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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 29, 1913)
VATiVTVf: (vnraciKl'w. 5IOXDAT, DECEMBER 29, 1913. 10 " " ' " "" ' T-TTT ome Industry omian: th e State 1 hat b ilDDort A Happy New Year to You One and All ! II O Q u TT .Page 7" The Oreg 3 I HI m m w J Your New Year's Dinner will be an assured success if you iff with cilin Tllfllp f mm . - . ' -a PIHI Ip .-a... -r - At"Avx' "Otter" uams Serve i-tenming hot. It Trill recall beach days last Sum mer, when you dug clams. Only the tender parts of young clams, aug jrora me famous Oregon beaches, used. Preserved to retain ail the aei icacy of flavor. At inr imm' 15c 2 cans S.-.e. Have oil labels in for prizes Fndav Prizewinners in Oregonian's Essay Contest Resolved: To Sleep Later in 1914 Of coiirie I can, for I us ,t&$tx Albers' Peacock iuckwheat Flour I It makes buck wheat cakes that "melt In your mouth" In J u a t the shortest time possible. milk, so wit water. Have all labels day. r r3 SEE The Neu Year Will Be Bright tor the little folks If you give them plenty of Portland Pure Milk and Cream It makes chubby, sturdy babies and healthy, happy "rrown-upa.'' The safest milk delivered In Portland today. Scien tifically guarded In every step. "If It'll nnr fioilh for baky. It'a pare caoask far lOlV Jlare all caps In for prises Friday. 1 FIRST PRIZES S5. I think Oregon people should patron ize home Industry for various reasons. First of all, we should be firm be lievers In reciprocity, and in -order to be true citizens of our own state I think it Is the best policy to purchase Oregon products as long as our home state Is able to furnish the necessaries of the same value and prices as other states'. We ought to. without -much or any consideration, make an effort to sup port the state tbat supports of, In preference to others. Why not? If you haven't ere this been loyal to your home state whenever purchasing from your grocer, demand your local or state manufacturers' products. It Is very beneficial to all. It enlarges the man ufacturing districts, thus creating a larger demand for laborers and it keeps capital at home. Our home is an absolute patron to home Industry. Some of the articles which we use are well worth mention ing, such as "Albers" Pancake Flour," "Albers" Buckwheat Flour." together with the Union Meat Company's dell clous bacon and Columbia butter: a cup -or two of Diamond W coffee with Portland's pure cream and we think we are having the finest breakfast ever placed on the table. Also various other Oregon products are extensively used in our home, such as Van Hoeter's bleaching soap. Holly milk, Wadco cove oysters, Wadco salmon. Diamond W. tomatoes. Otter clams. Vim flour, Zan brooms, etc Our motto should he: "Support the State That Supports You." FLORENCE HANSBERGER. Ago 13 years. SECOND PRIZE 3. Oregonlaaa Ongbt to l'e Oreson Prod ucts. Every citizen of the United States believes that the industries of this country ought to be protected in some manner. Many, however, do not agree Boys and Girls rIn studying geography at school, you learn the products of the various countries and states. Do you know the products of YOUR OWN STATE T Do you know where the food you eat grows and how it is made into the form in which you see it at home I When eating crackers, have you never wondered how they got into the box what hap pened to them between the time they stood in the field as golden wheat and the moment you opened the box to get a crisp, fresh wafer? as to the amount of protection, but all agree on protection. As a consequence nearly all out produce Is American made. ' In the same manner, every loyal cit izen of Oregon ought to buy Oregon made products. True, some products, such as coffee, must be grown In trop ical climates, but Oregon firms handle such goods. The Oregon country is being devel oped wonderfully; fo fast that It will soon be added to the lists of exporters instead of Importers. However, if Ore gon goods Are ever to be exported the people of this state must use the prod ucts first. Every Oregonian owes it to himself to buy Oregon-made goods, for if Oregon manufacturers are patron ized the Industries will grow, and If the Industries grow the cry to help the poor will cease. Many idle men will secure work and there will then be less need for free lunch-counters. In the end. the person who patron izes home Industry is not only helping to develop that Industry and thus help the Oregon laborer, but ho Is lso spending his money for the products which give tho best results. ERNEST PETERSON. S5S East Thirty-ninth street South, Portland, Or. THIRD PRIZB $1. . Why Oregon people should do all their buying from Oregon manufactur ers, everything being equal. Is, in- my estimation, a very easy problem to solve. You see there are none "Just as good," for Oregon manufactures the very best of everything, so If wo want the very best we must buy Oregon products. We not only help our state and its manufacturing concerns, but also ourselves, because we get the purest of foods, best of clothing, finest of lumber and many other things. Also It encourages other manufacturing firms to come to Oregon, thus gjvlng work to many a poor man. We use Oregon products all we can in our Keep Them in the House Next Year The hostess who always has Dill Pickles on hand is prepared with the relish that ad us zest to a meai. from Wadhame & Co, Bm all Diamond W Labels la for Prlaea Friday. home. We are very fond of Golden West coffee and Peacock buckwheat cakes for breakfast. We also use Olympic flour, Columbia River salmon. Hood River apples. Pearls of Wheat mush, and many other articles of food, besides clothing, blankets, etc., made from Oregon wool. My mother says Oregon products are the best, and I think she ought to know, for she was born and raised In Oregon. My slogan Is, Oregon first, best and always. LAWRENCE V. PAPE. 70 East Nineteenth street North, Portland, Or. FOURTH PRIZB t. I looked in tho kitchen before I be gan to write this essay. There I saw spices, flour, soap, butter, buckwheat, a broom and many other things made in Oregon. But you wanted to know why we should use home industry. I think ' it ts because It gives many people work, and if there wasn't any work, people would move away and build up some other place. . If there wasn't any peo ple they could not sell their goods. I am 11 years old. CECIL ROBERSON. 1029 South Ivanhoe, St. Johns, Or. FIFTH PRIZE 91. Support the state that supports you! Why not, when It gives you the best to be had? I was looking over the list of groceries papa ordered and all were Oregon manufactured. Such groceries as these are always found in our pan try: Diamond W coffee. Holly milk, Albers' Peacock buckwheat flour, and Olympic flour. Mamma is visiting In Portland and she says the milk and cream she gets cannot be beat. Ore gon is a fine state and we would like to see it as large as any other, but if people don't support the state that sup- . ports them, they surely could not ex pect It to grow, I think don't you? Age 15. . . EDITH COWAN. Timber, Or. And coffee, too. Do you know where it grows and how it is roasted and what "Steel Cut" means T And so on through all our foods. Ask about them at home. Talk it over with mother and dad. Talk it over at school with teacher and the other boys and girls. . vFrom Oregon's Creamiest WPSgs Cream V f Butter a V Churned in our own f f V modern creamery. We fS never chance or guess its quality ii O Union Meat Co. ir ff You Don't Know how good bacon can be until you have tried i S Bacon , U. S. Government Inspected. In sist on getting Columbia Brand tsacon. I v.w . v " i ,i i riii 1 1 ' r E THrtAClFIC coast; 1 Utoiil - t-'v New Year's Resolution: Always to buy the broom which comes in this wrapper. It sweeps cleaner with less effort and wears longer! Look- for the bie "Z." All grocers Bell them accept no other. Have all labels in for prizes Friday. ilil HOLtv" fA "Mine Host" on New Year's Day will make his guests doubly wel come If his "bowl of good cheer" holds eggnog with plenty of rich, whipped cream on top. It will be rich and delicious if you use Holly Milk It Whips Cool a m oa lee over niat. It will wblp like the rlcoeat "freak" Try It- m At AH Grocers 10c Have all labels in for prizes Friday. Why should YOUR mother buy articles made here at home in preference to those made way back East, or somewhere else, whenever she cant Aftei you have thought about it, and talked it oyer, write an essay and send it in to the Home Industry Department, Oregonian Office. Perhaps you may be one of the prize winners. Try it ! JJWUIIJ.1 ilWWfJ i A Fresh Box for New Year's Day and a box for each day after that, resolve wise housewives who use Haradon's "Supreme" Biscuits They're always light and flaky Made every day. Packed while still hot in airtight, moistproof cartons. Delivered daily to your grocer 5c and 10c packages. Have all labels in for prizes Friday. Ti'hlil'il fViift' fffc-fi iTrTTi' I For Your New Year's Guests eat the crust from thin slices of light bread. Butter thickly, roll and tie with festive rib bons, sticking sprig of holly or mistletoe in each roll. Your bread will be deliciously light and white if you use "Olympic" Flour Experienced housewives know "It isn't the reope ns the flour Specify "Olympic" to your grocer Have all saleschecks in for prizes Friday On New Year's Day and 364 Days After Eesolve to use only Golden West Coffee Steel Cut. No Chaff No Dust. Scientifically blended. Absolute ly uniform in brew. Ask your grocer for "Golden West." Have all labels in next Friday for prizes. ' CpFFEl fe. PORTLAND II 33Z ' , ' a - " . aM a I GIRL'S ESSAY IS EESI -SVPPORT STATE THAT Sl'PPOHTS Tor MOTTO SCGGESTED. Idea ut loyalty t Oreoa Eaipaaalae Aa-ala aaa Asala la Tbe Orcso alam'a Coateat for Chtldrea. -Support the state that supports you" Is the motto suggested by Mlsa Florence Hunaeberger. 1J years old. of 14 Third street. South Portland. In her es say, winning first prize In The Orego nian contest on "Why Oregon people should do all their buying from Oregon manufacturers, everything else being equal?" This Idea of reciprocal state loyalty is emphasized again and again In the essays, which present every phase of the question. Three of the Ave prizes go to Portland children, one. the fifth, to Edith Cowan. of Timber, and the fourth to Cecil Roberson, of St. Johns. Second prize was taken by Ernest pi..,nn nf sa F&st Thirty-ninth street South, and third prize by Law- renco W. Papa, of 70 East iwneteeniu street North. Many of the essayists went to the nan, ,nH trained lnsDlration from the , j c - goods on the shelves before they be gan writing. AmAnw th. xnmvm esneclallv worthy of mention, but for which prizes could not be given, were tnese or Annur t i . 9 i r i T- i . Thtfanth. street a. aa. " - South: Lorna Kinney, of Newberg. Or.: JOSvphlne IV-UIOUII, iW iWl ruuricenm street South: Paul Ryan. Newport. Or.; Harry Ken in. 4il Sacramento street: Truman Ptoraasll, or saiem, ana aiaoei May, of Condon. According to the term of the con test, none of the children was more than It years old, and many were sev eral years younger. Owing to the large number of returns received In the monthly label contest being conducted by The Oregonian, the names of the wipners will not be pub lished until next Monday. BY-PRODUCT IS TOPIC FRITTMEN'S COMMITTEE NEEDS MOXEY FOR INVESTIGATIONS.; V. It Wicks ,of Moaeow, Believe Way Will Be Foaad Te Iaereaae Profits f Horticulturists. MOSCOW, Idaho. Dec 28. (Special.) W. H. Wicka returned from Walla Walla, where he atended the meeting of a committe appointed at the Spokane apple show this Fall to Investigate the mater of orchard and garden by-products in the various frultbelts of the Northwest- The committee was formed of 11 men, each of whom represented a diferent fruit-growing section of the country. . , . At the Walla Walla meeting, which waa the first to be held since the apple i ... M.MKAr nr th committee snow, alio J"-'""--" " - - reported on the nature ana too txiem of by-products in their respective sec tions and outlined as nearly as possible I the methods through which the work of turning the orchar waste into prom can be accomplished. The committee has been divided Into three smaller bodies and wll again meet on March 1 at North Yakima. Between now and March 1 the three sub-committees will carry on extensive Investigations and will be ready to make a thorough re port on the work. An effort is being made to raise $1000 for the further ance of the work and already several commercial clubs have agred to con tribute toward the fund. The railroads and fruit growers' organizations of the Northwest also will be asked for fi nancial assistance. Professor Wicka believes that the work of this commute wil be a pro nounced success if the problem of fi nancing Its investigations can be solved promptly. He believes that the saving of orchard by-products wlll become an Important industry whereby the smaU grower as well as the larse will be able to realize a much greater profit in the future. Professor Wicks received notification yesterday that he had been reappointed Moscow representative of the board of trustees of the Spokane apple show for 1914. ELOPER Ifl DEATH LEAP HEIRESS, WHEJf FOUND WITH DOC TOR TRIES SUICIDE ROUTE. Persistent Suitor of New York Girl Waoae Parents Objected to Match la Scion of Canadian Family. NEW YORK, Dec. 28. Marion T. Earnshaw, the . pretty 18-year-old daughter of Elmer F. Earnshaw, treas urer and general manager of the Cas-well-Massey Drug Company, attempted suicide recently when Burns detectives broke into her room on the seventh floor of the Hotel Aldine, Twenty ninth street and Fourth avenue, and arrested her and her companion. Dr. Geoffrey Westhrop Macdougal, 85 years old. of 41 Washington Square South. The girl, missing from her home, 874 Wadsworth avenue, since December 7, ran as the detectives entered and plunced through the window. Mac dougal. who followed, caught her an kles, and with the assistance or a ae tectlve pulled her bacs: Into the room. Macdougal, who claims kinship to an excellent Canadian family, and Miss Earnshaw were taken to the Harlem police court, where Magistrate Krotel held the man In $2500 ball on the charge of abduction, and Miss Earn shaw without ball on the charge of being Incorrigible. The warrants were sworn out by the young woman's father. -' According to Earnshaw, Macdougal was Introduced to the EarnshaW fam ily one year ago. Immediately there arose a warm friendship between the girl and the man. Earnshaw said Macdougal followed the girl to the resort where the family spent the Summer, and there Miss Earnshaw declared that she would not give, up her sweetheart. Mr. Earnshaw took his daughter South during November, but upon their return Macdougal met them at the railway station. Earnshaw declares that Macdougal pleaded to be allowed to marry the girl, and that Miss Earn shaw Insisted that she was engaged to marry her persistent lover. Earnshaw , declares that the family disapproved of Macdougal because the latter drank too much and too frequently. On the night of December 7, Earn shaw and his daughter were dining in a Lenox avenue cafe when Macdougal joined them. Earnshaw went to a tele phone to call Mrs. Earnshaw. When he returned Miss Earnshaw and Dr. Macdougal were gone. Only recently Miss Earnshaw grad uated from one of the principal dra matic schools here,1 but gave up her ambition of becoming an actress prin cipally because of her mother. AV. E. Wilson Seriously III. VANCOUVER, Wash., Dec 28. (Spe cial.) W. E. i Wilson, a brother of Philip Wilson, of the Wilson Drug Com pany, Is reported to be In a precarious condition at St. Joseph's Hospital, where he was taken tonight, suffering from diabetes. He has been living on a farm eight miles out on the Jaggy road, in hopes that his health would be benefited. In dry air sound travels 1443 feet a sec ond: In water, JtlliO feet; In Iron, 17.500 feet. The ancient Roman amphitheater at Dor chester, Kngland, Is being excavated ana explored.