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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1914)
5 T7 e tadostry stands for Albers The Mill on the Stream For hot - cakes and flap-jacks Their Flour is su preme. stands for Flour, From which bread we bake, For the lightest and whitest "Olympic" you take. Golden West. Finest country, 'tis true; Golden West Coffee, Uniform in brew I stands for "Otter" Clams, tender and sweet, FromOregonBeaches; A most tasty treat! TTT"E 5IOT?TG OREGOXIAN. MONDAY. JUXE 8, 1914. 11 A of H. fT7 TT OF Ink me act fl M Albers Bros. Milling Co. Save the labels for Home-Industry Prizes j stands for Butter The best in the land For richness and pur- ity Use "Columbia Brand." Union Meat Company Save the labels for Home-Industry Prizes stands for Columbia. Hams, Bacon and Lard, Whose quality always Will prove a safeguard. Union Meat Company Save the labels for Home-Ihdnstry Prizes nni stands for Diamond, Sparkling like dew. "Diamond W" Dill Pickles, The pure brand for ';. YOU. "Diamond W" Brand Food Products Save the labels for Home-Industry Prizes Olympic Flour Save the labels for Home-Industry Prizes Closset & Devers Save the labels for Home-Industry Prizes 'Ttt Every Housewife Must Learn to Discriminate in buying. Do not take what is offered by your tradesman. Ask for Oregon-made goods insist upon them. The products made here in Oregon are not only "just as good" as those brought in from other states they're better in many instances because they are made to meet local needs! Every Dollar Does Double Duty when you spend it at home it brings you one hundred cents in value and means just that much more toward the upbuilding of Oregon financially and industrially. Remem ber that and make your slogan Oregon First 1 SnnnWnSnaVnnannnBSSSnnh. . hwn y u stands for "Holly," The tree ever green; "Holly Milk" the condensed That is pure, rich and clean. Holly Milk Save the labels for Home-Industry Prises stands for Light That helps us to see. The sun when it shines And P. R., L. & P. Portland Railway, Light & Power Co. Save your receipts for Home-Industry Prizes 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 prizes are offered each 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 And $120 for the Best Essays For the best On "Why Oregon People Should Do All Their Buying: from Oregon Manufacturers, Everything Else Being Equal." This contest is open to every boy and girl in Oregon under 18 years of age. essays xne -ioiiowing prizes are ouerea eacn montn: First Prize $5 Second Prize $2 Three Prizes of $1 Each Essays should not be over 200 words in length and must be in the Home Industry Depart ment before the last Friday of the month. Writer should mention such articles as cereals, coffees, etc., used at home. The writer's full name, with name, address and telephone num ber ot parents, snould be on eacn essay. It snould be m child's own handwriting. Otter Clams Save the labels for Home-Industry Frizes 1 .-7si- KSsyV t Hp stands for "Purity" Pure Milk and Cream. It makes bouncing babies, With health all agleam. Portland PureMilk & Cream Co. Save the labels for Home-Industry Prizes 2 stands for "Supreme" Soda Biscuit so fine, Made in surroundings Of happy sunshine. F. F. Haradon & Son Save the labels for Home-Industry Prizes , a stands for Zan The Broom that cuts work, Saves time and en ergy So maids do not shirk! Zan Brooms Save the labels for Home-Industry Prizes 1 A.eu 1 AiLfeJJaJl, I SfATTLE CHARGE FACED ROBERT LISDSAT TO ANSWER FOR ALLEGED BAD $650 DRAFT. Clubman's Father to Hake Good S300 .Worthless Draft Son Held In Milwau kee Alleged, to Havre Issned. SAN FRANCISCO, June 7. (Special.) Although it was announced immedi ately after the arrest in Milwaukee of Robert Lindsay, local clubman and po loist. that his father would make good the $300 alleged worthless draft ac cepted by the Southern Pacific at Red wood City, Lindsay will be returned to Seattle to face a similar charge. Shortly after Lindsay's recent three weeks' stay in Seattle. Algernon Crof ton, San Francisco attorney for the Seattle Hotel, received for collection a worthless draft for $650, alleged to have been issued by Lindsay on the J. & M. Shock Absorber Company, at that time insolvent. The draft, it is said, was given in payment of a $250 bill, automobile hire and champagne. Four hundred dollars in cash was advanced, it is said. Mr. Crotfon pressed Lindsay for the money upon threat of arrest, but the man left for the Bast before paying it. The $300 draft drawn on Lindsay's father was Issued upon the clubman's departure for Chicago, and it was this draft that caused his arrest in Mil waukee. Since Lindsay's father has announced that he will honor the draft. Attorney Crofton has wired the Seattle police, requesting them to communicate with Milwaukee authorities and have Lind say returned to the northern city for prosecution. RAIN STOPS UNION SHOW Awards of Special Trophies Made, but Chariot Race Is Tie. UNION. Or.. June 7. (Special.) Jupe Pluvius attended the stock show today and heavy clouds overhung the city. The Sunday matinee which was to see the windup had to be called off. The Indians have struck their tents pre paratory to departure for their homes on the Umatilla. All prizes and ex penses have been paid and expenses liquidated in readiness for next year's show. The silver trophies donated by President Farrell, of the O.-W. R. & N., were awarded as follows: Showman's prize to Jack McCarty, of La Grande, for Morgan stallion; grand champion won by Albert Hunter's Percheron stallion; silver platter awarded to S. I. Benson's saddle horse; fourth prize to M. S. Levy's Shetland tandem team. Zeek and Spain are tied for time in chariot races. Centralia Motorists to Attend. CENTRALIA. Wash, June 7 (Spe cial.) D. F. Davles. vice-president of the Eastern Railway & Lumber Com pany and president of the Centralia Automobile Club, has been selected to lay the needs of Southwest Washing ton before the State Automobile Asso ciation when it gathers for its first meeting in Seattle July 16. The Cen tralia club is planning to send a big delegation to the coining meeting. COLLIER STILL DETAINED STORSTAD MUST GIVE S200.000 BOND TO GO OX HER WAY. Sixty Unidentified Bodies Placed la Vaults, Six of Them Being Those of Little Children. MONTREAL. Juno 1. The Norwe gian collier Storstad. which rammed and sank the liner Empress of Ireland in the St. Lawrence a week ago Fri day morning, still pokes her bat tered nose up against the Dominion Coal Company's dock in Montreal, an Impatient prisoner of . the Admiralty Court of Canada. Captain Andersen is anxious to get the Storstad to a drydock for repairs, preparatory to resuming her coal carrying business, but a bailiff is in possession and the captain must wait until the court accepts a bond for more than $200,000 and releases her. Such a bond will be offered on Monday in connection with the Canadian Pacific Railway Company's action against the Storstad's owners for $2,000,000 dam ages. The Coroner's Jury'at Rimouskl ad journed today for an indefinite period pending the investigation of the Em press disaster by Lord Mersey and his fellow Commissioners. Sixty unidentified dead bodies at Quebec were placed In the vaults of St. Charles Cemetery tonight. Six of the bodies are those of children, rang ing from a 6-months-old baby to a girl of 8 or 9 years. FRUIT DRIER ADVOCATED Professor Brown Tells Mosler Evap orator Is Preferable to Cannery. MOSIER. Or., June 7. (Special.) Professor W. S. Brown, of the Oregon Agricultural College, addressed Mosier Grange yesterday, on the "Utilization of Fruit and Vegetable By-Products." Professor Brown outlined the limiting factors which make a cannery feasible or unfeasible in a community. He said that from his observations of local conditions he believed, an evaporating plant would answer the needs of the community -at present and be much easier to finance and operate than a cannery. RAINS HELP SPRING . CROP Hay Will Yield Heavily and Potato Acreage Will Be Increased. LA CENTER, Wash., June 7. (Spe cial.) The continual rains that have fallen here the last few days will be a great help to all upland pastures and all Spring crops. The hay crop will yield heavily and although some may be spoiled by lodging, the greater part will be kept growing so it can be har vested in the dry season. More than the usual acreage of po tatoes will be planted with the expec tation of better prices than have been obtained the last few years. BunburnT Use San tlseptlc Lotion. Adv. SENIORS HEAR ADDRESS BACCALAUREATE IS DELIVERED BEFORE ALBANY GRADUATES. H. M. Crooks, College President. Speaks. Commencement and Other Exercises Will Be Held Dirlas Week.' ALBANY. Or., June 7. (Special.) Before an audience which filled the First Presbyterian Church. H. M. Crooks, president of Albany College, delivered the baccalaureate address to the gradu ating class of the college this morning. He spoke on the subject "As Other Men Are." Rev. W. P. White. D. D., pastor of the United Presbyterian Church of Al bany, offered prayer, and Hev. F. I Fraser, new pastor of Grace Presby terian Church, pronounced the invoca tion and benediction. A solo by Mrs. Flo, of the college conservatory of music, an organ prelude by Miss Wag gener, of the conservatory, and a quar tet by Mrs. Flo, Mrs. Logan, Mr. Wood and Mr. Van Tassel were the musical numbers. The 42d annual commencement exer cises began last evening with the con servatory graduates' recital. The pro gramme was presented by- Miss Mary Irvine, in piano, and Miss Ina Hansen and Ray Cleaver, in voice. The president's reception and the senior class day exercises will be held tomorrow. The meeting of the board of trustees and the commencement con cert will take place Tuesday and Wednesday will be commencement day. In the First Methodist Church to night the annual address to the Chris tian associations of the college was delivered by Rev. George T. Pratt, of Seattle, Wash., a 1902 graduate of the college. FREE DRINKS ARE EARNED Man Buys" Chehalls Farm on Flc tltioTie Draft, but Gets No Money. CHEHALIS, Wash., June 7. A man representing himself to be Ole Ander son went to a Chehalls bank and saying that he had bought the Phillips farm east of town, arranged to draw on ex United States Senator Gamble, of South Dakota for $8000, which he alleged the ex-Senator was keeping for him. A Tankton bank wired back that Ander son had no money coming from Senator Gamble, that the latter did not know Anderson and that the same thing had been tried before. After drawing on Senator Gamble Anderson contracted about town with different big mercantile firms for ma chinery and other equipment with which to begin his farm operations, but paid out no money, leaving town as soon as the bank got word from its correspondent. - So far as learned Anderson got no money from anyone, but succeeded in finding friends who kept his thirst ap peased. Centralia Wants Conventions. CENTRALIA, Wash., June 7. (Spe cial.) The 1915 convention of the State Grange, which will be held in Centralia, is only one of a series of meetings that the local Commercial Club is trying to land for next June. The others are the United Spanish- American War Veterans and its auxil iaries. If they meet here it will mean at least 5000 delegates to Centralia at one time, for the entertainment of which special attractions will be offered. Campmeeting- On at Orchards. ORCHARDS, Wash.. June 7. (Spe cial.) The second annual campmeet ing of the Clarke County Holiness As sociation is in progress here. Rev. Charles B. Allen, of Denver, evangelist of the Colorado conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church for the last 10 years, is under engagement for the entire period, closing June 14. Rev. E. B. Reece, pastor of the Meth odist Church at this place. Is manager of the camp. Mrs. Stella Crooks, the singing evangelist, is leader of the singing and shares in the preaching. Alleged Burglar Arrested. CENTRALIA, Wuh, June 7. (Spe cial.) John Henry Bolln, a negro, who was arrested in Centralia Friday night on a charge of drunkenness, yesterday was identified by Policeman Louden as being wanted in Tacoma on a charge of burglary. The Tacoma po lice were notified and J. W. Huckaba. a detective, came down yesterday and took Bolln back for trial. Blight Reported Under Control. GRANDVIEW, Wash., June 7. (Spe cial.) Blight is practically all under control in the Grandvlew district now. Horticulturists who have had large crews of men have reduced them to three or four. Although the blight is under control it is not entirely eradi cated, and vigilance is necessary to maintain control of and to finally stamp out the disease.