THE UIORXTN'G OREGONIAN, 3IONDAT, JANUARY 5, 1914. T 5 O ludlositiry it SI ft B. . If OTLll Are Yous uu 7 Po rp Home w ISNfeiCTWHi- S tlii o id) "erossa7"'' $v Every Mealff U Butter VSv It'" churned under the J V most sanitary conditions J right hero in our own creamery. f J NX. Union Meat Co. -""O SOTOTDOIFltS You'll meet the world cheerfully if you have "hotcakes" for breakfast made from Alfoers' Peacock Buckweat Flour ti Guaranteed Self-Raising They're light and tender Quickly made easily digested. Save the labels for Home Industry prizes. Standing Sentinel over cheerful, chubby babies Portland Pure Milk and Cream is pure, Pure, PURE ! ! ! Absolutely the safest milk delivered in Portland today. Guarded in every step by modern science. If It's Pure Enough for Baby It's Pure Enough for You. Save the caps for Home Industry prizes. Cash prizes for labels from all goods advertised The Winners in the Label Contest for December are: 1st Prize $10.00 Miss Hazel Beeserer, 333 Clay Street. s 2d Prize $ 5.00 Miss Bertie Smithers, 335 Clay Street. 3d Prize $ 2.00 Mrs. E. King, Oaks Point, Cowlitz Co., Wash. 4th Prize $ 1.00 Miss Ida Killduff, 760 East Fourteenth Street South.' 5th Prize $ 1.00 Miss Dora Conlogue, 1175 Gay Street. 6th Prize $ 1.00 Mrs. A. W. Mills, 701 Savier Street. To Those Who Are Not Already Saving Home Industry Labels: Spend your 'money at home develop your own home state. Every dollar spent by an . Oregonian for Oregon products pays double dividends he gets full value for the dollar expended and he keeps that dollar at home. None of us are big enough to stand alone. "We all depend on our fellow workers to a large extent. The thing to do is to co-operate ' wherever possible. .The real prosperity of a state is measured by the number of men and women to whom it can give employment. And the size of the weekly pay rolls depends upon YOU i whether YOU are willing to buy the output of home manufacturers and patronize HOME INDUSTRY! Help yourself by helping the other feUow. Keep your money at home ! As an incentive to you to get the ''buying at home" habit and have you ask for the goods advertised on this page by name, The Oregonian is offering six cash prizes each month for the greatest number of labels or saleschecks secured from articles advertised on the page. And $120 for Best Essays on "Why Oregon People Should Do All Their Buying From Oregon Manufacturers, Everything Else Being Equal.' ' "Sugar and Spice and All Thai's Jsfice" will not make a good cake without just the riglit baking powder. Man. fit-?-:-- 3 5v3 mm Mmgmt, II I II lJ,i?if .si".. mi.iJai.V ! MW m mmmWV Ipdustry The writers should I v "I B The 3ia "Z" jr'r ond Vhips as Vel f Bread Baking May a 8! " j-W JM- "Sv. as "fresh" cream. il Be Yours, Because A3f32t2 j That Stands for Quality WStV " J0jy" S ff J' ZAM BK&MS' Mm i: I Save Time , jWW are made by expert ' wjf!iSSSyJ i densed milks- M mMg I and Energy jPJr ' workmen from carefully MsSr 'l with HoUy Milk in the $$' fc&k&Jk. iXTA 1" " Fl 5 in-IIouse- -jFjr selected broomcorn. The WdWVlll 1 1 lT? house whiPPed cream 13 fcj MM lirkjjr UlVIllDIC HOIIF II I - work. - straws are long, strong and firm ftMff UlZM 'M always P0SSlble-1 Vt XUM N .. 6 V&'-uF Koaun rfii ... jS 1 X'hTTf makes the lightest whitest il A y k 8RAN0.ilr(l At All Grocers T SJS?', bread. More loaves to the sackT II for Home Industry Prizes f VWMI -fc Save the labels for Homo J$. 'ocer. A Tu noeen. , B l X ""wwiww By 7i. T , . - OA CS!w Smve the sales checks for jfsf Save the labels for 'H' wmijm.W..iiips, -ii.i ...,. n.ii . " Vffijtf -HOLLY lnaustry prizes. ' jUt Hi-10 Indn"trT prlgg- Home Industry prizes. Baldng Powder is pure absolutely free from "acid" ingredients. Goes twice as far a3 other powders. At All Grocers Full potHid tin 25c. Save all Dltmond " W " labels for THome Indus try This contest is open to all boys and girls of. Oregon under 16 years of age. Cash prizes of $5, $2 and three prizes of $1 each will be given each month, or $120 during the year. Es says must not be over 200 words in length and should be brought to the Home Industry D epartment, Orego nian, not later than 6 P. M. on the last Fri day of each month. The writers should mention the things stt I Yes, Tvladam, They're Fresh! I am always certain that Haradon's "Supreme" Biscuits are crisp and flaky. I get them fresh every day. I know they're made under absolutely sanitary condi tions and packed while hot in airtight, moisture-proof cartons. At All Grocers 5c and lOo Packages. Save the labels for Homo Industry prizes. made in Oregon which are used in their "own homes. This pertains especially" to food arti cles, such as cereals, canned goods, coffee, etc. Mention the brands by name. The writer 's full name, with name, ad dress and telephone number of parents, must be plainly writ ten in the handwriting of the child submitting it. Only one side of the paper should be used. , V PORK AND T-INEST S&S SPICES IN liSjS ft !ePwk4 U v BRAN3 bausage TVJ V lU. S. Government Inspected.) tfi (JL-"''v' Try 'it j'ourself. , Your M II dealer can supply yon. ft i Jm-- VSw union meat MJil A. Simple Lunch or an Elaborate Dinner will be a "success" if you serve soup or chowder ' ' made from "Otter Clams" - Dug from the famous Oregon beaches. Only the tender parts of young clams used, with all the delicacy of flavor retained. At All Grocers 15c 2 Cans for 25c. Save the labels for Home Industry prizes. The Cup of Quality! Is always Insured If you use Golden West Coffee Its aroma Is of-unusual fragrance, because lt Is the result of per fect blending of the best selections 01 vari ous coffees. ' Steel cat So dast No chaff. HOTEL LOBBIES FURNISH TALES OF VARIED TENOR Pure-Bred Hereford3 "Will Be Brought to Hanley Ranch Banker Returns to Mexico Old Times Recalled. Walla Wallan Has Alliterative Signature MJ. HANLEY. of Medford, was in Portland yesterday, en route to Helena, where he and his brother Ed have bought a carload of purebred Hereford cattle which he will ship to Medford. They will be placed on the Hanley ranch near Jacksonville, known as one of the best stock ranches In the Rogue River Valley. "These will be some of the finest cattle ever brought into Oregon," said 3Ur. Hanley at the Imperial yesterday, "and their purchase marks the begin ning of an effort on our part to pro duce" none but the best stock." With Mr. Hanley was his son, Michael, Jr., who was returning: to the Khattuck Military Academy at Shat tuck, Minn., where he Is a student. In 1913 from 100 7-year-old Bose pear trees Mr. Hanley sold 60 boxes at $2.10 per box f. o. b. Medford. The land Is cleared-ofT timber land in the north fork of Llt'le Butte Creek. Mr. Hanl- is a brother of William Hanley, of liurns. il ev -.,4 0 UTS. bank has done a better busi ness In the last six months than ever before," said A. R. Downs, who, with his son. Is In the banking; busi ness at Guadalajara, In the State of Jalisco, Western Mexico. Mr. Iowns made his headquarters at the Portland while in Portland several clays oa business. Ho left Sunday. Xor San Francisco, and will take boat from there for Mexico. There have been no revolutionary uprising's In the State of Jalisco, and Mr. Downs says that the people there, particularly the American and other foreign, residents, are more interested in seeing a stable government In Mex ico than in seeing any one faction win. Mr. Downs is a former resident of Seattle and has spent several months there looking after business affairs. He is the owner of Colonia Seattle, a suburban residence project near Guadalajara, f( AM looking for a house," said I Judge William M. Colvig, late of Medford, at the Cornelius yesterday. Judge Colvig has been appointed right-of-way agent for the Southern Pacific in Oregon, and proposes to re move his family to Portland soon. "But I am telling these landlords, when they tell me the advantages of their properties as reasons for charg ing a high rent, that intend to rent tox a term of years I never did like to move, anyway, and that I am in other ways a most desirable tenant. I want a place where I can have some grass and a few rosebushes, and I'll take care of these things as though the premises were my own." Judge Colvig Is an ex-president of the Medford Commercial Club and has been prominent la aver? movement Xor the advancement of Medford and Southern Oregon for more years than Is embraced in the memory of a ma jority of the residents of that region. One of the first things Judge Colvig did to make Southern Oregon a better country to live In was to serve as a volunteer in the war against the Modoc Indians In the '60s. He was one of the earliest white men to see Crater Lake, aud was one with a party of regular soldiers who took a number of Indians down to the water's edge and pushed them in for the purpose of dispelling the idea of the savages that the devil dwelt in the blue bosom of the lake and rewarded whoever looked upon it with death. Mrs. C. L. Reames, wife of the United States District Attorney, is Judge Col vlg's daughter. CW. TALMAGE, who practices law at Tillamook, told his friends at the Imperial the other day of the work on the new Jetty at Tillamook Harbor. Giebisch & Joplln, of. Portland, have taken a contract for the construction of the Jetty, on which $814,000 is to be expended, half of the money being fur nished by the Government and half by the Port of Tillamook. "The work as projected will give us 18 feet of water on the bar at mean low tide," said Mr. Talmage, "and this will mean that ships of good draft can. enter. As soon as they can the Whit ney Company, one of the largest oper ators in timber in the Tillamook re gion, will build a big sawmill. The Wheeler Company is now completing a mill with a capacity of 150,000 feet a day at Wheeler, . on the Nehalem River." Mr. Talmage is an enthusiast for the Tillamook country, which he says is Just in the beginning of Its develop ment. Its possibilities as a dairy dis trlct bav already been proven, and dairy land Is selling for from $300 to law an, Kura, Y HILB Mr. Talmage was talkin W Judge George H. Durham, form erly of Grants Pass, but now living in Portland, came up. It had been many years since the two men had met, but they immediately "placed" each other. "I have good reason to remember Judge Durham," said Mr. Talmage, "for I saw him lose his toes under a passenger train at McMinnvllle April 12, 1890. He was Just swinging on to the train as it pulled out. and his foot caught on the overcoat he carried on his arm. He missed the step and stepped down on the rail and the wheels amputated his toes." UT what do you know about this?" called out "Chief Clerk Harry Hamilton from the desk. "That's ancient history, as Judge Durham will agree, and if Talmage gets Btarted on old times, he'll never get run down." The party stepped to the register, and this is what they saw . beneath Hamilton's finger: "W. W. Wilson, Walla Waila. Wash." "Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers,", Talmage began to chant, but he was restrained before he could get any deeper in the alliterative laby rinth. "Thcr Msed to be a minister atWalla Walla who could show the same num ber of "W's" as Mr. Wilson," said Ham ilton. "His name was William W. Wallace." nroduetion In the "United States in creased from 450.000.000 dozen In 1SS to 1.3(K.OOO,00O dozen in 1900 and to 1,75, 000,000 dozen m 1912, the export last year amountlas ta 19,000,000 dozsn, 4 OF KING 6 HELD TREE OREGOX CITY GIRLS AND BOY CfUGHT AT ASTORIA. Brother of One Young Woman Tries to Kill Himself Is Report No Clew to Other Two Youths. OREGON CITY, Or., Jan. 4. (Spe cial.) Four of the party of three girls and three boys missing from this city since last Wednesday were found and arrested today at Astoria, according to a message received by Constable Frost. The party was taken in custody at a lodging house at Astoria. Those held are the girls, Ethel Forsythe, 18 years old; Viola Monghan, 16 years old, and Margaret Curtis, 16 years old, and one boy. Jack Davis, 22 years old. Coincident almost with the finding of the alleged elopers the brother of Miss Forsythe, William, Jr., is said to have tried to kill himself by Jumping into the river. He was restrained, it is said, by his bride of three weeks, from whom his parents are reported to have told him he must separate. Another development of the day, the authorities say, is the finding of a clew that indicates that another person than the three boys and three" girls planned the elopement for them. This person's identity has been learned, it is said. The four persons held and Alton Lewis, 18 years old, and Glenn Jer meler, 18 years old, went to Portland last Wednesday, it is said. The three boys were seen on a street car in Port land the next day, but no trace of the party was found when officers made a search. . . . A. clew later .was obtained, that led to a watch being kept for the party in Astoria. Sheriff Burns, who located i i , , nntTilnv nnnecrn- nig uui , uuuia icuiu """o ing the whereabouts of the two boys still missing. xne prisoners ucm that they had seen them. The girls dqM v. .-i. n A otnrla n work and two claimed they had found positions. Davis also is said to have found work. 135 HIKE 10 MILES TO EAT Unemployed Tramp Through Mad for Men! at County Expense. FRESNO, Cal., . Jan. 4. A 10-mlle tramp through the mud was made to day by the band of 135 unemployed, starting from Porterville, where they had laid over for two days, to Terra Bella, In the southern part of Tulare County. At Terra Bella the band has assurance o,f breakfast tomorrow at county expense and will be accompan ied as far as the county line tomorrow to Decour. From there to Bakersfield is a dis tance of more than 20 miles, with no settled territory, and as a precaution A. L. Hall, the leader, will go on to Bakersfield to arrange for entertain ment. The band is being accompanied through Tulare County by Deputy Sheriff Stewart as an escort. ASTORIA ELK IS DROWNED Duckboat of W. W. Houghton Cap sizes and. Body Not Recovered. ASTORIA, Or.. Jan. 4. (Special.) William W. Houghton, son of Police Captain Houghton, was .drowned In the Columbia River near the Youngs Bay drawbridge today by the capsizing of his duck boat. Houghton was about 28 ' years of age and unmarried. He was a member of the local lodge of Elks and members of that order spent several hours this afternoon dragging for the body, but no trace of lt could be found. The Kind That Lasts a Lifetime That's the kind of chairs you are looking for and that's the kind you find in King Craft Chairs Because King Craft Chairs are handed down from one generation to another we are offering every mother an attractive BRASS SAME PLATE (bearing the name and date of baby's birth) With Every Purchase of a KIG CRAFT JTCRSERY CHAIR. Simply present this ad with your order for the chair. Give name and date wanted pn the plate. OREGON CHAIR CO. Portland, Oreton. If your dealer does not oarrv King Craft Chairs, we will tell you one who does.