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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (May 18, 1914)
V 10 THE MORNING OREGOXIAJT. MONDAY, MAT 18. 1914. "-'fs.ii vfefe SPsT wj Si . (I No chance for a "bad beginning" if vou have uencious cases lor DreaKiast made from Albers' Pancake Flour The kind that melt in your. mouth and are easily digested. Try them. , At all grocers I Save the labels for Home Industry Prizes The Child's Right in thisjworld is love and care care for its mental, moral and physical being. Its little body will be come sturdy and strong with plenty of 1L. Purity Milk and Cream Guarded every step from clean cows in green pastures to the bottle in your home Portland Pure Milk & Cream Co. Save the caps for . prizes. The one most important item of food -is"'Bready and the most important feature in bread-making is Flour 1 'Olympic" Flour Makes the lightest, whit est bread. After you've -once used it you'll realize It isn't the recipe V It's the Flour! Specify "Olympic" to your grocer and save the sale checks for prizes A ' For Those A' .nV Sandwiches 3$f L NifcsSv which you want to be I i er than usual V BUTTER II " v Ask for it at your SI II dealer's in odor- f s ' , proof cartons. f xk. , Union Meat Company. AA 9 -PURE, RICH MILK! Scientifically evaporated and thoroughly ster-' nizea mates , . ir V a. - ; Ann OnkQOt-, "Holly" Milk the most delicious and de sirable of all condensed milks. It Whips because it's Rich est in Butter Fat! Save the labels for prizes. Easy to oo as those made in the East. AH that's necessary is to tell your merchant that you believe in patronizing home manufacture in helping'to build up local institutions that will pro vide employment for Oregon people, and keep Oregon resources in Oregon. Make Up Your Mind to Start Now!- The Oregonian has banded together these progressive manufacturers that you see repre sented on this page. Cash prizes are offered each month for those saving the largest num ber of labels from goods advertised in connection .with The Ojregonian's Home Industry Campaign. ' . Jfj Ham That Satisfies Your Fondest lv jff Expectations- I fe Ham A II V. S. Government Inspected. I I Ask your dealer to supply you with JPJWfc Jf I Columbia Brand Ham. IS 'J r I KIOX MEAT COMPANY jX). tJ lPloiiecr Packers of the 'J sLAbLLi' SSSTSTrrr DAINTIES -5 IxXh ends of very pekart . v iff XSS vl SUmMi bkd llimTt 'fe Yft III P,1.mp,v COIIect 12 ends from six packages of "Supreme- I Klscutt, 'Supreme ' Sodas, or any other packages of 1 I "SUPREME" baked goods, and if your grocer cannot I I supply you with the Complimentary Box, mail them I I direct to us, and the full Surprise package will be Bent I 1 at once by parcel post, absolutelv free. F. F. HARADON A SOX. VA --O fcS Portland. Oregon. Ill Zt Stood for Zebra In the children's a, b, c's. -.It Means - awiba3riMnntA Jr AA A. jA IT- They Stive . A -r' Time and . jf"--Energy Jr '"tjr In House- jf' ' A jA . Clip the A r- To the discriminating t ' housewife. Made by expert workmen. , The straws are firm, straight and tough. 'Z" from the wrannera for nome industry Prizes. A First Aid to the Hostess When unlooked . for company comes, you'll feel perfectly secure with in Otter Clams the panfry. Delicious j.broths, chowders and bouillons prepared in a few moments All the fresh sweetness of flavor retained At all grocers, 15 2 cans 25 Save the labels for prizes Delicious Salads depend for their success upon tneir dressing. Tins is assured with Salad Dressing No trouble at all ready to use ! In glass jars, at all grocers. Ask for Diamond "W" Save the ' labels for prizes. Made in .Oregon Use Electricity generated at home. Portland Railway, Light v & Power Company has ten large generating plants in Oregon. In ease any one plant fails to supply current, there are nine other stations to depend on! PORTLAND RAILWAY, LIGHT & POWER j COMPANY Broadway and Alder Streets Phones: Marshall 5100, Home A-6131 Portland Salem Cash Prizes for Labels from Goods Advertised! TO STIMULATE interest in Home Industry and have you ask for the goods advertised on this page by name, the following cash prices, are offered ach month for the great est number of labels turned in: - First Prize $10 in Gold Second Prize $5 in Gold Third Prize $2 in Silver Three Prizes $1 EacH - B And $120 for the Best Essays - ' On "Why Oregon People Should Do All Their Buying From Oregon Manufacturers, Everything Else Being Equal." . ' . -This eontest is open to every boy and girl in Oregon under IS years of age. For thebest essays the follow- mg prizes are offeredJeach month : - -.. . "yrr - ""st Frlze A5 Second Prize $2 Three Prizes of $1 Each Essays should not be over 200 words in length and must 'be in the Home Industry Department before the - last Friday of the month. Writer should mention such articles as cereals, coffees, etc., used at home ' ' Tie writer s full name, with name, address and telephone jaumber of parents sThnld be on each essay It should be m child s own handwriting. , J It's the Blend that makes this Cofe so delicious! "Golden West'! Coffee is - so scientifically and deli cately blended that every can is uniform in flavor. Thoroughly seasoned coffees only are used to give rich mellowness of flavor. Steel Cut No Dust, No Chaff Save all Golden West labels for prizes. COFFEE GROCERS START FIGHT EtKKRE.J)l M TO BE INVOKED OS SINDAT-CLOSIXG ORDINANCE. If Petition Is Filed Before May 23, Lin Will Be Held Vr VntU 1913. Otherwise. Operative Maj- 30. Beliaving the ordinance passed by the City Council three weeks ago prohibiting: the sale of certain lines of groceries on Sunday is unfair, dis criminatory and unreasonable and will not cause groceries to close on Sun days, small concerns have started the circulation of petitions to tnvbke the referendum on "the measure. If the SO00 namas sought a-e obtained before May 23. the petitions w'U be filed And the ordinance, which otherwise ill be come effective May 30, will be held up until June, 1915. Copies of the petition have been placed in about 40 grocery stores of the city and it is sahi signatures are being procured rapidly. It is said the referendum can be invoked on the or dinance, wiWi practically no expense, small grocers having agreed to attend to the work of getting the signatures. The ordinance prohibits the sale of "groceries." It allows the sale of bread, fruits, ice cream, pastry, meats, milk and soft drinks and some other things, but prohibits the sale of what is commonly known as groceries, in cJudins butter, eggs, coffee sugar, etc. The small grocers say that while they would not object so strenuously if all grocery stores were forced to close on Sundays, they object to an ordinance which will mereijj prohibit the sale of certain articles and allow the sale of other articles. They say there will not be a single store closed on Sunday because of the ordinance: Tears of sympathy come more rapid ly than dollars of' comfort. NATION IS SAMARITAN AMERICA MUST . AID "BLEEDING MEXICO," SAYS MINISTER. . Rev. L. K. Richardson Emphasize Fact Many Unfortunate Peplea Have Been C'lvllimed by United State. "Like the victim of the Jericho road, Mexico lies prostrate and bleeding and half dead on the pathway of the world's life," said Rev. L. K. Richard son, pastor of Kenilworth Presbyte rian Church." last night in a sermon on "Bleeding Mexico." "It is at once the duty, opportunity and privilege of the United States to play the part of the good Samaritan. Our Nation has been divinely called to be a good Samaritan to unfortunate peoples. It was American influence that opened the doors in Japan to Western civilization: - American di plomacy, prevented the dismemberment of China; American sailors and soldiers freed the Filipinos from the bloody hand of Spanish tyranny; and Amer ican teachers and missionaries have dotted that archipelago with schools, hospitals and churches. , . , "The sea gates at Vera Crux have been -opened. The opportunity is ripe for American progress to enter, Amer ican sympathy to uplift and American missionaries to heai and teach. Al ready we have cleaned up the .fortress prison of San Juan de Ulloe. an Island castle filled with-inconceivable scenes of filth and horror, equipped with 60 whips, braided and knotted with raw hide and wet with human blood. "This conquest of love, is but an Il lustration of what we must accomplish for the whole Republic Annexation and exploitation must be the farthest from our purpose." Dog- Bites Two at Hoalton hCLTON, Or.. May 17. (Special.) Mrs. A. J. Kelley was bitten by a stray dog recently. . The dog also bit Sidney Usher, who was near, the Kelloy borne. Mrs. Kelley suffered no ill-effects until Saturday, when the wound became so Inflamed that her husband took her to Portland for treatment. MEAT' HEARING SCHEDULED Changes Made in Proposed Ordi nance Since Discussed. ' A lively session of the City Coun cil is expected today, "when the third of a series of public meetings to con sider the proposed new; meat inspec tion ordinance will be held In the Council chamber at the City Hall. The measure, as it will be consid ered today, is changed in a number of essentials from what it was when con sidered at the last hearing. One of the principal changes is the granting of permission to butchers to stamp meat with their own stamp in case the city Inspectors are unable to at tend to the Inspection. Another im portant change is providing for one central' inspection booth in place of a series of such booths. All farmers and small producers will have to send their meat to the central booth for, inspec tion before delivering it to the butcher shops and wholesale concerns. Where rules are fewest they are least likely to be broken. mm m