13, 1913.
9
EUGENE RADIATORS
PAY HIGH TRIBUTE
ROSE BATTLE TODAY
VISITORS SEE CITY
PROMINENT BUSINESS MAN, ROSARIAN AND ALL ROUND
"GOOD FELLOW, ' ' WHO IS RTrr OREGONUS VII.
FOUR MEN WHO WILL DARE LIFE IN PARACHUTE JUMP
TODAY,
Young Women to Pelt Occu
pants of Grandstand.
Rosarians Take Guests Around
Town in Motors.
University City Club Makes
Editor of The Oregonian
Honorary Member..
PUBLIC ADMITTED FREE
ALL TAKE PART IN PARADE
THE 3IORMt UKJUtrUiSlAJS- FKlUAJf, J USE
NEWSPAPER CREATES NAME
Active Membership in Order Is Lim
ited to Eugene Commercial Club
and No Others- Have Hereto
fore Been Admitted.
With, appropriate ceremonies the Ra
diators, the excellent drill team from
Eugene, yesterday noon initiated Edsar
B. Piper, editor of The Oregonian, into
their order because The Oregonian
first named Eugene as the city of
radiation. Mr. Piper Is the first hon
orary member" to he chosen.
D. E. Yoran, Mayor of Eugene, is
president of the Ra.dla.tors, uf whom
there are about 50 In the drill team.
Their uniforms are of light gray, their
straw hats are trimmed with red rib
bons and they carry nifty canes, mak
ing a fine appearance. They have been
one of the chief outside attractions dur
ing the Festival and have made a- de
cided hit in Portland.
Mayor Yoran made a speech when the
Radiators called at The Oregonian yes
terday and gave the history of the
organization and told how it came to
be formed. Mr. Piper, when named as
an honorary member, made a fitting
reply, thanking the members for the
honor thus paid him.
Mayor Yoran said:
"October 15, 1912, Eugene celebrated
the coming of the Oregon Electric road
to that city. At that time The Orego
nian, through its editorial columns,
named Eugene the city of Radiation,
the city from which railroads radiate
to all parts of the state and country.
"We believed at 4that time that you
were the first person outside of Eu
gene to recognize the fact that Eugene
was truly a city of radiation. We now
have rudlatlng in and out of Eugene the
Southern Pacific, the Oregon Eastern,
the Oregon Electric and will soon have
completed the Portland, Eugene & East
ern and the Willamette Pacific.
"On completion of these roads we will
truly be the City of Radiation and act
ing on the editorial for which you were
responsible we have organized a march
ing club of 50 members and have named
them 'The Radiators.
" 'The Radiators,' while accepting the
name you have suggested, is truly a
Eugene product. The suits which we
wear were made from cloth manufac
tured at the Eugene Woolen Mills and
made up by a Eugene tailor. Active
membership In "The Radiators' Is limit
ed to members of the Eugene Commer
cial Club, but while we are strictly a
Eugene product we have made provision
for a limited number of honorary mem
bers, and feeling that you are the prime
mover in the organization of 'The Radi
ators,' we come here today to pay our
respects and ask that you accept from
us the first honorary membership in
our organization, that has as Its objects
the building up of Eugene as a city of
radiation and the advancement of the
State of Oregon."
Following is a list of the members of
"The Eugene Radiators." who are at
tending the Rose Festival:
jy. E. Yoran, president; J. S. Magladry,
vl-prealdent ; M. J. Duryea, eecretary; F. N.
McAltster, treasurer: J. M. Williams, cap
tain ; C, E. Roberts. lieutenant; A. Hampton,
J. H. McMorran, C. a. Washburn, W. C.
Yoran. J. A. Murray. D. H. Hayes, U L.
Goodrich, R. Goodrich. R. M. Jennings, W.
M. Green. L. l. pierce, E. D. Paine, J. Rod
man, F. J. Berber. Q. F. Skip worth. P.
Hoppe, W. F. 3Ustrap, E. A. Potter. B. R.
Bryson, W- F. Osburn, C. H. Fisher. S. C.
Dalton, C. S. Williams, W. Polders, W. A.
Kuykendall, G. W. Griffin, F. E. Chambers.
O. H. Skothelm, H. B. Leonard. L. L. Iwls.
A. J. Gllltte. II R. Knight, F. E. Burgess,
H. F. Hollenbeek. G. R. Ltwrenoe, L. R.
Flint. W. T. Gordon, W. l .. Klncaid. W. X.
Hayden, F. L. Chambers, A. T. Fraley.
Honorary member, Edgar B. Piper.
FIREMEN'S WIDOWS HELP
Graves of Dead Comrades Furnish
Flowers for Decoration.
A feature -of the fire department's
division of the rose parade yesterday
was the mass of roses which adorned
the hook and ladder truck. The flow
ers were taken from the rose bushes
covering the graves of dead firemen
!n the firemen's section of Lone Fir
Cemetery. They were sewed on the
truck by some of the widows of fire
men, including Mrs. David Campbell,
widow of the late David Campbell,
chief of the fire department.
The firemen are extremely grateful
to the people who gave them flowers
to assist in their decorating plans.
They did not get enough to adorn their
motor apparatus in Wednesday's pa
rade, and knowing that the new ma
chines would make a better showing
without flowers than the horse-drawn
trucks, they used all they had on the
entries in yesterday's pageant.
PORTLAND BOY IS OFFICER
Redondo B. Sutton, Graduated From
West Point, Will Go to Porto Kico.
News was received today from West
Point of the cradui ti n of Redondo B.
Sutton, son of Mr. a, ml Mrs. James N.
Sutton. 784 Hoyt street, this city. He
becomes a second lieutenant and will
spend bis furlough of several months
in Porto Rico.
During his period at West Point
young Sutton distinguished himself as
an mil -round athlete.
THE FESTIVAL M'lRIT.
BT DEAN COLLINS.
Oh. half the week has sped away
Am fast a 5 time may run.
Packed to tha rim wiu every day
its full share of fun.
Oh. is there now. here in our midst,
A gink who dares to holler,
"Why should men kid the way thou
kldst.
And march and wilt tlieir collar?"
If any be who speak thutwlie,
Go aeiic them by the noses.
And bury them clean to the eyes
In the fair blooms of roaaa;
The werk speeds fast and soon la past
And ever white we may
Let s make more jolly than the last
Our aach succeeding; day.
Hurroo. iaoormy. our Jo'.ly ruests:
Rex Orcfonus Btui
Bancs forth his carnival beheata;
W muit obey hla will!
Kick in. kick In. and shout and grin.
While tha swift moments whut.
That from aach moment we may win
All of th fun there la.
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DORR E.
DORR E. KEASEY 16
Oregonus Reveals Identity at
Multnomah Hotel Ball.
PERIOD OF SILENCE ENDED
Prominent Real Estate Dealer Has
Been Head and Heart of Boy
Mayor Feature and Prom
i ne nt Kosaria n .
After having1 smiled upon his subjects
and encouraged the spirit of Festival In
the city from the moment of his sailing
into the city out of J.he realm of mystery
on the Willamette somewhere between
Portland and Fairyland, Rex Oregonus,
monarch of the Realm of the Rose, un
masked himself and stood before his
subjects in his real personality for the
first time at the ball given In his honor
at the Multnomah Hotel last night by
the Royal Rosarlans. Behind the dis
guising- make-up in which he had played
the part of king all week was Dorr E.
Keasey, one of the leading realty men
of the city and prominent In business
and social organizations of the city.
Rex Oregonus from the time of his
coming was necessarily a silent king.
No edicts were issued by word of mouth
and only by signs and by his benign
smile did he Md his subjects carry on
the revelry of the Festival. Thus for
four days was Rex Oregonus a king of
mystery, and right royally did he reign.
Mr. Keasty'a selection as the suc
cessor to Fred A. Kribs, who ruled as
Rex Oregonus in the Rose Festival of
1912, came to him as a fitting recogni
tion of the active services he has ren
dered and the enthusiastic support he
has always given the Rose Festival.
Mr. Keasey has been the head and
heart of the Boy Mayor feature which
has annually been conducted in connec
tion with the Festival. He has con
tributed largely both financially and
from his personal efforts to the support
of the great annual entertainment
which Portland offers to the world.
As a member of the Royal Rosarlans,
he was one of the active workers in its
enterprises to advance the Festival and
was one of the leaders in the excursion
of the Royal Rosarlans into California
last January, which has resulted in the
large delegations from Oakland and
Pasadena, which in returning the visit
of the Royal Rosarlans have added
much to the festivities of the week.
Mr. Keasey is a member of the Port
land Commercial Club. He is an active
member, and was one of the officials of
the Realty Board. He is also connected
with many other business and social
organizations of the city. He has lived
in Portland for many years and his
whole business career has been devel
oped in this city.
The kings of the Rose Festivals of
the preceding years, to whose roll of
honor the name of Mr. Keasey was
added last night, were: Harry CL Mc
Allister, 190&; Dr. Emmet Drake, 1909;
RADIATORS, HERE TO BOOST THEIR HOME CITY, INITIATE EDGAR B. PIPER INTO ORDER AS FIRST HONORARY MEMBER.
ATTIRE.
KEASEV.
Owen Summers, 1910; W. C. Bristol,
1911, and Fred A. Kribs, 1912. There
was no king in 1906, the first year of
the festival.
Snapshot Interviews
w
E WILL take back a story from
Portland that will Insure any
thing Portland wants in the city if
Portland ever comes to Oakland." The
speaker was M. M. Barnett, editor of
the Oakland Review, a weekly society
paper. He said that when it was first
proposed to bring a bunch of Oakland
boosters to the Koae Festival that the
friends of those who proposed to go
said they were foolish, and that it
would be impossible to make a credit
able showing, etc. "We are glad we
came," said Mr. Barnett, "and when
Portland comes to Oakland, we will re
taliate by trying to give you as good a
time as you 'have given us. What do
you think of our schoolboy band?"
"Portland has added another mile
high to her reputation for knowing how
to entertain a crowd of live ones," said
James H. McCullough, manager of the
New Washington Hotel at Seattle.
"However, we will make a try for the
altitude record next month " he added,
"Are you coming to the Potlatch?"
"The Rose Festival is one of the finest
expressions of the spirit of hospitality
that I have ever seen," said Henry
Erben, one of the Seattle Tillikums.
"It has done its share to unite the com
munities of the Pacific Coast in a com
mon bond of friendship and sympathy."
"The finest thing we have ever seen
in the way of a spectacle, as It is the
finest we have ever experienced as an
entertainment," is the verdict of James
A. Plnney, owner of the Pinney Theater
at Boise, who came to Portland with
Mrs. Pinney for the Festival and the
meeting of tho Pioneers' Association
next week. Mr. Pinney was Mayor of
Boise for several years, and is an Oregon-California
pioneer. He came to
California in 1850, and to Oregon In '62.
He fought as a volunteer against the
Rogue River Indians in '53, 64 and '55,
and was at Jacksonville when James Ish
discovered the famous "Gold Hill
pocket," from which a quarter of a
million dollars was taken In '59. In the
Spring of 62 he packed wheat from the
Willamette Valley to seed his place
near Jacksonville. He went to Idaho
in the '60s.
Chief Justice McBride. of the State
Supreme Court, says that the electrical
parade was the finest spectacular effort
ever achieved by a Rose Festival man
agement, "It was simply wonderful,"
he said, "and while It was seen by per
haps the biggest crowd that has ever
attended a Rose Festival, it is too bad
that those magnificent floats should go
out of commission, having been seen
but once."
THE LESSON OF THE ROSE.
BT REX LAMP MAN.
Life Is not vain. The rose that blows
Sequestered and unseen,
1'pon the wind its perfume throws
Perhaps 'twill steal between
Some lattice where a sick one lies.
And bring- back memories of blue skies.
Bright brooks and fields of green.
Life is not vain. The rose will fade,
And die, and turn to mold.
But from the dust where It decayed
New roses will unfold.
As full and fair as ever grew.
Touched by kind winds as ever blew,
With fragrance yet untold.
UNIFORMED DRILL TEAM FROM EUG-ENE
Gaily Decorated Floats to Pass In
Review Before Federal Building,
Where Masses of Buds and
Petals Will Be Hurled.
ROSE FESTIVAL. PROGRAMME
FOR TODAY.
1 to 5 P. M. Reception on
cruiser St. Louis.
2 P. Mi Shower of Roses
and Battle of Flowers. A train of
10 cars loaded with roses and
pretty girls from the Peninsula
will strew roses upon the streets
until there Is a carpet of fragrant
blooms to greet you everywhere.
As the train passes the review
stand thousands of spectators
win engage the passengers in a
"War of Roses.
Route of Roue Train and Rose
Shower Train leaves the Pied
mont barns at 1:30, proceeds over
Killingsworth to Williams ave
nue, to the Steel bridge, to Third,
to MorriBon, to Thlrteeoth. , to
Washington, to Third, to Yamhill,
to Morrison bridge, to Grand ave
nue, to Holladay avenue, to Union
avenue, to Killingsworth avenue
and to the Piedmont barns.
2 P. M. Aviation meet at the
Country Club track. Royal Oaks
to plant oak tree In park near
Salmon street.
2:30 P. M. Swimming meet
from East Side, south of Haw
thorne bridge.
8 P. M. Band concerts.
8:30 P. M. Pyrotechnic display
at the Oaks Amusement Park and
Council Crest.
9 P. M. Rex Oregonus and his
Court will visit Oaks Amusement
Park for grand pyrotechnical dls
play In their honor.
A battle of roses between persons
in the grandstand in front of the Fed
eral building on Morrison street and
scores of young women passing before
them on board half a cozen gaily-decorated
floats will be the principal Fes
tival function today.
This exciting event is scheduled to
begin at 2 o'clock. The floats will
come from North Portland, where the
roses and the fair "warriors" will be
supplied. It will pass through the
principal business streets and by the
several grandstands.
The public will be admitted free to
the stand in front of the Federal build
ing, but It is urged that everyone who
enters be supplied with an armful of
roses, so that the girls in the cars may
be pelted in return for the floral bom
bardment administered by them.
Roses Belnsr Gathered.
J. H. Nolta, manager of the Penin
sula rose train, desires that all roses
and rose petals be sent to 112 Killings
worth avenue this morning as early as
possible. He desires that the roses
and petals be sent in packages by
streetcar. They will be dropped off at
the carbarns. Manager Nolta an
nounced the following programme for
the rose train:
Bandcar, bearing Women's Band of 30
pieces.
Blizzard-car, with 24 eninsula young
women, from which rose petals will be
blown from a funnel.
Piedmont and Woodlawn Artisans
cars.
St. Johns Commercial Club car.
Sellwood car. s.
Women's Auxiliary of the North
Portland Commercial Club.
Peninsula playground float.
Mr. Nolta announced that the rose
train will leave the carbarns at 1:30
and will reach the grandstand In front
of the Postof f ice at 2 o'clock, where
the battle of roses will be held.
Parks to Be Portrayed.
One of the Important features of the
rose train will be the float represent
ing in miniature playgrounds of Penin
sula Park. Miss Ryan, who haB charge
of Peninsula Park, Is directing the
decoration of the car, which will rep
resent to the public the athletic activ
ities of the playgrounds of the park,
and also of all the Portland play
grounds. The car will be decorated
with a great profusion of roses. There
will be swings and ropes of roses.
chutes and other apparatus, and thereT
will be children on the car using the
apparatus. It will be typical of the
playgrounds and the first float of the
sort shown in Portland.
Numerous other events will serve to
hold the attention of Festival visitors.
Athletics and sports of various kinds
are on the programme.
Fireworks at the Oaks tonight ought
to attract a big crowd. The success of
the entertainment there Monday has
been heralded through the city with
the result that a crowd larger even
than that of Monday night likely will
be there tonight.
Man Passes Worthless Checks.
ROSEBURG, Or., June 12. (Special.
Accused of passing a worthless check
on the Jewell Hardware Company, of
Grants Pass, R. A. Miller was arrested
here tonight and is being held pending
the arrival of the Grants Pass officers.
Miller confessed to the Grants Pass of
fense following his arrest here on a
charge of attempting to pass checks
on a local merchant.
PHOTOGRAPHED YESTERDAY IN
LEFT TO RIGHT RALPH CARHART. DALE IvIUD, EDWARD VJf
GBR (PILOT AND OWNER OK BALLOON), PRESTOX CROSBY,
THOMAS M'CLAIN.
4 TO RAGE IN DROP
Quartet to Make Parachute
Leaps at Same Time.
START IS 2000 FEET HIGH
Daring Leapers, Under Direction of
Balloon Pilot linger, Are to
Make Ascent on East Side
and Jump at 12:30 Today.
Four entrants in a 2000-foot down
ward dash will risk life and limb for
mere glory at 12:30 o'clock this after
noon, the start to too made from Ed
ward Ungar'a balloon. Parachutes are
to be the vehicles, and two of the
Jumpers are old-timers so seasoned at
the game, in fact, that they are keen
rivals.
There are to be no prizes, Thomas
McClain and- Ralph Carhart merely
seeking to establish that each is a
better Jumper than the other. The
others who will make the race are
Preston Crosby and Dale Kidd, not so
old at the game, but still ambitious to
come as near as possible to the exploits
of the old-timers. Mr. Unger will go
up in the, basket as pilot.
Nothing like this race has ever been
put on anywhere in the world, accord
ing to Mr. Unger. He says he has par
ticipated in an event where three par
achutes were launched from the same
balloon, but never four. The ascent
will be made from East Taylor and
East Seventh streets and when the
bag has reached the end of the 2000-
foot cable, the dangling parachutes will
be cut'oose and the race will be fairly
on. 0
Mr. Unger makes the weather a con
tingency. If the wind is blowing hard
er than ten miles an hour, he will not
permit the race. Anything less than
that, however, will not interfere se
riously with the conduct of the um
brellas. Crosby has made about five para
chute Jumps in the brief period of his
aeronautical experience. It is said he
made his first Jump on a 50-cent bet
at Bellingham, Wash., and liked the
sport so much that he has Jumped
whenever he got the chance.
McClain has a "clown" parachute,
which wobbles from side to side all
the way down and is supposed to send
cold thrills along every spine.
When the ascent is made, the Jump
ers will be standing erect in their
racers, which will be attached to the
balloon in the usual way. Then, as the
cable tightens when the slack is taken
up, Unger will give the signal and
every one of the four will shoot down
ward. What will happen then is en
tirely dependent upon the breeze and
the skill of the Jumper.
Bill Hanley Mistaken for
William J. Bryan
Visitors to Rone Festival Agree
That Portland Women, I.Ike Port
land Rosen, Are Incomparable.
BY ADDISON BENNETT.
ELLO" remarked a California
visitor in the hotel lobby, "there
goes Billy Bryan, Secretary of State in
the Wilson Cabinet; I didn't know Billy
was in town. I knew this Rose Fes
FRONT OF THE OREGONIAN BUILDING.
MR. PIPER
tival was some considerable of an oc
casion, but I didn't suppose it would
attract Billy."
You are wrong," spoke un E. G.
Riddell, of Medford, "that is not a
Billy, that is a Bill; big. Jolly, broad-
gauge Bill Hanley of Burns, a native
of our county. Yes, Bill was born in
Jackson County and went
over to
40 years
grow up
Harney County some 35 or
ago to follow the cows and
with the country."
Yes, and he has 'growed
up,'
put
in J. A. Maddox, of Klamath Falls. "In
speaKing of Billies and Bills we are
quite sure our Bill, even though he so
closely resembles Billy Bryan in ap
pearance. Is one or the great his men
of the country. There are many Will
iams and a multitude of Blllies but
only one Bin.
Walter Pierce came sidling up and
suggested that he thought the Rose
Festival of this year was bigger and
better than ever. "Yes," exclaimed S. D
Crowe, of La Grande, "like my home
town, the Rose Festival gets bigger
and oetter with astonishing rapidity."
u. E. Wichersham, of Spokane, here
remarked that he hoped the Portland
people would not forget the interest
taken in the Rose Festival by the Spo
kane people and in return help their
great inland metropolis out. "But they
will," he went on, "for there is a bond
of friendship between the people of
Portland and the people of Spokane
tnat will never be severed.
H. F. Jones, an intimate friend of
Governor West, former Mayor of Red
mond, here suggested that about BOO
people had come down from Crook
County to see the Festival. And we are
getting the worth of our money and
white treatment besides. Here at this
hotel every room is filled, and they
could fill thrice as many more. Yet
this morning when I asked what the
charge would be for my room I was
told the price would be the same as
usual.
W. E. Brink, of Prlneville: H.
Crosby, of The Dalles; R. E. Tozier
Arlington; L. B. Allen, of Antelope
H. Givln, of Pendleton; I. W. Long,
H
of
J
of
Bridal Veil; R. D. Cooper, of Grass
Valley; William Eccles, of Baker; W.
K. Walpole. Jr., of Irrigon; Bob Hynes
of Heppner all of these representative
citizens of Eastern Oregon seemed to
assent by their smiles and their hearty
nanasnaKes tnat they were being treat-
ea rignt ana were enjoying themselves
"Is this a convention or an assembly
of Eastern Oregonians?" queried Dan
J. Moore, of Seaside. Tom Wright, of
Union, speaking for Eastern Oregon
ana her people, replied that the classe
ui oeasiae mignt assemble ror "con
vention" In their own bailiwick if they
saw fit. "But," he continued, "we have
to roregather clans in Union County
without success, for the reason that the
bivalves got sore feet before we could
drive them across the mountains."
"What has all of this clam talk got
to do with the Rose Festival?" asked
.c. oiewari, or uorvawis. were we
are standing here talking 'small talk'
when the big parade is Just going to
be pulled off. What I came here for
was to see every blessed thing to be
seen (with a strong emphasis in the
'to'). So let's go out and get "
"Uncle Jim" Cooper, of Independence,
came to the fore with the suggestion
that Corvallis was a dry town, awful
dry, astonishingly dry, and, therefore,
it might be appropriate, etc., and so
on, as it were
Somehow. Just at that Juncture, the
"assembly" or "convention" -took a re
cess, and when they again came to
order S. S. Spencer, of Eugene, said
there was one side to the Rose Festival
occasions that made the event always
appear to him as the finest affairs he
ever attended. "Yes," he continued,
"there are two, not one. First, the great
big-heartedness of the Portland people
and the manifold ways they have of
showing their appreciation of our at
tendance; the second, which ought to
here come first, is the loveliness of the
Portland women."
"The women," exclaimed several In
unison, "the women!" Why the Port
land women, like the Portland roses,
are simply beyond compare."
Asp j half was known to the ancients and
this material Is said to have been employed
as a binder In masonry by the Babylonians.
STANDS IN FRONT IN CIVILIAN
Thursday's Programme Ends With
King's Ball, Today's Entertain
ment Includes Battle of Roses
and Club Reception.
PROGRAMME FOR TODAY. J
Forenoon Automobiles will be
uibycsai oi guests wno ueslre
to take trips about the city, and
may be had by notifying the
committee of the day at the
Multnomah Hotel.
2:00 P. M. Guests permitted
to attend, according to their in
clination, the "Battle of Roses"
r baseball game. Special parties
also will be organized to take a
trip to the Oaks. Guest badge
will admit at the baseball game.
9:00 P. M. Reception by the
Portland Commercial Club of
Miss Spokane, the King of the
Pasadena tournament. King of
the Oaks, Rex Oregonus and
their retinues at the club.
Small parties of the visitors in Port
land from Oakland, Pasadena, Eugene
and other cities, were entertained by
the Royal Rosarians with' automobile
trips about the city and the surround
ing country yesterday morning, al
though tbe merry-making of the pre
ceding "Night In Rosaria," in which
the drill teams of the various organiza
tions had taken part, made sleep dearer
to most of the visitors.
The automobiles gathered their par
ties at the Multnomah Hotel and each
car was whirled about the city at the
will of its occupants, the Rosarian
guides recognizing no law above the
wishes of their guests. The visitors
were returned to their hotels before 12
o'clock so that they might make ready
for the Horse and Vehicle parade at
2 o'clock. All of the men in the visit
ing delegations participated in this pa
rade and the Rosarians' grandstand
committee had only to attend to taking
the women of the parties to the stand
in time for the beginning of the parade
and their safe conduct back to their ho
tels after the parade. Many automo
biles were pressed into service to trans
port members of the drill teams to their
starting places in the parade.
Guests were taken directly to their
hotels after the parade to make ready
for the King's ball, which closed the
day's programme.
Today's chairman will be O. C. Bortz
meyer, and guests will be entertained
with theater parties or at the baseball
game after the "Battle of Roses,"
which will take place at 2 o'clock.
The Portland Commercial Club will
extend its hospitality to the visitors in
a reception at the Club tonight.
400 NURSERYMEN COMING
American
Association Convenes
in
Portland June 17 to 21.
The 38th annual convention of the
American Association of Nurserymen
will be held in Portland June 17 to 21,
inclusive, with headquarters at the
Multnomah Hotel. Four hundred dele
gates are expected. The officers are:
President, Thomas B. Meehan, Dresher,
Pa.; vice-president, J. B. Pilkington,
Portland; treasurer, Charles J. Maloy,
Rochester, N. Y. ; secretary, John Hall,
Rochester, N. Y.
The programme will be completed
this week. The main entertainment
f Antiir 1 n trnllov t-ir Tnna 1ft n
fOrenco, where the members and their
friends will be entertained by the Ore
gon Nursery Company at luncheon and
an inspection of their nurseries and a
trip up the Columbia River on the
Bailey Gatzert on the following day.
Tuesday will be given up to receiv
ing the delegates and holding business
meetings. Governor West and Mayor
Rushlight will deliver addresses of wel
come Wednesday, to which P. A. Dix
will respond on behalf of the Pacific
Coast Association.
Among the addresses are the fol
lowing: "What Shall the Future of
Horticulture Be?" by E. W. Kilpat
rlck, McKinney, Tex.; "The Traffic
Manager," by E. S. Welch, Shenan
doah, la.; "Park Making on the Pa
cific Coast," by E. T. Mische, Port
land: "Care of Small Fruit Plants, Duty
of Nurseryman and Planter," by L. J.
Farmer, Pulaski. N. Y. ; "Working and
the Results of New Federal Horticul-
tural Laws," by J. McHutchlnson, New
York City; "Horticultural Laws." by
George C. Roeding, New York Cit- ;
"Oregon's New Quarantine Law," dis
cussed by W. K. Newell, Gaston; F. A.
Wiggins, Toppenlsh, Wash., and John
Vallance, Oakland, Cal. ; "Nurserymen's
Problems in Fungus and Bacterial Dis
eases, by Professor H. S. Jackson, O.
A. C., Corvallis; "Uniform Agricultural
Laws," by A. J. Cook, Sacramento, and
"Between Nurseryman and Fruit
Grower," by Professor O. M. Morris,
Pullman, Wash.
I THE
OAKS
BIG FREE BHil. AT PORT
LAND AMUSEMENT PARK
Glacier Park Indians at
Oak Tavern to dinner
at 5. P. M. War dance
on bandstand at night.
TONIGHT
9 P.M.
Fireworks