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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1915)
TTTE MORNING OREGONIAN. MONDAY, JULY 19T5. CITY NEWS' IN BRIEF OKEGOX1AN TELEPHONES. atanag-ing- Editor Main 7O70. A 6095 Oity Editor '. Main 707i. A 605 Sunday Editor Main 7070. A )5 Advertising Department. .Main 7070. A ir Olty Circulation Main 7070. A 60U5 Composing-room Main 7070. A 60tto Priming-room Main 7070. A 60H5 Superintendent Building. .Main 7070. A ttuos AMUSEMENTS. OAKS AMUSEMENT PARK Varied amuse znents, concert band and vaudeville; Sou- a s band afternoon and night. PAN'TAGES (Alder at Broadway) Vaude ville. Performances 2:30, 7:30 and 0:30 EMPRESS (Broadway and Stark) Vaude ville. Performances 2:30. 7:30 and 0:15 t'. .VI. ORPH EUM Broadway and YamhilL Movies. MAJESTIC Park and Washington. Movies. OREGOSIANS AT HE SORTS. Subscribe with the following agents, at your Summer resort, to secure the roost prompt delivery of The Ore gonlan. City rates. Subscriptions by mail are payable in advance; Bar View E. V. Jackson Bay City. Or . P. Marcher Bay Ocean .....W. S. Jobnson Brighton. Or W. A. Bo we Carson. Wash Carl B. Smith Mineral Springs Hotel Columbia Beach Mrs. N. E. Burkhesvd Ecola, Or L. W. Crone Garibaldi It. C. Ellis Gearhart. Or Mrs. M. S. Elliott Eons: Beach J. H. Strauhal Luke Lytle .Frank Miller Manhattan Manzanltn. ....... Mrgler. Or ahcotta. Wash.. Newport, Or...... Ocean Park Ocean Lake Park. Rockaway Beach, galtalr ....Frank Miller ...K. J. Kardeil ....Louis Cohen ... .J. H. Brown . . .O. '. Berron . .1. E. Beectoey .O. E. Comstock .... frank Miller ....Frank MlUer Seaside. Or Clark btratton beavlew. Wash Constable Putnam Twin Hooks Frank Miller Tillamook. Or J. 8. Lamar Wheeler. Or B. H. Cady Wilbolt Springs F. W. McLaren Elders Are Installed. At the serv ices yesterday morning at the consoli dated First United Presbyterian Church, IJast Thirty-seventh street and Haw thorne avenue, the recently elected elders of the consolidated church were installed. R. D. Hamilton. H. M Nisbet and L. B. Speer were installed for a three-year term and P. H. Steven eon and W. A. Carrie for five years each. Rev. F. D. Findley. the pastor, officiated, and delivered an address. Last night a platform meeting was held during which several addresses were delivered. Miss Eleanor Ewing, of Reed College; Miss Berger, vice president of the Washington State Christian Endeavor Union; Miss Kerr, of the Muskingum College; James Kelso, of Monmouth College, and E. M. Runyan, of Reed College, made brief talks. Holiness Camp Meeting Closes. The eleventh annual campmeeting of the Oregon Holiness Association came to a close last night at the grounds, East Thirty-third and Mason streets. Yesterday was the biggest day of the entire ten days. Services began at 6 A. M. and lasted all day. In the morn ing breakfast and a public meeting at the tabernacle were held. Big meetings were held through the afternoon and last night the final services. were con ducted. A number of ministers and evangelists took part, including Rev. Charles Stalker, Rev. C. W. Ruth, of Indianapolis; Rev. Stella Crook, of Portland;' Dr. Alexander Beers, of Se attle, Wash., and Mrs. Edith White sides, of Portland, newly-elected presi dent of the association. Rev. J. F. Ghoemlet to Return. Rev. J. F. Ghormley, formerly a prominent minister of the Christian Church and builder, of Portland, will arrive in Port land Tuesday or Wednesday to take the place of his son, Rev. J. Carlos Ghormley, pastor of the Montavilla Christian Church while the latter takes his vacation. Rev. J. F. Ghormley has been pastor at Great Fall 8, Mont., but is anxious to return to Portland even lor a short time. He was pastor of the Central Christian Church, East Salmon and East Twentieth streets, having founded that church. His son will pass ihis vacation in Eastern Oregon. Child's Clothino Found. Clothing found on the banks of Columbia Slough on Friday, and apparently the property of a girl 5 or 6 years old, was turned over to the police bureau yesterday by Claude Roycoft, of 894 Simpson street, a member of the Juvenile Police. The clothes included a brown and white checked dress, black stockings and supporters, and under clothes. That a girl may have been drowned while in swimming, or have been the victim of an attack. Is the theory being investigated. No girl of that age has been reported missing of late. Mr. McMichael to Lecture. Stanley L. McMichael, of Toledo, secretary of the National One-Cent Letter Postage Association, will be the speaker at the luncheon of the Members Council at the Chamber or Commerce today at noon. Mr. McMichael is making a tour of the Coast In the interest of the 1-cent letter postage movement and is delivering lectures in each city. C. H. Lane, tailor, now located with C. B. Turlay & Co.. 213 Plttock block. Adv. Clerk J. E. Tanch Retires. J. E. Tanch. clerk of the St. Johns school district, has retired after 12 years of service. He turned over to the Port land district $1796.45 and $1631.63 from the James John fund when, the district was merged with the Portland district. The St. Johns district, while Mr. Tanch was clerk, spent many thousands of dollars ir the erection of the James John and high schools and several grammar schools. Section Line Road Ijtproved. "While the Base Line and Sandy roads are being paved the Section Line road also has been improved. The county has had several crews at work for a week on the road between Portland and Gresham. Screened gravel has been used for a surface and the road has been oiled for most of the distance. Most of the traffio between Portland and Gresham takes the Section Line road. "Education in- Business" la Topic "Education In Business" will be the subject of the programme at the Rotary Club luncheon at the Benson Hotel to morrow. C. B. Waters will be chair man of the day and H. C. Spillman will be the chief speaker. I. M. Walker will talk on typewriters and Mr Waters has arranged for a demonstra tion of speed by some of the fastest typewriters In the country. Alleged Foroer Returned. Deputy District Attorney Arthur Murphy re turned from California yesterday after noon with Earl Kisby, aged 19, wanted in this city for forgery. Kisby is al leged to have violated the parole granted him on April 12 of this year by forging two checks on the National Amusement Company pay slips. He was arrested by Long Beach. Cal., police. Prisoners Enjot Concert. E. L McFaden yesterday spoke to prisoners at the city Jail and entertained them with a Victrola concert, made possible by Sherman, Clay & Co. His talk on "Turning Points" was followed by the concert in which a number of grand opera records were used. Hatnes' old - fashioned salt - rising bread Is delicious. Ask your grocer e Adv. Printed Books, Catalogs. Posters. V- W. Baltes & Co.. Main 165, A 1165. Adv. Dr. J. D. Duback, eyesight specialist, aixtb, floor Benin bull din,-. Afiv. Sandy Man Buried at I.iDEPKvnmrit Funeral services for Frank Patterson, ex-resident of Sandy, who died from injuries in an accident at Independence, were held at Independence July 16. Rev. John Osborn officiated. The pall bearers were from the Sandy Oddfel lows' lodge, of which Mr. Patterson was past noble grand and were A. C. Baumback. W. V. Rogers, F. E. Beck with. Clem Bartch. Otto Meinlg and George Maroney. Many other members of the lodge attended the services. Mr. Patterson was 35 years old. He is sur vived by his widow, mother, two brothers and four sisters. "Veterans to Picnic at Oaks. The Oregon Veterans' Association and auxiliary will hold their annual picnic at the Oaks, Saturday. August 7. Vet erans with badges will be admitted to grounds for half price. Coffee, cream and sugar will be furnished by the committee. Those attending are ex pected to take baskets with lunch. Baritone Soloist to Sino. Fredrick de Bruin, baritone soloist, who has been studying for grand opera, will sing at the meeting of the Central W. C. T. U Wednesday afternoon. The meeting is to be at the union's headquarters, 171 H Eleventh street. "The Requiem" and "Open the-Gates" will be the solos. MAJESTIC FILM GRIPS "PROHIBITION" FICTTRES CLEARLY POWER OF LIQUOR HABIT. Plot of Story Entertaining, Action la Rapid and Lesson Carried la Strong; Flea for Temperance. -"Prohibition," a great seven-reel drama, vividly picturing the effect of drink "to the third and fourth genera tion," is the Majestic attraction all this week. The DlOt Of th mtnwv la nnfAM.4 rapidly in a prologue, in which the mumy un oi a newiy-wedded man, who is a drunkard, is revealed. His Sister. Ulhnl Larliln ,-,..,-. - talented lawyer because of' his Intem perance, ana wnen Lemmale Laxkin's wife dies, leaving two small sons, Dick and Ben, Mabel becomes their foster mother. Later Dlrlc aTlrl Tien lv TT.ttU who is won by Dick. The loser deter mines to ruin his brother, using his inherited cravinar fni dHnir - - -.,.,- Finally succeeding, he takes his brother to a cabin in the woods, where he gives him a supply of liquor. Later the plot is discovered and, in a struggle -with Dick. Ben is killed. In the meantlmA William t -. i - , - lawyer, has reformed and Is elected to Congress on the . Prohibition ticket. Finally, after the third generation, the father and son free themselves from the grasp of rum, and the film ends with Dick rejoicing over the birth of his son. It is a stirrina- nlav. whih irin. reach every class with an entertaining presentation of a great lesson. The characters, too. are wl l nnr-tr-av clearly drawn. 'COLLEGE WIDOW AT OEPHECM Dashing Story of School Life Is Thrilling in Picture Form. The clever and popular "College Widow" Is presented In nirtu rn- the first time Jn Portland at the Or pheum this week. Ethel nvinn .n George Soule Spencer lead an excellent cast as me -College Widow'.' and Billy Bolton. Coach Macgowan finds the football team short of wlnnlne mnta. rial and scrambles about to obtain players, some of whom are Illiterate bums. Billy Bolton, the beat Knrlho.i halfback, stops at Atwater on his way a nvai college and meets Jane Wlth erspoon, ihe president's daughter ("College Widow"). The students str- suade her to induce him to enter at Atwater and play on the team. There are many amusing characters the con stables, the boarding-house waitress and Bud Hicks, who create an abund ance of wholesome comedy. jane consents to wear Billy's frat pin and. after he has won the arrest game, the engagement Is announced. An inimitable spirit of college enthu siasm makes the film one of the most attractive comedies imaginable. MOOSE BOYS TO PLAY Band I Tom Mooseheart In Free Con cert Tomorrow Xlght. Portland Lodge No. 291. Loyal Order of Moose, will provide a free band con cert at Multnomah field at 8 o'clock tomorrow night. The entertainers will be the Mooseheart Boys' Band of about 40 pieces, from Mooseheart, 111. The boys range in age from 7 or s years to 18 years. All are residents of the National home for the orphan chil dren of members of the Moose order. Mooseheart teaches its children to use their hands and la becorfllnr one of the great vocational Institutions of the country. The band was organized about a year ago and was sent to the r-acirio coast this year to attend the National convention of the order at sn Diego. When the trip of the band waa proposed Portland lodge decided upon a iree concert that the public might have a chance to learn of what the order is doing for Its orphan children. .newspapers of cities In which the band has appeared have co-nnrtH The leader of the band is Harry Nigro, who has not only made musicians of all his boys, but developed three or rour capable soloists. Mr. Nigro also has brought out a team of vaudeville actors who sing, dance and do a bit of monologue. The repertoire of the band Is complete. "Poet and Peasant" and "The Bohemian Girl" are among the selections which the boys play. Prior to the concert Circuit Judge Gatens will deliver a five-minute Ad dress on the Mooseheart Institution. WIFE BEATING IS CHARGED Bruised Woman Doesn't Want Hus band Arrested; Landlady Insists. Bruce T'l Hxt.rs wn o t. trolmen Maxwell and Tyler In the Keystone Annrtmnt nf in T-r - - "-i in auu street, charged with beating his wife at is:ou yesterday morning. According to the police report. Mrs. Plasters ap peared badly bruised and with torn clothing, but did not wish her husband arrested. The landlady of the apart ments insisted that he be taken into custody, however. The rooms were In great disorder "as though a cyclone had struck them" reported the officers. Plasters refused to put on his clothes when put under arrest, and was taken to the station naii-ciotned. - Bend Miss Bank' Guest to Fair. BEND. Or.. July 25. (Snivl.l t Marie Brosterhous, tha winner of a trip to the San Francisco fair offorAi last year by the First National Bank of Bend, left last night for the exposi tion city. The prize was offered to the school child who. In the coming' year, showed the best scholarship, combined with earning and saving ability. Miss Brosterhous, who was In the eighth grade, led her class and at the same time earned over $100 by baking and selling bread. German patrols fighting- In the snow-clad VoEges are provided witn white cioaJta to matwa wlta tat iandscma. EX-CAPTAIN OF COAST SURVEY REVISITS PORTLAND AFTER FIFTY YEARS. ; v - "- ) ' 'i - .... . . it i r- t ' r f CAP".AIJi EM I. EOMOUS, OP PHILADELPH CELILO ORIGIN IS FOUND GOVERXMEXT SCIEXTIST REPORTS IXDIAX WORD MEANING. Name Signifies "Place Where River Cats Into the Bank," Says Tribal Lore Inveatltrator. Celllo the place where the river cuts Into the bank. Dr. Leon J. Frachtenburg, of the Smithsonian Institution, who returned to Portland yesterday, said on a recent trip iiito the Taklma Indian Reserva tion he had gathered Indian lore which enabled him to give that construction to the origin o" the word Celilo, and throw a little additional light on a controversy which held sway during the formal opening of the Celilo CanaL Dr. Frachtenburg said that he had learned from an old Klickitat Indian the origin of the word Celilo. The old Indian told him that the original name for the falls of that name was Selllakt. pronounced with the "kt" almost silent. The word in Klickitat means the place where the river cuts into the bank. Dr. Frachtenburg's work for the Smithsonian Institution consists prima rily of a study of the Indian tribes in his territory with a view to obtaining their history, tradition, language and customs for preservation and with a view ultimately of learning the origin of tha Indians. His territory consists of Oregon, Washington, Alaska and part of California. While at the Yakima reservation Dr. Frachtenburg interviewed the last member of the Tualaty Indians, who were the strongest tribe of the Cala poola Indians Inhabiting the Willam ette Valley. The Indian, who Is called Louis Conoyer, was working for a man near the reservation. While working his territory Dr. Frachtenburg makes his headquarters at Chemawa. A. B. BIELASKI VISITOR DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE HlItEAU CHIEF NOT OX BUSINESS. Head of Investigation Department oa Way Home After Addreaatns; Purity Conareaa In California. A. Bruce Bielaski, chief of the bureau of investigation In the Federal Depart ment of Justice, left Saturday for Se attle after a day's visit In Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Bielaski came to Portland from Ban Francisco, where he repre sented the United States Attorney Gen eral at the meeting of the World's Pur ity Federation.' The Government's handling of cases In white slavery and Its measure for safeguarding women in the United States were the subjects of his ad dresses before the congress. ' Mr. Blelaski's trip to the Northwest wae purely for amusement and he did not devote time1 to examination or the work of local officials. He was enter tained, however, hy Charles P. Pray, special agent of the bureau of investi gation In Portland. . Saturday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Bielaski. with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Evans, made the trip over the Columbia Highway. Mr. Bielaski will go from Seattle to Spokane and thence to Washington direct. "I am rather glad that I have not been especially engaged In official busi ness while in Portland." he said yes terday, "for I find so many attractions here that I should regret anything that would keep me from having time to enjoy them while I may." DEFENDER FINDS INGRATE Public Lawyer Loses Dfploma and $2 Trying to Help Xe'er-Do-Well. David Robinson. beside being the public defender at police headquarters. Is a man with a warm heart and an In dulgent spirit. His dally visitors In clude men of shady pasts and clouded futures, but all are given the best ad vice and practical suggestions as to what their conduct should be. The other day a man with a three months' beard and a lean and hungry look was telling Mr. Robinson a typi cal hard luck tale that Mr. Robinson sensed would Inevitably end in a "strike" for a loan, but the public de fender avoided the inevitable. Learn ing that the unfortunate had at one time been a picture framer, Mr. Robin sort suggested that If the man would put his diploma, won from the Unlvers Jtj oX Oregon Law School, in a Xrame, i ; t , . ' ' i ... .- . A. that a payment of a couple of dollars would keep the man from being an ob ject of charity. The man agreed and the diploma was handed over. And as a result of Mr. Koblnson's practical generosity Carleton E. Spen cer, secretary of the University of Ore gon Law School, is making Mr. Robin son a present of a duplicate diploma. Neither man nor diploma have reap peared. PARADERS BOOST PICNIC Grocers and Merchants plan Big Free Outing at Bonnerllle. Four hundred automobiles, filled with Joyous young people, paraded the streets Saturday night to advertise the pic nic to be given at Bonneville July 28 by the Portland Grocers" and Mer chants' Association. The parade was more tnan five blocks long. The parade was given under the auspices of the Portland Salesmen's Club, of which A. G. Clark Is presl dent. Everything at the picnic will be free, according to Robert G. Duncan, assistant secretary of the association. The programme will Include dancing band music, a baseball game, races and other athletic events. Several hundred dollars will be given away in prizes. BEAUTIFUL HOME. Owner has placed in our hands for sale his handsome Irvlngton home. The house is worth 821.000 but he'll sell it for $18,500. providing he can sell It by August 10. The house Is strictly mod ern and reallv a fine home. Well ar ranged big rooms, high-class wall coverings. Best plumbing shower rooms In addition to two baths four lavatories, four toilets. Two fireplaces. Double electrical system, underground entrance one for lighting and one for cooking and heating by electricity. Big grounds, plenty of shrubbery, flowers and native trees. On corner of one of Irvlngton's widest and best streets and where there are plenty of other good homes. Terms If you want them or would take some trade.. We have the photographs of the Interior and exterior at our office. S. D. Vincent & Co., 816 Chamber of Commerce bldg. Adv. Worms Iestroying Foliage. A new form of prisoner arrived In the police station last night when Pa trolman Shoemaker took In a paper sack containing a quantity of worms. The officer charged tha worms with eating leaves on elm trees on East stark- street between East Forty-seventh and Fifty-second streets. The people In the vicinity have requested the city author- .... m v j "am i no ma worms ana aeter. mine the best method of killing them to save the trees. KOItWEGlAX I.ITHEHAV I Ell 1TALLKI) ESTKKUAY. v. v ... .. s Itev. Wllhelm IVttersea. At an Impressive service yester day morning in the Norwegian Lutheran Church at Fourteenth and Davis streets. Rev. Wllhelm Pettersen. who arrived last week from Portland. Me., was installed. Rev. H. O. Hendrickson officiat ing. Special musio was rendered by the quartet. In the evening there was a union service attend ed by all the Norwegian Lutheran ministers of the city. Rev. Mr. Pettersen succeeds Rev. J. Ellestad. The new pastor was for several years professor of history and literature lit the Augsburg Seminary at Minne apolis. He Is regarded as one of the leaders In his denomination. VISITOR OF '65 HERE Captain Ell D. Edmonds Knew 'Banker Named Ladd' Then. OLD MARKS ARE MISSED Advancement Made by Portland In 50 Tears Is 6tartllng to. Offi cer In Xavy During Civil War; Old Friends Sought. Visiting Portland yesterday after an absence of 60 years. Captain Ell D. Ed monds, of Philadelphia, found himself, as he phrased It. "In a startllngly ad vanced metropolis In which all tha landmarks of 60 years ago have been nearly obliterated by a growth that is little short of miraculous." Captain Edmonds was a Lieutenant In the United States Navy In the Civil War, and In May. 1865, at the close of the war. was ordered to the Pacific Coast In command of the Coast Survey steamer William L. Marcy. to make a survey of the rivers and harbors of California and Oregon. After two years on the California coast he came north and for II months was occupied In a survey of the Columbia Rlvrup to Three Tree Point, about 26 miles from the mouth of the river. "I have come back now. said Cap tain Edmonds, "and I am planning to go over all tha ground I covered in that trip 60 yeara ago. "I have met few people on thta coast whom I knew when I waa here before. Ferdinand Westdahl. who was my Junior officer on the Marcy. Is still In Ban Francisco, where be Is now a cap tain In charge of the United States Coaat and Geodetic Survey. William H. lieuer. then a First Lieutenant with me. Is now a Colonel on the retired list In San Francisco. "I do not know whether I will find anyone In Portland that I used to know. "I remember In the Winter of "87. when the Columbia River was blocked. I was froxen up at Klavel's dock with the revenue cutter Joe Lane and the steamer Orlflamme. On board the Orl flamrae was a Portland banker by the name of Ladd. with whom I became well acquainted. "Later on I visited him In Portland for a short time. He was a great fan cier of horses and took me for several pleesant drives about the city." "Well, well." he said with a gleam of pleasure, when Informed that the Ladd & TUton Bank Is presided over by the descendants of the man he met on the old Orlflamme. "I am glad to hear that there are some people In the Northwest that I still know In an Indirect way. I don't hear many of the names of men that I used to be acquainted with then. "I used to read The Oregontan with a great deal of Interest, for the marine news was mighty good In it in those days, and I have always been Inter ested In thst. -for I have followed the sea all my life." Captain Edmonds Is at the Portland Hotel and will remain here until Thursday, when he will leave for the East, via Seattle. Spokane and Duluth. NOME PASTOR ARRIVES REV. P. E. BAUER RELATES THRILLS AXD DAXGERS OF FAR NORTH. Lure of Gold Makes Work la Alaska Difficult for Charfh, Which Xeeda Help, He Says. His mind stored with thromance of the Northland; his manner softened by two years of constant contact with life In Its most unlovely form and his health improved by the rigors of the climate close to the Arctic CI role. Rev. P. E. Bauer Is again In Portland. For two years Rev. Mr. Bauer has been pas tor of the Federated Church at Nome and. In th course of his stay there, be came acquainted with the conditions In that famous mining camp of 400 per sons. Mr. Bauer went to Alaska two years ago from Salem, where he was pastor of the First Congregational Church. Paators of the Federated Church of Nome are ministers from the Protestant denominations. As two years Is the limit allowed for each de nomination. Mr. Bauer will not return to the North. His place will be taken by a Methodist. He reports that the people are so ob. sessed with the desire to And the "dust" that religion Is practically for gotten and that the churches have to rely on outside assistance for their maintenance. Speaking of Nome. Mr. Bauer said: "It Is a place that glvea to saloons 8300.000 yearly and to churches 85000. "I earned my right to be called a 'sour-dough,'" said Rev. Mr. Bauer, "the first Winter that I was In Alaska." He has "mushed" with reindeer and dogs In the bleakest parts of America's most northerly territory. For 1 days he rode over endless fields of snow with one English and two Eskimo compan ions. The trip was made between Nome and Cape Prince of Wales, 340 miles. On his return from Alaska he came by the "Inside Passage." He brought samples of ore from the Treadwrll mines, that have contributed a large part of the wealth of Alaska, and pieces of Ivory carving. CHURCH CONFERENCE NEAR Kvangellcal Association Meeting at Jennings Lodge Tomorrow. The annual convention and camp meeting of the Evangelical Association of Oregon will open tomorrow morn Inc at 8 o'clock In the tabernacle at Rlvervlew Camp Grove. Jennings Lodge. Rev. It. Schuknecht. the pre siding elder, will be in charge. At 9:20 tha president of the Toung People's Alliance will deliver the open ing address. L. It. Carrlck. president of the Portland Christian Endeavor Union, and Kev. F. M. Fisher. A. K. Bradford. Mrs. Katherine Daugherty. Miss Ruth Martin. Rev. p. Conklln and Miss Kva BtBhoff will speak. Other speakers are R. P. Hutton. state super intendent of the Anti-Saloon League, and Rev. A. P. Lay ton. Vhe meeting will last till August 8. Parmer Paralyzed by Blow. GRAYS RIVER. Wash., July 85. (Special.) While assisting a neighbor on the hay field Friday. Lee Stradley. a prominent farmer, near here, waa paralyzed when a binding pole of the load broke and struck him. Physicians also found several minor Injuries. Mr. Stradley was unmarried and has no relatives here. He came here from Missouri about five years ago. , Forst Fir Soon Controlled. EUGENE. Or- July 25. .(Special.) The first forest fire of the season on the Upper Willamette occurred Friday near Oak Ridge, originating from log ging engine sparks. A logging crew put It under control within a short Una, . . Tlx B & is2r Excursion Rates East Chicago and Return ST. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS. DULUTH. WINNIPEG. OMAHA. KANSAS CITY. ST. JOSEPH. SIOUX CITY and return $GO.OO Reduced rates to many other Eastern Points. Phone, write, or call for information. Ride on the Oriental Limited, 72 hours to Chicag-o. Through Standard and Tourist Sleepers. Leave Portland daily 7:25 P. M. Tickets and Sleeping Car Reservations at CITY TICKET OFFICE. 34S Washington St. (Morgan Bide.) and at DEPOT. IL DICKSON. . C P. & T. A. Arrange stopover at GLACIER NATIONAL PARK on your way East or West, on main line of GREAT NORTHERN R. R. PvSn I 1 Credit Daniel Webster once said that credit had done more a thousand times to enrich na tions than all the mines of the world. How about your credit? ' A banking connec tion with us will add greatly to the credit of any individual and accords a certain busi ness prestige. Bank with us and enjoy the benefits to be derived. LADD & TILTON BANK Oldest in the Northwest. Washington and Third Capital and Surplus, Two Million Dollars. MORE GARDENS WANTED COISTY SCHOOL Sl'Pl'.RlXTEXDEN'T WOI LD EITFAU SYSTEM. Call laaaed for Aaxnal Tearhera la atltate rstrais 1. 2 aid X Sc-keol Dlre-era lavlted. A campaign for the extension of the school gardens to every public school In the county where they can be main tained is to be one of the big moves Inaugurated by County Puperlntrndrnt of Schools Armstrong this Fall. Mr. Armstrong declared yesterday that he planned to give by that means practi cally every student In the county a thorough training In gardening of a practical nature. "There la no reason." he said. wh v the American boys and girls c.vnnot be trained to raise gardens as good as those of the Japanese gardeners around Portland." Mr. Armstrong has ttued a call for the annual county teachers' Institute to be held at the Central Library build ing September 1. X and S. "This date was selected to have the Inatltute over before the schools be gin." said Mr. Armstrong. "It gives the teachers an opportunity to discuss any new teatua or Innovation which they wish to adopt and thus enables the teacher to introduce those changed at the opening of the term." Mr. Armstrong hs invited the school officers of the county to meet the teachers on the last day of the session. This he believes will institute a "get together" spirit for the good of the county schools. "The law provides." said Mr. Arm strong, "that the chairman of the school board be paid IS for that day to defray his expenses. I hsve advised districts to pay 12 each to the remain ing two members of the board and to the clerk, believing It will be money well pent W. C. T. V. to Clve Luncheon. The Multnomah County Woman's Christian Temperance I'nion will give a luncheon to Mrs. Jva Bark ley at the Y. V. C A. dining-room Tuesday noon In the nature of a farewell reception to Mrs. Berkley, who plans to leave shortly for the Kst. Mrs. Berkley 0 Only Company "Exclusively Oregon" Best for Oregonians Home Office, Corbett Building, Fifth and Morrison, Portland A. L. Mills, " President L." Samuel, General Manager Telephones: Marshall SO Is -J- V ia, A L!T rvrr-"- vi "i COLLARS PALACE LAUNHRY iioli: Ai.K nitv cooi. Kt tMniNr;. .NOTION N. L DINKELSPIEL C... San Francisco I'artlaaa 9alearMsa Kherlxa. Kmsb 112. Tfctra. Car. Oak. Esilrrs Prim! ISIXTstalstsc ? (he Krelasit! sa IUsMt, SCHWAB PRINTING CO BEN F.GREENE-HARRY FISCHER 2451 STARK STREET formerly was president of the Tort land Central Woman's Christian Tem perance Union. Shol Klretl at Prowlers. E. S. Streeler. 459 Nineteenth street North, fired two shots at prowlers try ing to break into his basement window at 1:15 o'clock yesterday morning. Mr. Slreeter. a former deputy Sheriff, wae in bed. heard the noise and arose and chased the men to Eighteenth street, where they turned on Thompson street and dsappeared In the direction of tha river. Mr. Streeter does not think he hit either man. On pound of rood bread Is as nutritive as lH pounds of potatoes. Insurance Company C S. Samuel. Assistant Manager. 1. A-22S5 TJAW 1 if in - -. 7 W LI