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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (April 11, 1911)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY. APRIL -.11. 1911 GMPEHTERS BEGIN LABOR AGITATION Many Go on Strike, Asking for Closed Shop and $4 for Eight-Hour Day. BUILDING NOT HAMPERED Mot Xot General and Aimed Only at Few Firms Craftsmen Seek to Fore Federated Trade Council to Act. litres cumber of union carpenters of Portland went out on a strike yes terday morning. About 1000 men are Bald br union men to bare been affect ed. Contractors say the number Is mailer than this. Building operations In the city are not yet- seriously haro- - pered. however, according to all that could be learned last night. A .member tf one laree contracting firm said last . jitsht not more than 10 per cent of the. cartcntTS employed by his company : hart quit. On one Job where 13 men were employed three men quit and on another Job where 1 men were em ployed none had quit. It was rumored .' that some of the union men refused to go out with the other members. ' The decision of the union carpenters to strike is said to have been reached at a secret meeting held Sunday. Their demands are an eight-hour day, 4 a day waxes and a closed shop. Two con tracting firms are said to be operating oa the closed-shop pu.n. Xlne-Hour Pay Is Cause. Recently some of those operating on the opon-ahop plan, who were anxious . to hasten to completion certain work under way. asked their men if they i would object to working nine hours a day. To this some consented, others objected. The nine-hour day was es tablished. This was followed by a atrlke of the union carpenters em plored on the new Multnomah Hotel building. , A . The Carpenters Union is said to have '. vnted to submit to the federated Trades Council an ultimatum to tha effect that the Federated Trades must support the carpenters In the strike, and that If they did not do so the carpenters" union would withdraw from the fed eration. . . A mcetlnir of the Bulldlnir Trades Council was held at the Labor Temple. ' Fourth and Alder streets, last night, a delegate from tha Carpenters" Union ba les" present. lie decllnod to say. how ' ever, what action his union had taken, or to admit that the strike had beea called. C M- Rynerson. editor of the Labor Press, even went so far as to deny that a strike had been called. Contractors. I-ola large and small, admitted, bow ' aver, when questioned, that union men In their employ quit yesterday. , Closed Shop Demanded. The strike Is said to be aimed prin cipally at such firm as the" Hurley-Ma-- son Company and Morgan. Flledner ft ' Boyce. Geonre C. Mason, vice-president of the former oomparry. declined last night to be Interviewed. William 1. Flledner. of the latter firm, said mem bers of the union had been pressing his firm for two weeks to establish a closed shop. "Saturday a representative of the union cum to us. he said, "and wanted to know tf we would agreo to a closed shop If the union would agree not to demand th calling off of the union la borers In other lines who sre In our em ploy. This morning the union carpenters quit. As the weather was rainy we only worked on one Job today, eo we cannot tell Just how many mea have quit. There Is no scarcity of laborers, however." About 400 carpenters are said to have been present at the meeting - Sunday, when It was voted to strike. A lively discussion Is said to have preceded the f.nal vote, which IS safti to Jtave been two to one In favor of the strike. The. nest regular meeting of the Fed erated Trades Council will be held nest Friday ntxht It is probable the propo sition from the Carpenters' Union will be submitted to the federation at that time. CANOE UPTURNS; ONE DEAD A. C McClufty, Pharmacist, Is Drowned In Lake Washington. . TJNTVERSTTT OF" WASHINGTON'. Se attle. Wash, April 10. (Special.) Albert C McClufty. a former student m ef the University of Washington, was drowned ,1a 'Lake Washington this morning, flva miles above the' univer sity campus. In company with A. K. Allen, ath- leiic coach of the Lincoln ITIgh School, of this city, he was making a cano trtp up Lake Washington to be gone t several days. They were sailing with a swift wind and near the shore they struck a shoal and the canoe capslsed. Coach Alien managed to secure hold on a pier. Just below tha water. After ' remaining In the water for nearly a half hour he was rescusd by a passef- by. McClufty, who was an expert swim mer, attempted to swim ashore, but "was seized with cramps and went down before aid could be secured. McClufty was a phnrmadst and com ' . p'.eted his coursa here last February - and would have received his degree next June. He was Is rears old. His parents reside In Alaska. Hla body , was not recovered. BLAME PUT ON STRIKERS Crows Xest Coal Operators Say Miners' Cause Trouble. FERNIS. B. C April 10. Coal oper ators In tha Crows Nest district, where too miners are on strike. Issued a re ply today to the ultimatum delivered by the Ottawa government that if the miners and the operator did not reach: an agreement the govenfment would appoint a board of arbitration. The operators" statement places the blame of the strike on the miners and says that the mlneowners "cava al ways been willing and eager for any board that would assist In the settle ment or make the publlo fully aware ef the real situation." OREGON CITY MAN DIES Uuldo ltoACoe Clark Was Native of Clackamas County Seat. OKEOON CUT. Or. April 10. (Special- Guido-Rosooe Clark, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodere W. Clark, of this city, died at the family home on Sixth and Monro streets Sunday, after a long illness. Mr. Clark was born In this city on December II. 1881, and was 11 years old. Ia 1897 ha graduated from the Oregon City High School and after wards took a course In mining engineering- at Pacific University, Forest Grove, graduating - from that Institu tion. Later he went to Boston, where he entered the Boston School of Tech nology, graduating- there with honors. From- there be went to Mexico, where he held the position of assistant su perintendent of the Guggenheim smelting- works, at Monterey. After several years his health failed him. and he went to Saa Antonio.. Tex.. ' Tucson. Ariz., thinking- tha change of climate would be beneficial. Not regaining his health he came to Oregon. He Is survived by his parents and a brother, Roy Clark, of this lty. The funeral services will be conducted from the family home Tuesday . 1 -o'clock, and the burial will be in the family plat in Mountain View Cemetery. Rev. William Proctor, pastor of the Congre gational Church will officiate. ASYLUM WILL BURN OIL STATE BOARD EATERS INTO THREE-YEAR CONTRACT. Saving f $ IS, 000 a Tear Will Be Effected and Wood Will Be Made Cheaper In Salem. SALEM. Or.. April 10. (Special.) Contracts were entered Into today be tween the State Board and the Standard Oil Company for fuel oil to be furnished to the Oregon State Insane Asylum dur ing the next three years. The contract is tl.OS a barrel delivered, f. o. b, Sa lem. This oil when used, the Board has estimated, will be equivalent to $3.60 a cord If wood were used, wood now cost ing the state 11.50 a cord. During the three years the "Board expects to save 115.000 -on this contract alone. Recently oil was II 3S delivered in this city, or SI f. o. b. Portland, the present cost be ing 80 cents f. o. b. Portland. During the three years, starting July 1. the board expects to use 45.000 bar rels of fuel oil. The cost of Installing storage tank and burners at the beat ing plant at the asylum will be approxi mately IIS50. the board consequently expecting to effect a net saving of $12. 150 on the change from cordwood to coal OIL "This plan will also be beneficial to Salem." said State Treasurer Kay today. "People of Salem are finding difficulty In securing wood because the Institu tions use such an Immense quantity of it and frequently wood famines have resulted. The board hopes to use oil at the Penitentiary later in the year. About 1600 cords of wood are used there annually. We will use about 4500 bar rels of oil there a year, at a saving- of f ISO annually. "The Southern Paclflo has reduced its rate on fuel oil between Portland and Salem from 10 cents per 100 pounds to I cents. This reduced rate makes a ma terial difference In the cost here on any quantity. It la the hope of the Board to also start using oil at the State Capi tol building when we find It feasible and convenient- " BALLOON FLIGHT IS Oil HONEYWELL A.VD TOLAXD SAIL FOR CAXADA, FROM TEXAS. Missouri Men Are After Lahm Cup . for Long Distance Voyage In Gas Bag Conveyance. SAX ANTONIO, Tex., April 10. IL B. IToneywell and J. W. Toland. of St. Louts, Mo., started at t:JS o'clock to night In Honeywell's balloon In an ef fort to win the Lahm cup for long -distance, flights. The balloon rose gracefully and floated off to the west, disappearing In a few minutes. The aeronauts expected to strike a northeasterly air current. Lieutenant Honeywell hopes to land somewhere m Canada. He thinks the trip will he made in 48 hours. Honeywell la a Lieutenant In the Stg nay Corps of the Missouri National Guard. -He Is a balloonist of long. ex perience, having .been a pilot on several previous long-distance flights. Honeywell's attempt U break the world's record Is the third one within 11 months, which had Its start In San Antonio. Clifford Harmon started from her in the Spring of 1910. He landed In Arkansas In a storm. William Asa man, of St. -Louis, started from her last February In the balloon Sofia and landed n Missouri. SWINDLER GETS DIAMOND Spokane Realty Man's Wife Gives i Valuable Gem to 'Investor." SPOKANE, Wash, April 10. (Spe cial.) Representing; himself to be the scion of a wealthy family In tha East and saying that ha was possessed of f 100.000 to Invest In Washington lands, Roy M. Forgat for whom the police s,r now scouring the city, obtained a $500 diamond pin from Mrs. F. F.-Fox. of the Valla moat Apartments, this morning. ' He represented himself to F. F. Fox, real estate dealer and land promoter, as a prospective tnveetor willing to purchase a large slice of Kennewlck landa. Fox told what a in diamond he had given his wife.. Fox took Forgat to Kennewlck to Invest his fortune In fruit lands. Short ly after they reached Kennewlck For gat left for Spokane and today went to the Fdx apartments, where he confided to Mrs. Fox that her husband had sent him front Kennewlck to get the dia mond. ' Mrs. Fox asked only a few questions and then turned the stone over to For gat. A warrant was issued for For gat. INDIANS LOSE TIDE LAND Claim of Pnyallnps to Tacoma -Tract - Thrown . Out of Court. WASHINGTON. D. C April 10. (Spe cial.) The United States Supreme Court dismissed for want of Jurisdic tion the suit of George Bird and other Puyallup Indiana to seour title to valuable tide lands In Tacoma harbor. Immediately adjoining the' Puyallup Indian Reservation. Thiaesult wss Instituted at the sug gestion of Charles Bedford, of Tacoma. three years ago and later taken up by B. 8." Oronscup., The lower court de cided adversely to the claim ef the Indians, and that action is In effect affirmed, 1 20 SINK WITH SHIP Squall Hits Little Canadian Steamer, Shifting Cargo. MOTHER AND BABE DROWN Many on Shore, Powerless to Aid, See Ship's Company Clinging- to Decks md Wooden Vessel Sinks . Off Vancouver Island. (Continued From Flrnt Psg. drowned steward, was soon adrift on a door and was rescued by.Jndiane. At Coal Island the sea cast up the body of Miss Isabel Fenwlck. She had no life preserver jwd bad tried to reach shore on a mattress, to which her dead hand still clung. Harry S. Moss, a passenger, lay on the wreck Of the house with Mate Isblster, John BennetA, and an unknown passenger, drifting, about two hours and a half. The sea washed the broken deckhouse against Mary Island and Mate 'Isblster jumped ashore with a rope and pulled Bennett and Moss ashore. They threw the rope to the other fellow who was clinging, dased and almost unconscious to a davit fast to the wreckage. The rope whirled around bis neck but he paid no atten tion. He still clung to the davit Then a breaker came, turned the deck over and he was not seen again. Captain Tells Story. Captain Sears gave a complete ac count of the disaster. , "We left the wharf at t A. M, soon after the passengers were transferred from 'the train I think there were 15 of them, said Captain Sears. "There was a heavy load of freight Some hay was on the boat deck. Rounding a reef near Shell Island, we had to bring the wind oar the beam. . The steamer listed to port It must have been 10 or 46 minutes after we left the wharf and the cargo shifted. X was In the pilothouse and I felt the lurch. I told the mate to take the deckhands below and trim the cargo and I kept the vessel before the wind. "The purser came up and told me the steamer was filling.. I put the helm hard over, but the wind kept the ves sel on her port side and she never re covered. She was listed so much that sha would not steer. Then the upper house broke away, with the passengers In It ? House Breaks Away. , i I Jumped out of the pilothouse and caught up a pole that I use as a boat hook. Some passengers drifted from the wrecked house. I reached for some of the women drifting away and NEW BILLS AT THEATERS MARTS DRKSSLER la TiUle's Nightmare" Hook and Lyrics br Kdsar Smith Mmae by A. Baldwin Sloans Pre sented at the Hellig Theater. CAST. Tlllle Blobbs Miss Marie Dressier Maud Blobbs Phyllis Gordon Peroxla 6now. ........ .Anfle Norton Harvey Tinker. ... Harry Macdonouch elm pettlncll. .' Horace. Newman Rtntley Brass. .. .Charles H. Bowers Harry Frost ...George Gorman THAT exuberant and effervescent comedienne, Marie Dressier, who Is" blessed beyond measure with per sonality and distinct humor, came to the Helllg last evening In "TilUe's Nightmare," undoubtedly the most all round entertaining show tt a season full of musical plays. .' - Just as its title would. Indicate, it Is a dream extravaganza In throe rousing whoops and a hurrah, with a prologue and an epilogue tacked fore and aft In a manner similar to the -"high brow" and consequently 'less - Interesting drama. In every essential It Is up to the smart standard of the usual Lew Fields production, and mora than en tertained an audience of critical first nighters. Miss Dressier, as Tlllie Blobbs. a boarding-bouse drudge, is simply Im mense, and you can play that word both ways, too. She plasters the bur lesque on thickly and evokes a steady round of shrieks front her audience. When she sang her famous ditty about Heaven protecting the "wor-r-r-klng glrreV' playing her own accompani ment with much! plano-elocutlon at a tln-panny instrument, the house dis solved into plain, old-fashioned hys teria. When "Tlllle" has -a pleasant siege of sea-slcknesa the spectators as one person wish they had come dinner less to the theater, so vividly faithful Is the plump comedienne's woe. and when she caricatures Tetraxxlnl in grand opera, and finishes with a bur lesque of the "artistic dance." Its a riot pure and simple. Th show itself, of which Miss Dress ier la per cent Is built up out of the nightmare of Miss Blobbs. whose aesthetio soul Is discontented with the doubtful gaycties of life In a small town boarding-house. She yearns largely for that much-discussed thing the "unattainable." and after a wild orgls of dissipation on pickles, she falls asleep and has a gorgeous dream. Of course,, she gets lost in New York with the customary, sidewalk comedy, only that this differs In being surprisingly new and fresh. Then she meets ber country swain, now transformed as the owner of a fine big department store, and gets married In the shop In regu lation style, under a huge' floral bell, and scatters several millions In small change about among the clerks. Tlllle and her husband go yachting, and to Parts, where she plunges in gay life and takes a Jaunt, on aa airship. The avia tor loses control of hi motor, drifts to the North Pole, and then lightens ship by heaving the acutely plump lady overboard. She wakes up back In her old boarding-house, and la very happy to be there. In Itself the play is funny. The lines of the concoction are ljy Edgar Smith, and the tunes real tunes too. are by A. Baldwin Sloan. Tha company Is nu merous, decidedly, and the chorus girls, not over-blessed with beauty, make up for this deficiency with ability to dance. A quartet of wee maids have several terplschorean specialties that deserved ly win much applause, and many en cores: There Is some good and deliberate acting by the principals; every body works hard, and the entire production Is stamped with dash, exhilaration and go. Tlllle will remain at the Hellig; all week with th regular matinees on Wednesday and Saturday. got- three, of them. There wer four others that I saw and I pulled two of them back to the wreck, "W floated a boat off and six men and several women got Into It I told the people it would be better to stay with the wrecked house, as It would float but those who wished could, get Into the . boat - The boat swamped when lt.gol about half way from the wreck to land. " "The other boat whiqh had been un der water, came up about 20 feet away and I got a place of wreckage and slid over to It I got It alongside the wreck, and, with the chief engineer and an Indian deckjiand, I started for shore. 'The mate, the steward, fireman- and some passengers were still on the wreck. We did not know our plight had been seen and I was anxious to get ashore to get help. We paddled the boat We landed on Armstrong Point We saw the occupants of th swamped boat but could not reach them." FOREST FACTS GIVEN PREVKXTICTX OF FOREST FIRES IS ELLIOTTS AIM. State Official to Distribute Litera ture Calling Attention to Jfeed of Precautions. SALEM, Or., April 10. (Special.) As an additional induqfcment to the people of the state in taking steps toward the prevention- of forest fires. State For ester Elliott has prepared some facts concerning Oregon forests which will be distrubuted in connection with the digest of the new forestry law. He says: '"Oregon has one-fifth of the stand ing timber of the United States, or about 600,000,000,000 feet. "This Umber is worth, on the stump not less than 1600,000,000 and if manu factured will bring In over 16,000,000,000 of outside money. It will, either be manufactured or destroyed by fire. "Oregon's forests already distribute more wealth in the state than apples, fish, wool and wheat combined. Cutting has hardly begun. Of the revenue re ceived from our lumber 80(,per cent goes for labor and supplies. ' "Last year approximately 1,750,000, 000 feet of timber was killed by fire, representing a value of not less than (2,000,000 In stumpage alone. Over 1, 000,000,000 feet of the timber killed was on private landa outside National for ests. Slx human lives were lost In this state- last Summer through forest fires, the homes of many settlers burned and livestock on the range destroyed. "Timber owners are spending each year for fire protection about 130,000., the Federal Government spends for pa-' trol $150,000, and under this law the state has at Its command for the pro tection of its forests, $60,000 for the next two years. - "Oregon's timbered; area Is approxi mately 25,000,000 acres. Of this amount one-half is patrolled by the Federal Government the rest must be looked after by the state and the private owner." . Y. M. C. A. Board Will Meet. The retrular monthly meeting of the -. . . "SHAM."- A Play la Three Acts br Geraldlae Bonner and Elmer B. Harris. CAST. Katherlne Van Riper. Florence Roberts Clementina, Vlckeers. .Brenda Fowler MrsFordyee Brown. Lillian Andrews MrsMerington Ruth Lechler Maud Bock....'... Fay Balnter Roeey Mildred Dlibrow Tom Jaffrey .....Thurlow Bergen Jeremiah Buck Theodore Roberts J. Montague Buck. .. i. ..Dean Bruce Jacques d'Eauvllle. Frank tMnlthoras A. waiter .N.Walter Renfort THE third wee of the Florence Roberts-Theodore Roberts-Thurlow Bergen engagement at the Baker opened last night .with a revival of "Sham," that keen satire, shot through generously with shafts of straight com edy, which Miss Roberts brought to Portland three seasons ago. The stock prt-duction Is of superior quality and several Insistent curtain calls follow ing the second act gave evidence of the way the well-filled house liked it While the rather frothy situations of "Sham" make. little demand upon Miss Roberts' One gift for emotional acting, the role of Katherlne Von Riper,, the thoughtlessly extravagant product of appearance-worshipping New York so ciety, gives her an opportunity for ac ceptable bits of comedy and suggests the sort of Florence Roberts that might have developed had not her early bent been toward the emotional schooL The Florence Roberts art is characteristic In the second act where Katherlne is stung to introspection and self-disgust by the unconsciously ' keen home thrusts of her lover, Tom Jaffrey, which Is handled very effectively by Thurlowv Bergen. Miss Roberts and Thurlow Bergen are all that the mat inee maiden could wish in the fervent good-bye scene just before the last curtain. ' An excellent piece of difficult work Is the Interpretation by Dan Bruce of the role of Montague Buck, the young scion of Idaho millions who Is cutting his teeth and being preyed upon by the impoverished, blue-blooded "grafters" of both sexes in aristocratic New York society. " This is a role that could very easily be overdone, but la given Just the right touch by Bruce. The role of -Jeremiah Buck, the heard-headed man qf Idaho millions, falls- to Theodore Roberts, who gives .a j very realistic portrayal of the part - v A pleasing glimpse of the always dainty and artistic Fay Baltner Is per mitted In the brief appearaac of the Ingenue as Maud Buck, hostess of the grand ball that was intended to show New York tht the Bucks were not "such tendorfeet after alL" This role and several others are cut and one or two roles are eliminated altogether from the former production, but the loss Is not appreciable. Lillian Andrews and Ruth Lechler axe placed as the two sham-soaked aunts, and to Brenda Fowler falls the role of. the devoted cousin of Katherlne, "Clem" Vlckeers. Mildred Dlsbrow handles cleverly the slangy lines of Rosey and Frank Deni thorne and. Walter Renfort Interpret two minor roles acceptably. "Sham" contains many clever lines, has an engaging. If rather obvious plot and its story is told In three acts that are entertaining throughout The story of how the hardened devotee of "sham" society finds an awekening of con science and pride through love holds the Interest to the quite -satisfactory finish, even though somewhat lacking in action, and the lesson taught by the satire Is a wholesome one. "Sham" will be on the Baker stag throughout the week,,with Wednesday and Saturday matinees. ' . OPEN SHOPS United Metal Trades Association Portland Armstrong Mfg. Co. Bell, Wildman & Co. -Columbia Steel Company. ' Harper Brass Works. Harris Ice Machine Co. Helser A Unden Mach. Wks. Hesse-Martin Iron Works. . Hicks. Burt HIppely, B. Independent Foundry Company. Multnomah Iron Works. Northwest Steel Company. Oregon Brass Works. Oregon Foundry Company. Pacific Iron Works. Phoenix Iron Works. Portland Boiler Works. Portland Iron Works. Portland Pattern Works. Portland Tool Works. Portland Wire & Iron Works.' -Prehn, Wm. Smith & Watson Iron Works. Willamette Iron & Steel Works. Willamette & Col. River Towing Co. Wood. John, Iron Works. National Iron & Foundry Co. B. Trenkman & Co. i Portland Elevator Company. Astoria Iron Works, Astoria, Oregon. Eureka Foundry Co., Eureka, Cal. Patronize Home Industry PACIFIC IRON WORKi STRUCTURAL STEEL, - ARCHITECTURAL IRON. Immediate Delivery. Portland, Or. board of directors and committee of management of the Portland Young Men's Christian "Association will be held at 6:15 o'clock tonight in the V. M. C. A. auditorium. Those attending will have dinner together, after which reports will be read and the affairs of the Institution discussed. . i MiSSIONS 'wiLLrrBirTOPIC Scml-Annual Jleetlng of Columbia 'River Branch Is Today. The semi-annual meeting of the Columbia River Branch Woman's For eign Missionary Society of the Metho dist Episcopal Church will be held at Taylor-street Chufrch today, beginning at 9:30 A. M. Tho branch covers the territory occupied by Montana, Idaho, Washington and Oregon. The officers of the society are: Presi dent ,Mrs. H. D. Kimball, Salem; cor responding secretary, Mrs. A. N. Fisher. Portland: associate secretary, Mrs. Url Seeley. -Seattle: recording - secretary, Mrs. W. H. Sayler. Portland: treasurer. Miss Nettle M. Whitney, Tacoma; su perintendent of young people's work, Mrs. J D. McLean, Spokane; superin tendent of children's work, Mrs. Stella H. Burt Manor, Wash.; superintendent of department of supplies, Mrs. L. C Dickey, Portland. Semi-annual reports of all of these officers will be pre sented. An- address by Mrs. 8. W. Eddy, formerly a missionary In India, will be a feature of the ai-noon ses ton. -0tr.' " 9mK Midnight In The Osarks and yet sleepless Hiram Scranton, of Clay City, III., coughed and coughed. He was In the mountains on the advice of five doctors, who said he had consump tion, but found no help in the climate, and started home. Hearing of Dr. King's New Discovery, he began to use It "I believe it' saved my life," he writes, "for it made a new man of me, so that I can now do good work' again." For all lung" diseases, coughs, colds, la grippe, asthma, croups whooping cough, hay fever, hemorrhages, hoarseness or quinsy, it's the best known remedy. Price 60c and J1.&0. Trial botle free. Guaranteed by til druggists. Setter- ivour Tie Gordon i5at $3 ; The Triple Ring $4.00 A. B. Steinbach & Co.. AiJents! How to Stop Drinking We are in earnest when we ask you to try ORRINE at -our expense. We Tn-ill give your money back, if after a trial vou fall to get results from ORRINE. This la a very generous of fer. It gives the wives and mothers of those who drink to excess an op portunity to try the ORRINE Treat ment It also shows our confidence in the meriU of ORRINE. ORRINE is recognized as the best and most suc cessful remedy the world has ever known for Drunkenness or the so called Liquor Habit. It is a very sim ple treatment can be given in the home without publicity or loss of time frorabuslnees, and at a small price. ORRINE is prepared in two forms. No. 1, secret treatment a powder, abso lutely tasteless and odorless, given secrJtlv In food or drink. ORRINE No. 2, in pill form, is for those who desire to take voluntary treatment ORRINE costs only $1.00 a box. - Write for Free ORRINE Booklet (mailed In plain sealed envelope) to ORRINE CO- Orrlne Building. Washington, D. C. ORRINE Is recommended and is for sale in this city by bkidmore Drug Co, 1H Third St, and 372-874 Morrison St