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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (May 8, 1913)
THE MORXiyG OREGONIAy, THURSDAY- 3IAY 3, 1913. - Cleanliness Is Akin to Wholesomeness and a Visit to This Kitchen Adds Zest to the Appetite Every day sees thousands of Portland men and women in business and professional walks of life, and shoppers in scores that partake of "down-town" luncheon at noontime. Did you ever stop to consider the condi-' tions under which foods are pre pared in the restaurants you have visited t Of course, you de sire the same cleanliness and re freshing appearance as you have in your own home. 'Tis worthy of considerable thought and in vestigation for your health's sake, as just where to dine when down town. One of the most commendable, spotlessly clean and most scru pulously kept kitchens in the city is that of Tho Meier & Frank Store's Seventy Floor Restaurant. A trip of inspec tion reveals to you a most invit ing place of preparation for foods. Mr. A. E. Tabor, chef in charge, and his assistant youll find immaculately attired in white, showing the individual pride that each one takes in the appearance of this kitchen. Floors are spotlessly clean; ven tilation is of the best. And 'tis plain to anyone that every mod ern convenience has been in stalled in this immense kitchen. The mamm6th four-oven range is required to accomplish the necessary cooking for The Meier & Frank Store's Restaurant more favorably known as the "Tea Room." We are informed that this monster range cooks with gas exclusively, and that much of the cleanliness of the kitchen is due to the fact that gas is used as a fuel. The re frigerating system was next vis ited, and 'tis small wonder at he popularity of The Meier & Frank Store's Restaurant, when such care is taken to keep pro visions and "green stuffs" so fresh and cool. The most interesting depart ment is the bakery, where light J y Km 1 I- s v:. -- s ; r ' . ; i i I - -- x-- - - - - M- I ft ' - ::s: ; --fT &jJi V'HI j v- I and wholesome bread, biscuits, cakes and French pastries' are made, fresh, daily. Large power mixing vats reduce the la bor to a minimum and perform the kneading of dough to perfec tion. In fact, the entire culi nary department of The Meier & Frank Store's Restaurant bears evidence of healthful thought in the preparation of edibles for the patrons. The Restaurant proper, or Tea Room, is situated on the Seventh "Floor, and has a won derfully . inviting appearance, even at a casual glance. The spacious lobby, where friends and business associates gather before and after their meal, has every appearance of restfulness. And the refreshing air, seven floors above the noise and hub bub of the streets. And from the large windows you are af forded a panoramic view of the city parks, hills and mountains. Luncheon is served from 11 to 2:30; Afternoon Tea from 2:30 to 5. During the Luncheon hour delightful music is rendered by Meier & Frank's Special Or chestra. And this Restaurant is famed for the Saturday night Table d'Hote Dinners. Remarking again, at the ter mination of our tour of inspec tion, our wonderment at the cleanliness and wholesome air in the culinary section, where cook ing on such an extensive scale is carried on, Mr. Tabor empha sized strongly to us that the rea son for lack of a dark, smoky ceiling, and one of the principal factors in making possible such cleanliness, 'was the use of gas in cooking. 'Twould assuredly be worth a visit to The Meier & Frank Store's Restaurant and culinary department to see the up-to-date methods employed in the preparation of foods. I - v A. E. TABOR, Cbef tbe Meier A Frank Store's Reatanrant. in PTiinniTP minv U DIUULI1I0 DUGI Klamath Falls Boy Lone Nomi nee to Head Organization. EDITORSHIP RACE WARM Portland and Sntherlin Men Out for Place on Oregon Emerald Elec tion Will Be Held In Week Following Nominations. UNIVERSITY OP OREGOX Eugene, May 7. SpeclaL) Nominations for the annual student body elections to be held in one week were made at tbe regular student body meeting today. Vernon T. ilotschenbacher, of Klam ath Falls, was the-only nominee for the student body presidency. The surprise of the day was sprung in the race for the editorship of the Oregon Emerald. Three men were nom inated, one. Henry Fowler, of Port land, being an avowed candidate, and tbe other two. Donald Rice, of Port land, and Fendel Waite, of Butherlin, being dark horses. The other nom inations were as follows: Vice-president of the student body. Delbert Stanard. of Portland, and El liot Roberts, of The Dalles: secretary of the student body. Ellice Shearer, of Portland: Ruth Beach, of Portland: Maud Mastlck. of Portland, and Norma Dobis. of Eugene: executive commit tee (two places), Wallace Caufleld. of Oregon City; Willard Shaver, of Port land: Everett Stuller. of Baker, and Dalzel King, of Myrtle Point; athletic council (three places).- Chester Hug gins, of Hood River; Carl Fenton. of Dallas; Robert Bradshaw, of The Dalles: Elmer Hall, of Baker, and Jo feph Jones, of Portland; manager of tho Emerald. Sam Michael, of Baker. TROUTDALE CLUB GROWS Portland Commission Merchant Buying Old-Crop Potatoes. TROfTDALE. Or.. May 7. (Special.) At the last meeting of the Trout dale Commercial Club several new members were enrolled. 8. A. Arata and C. E. Cree, of Falrvlew, were present and made short talks. A wedding of Troutdale people took place In Portland Tuesday, George Lar son and Miss Grace Mickey, of this place being married. They have made their home at Celilo, Or., where Mr. Larson Is engaged in the Ashing busi ness. A commission merchant from Portland has been buying tip the pota toes east of the Sandy River paying SS cents a hundredweight for the old crop. $10,000 LIBRARY PLANNED Goldendale Arranging to Buy Site for Carnegie Gift. GOLDENDALE, Wash,, May 7. Spe cial.) Goldendale Is to have a Car negie Library to cost approximately 10.000 and. though small, will be artistic, and complete in its arrange ipents. The lot will bs purchased through popular subscription. The women of Goldendale Board se cured from the large flouring mill at Goldendale the free gift of all the wheat-eats they could sell, and a sale was conducted at one of the leading stores by enthusiasts volunteer saleswomen. MOSCOW OFFICIALS SWORN Idaho Town Expects to Spend $200, 000 on Improvements. MOSCOW, Idaho. May 7. (Special.) The new officials of this city who were chosen April 1, were sworn into office last night. W. S. Robblns and Grant Robblns, respectively, as Chief and nlpht officer, with Mat Shelden, who remains on the force, were ap pointed by Mayor Clarke and immedi ately confirmed by the new city coun cil. The other appointees were George G. Pickett, city attorney, succeeding himself; Robert Odenberg, water com missioner, also succeeding himself; Edward Gates, sexton of the cemetery and Albert Dugless, street commis sioner. W. H. Connors was re-elected President of the Council. The members of the new Council are: D. N. Martin, John E. Hall. First Ward; Ray Carter, W. H. Connors, Second Ward; Francis Jenkins, Chas. Oberg, Third Ward. The present city improvements. amounting in the aggregate to about 1300,000, consisting of the relaying or new water mains in the paving dis trict, the construction of a storm sewer system and the laying of 70.000 yards of paving, all of which Is now in progress, will be the important -fea ture and business of the new city officials. Centralia Workmen Strike. CHEHALIS. Wash., May 7. (Special.) Eighteen Centralia men who were employed on the hard-surface road work east of this city, struck Monday for an increase in wages from 12.50 a day. They demanded (2.75 a day, owing to expense of transportation back and forth. The demand was refused and the men quit. Their action had been anticipated. however, and another force of men was at once put to work In the places of the strikers. PLAN OUT "Model License" City to Be Proposed on Monday. PROMINENT CITIZENS BUSY All Corner Saloons Jn Empire City Will Be Abolished by January 1, 1914, It Hayden's Pro posal Becomes Law. SPOKANE, Way 7. (Special.) A new saloon regulation, eliminating corner saloons and limiting the num ber of saloons to each block, calculated to make Spokane a "model license" city, will be introduced Monday in the City Council by Commissioner Hayden. Tho proposition Is " known to be backed by a number of prominent citi zens and tho general plan was ap proved today by Mayor Hindle-y and Commissioner Fassttt In interviews, assuring the passage of the new measure In practically its proposed form. Hayden's proposed saloon regula tions will abolish all corner saloons by January 1, 1914. It will limit the number of saloons to one per block fronting on Sprague, Riverside- and Main avenues, Washing ton to Lincoln streets. It will limit the number of Faloons to two per block fronting on all cross streets In the above district. Outside of tho above districts not more than three saloons per block front shall be allowed. It will be the policy to put the law gradually into effect, beginning Janu ary 1. 1914. It will make saloon hours from 6 A. M. to 12 midnight at once Instead of to 12:30 A. M., as at present. The ordinance will be introduced Monday. Three ity commissioners, a ma jority, already say they favor the gen eral proposition, but want more time before expressing themselves on the details of the new measure. t T.TVT! TWTWRT.Tf? ART! AT HEAT) OP RTJSTNrT.RS OP.RATITZA- TION AT TILLAMOOK i i XEWLY-ELECTED OFFICERS OP COMMERCIAL CUB. ILLAMOOK. Or.. May 7. Fred C. Baker, newly-elected president of the Tillamook Commercial Club, was Instrumental a few years ago in organizing the club and has since then been a member of the execu tive board. He is one of Tillamook County's persistent boosters and has done a large amount of publicity work for a number of years. E. J. Claussen was re-elected secretary, a position to which he has devoted considerable time in helping to make the club a success and distribute literature. Will Spalding, who was chosen as treasurer, has been an active worker of the club and filled several positions on committees with success. The club ha a live executive board, which includes C. E. Trom bley. B. C. Lamb, John Groat, S. M. Kerron, Ira C. Smith, W. G. Dwlght and F. I. Small. "YEGG" SUSPECTS TAKEN Two Held for Grand Jury In Safe Blowing at Springfield. EUGENE. Or., May 7. (Special.) Two of the men suspected of complicity in dynamiting a safe at Springfield last Friday were identified Monday as men who had been hanging around Spring field prior to the robbery, and this with other testimony resulted in their being bound over to the Grand Jury. One of the men was gathered in late Saturday night when the police looking for a man wanted at Salem rounded up float ers. This one man attempted to elude tbe officers as they, neared the jail, but was caught by another officer stationed around the corner. It was found that one of hts fingers had been blown off and another was lacerated. The pres ence of battered and marked coins added to the evidence against him. - The safeblowers left a trail of blood, as if a hand had been injured, and the physician who later dressed this man's bounded hand said the Injured man must have wished to avoid publicity, or he would have had the painful wound dressed sooner. The companion was picked up later on the street, and he, too, had a quantity of the battered silver. CHEHALIS RICH IN TIMBER Total Value Is Conservatively Esti mated at $41,500,000. ABERDEEN', Wash.. May 7. (Spe clal.") There is enough green timber in Chehalis County to pave a street 30 feet wide around the earth. This couid be done with plank four inches thick. This Is shown by the county cruise, which gives a total of 20.732,394, 365 feet of merchantable standing timber and 795.299,746 feet of down merchant able timber. The total value of this timber is con servatively estimated at $41,500,000. ' ' ) SISKIYOU SURVEY STARTS Jackson County Proposes to Build Road of Easy Grades. ASHLAXD. Or.. May 7. (Special.) Yesterday engineers were Instructed by the Jackson County Court to begin sur veys for a new wagon road over the Slskiyous near Ashland to the Califor nia line. The grade of the new rpad, varying from 2 to 6 per cent, will be much less than that of the present toll road. The new road will form a part of the Pacific Highway system. , ' Chehalis to Observe Fourth. CHEHALIS Wash-, May 7. (SpeciaL) Chehalis business men have voted to celebrate the Fourth of July and at a meeting presided over by President Judd of the Citixens" Club a committee was chosen to canvass the situation and make report at another meeting to be held next Monday night. Ashland Commercial Club Elects. ASHLAND. Or., May 7. (Special.) Commercial Club officials elected May 5 are: President. J. W. McCoy; vice president. C. B. Wolf; secretary, W. H. Day; treasurer, F. S. Engle; trustees, R. P. Campbell, F. F. Whittle and Hom- illinga TILLAMOOK GETS FAIRS COUXTV SCHOOLS SHOW PROG RESS IX THEIR WORK. Field Worker Maris, of State Indus trial Fair Project, Talks of Plans Laid for Coast Vicinity. SALEM, Or., May 7. (Special.) "With an energetic, aggressive School Superintendent, a competent corps of teachers, an ambitious bunch of pupils and a co-operating public, the schools of Tillamook County are progressing with rapid strides," said N. C. Maris, field worker for the State Industrial Fair, today. "They are not only interested and doing good work in their textbooks, but they have caught the spirit of the In dustrial propaganda and are ' busy learning to do some of the practical things in life. Superintendent Buel and I passed last week visiting schools through the day, and holding public meetings at night, arousing the children, as well as the parents, and effecting local organiza tions for the conduct of industrial school fairs in different parts of the county. Splendid response was met with every place, and the work taken hold of In a way that -means success for the school fairs and material bene fit to the county. "Fairs will be held at the following places: Tillamook, Beaver, Cloverdale Bay City, Nehalem and perhaps at Ore town. This will bring a fair in easy reach of all the children of the county. "It seems a little bit singular that butter-making should be all but a lost SEE IF YOUR CHILD'S TONGUE IS COATED If Cross, Feverish, Bilious, Give Delicious "Syrup of Figs" to Cleanse Its Little Bowels. Look at the tongue. Mother! If coated. It Is a sure sign that your Utile Insldas, the stomach, liver and 30 feet of bowels are clogged up with putrefying waste matter and need a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When your child is listless, drooping. pale, doesn't sleep soundly or eat neartlly. or Is cross. Irritable, feverish. stomach sour, breath bad: has stomach ache, diarrhoea, sore throat, or is full of cold, give a teaspoonful of Syrup of Figs, and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile will gently move on and out of Its little bowels without nausea, griping or weakness, and you surely will have a wll, happy and smiling child again shortly. With Syrup of Figs you are not drug ging your children, being composed entirely of luscious figs, senna and aro matics it cannot be harmful, besides they dearly love Its delicious taste. Mothers should always keep Syrup of Figs handy. It is the only stomach, liver and bowel cleanser and regulator needed. A little given today will save a sick child tomorrow. Full directions for children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the. package. Ask your druggist for tbe full name. "Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna," prepared by the California Fig Syrup Co. This la the delicious tasting, genu ine old rellabl- Rf us anything els offsred- art in that great and almost exclusive dairy section. There Is more profit the year round in cheese and practic ally all their milk Is marketed at the cheese factories. There are (several of these in the county, and nearly all of them run on the co-operative plan. Their best bottom land pastures will support a cow to the acre with no other feed except a little hay for a short time during the Winter. One man told me his six cows averaged him $120 a head last year. It is needless to say they know nothing about hard times.'' Cattleman Once Rich Dies in Want. TUCSON, Ariz., May 7. Frederick Maish, twice Mayor of Tucson and at one time one of the largest cattle own ers of the state, died In want oday. Po licemen found him in a shack, where he had been unattended for a long time. Malsh lost his fortune when the drouth of a few years ago scorched the ranges and his cattle died of starvation. Hood River Plans Fourtli. HOOD RIVER. Or., May 7. (Special. ) At a meeting of the Merchants Asso ciation here it was decided to hold a pan-valley Fourth of July celebration in the city. Frank A. Cram, Clarence F. Gilbert and D. G. Cruikshank were appointed on a committee to confer with the Commercial Club and to work out details of the event. Four Cigar Factories Burn. . KEY WEST, Fla., May 7. Flames which threatened the lower buslneHS section of the city today destroyed four cigar factories and several smaller buildings, caused a Iosr of $100,000. This Will Soon Be a Familiar Sight In many cities as much as one-tenth of the people move every year. And in every city the percentage is larger than you imagine. Now, if you are moving this year you naturally want to get a happier location than you have had before. That doesn't mean that you necessarily desire to pay a lower rent or gefa smaller house, but it does mean that you desire some compensation for moving. Therefore, the first thing you wish to do is to get iu touch with all of the most desirable places for rent. The old method of doing this was to go around from street to street and from house to house. But in the light of our twentieth century progress, this is a foolish way of doing. It is foolish because your legs cannot travel nearly a3 far as your eyes or your mind. Therefore, the place that is most desirable is likely to be overlooked. On the other hand, if you will just turn to the "For Rent" Ads in The Oregonian you will cover as much ground in five minutes with your eyes as your feet could get over in a week. Practically all of the desirable places for rent are in The Ore gonian now, because people who have houses and apartments and homes for rent use the same up-to-date means for renting them as other people use for finding them. So all you have to do today is to turn to the Want Ads in this paper, look up the columns marked for rent, and check off the places in what to you are desirable neighborhoods. Then, instead of tramping all over this city, you have all of the most desirable places right at your finger ends, and an hour or two spent in visiting these places will show you everything you want to see. Try it with this paper today. Take your pencil, check off the list, and mention, please, the name of The Oregonian when you make your calls for inspection. When you do it in this way, moving loses all of its hardships, and finding a place becomes a pleasant task.