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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1915)
THE MORNING OltEGONIAN. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1915. Q CITY NEWS IN BRIEF OEECOXUN 'TELEPHONES. Mnaglnjc Editor Main 707O. A 605 City Editor Main 70o. A. SOUS Sunday Editor Main 707O. A H)HS .Advertising Department. . Main 7070, A 0a City Circulation Main 707U, A Composing-room Main 7070. A BUK5 Printing-room ..Maln 7070. A B05 Superintendent Building. .Main 7070. A OU3 AMUSEMENTS. HEILia THEATER (Broadway, at Taylor) Charles Frohman-Klaw & Erlinger pre sent Elsie Ferguson in the drama, Out cast.' This afternoon at 215 and tonlgnt at 8:15 o'clock. BAKER THEATER Broadway and Slxtn. between Morrison and Aider layman a. Howe's spectacular moving; pictures. Afternoon and night- OAKS AMUSEMENT PARK Concert band and vaudeville. VaudeTllle. PANTAGES (Broadway at AIderT"Per" formances 2:30. 7:30 and 8:80 V. M. EMPRESS (Broadway and TCamhlll) Per formances 2:3o. 7:30 and :Xrf P. Motion Picture Th raters. ORPHEUM Broadway UATIONA lngton. PEOPLES West Park, near Alder. MAJESTIC Park and Washington. KEW STAR Park and Washington. 6UN8ET THEATER Broadway and Wash ington. , and Stark. -Park. West Park, near Wash- YOUNG, CLEVER, SENSIBLE IS MISS ELSIE FERGUSON Noted Star, Now at Heilig in "Outcast," Reveals Characteristics "Miriam" of Which Author of Great Play Never Dreamed. of Pomona Grange Meets "With Co lumbia. Pomona Grange will hold Its quarterly meeting today with Columbia Grange, in the hall on the Columbia River Highway, at Corbetts. There will be a business session in the forenoon. Dinner will be Berved at noon by Co lumbia Grange. At 1:30 o'clock, the field-day committee will meet to de cide whether a field day shall be held. An open forum will be conducted by the lecturer after the committee ses sion. A programme will be rendered and tonight a class will receive the fourth degree. J. J. Johnson, master, will preside. Many will go to the hall by automobile and others will go by train to Corbetts. where they will be met by automobiles and taken up the hill to the halL Columbia Grange has been preparing for several months for the entertainment of Pomona Grange. H. C. Myers1 Funeral Is Held. Fu neral services of H. C. Myers, pioneer and first Mayor of the old municipal government of East Portland, who died Sunday were held yesterday afternoon from the East Side Baptist Church. Rev. W. O. Shank and Elder Charles Hoy" officiated. The pallbearers were the nephews of Mr. Myers, Clay Green, William Green, Thomas Myers, Joseph Myers. John Wright and John Ware. Mr. Myers was 7 8 years old. He came to Oregon across the plains by ox team in 1866. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Irene H. Myers, and four children, Mrs. H. E. Warren, J. H. Myers Miss Winnifred Myers, M. J. Myers. He was a charter member of Washington Lodge No. 46 of Masons and was an active business man in the early history of East Portland. El-DOUOLAS COONTT FOLK TO MEET. The fourth annual reunion of the Douglas County Association of Port land will meet in the auditorium and grounds at Pninsular Park Sunday, June 27. The association, which is composed of ex-residents of Douglas County who now reside In Portland, and its environs, has a membership of 600. An approprate programme con sisting of speeches, music and recita tions, will be rendered. Among the members are Senator Harry Lane; George M. Brown, Attorney-General; Binger Hermann, ex-Commissioner of the General Land Office; Henry L. Ben son, Associate Judge of the Supreme Court of the State of Oregon, and other noted sons of Oregon. Mr. Buchtel Pats Tribute to H. Y. Thompson. Joseph Buchtel, pioneer, pays high tribute to the late H. Y. Thompson, who recently died at Seat tle. "Thompson was member of the firm of Hill, Thompson & Durham," said Mr. Buchtel, "while I was Sheriff of Multnomah County, and I came to know of many cases where, he appeared for people who were without means. Thompson never turned away any man because he had no money, but always gave such clients the same energy he displayed in cases where he received heavy fees, Thompson was an able at torney, especially before a Jury." $20,000 E statu Is Left. An estate estimated to be worth $20,000 was left by Mrs. Sarah A. Carpenter, who died at Salem June 11. according to the petition and will which were filed in County Clerk Coffey's office yesterday. The will leaves $5000 to Mrs. Car penter's sister, to be paid to her in monthly installments of Half of the remainder is given outright to Mrs. Carpenter's grandson, A. Jessup Strang, of Salem. The remainder is divided among four other grandchildren, H. C. Brodie, R. C. Brodie, R. K. Brodie and Be Etta. Brodie. Alumni to Go to Mount Angel At least 60 members of the Mount Angel College Alumni will leave on a special car at 4 o'clock today to at tend the annual reunion and banquet of the alumni association at Mount Angel tonight. The special car will leave over the Willamette Valley Southern at East Water and East Mor rison streets. Among the speakers at the reunion will be Circuit Judge J. P. Kavanaugh, Wilfred Farrel, John Kelly and Dr. Octave Goffin. Out West Editor Herb Friday. Robert Spangler, of Twin Falls, Idaho, editor of Out West, will visit Port land Friday to go over the Columbia Highway and prepare articles for pub lication in several of the leading tourist and outing magazines of the East. Mr. Spangler will be accom panied over the highway by G. S. Crego, the official photographer of the Chamber of Commerce, and will be sup plied with all material he desires for the preparation of his articles. Miss Db Graff- to Speak. "Peace and War and Europe Today" will be the subject of an address by Miss Grace De Graff at the luncheon of the Port land Ad Club at the Multnomah Hotel today. Miss De Graff was one of the delegates to the Women Peace Confer ence at The Hague. L. H. Newman, of St. Louis will also give a short busi ness talk. C. A. Benedict will be chair man of the day. Next Rosb Fete to Be Discussed. Plans for the Rose Festival next year win De ciscussed at a meeting of the auxiliary committee of the Rose Fes tival Association to be held at the Mult nomah Hotel tonight at 8 o'clock at the call of A. K. Higgs, president. Reports of committee on this year's festival will be read and discussed. Mr. Higgs has asked for a full attendance of the committee. Six Seek Divorces. Six sought divorces in suits filed in County Clerk Coffey's office yesterday. They were: "Viola K. Mader against Edward M. Mader, cruelty; C. V. Lyman against Jennie Lyman, desertion; Virna S. Lee against Robert M. Lee, cruelty; Adele C. Bowker against J. W. Bowker, cruelty; Eva Brown against Frank Brown, desertion and cruelty; Mamie Grace against Victor Grace, desertion. Woman Sues Autoist. Elizabeth Peters yesterday brought suit for $20, 000 damages against Roy Gee. whose automobile struck her at Sixth and Washington streets on April 19. Mrs. Peters says in her complaint that she was internally injured, and will be permanently maimed. She blames the driver of the automobile for her in juries. St. Clements School, to Close. The school at St. Clements parish, St. Johns, will close tomorrow night with an entertainment in the school halL There will be a musical programme, which will be followed by a coraedy entitled "Women's Rights," and Mao a "Forty- nve Minute urama. Mi Irvinoton Home must be sod; a. real bargain, is 884. Oregonian. Adv. Qualitt m Printing awd Bindino. F. W. Ba)s & Co., Main 165. A 1165. Adv. DEWQHTFtTL, week-end trip, Shipherds Springs, Carson, Wash. Adv. I f ' -v - ' ' ' - U, j I; t r ' ' 11 Elsie Fergnion In "Outcast." BY LEONE CASS BAER. AN INTBKKSI1NG example or clean, young womanhood is Elsie Fergu son, with strong white teeth and crocus-blue eyes, and a wealth of sofC shiny bronze-gold hair dragged smooth ly back and packed into a fat fold like the tucked-in ends of an omelette. She. is young enough to have nothing to hide, and good-looking enough to have nothing to change. A happy young girl she is, with a natural smile. I think that is what I liked the most that natural smile. It'B such a relief from the dramatic school smile most actresses affect. She was lounging around in a pinkish, close clinging negligee in her suite at the Nortonia when I went to see her yes terday morning, and all the while we talked she softly pulled the petals from a big pink rose and blew them about like bubbles. And between her bubble blowing of the rose petals she talked with amazing good sense. She calmly dissected her play, "The Outcast," and nevealed points in Miriam's soul of which her author never dreamed. "Miriam never had a chance, to be gin with," asserted Miss Ferguson. "You get the keynote of her character in her cry "They could have made what they wanted out of me." Her tragedy lies in the fact that they made the wrong thing out of her. Women are invariably what men make of them. "in all the stretch of years, from the big beginning of things up to the mo ment of going to press, there is but one real occasion on which a man has plausibly and successfully pleaded, in extenuation of his own shortcomings, that the temptation came from a woman. That case was the very first one on record. It is conceded,, and quite generally I believe, that the fate ful first man's pomological venture was made as a direct result of the In sistence of woman. , "Subsequent mankind has never sub jected Adam to serious condemnation for falling, but there are those who have used and misused the precedent. These men whine about the woman tempting me. It's all bosh. In 99 out of 100 euch cases she does nothing of the kind. If men are tempted it's because they want to be. or seek out tempta tion." All of which said Miss Ferguson in defense of Miriam. And a lot more she said, pungent, brilliant observations, but not for print. She is Scotch and German, which partly accounts for the enigma of her personality and her moods. She rose from the chorus, and. unlike lesser stars, she remembers it with delicious humor. A season ' in "Pierre of the Plains" was the bridge which carried the lovely Miss Fergu son from the third from the end in the rank and file of the merry-merrys to propinquity with dukes and earls and millionaires and social lights and othei what-nots in success. And that is in a manner speaking -considerable bridge. She is an American girl and was edu cated in Europe. Her favorite recrea tlons are modern dancing and horse back riding, and she is passionately devoted to good music. She emphasized the "good." Every concert of im portance finds Elsie Ferguson in its audience If she' can get away from the theaters. Not fiction, but history of music, makes up her chief reading and her prime ambition used to be a grand opera career. She has been a star six years and is delightfully unspoiled, ap preciative of her audiences' interests, and most thoroughly happy when she is giving others happiness. And that's a big undertaking all in itself, isn't it? Canning Demonstration Given. Miss Helen Cowgill, of the Oregon Agricultural College, gave a canning demonstration Monday night before the North East St. Johns Improvement As sociation, which met at the Savings Bank building. Miss Cowgill took the raw material and went through the process of canning by means of the steam method, which she said had been indorsed by the United States Depart ment of Agriculture. Miss Cowgill used a steam boiler into which the jar con taining the raw vegetables was placed and subjected to a heavy steam pres sure. . Miss Cowgill explained that this is a method by which any family or school, or farm, can use and save surplus apples, or vegtables, which are usually thrown away. She told of many cases where boys and girls had made a substantial income by using the canning methods, and pointed out that schools can become canning in- stitutions- Asssssments Arh Made. The dis trict improvement of East Forty-fourth and other streets has been completed and an assessment of $12,526 has been made for -the payment of the work. This district includes East Forty fourth, East Fifty-fifth, between Divi sion and East Lincoln streets. East Seventy-second street, which includes grading and concrete curbs and walks, the cost being $1814. East Twentieth, from Prescott to Crane streets has been improved at cost of $1562. The district improvement of Fifty-third and Fifty-fourth avenues has been im proved at a cost of $1136. Thomas Dufft's Funeral, Held. Fu neral services of Thomas Duffy, who died Sunday at his home, 467 East Twelfth street, were held yesterday from this residence and the St. Philip Neri Church, East Sixteenth and East Hickory streets. Interment was made in Mount Calvary Cemetery. Mr. Duffy was a member of branch No. 205, Catholic Knights of America, and many of the members attended the services. He was 61 years of age, is survived by his widow, Mrs. Mary E. Duffy, was the father of Mary, Margaret, 'Eliza beth. Agnes and Thomas Duffy and had long been a resident of Portland. Mrs. Healt's Funeral. Held. Fu neral services of Mrs. Bridget Healy, who died Sunday at the home of her daughter, 508 East Eleventh street, were held yesterday from St. Mary's Church, Williams avenue and Stanton street, and interment was made in Mount Calvary Cemetery. Mrs. Heaiy was 80 years old. She was the mother of Thomas Duffy, of North Yakima, Wash.; Mrs. John A. Jennings and C. J. Healy, of Portland. Two in Opium Raid Are Fined. Con victed of conducting an opium den at 526 Pettygrpve street. Ethel White craft and Thornton Robinson, both colored, were fined in Municipal Court yesterday. Judge Stevenson levied a fined of $25 upon the woman and $35 upon her companion. They were ar rested Sunday after the house ha'd been watched for several hours. Utensils for cooking opium were confiscated and in troduced as evidence. Portland Presbttert to Meet. The Portland Presbytery will hold an adjourned meeting this afternon at 2 o'clock in the First Presbyterian Church to act on the resignation of Rev. J. E. Youel, as pastor of the Spokane-Avenue Presbyterian Church, Sellwood. The church accepted the resignation and appointed three com missioners to appear before the pres bytery to ask that the pastoral rela tions be dissolved. Man Crushed by Train. Caught be tween train 18 from Salem and a switch engine in the Southern Pacific yards near the Bumside bridge yester day shortly before 5 o'clock, Peter Mc Avoy, section" foreman, was severely crushed and received a bad scalp wound. He was rushed to Good Sa maritan Hospital. McAvoy is 53 years old and lives at 740 East Twenty-first street. Retail store location for rent. Reasonable rate. Heart of the business district. S 890. Oregonian. Adv. Oriental Rugs wash-cleaned and repaired. Cartozian Bros. Alain 3433 Adv. JITNEYS MUST OBEY City Proposes to Enforce New Law July 1. CROWDING IS CONTINUED Required Time of Service Will "Be Demanded, as Well as Following of Fixed Routes Owl Antos Must Post Rate Schedule. No Jitney will be permitted to oper ate in Portland after July 1 without full compliance with every feature of the jitney regulation ordinance ap proved by the voters In the recent city election. This was the announcement yesterday of .City Commissioner Daly, who has charge cf plans for the en forcement of the regulations. By July 1 every Jitney driver intend ing to continue in business must have an application on file with the Munici pal Department of Public Utilities and must have successfully passed an ex amination to show his ability to drive a car. His car must have been in spected and approved. Each car must have signs on the front and sides indicating the route to be followed. This route must be fol lowed continuously from 6 A. M. until 10 A. M.. and from 3 P. M. until 10 P. M. The car must not change its route without securing written permission from the Department of Utilities. At no time during the hours mentioned must the Jitneys leave their routes either to deliver passengers or for any other purpose. Minimum License $3 Month. Each Jitney seating five passengers must pay a license of $2 a month in advance. For each additional seat a charge of 25 cents a month will be made. Commissioner Daly said yesterday that he Intends to enforce the ordi nance to the letter. Necessary blank forms are being prepared at present and an inspector of Jitneys and drivers will be appointed within a few days. OAKS AUDITORIUM 3 Fine Concerts next Saturday, June 19 at 8 P. M. Sunday, June 20 at 3 P. M. and 8 P. M. LUTHER COLLEGE CONCERT BAND 63 Performers AND CHORAL UNION 44 Voices A musical opportunity of a lifetime. Tickets 50c Children 25c Including: admission to The . Oaks Tickets Now On Sale at Sherman, Clay & Co., 315 Mor rison. - Eilers Piano House, Alder and Broadway. Wiley B. Allen, Broadway and Morrison. Tonseth Floral Co., 133 Sixth. Langoe Publishing: Co., 213 Washington, and at The Oaks Office. On the Square We will be fair and honorable with you. We examine your eyes by scienti fic methods, and in our own workshop p r e- VnV"S pare me lenses fl .'-3 which cor rect defects of t' guarantee abso lute satisfaction and our prices are as low as the very best service warrants. Wheeler Optical fo. FIFTH FLOOR, OBEUONUN SLDQ, Mr. Daly said yesterday that the same man will test drivers as Inspects the working parts of the machines to see that they are safe. It is expected that the enforcement of the measure automatically will put many of the Jitneys out of business. At present they are remaining in service by dodging from one route to another wherever passengers can be found. No attempt is made at regular service on all lines. Jitney CroTrdingr Continues. It was decided by the Council at its last meeting that the provision of the ordinance regarding the overloading of the Jitneys should be enforced at once. Apparently, however, the Council's or der Is not being enforced as the Jitneys are operating with overloads on all lines. This was one of the most im portant features of regulation when the present ordinance first was under consideration. Owl Jitneys as operating at present sre to come to grief unless they post both inside and outside their cars a schedule of their rates. Commissioner Daly said yesterday that the owl cars are virtually doing a taxicab business The Store of 100 Per Cent Service. Due to a backward season, all Spring; and Summer garments are in, OUR CLEARANCE at drastic price reductions. These are a few : Men's Palm Beach Suits at . $20 Men's and Young Men's Suits . . . ... $25 Men's and Young " Men's Suits ...... $15 Men's $7.50 Panamas, $5.85; Men's $5 Panamas, $4.35; Men's $3 Straw Hats, $2.45; Men's $2.50 Straw Hats, $1.65; Men's $1.50 Negligee Shirts, $1.15 ; Men's $4 and $5 Oxfords, $2.45, and many others await you today. COPYRIOHT ttS KUPPKNHKlMElt Successor to Steinbach & Co. GUS KUHN, Pres. Morrison At Fourth Tell tHe Wife Women's and Misses' $10 and $15 Outing Coats selling at $4.85 S. & H. Stamps Given. Kidney Trouble and Poor Eyesight Go Together If you have kidney and bladder trouble, the chances are that your eyesight is also poor, for eyesight is affected by these troubles. Thousands of men and women know they have kid ney and bladder disorders that unfit them for any worth-while worje. These people can all be bene fited by taking a course of drinking BUFFALO LITHIA Springs Watr Thousands of people whp for merly had kidney and bladder troubles are now doing work worth while. Their ability to do so is the result of drinking Buffalo Lithia Springs Water. Don't put up with needless suffer ing 'when you can get Buffalo" Lithia Springs Water at the nearest druggist's. Order a case and begin drinking it today. Drink six to eight glassfuls a day you will soon notice improvement. A few ) months of this treatment will put you on your feet again. 'Phone your nearest druggist. Our local distributor im Blumauer-Frank Drug Co. U 0 HOTEL TURPIN .17 POWELL ST. AT MARKET 0 m LI IN THE HEART OP THE CTTV 0 European Plan $1.50 and Upward EVERY CONVENIENCE I : AND COMFORT1, j fH3 A M T?P AMPTSrn M. A. A Mr ATA. JL -m 0 "EE Hi Auto Bus Meets Trains Steamers and are not hauling passengers on the five-cent fare basis. In face of this fact, steps wili be taken att once to force them to comply with the taxicab ordinance to the extent of posting no tice of their schedule of rates. - FURNISHED HOUSE. Owners away during Summer. Want someone in house to look after plants and shrubbery. House finely furnished. Big house, big yard, plenty of flowers. Rent of what it should be if we get the right people. July S to October 1. AP 884, Oregonian. Adv. Changes in Train Time Astoria Division and Inauguration of Clatsop Beach Summer Schedule Saturday, June 19 No. 21, local for Scappoose, Rainier, Astoria and Clatsop Beach, daily; leave 7:15 A. M. instead of 8:10 A, M.; arrive Astoria 11:05 A. M.; arrive Seaside 12:01 P. M. No. 22, Portland-bound, leave Seaside 7:25 A. M., Astoria 8:20 A. M.; arrive Portland 12:05 P. M. No. 29, SEASHORE LIMITED, DAILY; leave 8:30 A. M., leave Astoria 11:40 A. M. ; arrive Seaside 12:30 P. M. No. 32. PORTLAND LIMITED: leave Seaside 6:30 P. M., Astoria 7:20 P. M. : arrive Portland 10:20 P. M. ' i No. 33. CALIFORNIA STEAMER TRAIN; leave 9:30 A. M., Astoria 12:35 A. M.: arrive Flavel 12:55 P. M., sailing- days. No. 34 STEAMER TRAIN for Portland; leave Flavel 1 P. M., Astoria 1:25 P. M.; arrive Port land 4:25 P. M.. steamer days. No 31, WEEK-END SPECIAL, Saturdays only, for Astoria, Gearhart and Seaside; leave 2 P. M.. Astoria 5 P. M.; arrive Seaside 5:55 Pi M. No. 30. PORTLAND LIMITED, Monday only; leave Seaside 8:30 A. M storia 9:20 A. M.; arrive Portland 12:30 P. M. No. 23, local for Astoria and Clatsop Beach points, daily; leave 6:30 P. M. Same as at present, but will run through to Seaside DAILY; arrive Astoria 10 P. M., arrive Seaside 10:50 P. M. .,: No. 24, local for Portland: leave Seaside 4 P. M leave Astoria 5 P. M.; arrive Portland 8:0 P. M. RAINIER LOCAL Leaving time of Nos. 25 and 27 unchanged. No. 27 arrives Rainier 7:30 P. M. No. 26, same as at present. No. 28. leave Rainier 3:05 P. M. instead of 3 P. M.; arrive Portland 5 P. M. Account CONNECTIONS at Linnton with UNITED RAILWAYS the following, changes will be effective on United Railways: - . 4 No. 4 will leave Wilkesboro "10:30 A. M. instead of 10:40 A. M., and arrive at Linnton 11:35 A. M. in stead of 11:45 A. M. No. 6 will leave Wilkesboro 3:35 P. M. instead of 3:25 A. M., and arrive Linnton 4:32 P. M. instead of 4:22 P. M. OT.iEH CHANGES AFFECT LOCAL TRAINS HKTWEEX ASTORIA, . BEACH POIXTS. FORT STEVENS AND CLATSOP SEE NEW TIME TABLES FOR FULL DETAILS TO BE ISSUED FRIDAY. NORTH BANK Ticket Office Fifth and Stark Station Tenth and Hoyt , Broadway 920 A 6671 IMMEDIATE ACTION MAY SAVE LOCAL FIRM The Rose Show, while a beautiful local sentiment in every way and well worth all the time and thought given to it, incurred a great hardship on this firm, struggling against time to win out in a game of finances. As I told you before, some of our stockholders must be paid off. They want their money. The only way in which this business can be saved is to take the money out of the firm. This must be done by selling pianos at a price so low . that they will insure immediate action. I have cut and slashed regardless of cost and have sold many fine, standard-make instruments at prices un heard of in Portland or anywhere else. I have sold here in Portland standard makes for less money than they would cost wholesale on the floor in thejr Eastern factories and showrooms. But I see that I- must go still fur ther. The past week's loss of busi ness, due to the fact that people were interested in " the rose show and en tertaining visitors, has meant the loss of many precfoys days to me. Now, I must ask you to hurry. I will make it worth your while. If you will help me save this business by helping me raise the balance of the $40,000 which I must raise to pay off stockholders, then I guarantee to give you in return, piano values such as you never dreamed of. I don't ask you to play favorites or I do not ask you to do this for me on any basis but a straightforward business proposition. It is worth much money to me to be able to raise the $40,000 so that I can save this business and if you will help me do it I will be glad to pay you well for it. For example, I have on hand a standard make piano. Ordinarily you wculd pay $550 and would be getting a bargain in value. If you come be fore someone else gets here you can have it for $325. Of course, I am putting these prices so low in hopes that I can get all cash, because it is cash that I must have. But if you are not in position to pay cash, then I can arrange so that at only a very slight advance you can get any piano you want and on terms that will make it possible for you to have your favorite instrument. Be sure to come soon. I must have quick action and I will give you the bargains that will deserve it. Used pianos, good condition, low as $60. New player pianos as low as $230. Every piano backed by our fac tory guarantee, which is as good as a bank note. E. H. HOLT, Pres. E. H. Holt Piano Company.'Wholesal ers and Retailers, 333 Morrison St., just off Broadway. Northwestern Bank Building. uyp-if-l"""'"-""""i"'t in 1 --sSyJV-SSL- I .M.lltlf.V..., .. ....lt....,Mffnn "Jf L.....,i...Y.1.t.ii.iu..,iii...iiili.Mn.,i.i....J,,.....l Lunch 11:30 to 2 40c and 50c Dinner 5:30 to 9 50c and 75c You Enjoy a Good Meal and so does every one; that is why so many discriminating diners choose the Imp erial Hotel Grill as a place to please their pal ates and satisfy their appetites. Come today and - let us serve you. Instrumental Music During Dinner Hours New Direct Entrance to Grill From Broadway. L..r.......$ti, .yi..mi iiiiiiiiiiiiuIiiiuiiUii i..i.. .in.m Ill II ili !l I ii! liliii II I I iyimimiii A Suggestion BUILD UP YOUR CREDIT by becoming a depositor in this strong state bank. When it is known that you carry an ac count here your credit and gen eral business prestige will be greatly enhanced; it is a finan cial leverage to be seriously considered. Commercial and Savings Accounts Four Per Cent Interest Paid on Time Deposits LADD & TIL.TON BANK Oldest la the Northirwt. Rfwrarwii Otw Fourteen and One-Half Million Dollars. Washington and Third gr- ------- ') SUSS- ARTISTIC HOMES - PLANS S3. ' 360 W5WMT1 Iftl&m wwfcrtim ICCMWAB PRINTING CO KJbEN F.GREENE-HARRY FISCHER 24 54 STARK STREET