longer would be re quired, following the close of the present school year, he began to collect these printed copies. Principal Herdman, of the Washing-con High School, refused to turn over the copies he possessed, con tending that, having been printed with Dodson's consent and paid for by the district, they belonged to the district. Under the rules of the Board of Edu cation, it is incumbent on all instructors in the schools of the city, on severing their connection with the district, to turn over to the principal of the'building where they have been employed all property be longing to the district. When this is done the teacher is given a certificate as evi dence of the fact. When Dodson applied for this certificate recently it was re fused, because he had not deposited with the principal of the East Side school these history pamphlets. Until all school prop erty is surrendered, the Board of Edu cation refuses to deliver the final warrant In payment of the teacher's services. It was this condition which brought Dodson before the Board of Education yesterday. The professor was given a hearing and spoke very plainly. He in formed the directors that he did not pro pose to stand for any confiscation of these printed forms, which, he insisted, were his personal property and the product of much hard intellectual labor on his part." Members of the Board demurred, con tending that, although the syllabus might be copyrighted, the district had a prop erty interest in the few copies it pos sessed, having paid for the printing there of, and for that reason proposed to retain possession of them. "You had better consult an attorney, Professor Dodson," suggested Director Beach. "I have," was the reply of the angered historian, "and he advises me that I am entitled to recover all copies which are being held by the district." "We cannot agree with you on that point," interrupted Chairman Witten berg. "Well, you hold up my warrant next Thursday and I shall sue the Board of Education," threatened Dodson, as he started to leave the room. "All right," came back Chairman Wit tenberg, "we are frequently threatened with suits, and that is the reason we keep a lawyer on the Board." looking in the direction of Director Beach. THREE TEACliy RS ARE XAJ1ED Directors Select Additional High) School Instructors. Election of additional instructors in the Portland high schools took place yesterday at a meeting of the Board of Education as follows: Professor history department, Washington High School, Edwin Anders, of Aurora, 111., a graduate of the University of Illi nois; teacher in Latin, Washington High School, Anna L. Adams, of Cor nell College, Mount Vernon, la.; teacher in commercial department, Lincoln High School, Margaret Pomeroy, a graduate of Ann Arbor. Representing the people of Wood lawn, Councilman Vaughn appeared be fore the Board and urged the construc tion in that section of the city of a new school building. He said if the directors could not make provision for a new building, the immediate construc tion of an addition was an absolute ne cessity. It was further explained to the Board that the present building is crowded to overflowing, while the rapid growth of that district makes addi tional school facilities an imperative necessity. The directors approved the monthly payroll for teachers in the public schools. It represents a total of $62 -61S.75. BEATEN M COLLECTS PART'OP JOHN KEliX'S $5000 JUDGMENT SATISFIED. Property of One of Five Men Who Gave Him Terrible Drubbing Is Sold. The terrible drubbing given John Kern by five assailants in 1904 resulted yes terday morning in the sale by .Deputy ( onenix noinngswortn at tne tjourtnouse door of two lots in block 8, Brainard's Addition, belonging to George Wolf. They went for $350. After Kern was beaten he lay at the point of death for a time, but later re covered, and brought suit through Attor ney John F. Logan against George Mll ger. Jacob Hartung. Philip Schmidt, Adam Baum and Wolf. The Jury re turned a verdict in Kern's favor' for $5000 damages. An effort was made to find property belonging to the defendants with which to satisfy the Judgment, but this was for a time impossible. Detectives have been employed. however. in the last six months, to locate the property. Property belonging to some of the other defend ants has been advertised for sale by the Sheriff, and they are seeking to bring about a compromise. Other sales were continued yesterday until next Monday, pending the negotiations. N. AV. Chapin Sues for Divorce. North W. Chapin brought a divorce suit In the Circuit Court yesterday against Elm ma A. Chapin,. charging her with having deserted him a year ago last January. Thev were married March 10, 1889, at Tama City, la. INJURED IX MIXE CAVE-IN John Danger! Demands $10,000 of Beaver Hill Coal Company. A cave-in at the mine of the Beaver Hill Coal Company in Coos County, In which John Daugert was buried under a heavy weight of earth, has led to a suit in the Circuit Court, in which he is seeking to recover $10,000 damages from the company. The complaint was filed yesterday morning. Daugert says that with his fellow workman, Louis Woznek, he was driving gangway No. 9, and had excavated 10 feet beyond the timbers. As no more timbers were furnished, he and his com panion quit work, and were leaving the mine when they met the foreman. Jack Sharp?. Daugert says Sharpe asked why they had stopped work, and told them to return and that he would send them down the needed timbers a once. When the roof fell it broke Daugert's right leg near the ankle. He says the limb is now permanently stiff, and that his shoulders, back- and spine are also stiff. He is 31 years old and has a wife and child dependent on him. - He was earning $3.60 a day. DEFENDANT ALSO PROSECUTOR Robert Rodgers Says Drink Habit Caused Him to Forge Check. That the wheels of Justice do not move slowly when the defendant is also the prosecutor was demonstrated yesterday in Judge Bronaugh'B 'department of the Circuit Court when Robert Rodgers pleaded guilty to having forged a check for $18.75 by indorsing the name of J. M. Kellogg. The check was drawn on the Bank of California, and was passed on Al fccheibe. The crime was committed May 7, while Rodgers was drunk. He told Judgo Bronaugh yesterday afternoon that as soon as he sobered up and realized what he had done he went at once to the police and give himself up, telling the grand Jury which investigated the crime the same story that he told the police and the Judge. He came to Portland from California, ho said, and it was while stopping here for a day or two last week that his love for liquor got the better of him. He said he was almost famished when he forged the check. He also said that he has endeavored for years to overcome fhe drink habit, taking the Keeley cure several times. He wishes to return to his wife in California as soon as possible. Judge Bronaugh will sentence him at 2 o'clock this afternoon. BACK SALARY IS SUED FOR From Municipal Court Bailiff Bring Action. Against Mayor. James McDonald, nightwatchman at the Courthouse, formerly bailiff of the Municipal Court, brought suit in the Cir cuit Court yesterday afternoon against Mayor Lane, to compel him to sign a warrant for $100 in settlement of Mc Donald's salary. It was early in May, 1906, that the City Council passed an ordinance appointing McDonald bailiff of the lower court. He took the position, and held it until July S, 1907. His salary for May, 1906, is said to have been duly certified by the Au ditor, but when presented to the Mayor was refused his signature. Then he was mandamused to sign it, but the -case was reversed by the Supreme Court. At the time when McDonald gave up his position, his back salary amounted, it is asserted, to $1040. The Council passed an ordinance last February ap propriating this amount to pay McDon ald, hut Mflvnr T.nno votnnH .-. -.3 4 nance. The Council then proceeded to pass it over the Mayor s veto, and after 30 days City Auditor Barbur issued a war rant for this amount. Mayor Lane is said to have refused to sign the warrant. George S. Shepherd appears as McDon ald's counsel. ACCUSES HUSBAND OF FRAUD Mrs. Metz Brings Suit for the Return of Her Property. It is not often that a wife sues her husband for anything except a divorce, but Katharina Metz has brought suit in the Circuit Court against Theodore Metz, her husband of three months, to compel him to return to her property which she says he has secured by fraud. On April 3 SllA H T"! (1 Ha hiiahanH o .-. f T 1. Sweeney Sunifyside property worth, she ww. ner nusoanu wanted her to convey to him, she asserts, a life inter est In the land, which she agreed to do. But she says he had a warranty deed made out instead, and being unable to read she signed it. Mrs. Metz also alleges that nine days later trtie gave him $1150 to invest in a note and mortgage executed by Myrtle Olsen in favor of Paul Wardt, covering lot 11. block 15, Sunnyside Addition, and that he had it made out in his own name. She wants a clear title to her property, the mortgage conveyed to herself, and her husband enjoined from disposing of either until the suit is settled. LOTTIE AINSCOE LOSES SUIT Unable to Prove Defendants to Blame for Injury to Limb. After bringing a $15,343 damage suit in the Circuit Court because she fell through a roof while hanging clothes, and after exhibiting to the Jury yester day morning her injured limb, Lottie B. Ainscoe was compelled yesterday morn ing to leave the Courthouse empty-handed, and with no hope of receiving a dollar. Judge Cleland. in whose depart ment the case was tried, directed a ver dict for the defendants on the ground that no evidence had been introduced fixing blame on them. The suit was brought against B. W Powell, N. W. Powell. Mrs. H. N. Web ber and C. Kirkpatrick. The plaintiff had rented rooms in the brick building at Delay and Russell streets, and fell FOR SALE, TILLAMOOK, NEAR EAST 36TH, NINE FINE DWELLINGS. j .-. 1 5: Ji- inirn -VinJy - ' rfTiliM. tw- . x f ri ann iiiisin.1, m? "1 mi ii, 1 -iirrtr Bungalows, and two-story, five to eight rooms; new and modern; fireplaces, dens, seats, bookcases, buffets, beamed ceilings, paneled dining-rooms, sleeping porches, large verandas. Terms like rent. JOHN LOCKHART, OWNER, Main 493, A 3363. 610 Chamber of Commerce. THIS IS THE BEST TIME THE YEAR fOR A "VEW PIATB OR BRIDGE. A there Is little or no danger of ion gums or other troubles while Spring lasts. Our plates give the mouth, a nat ural expression, and will prove last ing comfort. DR. W. A. WISE President and Hihim, 22 Years Established la Portlaad. We will give you a good 22k gold or porcelain crown toi ........ .a S.Ba Molar crowns ................... B.ou 22k bridge teeth ............ S.00 Gold or enamel filings. ...... ... 1.00 Silver fillings '. jso Inlay fillings of all kinds 2.50 Good rubber plates COO The best red rubber plates....... 7JBO Painlees extraction. ............. -SO Painless extractions free when plates or bridge work Is ordered. Worlt guaranteed tor IS years. THE WISE DENTAL CO. !. The Fafllns; Blda; ad and Wash. sta. Office hours 8 A. M. to 8 P. M. Sundays, t ti 1. - Phone. A and MittBi 202B, breaking her leg in two places, when the roof of an adjoining shed gave way. Notes of the Court. Run into by E. T. Hall's automobile, J. E. Stowell wants $1000 damages. He brought suit for this amount in the Cir cuit Court yesterday. The collision oc curred on Yamhill street. Stowell says there was plenty of room for Hall to pass. When the big auto crashed into Stowell's horse and coupe the animal be came unmanageable, he says, and threw him out, fracturing two ribs. W. F. Reed pleaded not guilty yester day afternoon to having assaulted Will lam Stevenson with a pair of handcuffs. The estate of John Sullivan is worth $9740, according to the report of C. S. Palmer. D. R. Sutton and G. W. Logan, the appraisers, filed In the County Court yesterday. NEW SALOON LAW OBEYED Centralia Liquor Shops Will Main tain Open Front. CENTRALIA. Wasn., Jun 14. (Spe cial.) Two saloonkeepers of this city have shown an active compliance with the new open front saloons law. Land lord Hoard of the Harbor Hotel, near the depot, has thrown the front of his bar room entirelv onen. Dan Kalzer n-nmHA- tor of the Salzer block, has ordered an piiiie glass ironi ior nis saloon. The general sentiment among saloon men is in favor of a rigid enforcement of the law. Cigarettes are still MmnlraA nut. 1 with the weather eye open for the near mii uacn or a oiuecoat. TRY THIS FOR YOUR COUGH Mix two ounces of Glycerine with a half-ounce of Virgin Oil of Pine com pound pure and a half pint of straight whisky. Shake well, and take In doses of a teaspoonful every four hours. This mixture possesses the healing, health ful properties of the Pines, and will break a cold in 24 hours and cure any cough that is curable. In having this formula put up, be sure that your druggist uses tne genuine Virgin Oil of Pine compound pure, prepared and guaranteed only by the Leach Chemical Co., Cincinnati, O., and supplied through the Skidmore Drug Co., and all other first-class drugstores. ATHLETES TO KEEP IN GOOD TRIM MUST LOOK WELL, TO THE. CONDITION OF THE SKIN. TO THIS END THE BATH SHOULD BE TAKEN WITH HAND AH Grocers and Druggista, I II l iiwiiiw minium npimiLpiiiiW giplpf jmm0m v ' y- ?; llgr-'j?!,--1'' ' g"s"'lLr I THE PORTLAND PORTLAND, OR. BU ROPE AH PL&K MODERN REST AL KANT COST ONE MILLIOX DOLLARS. :( ! HOTEL, OREGON I Z CORNER SEVENTH AND STARK STREETS S Portland's Hew and Modern Hotel. Rates $1 per Day and Up S ; European Plan. Z ; WRIGHT-DICKINSON HOTEL CO, Props. I i"i;EvS " - i-t - -V. most. Tn rtA pm it tuL?iii3i'. T rw.nl .nJ 1 ; i Ui.,. J "uvi jvug CasitraJly LacstaJ Lata lMstaaea J. F. DAVIE S. President St. Charles Hotel COMPANY (Inc.) Front and Morrison, Portland, Or. EUROPEAN PLAN ROOMS 50c TO $150 FIRST-CLASS RESTAURANT IN CONNECTION THE Park: St., betweea Morrison and Aider. CALUMET HOTEL X "5U- . r? ? K S? ft SE and w . m jet f i MODERN BEAUTIFUL CLATSOP BEACH 1 1 Ml Portland's Nearest Beach Resort Via A. & C. R. E. Open All Year. Directly overlooking the Pacific Ocean. A delightful Summer and Winter resort. Hot salt baths and surf bathing. Sea foods a spe cialty. Walks, drives and boating. DAN J. MOORE, Prop. maim For the Summer's Cooking No kitchen appliancegives such actual satisfaction and Teal home comfort as the new Perfection Wick Blue Flame Oil Cook Stove. v Kitchen work, this coming; ,ummer, will be better and quick er done, with greater personal comfort for the worker, if, instead of the stifling heat of a coal fire, you cook by the cenctntratcd flame of the iimM1 11.1 , - Z.M J,--.! Mil. .IMMMII,,,..,,,.- f . II MEW FEUFECTION JViek Blue Flame OU Cook-Stove Deliver! heat where you want it never where you don't want it thus it doet not overheat the kitchen. Note the CABINET TOP, with shelf for warming plates and keeping food hot after cooked, also convenient drop shelves that can be folded back when not in use, and two nickeled bars for holding towels. Three sizes. With or without Cabinet Top. At your dealer's, or write our nearest agency. n Hi: ADQCARI t. RS FOR TOURISTS and COMMKRriAL TRAVELERS. Speriat rates maAe to families and tn sje rntlraen. Thr uianacexnent will be pleased at all tiroes to show rooms aod irive prices. A mod .rn Turkish bath es tablishment In tne botfL H. c. BOWERS, Manager. HOTEL PERKINS Fifth and Washington Sta. Tn l. A - 1 : i . . . . . uiiwuess ana snopping district.. Tne anil nn.tAJ.tA 1, 1 . u vt ti 1 - uiDiiiiitD puuuca 111 overy room, nooms ' 11 r"" uc&iu, en buna aoa bingie. iarge ana modernly equipped sample-rooms. ELEGANT GRILL Bns meats all trains. Rates St and on. , HOTEI, PERKINS CO. I". J. Richardson, Pres. I. Q. Paretland. Sec Mads Imperial Hotel Seventh and Washington PaiL MaHthan) & Sana, Praaa. lea PI ltWoa Pass Rates 51-0O-$lO-$2.C3( 0. O. DAVIS, Sec and Tras. A Strictly First-Class and Modern Hotel Containing 1 70 Rooms. Only American and European Hotel in Portland. Lotif Distance l'honft in Every Rcom. JFree 'Bus Meet All Trains. S2.00 ner dnv ami Rates European. $1.00 per day and up. Per month, single room and board., $45 to $65, according to room, for two. $75 to $110. Board, without room. ...... .$30 per month NORTONIA HOTEL ELEVENTH OFF WASHINGTON ST. Beautiful Grill R oom Bates to Families European Our Bus Meets All Trains Sample Suites with Baths for Traveling Men. COMFORTS MODERATE PRICES THE CORNELIUS "The House of Welcome," Corner Park and Alder. Portland's Bon Ton Transient Hotel. Headquarters for the traveling public. European plan. Single, $1.50 and up. Double, $2.00 and up. Our omnibus meets all trains. H. E. FLETCHER, C. W. CORNELIUS, Manager. Proprietor. HOTEL MOORE Seaside, Oregon never disappoints safe. economical and a won derful lizht criver. Solidly made. m ii rr. i ut-, 1 beautifully nickeled. Your living-room will be pleasanter with a Rayo Lamp. If not with your dealer, write our nearest agency. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporates!) 1