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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1915)
THE MORNING OltEGOXIAN. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1915. (MS ARRANGE FOR SHOW'S LUST NIGHT Close of Displays Is io Be Marked by Parade and "Coronation" Features. AUCTION TO HELP NEEDY Surplus Supplies Arc to Be Sold to Highest Bidder and Money Used in Ilclicf Work Dog Show Attraction in Afternoon. TODAY'S PROGRAMME, CLOSING THE MANUFACTURERS' AND LAND PRODUCTS SHOW. Closing day, Muta night and Mut dog show W. P. Strandborg; chairman. Aft ernoon. Doors open 1 P. M. 2 to 4:30 P. M. Tigano'a band. 2 to 0 P. it. Vaudeville and mo tion pictures In free theater. 2 P. M. Boy Scouts' band, under Robert King. Evening. 7:15 P. M. Benching entries la Mut dog show In ballroom. 8 to 10:30 P. M. Tigano's band. 8 P. M. Formal opening Mut dog show. 8 P. M. Mut auctioneers unlimber for action. (Proceeds of sales to help the poor.) 0:30 P. M. Announcement of dog show winners. 0:30 P. M. Crowning of Mrs. Luella, Williams, of Sperry flour booth. queen of demonstrators; master of ceremonies, Carl Reiter. manager Orpheura Theater. 11 P, M. Closing of exposition by singing of "Auld Lang Syne." t .......1 There will bo only one place In Port land tonight, and that will be the lanufacturers' and Land Products Show at the Armory. The Order of Muts has taken over the closing- night of the show and has fixed up & final "blaze of splendor" that will make roost other blazes look like insignificant tallow candles. The afternoon will, of course, be de voted to general entertainment and closing features, and the Muts, under the leadership of Chief Mut Bill Strand bourg. will descend upon the show in body at night. i Besides the attractions offered in the afternoon in the little theater, there will be a concert by the Boy Scouts' band, of 14, who will visit the show under the leadership of Scout Leader Robert King and the Rev. J. D. Corby. In the ballroom the afternoon will bo devoted to completing the arrange ments for the Mut Dog Show, which is to bo the feature of the evening. Muta. and Bands to Parade. At night the Order of Muts will pa rade through the streets and draw after them every "live" person in Port land, to witness the closing events of the Manufacturers' and Land Products Show. Efforts are being made to se cure a number of bands for service at that time. The Muts will not confine their ac tivities to any one section of the Armory; they will pervade it. The Mut jjog mow wm oe on In the ballroom, and in another time and place the coro nation of the most popular demonstra tor in the show win be made. Mrs. Luella "Williams has been elect ed most popular demonstrator, and the coronation ceremonies win be under the direction of Ed Duffy and his "champion aggregation of Oriental queen crowners." The actual corona tion and the speech of the occasion will be made by Carl Reiter, managr of the Orpheum and one of the new stars in the local firmament of Mutdom. Auction to Aid Relief Kund. And then there will be the general . auction sale. The purpose of the auc tlon is to dispose of goods on hand at the close of the show, and the proceeds will go toward the Winter relief fund which the Muts are raising for the benefit of the poor" in the Christmas holidays. There -will be 28 auctioneers scat tered about the building: wherever it is convenient and wherever there is anything to bo put Tip for sale. Charles Berg will be anchored to the sausage booth and will sell hams all evening, while Ed Werlein will be ordered to use his sonorous voice in the disposal of sandwiches or potatoes. Auctioneers are said to be, instructed to stop at nothing as long as people are buying, and to sell everything that isn't nailed down and sell what is nailed down, if they can borrow a crow bar to pry it loose. Song's to Tahrr Show Out. After the auction sales are all over there will be the goodnight chorus, "Auld Lang Syne," suns: by the entire multitude, with the Ad Club quartet and some others of the most popular singers in the city leading. This feature will definitely mark the passage of the 1915 Manufacturers' and Land Products Show into history. The exhibitors and demonstrators are to hold a party among themselves after the show closes tonight, provided there is anything left them by the Muts, but that isn't to be open to the general public or to anybody who hasn't learned the password or found a friend who knows it. STORAGE LAW ADVOCATED I-'ood Commissioner Favors Act to Require Proper Labels. The need of a law regulating cold storage plants and enforcing the labeling- of all cold storage food is present ed by J. D. Mickle, State Dairy and Food Commissioner, in an article ap pearing in the October issue of the Oregon Dairy and Food Bulletin. Mr. Mickle says that such a bill will be in troduced at the next session of .the Legislature. "If the law demanded honest label ing of all cold storage food products and all dealers complied." he says, "the housewife would soon learn that cold storage is not the bugaboo that it is now looked upon by many, and that proper cold storage and proper han dling after cold storage is much safer than much of the present-day "hen house storage' and "barnyard storage.' ' Centralis Auction Day Is Here. -CENTRA LI A, Wash.. Nov. 12 (Spe cial.) Centralias first monthly auc. tion day will be held tomorrow under the auspices of the Commercial Cluh .1. H. Roberts, financial secretary of the club, will act as clerk at the sale. Kwmers have been invited to list ar ticles for sale, and enough already has been listed to keep the auctioneers ousy tne entire day. SOME OF THE PROSPECTIVE PRIZE WINNERS AT THE -MUT" DOG SHOW THAT CLOSES THE SEC OND MANUFACTURERS' AND LAND PRODUCTS SHOW. - r i f I ZV J 1" ; i Vsr ', ill, vof" lii :' (1) "Henry," a Thoroughbred S'ord Retriever. Scenting Tils Objective. 2 "Stub," a Flea Hound, Snapped In an Idle Moment. :! "You Got-i Quit Klcklns My Dog Aroun'!" DOG SHOW TONIGHT Canines of Every Description to Be Entered. BLOOD IS DISQUALIFICATION Boys Go Into Highways and Byways In Search of Mongrelcst Typ and Voungsters Will Be Guests of Muts After Awards Made. GIRLS AS WEll AS BOYS MAY E.TGa MUX DOGS. Girls as well as boys are eligi ble to enter dogs in the Mut Dog night at the Manufacturers' and Land Products Show this even ing. The office at the land show has been besieged by girls, who for some reason had obtained the idea that only boys were eligible to enter their pets. "We want the girls and the boys, too, to enter their pets thp more the merrier." said Mr. Strandborg last night. O the muta. O the muta, O the yippin', yippln' muts. O the rrowslea, towsiea mongrels weutiicu on boxes in a row ; The blue-blood and the peSisree but little fiKuro cuts "When the common mut dog has his day at a common mut doc show. Tins owners especially if their dog happened to be a particularly forlorn looking, unaristocratic-looking pup who have found their pets missing within the past week may perhaps get a clew to their whereabouts by drop ping in at the Mut Dog Show at the Manufacturers' and Land Products Show tonight. Of course, if they were blue-blooded dogs they won't be there, for this is the show of the common cur, feist, mongrel or bowser. The boys of the city are to be the exhibitors, and the show is to be held in the auditorium of the Armory. Crowning- Future Planned. It is to be the center and core of the entertainment achievements devised by the Order of Muts to make the final night of the Manufacturers' and Land Products Show go off with a "bang" that will be remembered for a whole year to come. Nothing could be more eoDropriate. they decided, than a bench show of Muts, and forthwith they put S. S. Hewitt and other iaitniui mem bers of the order to work upon the plan. The vouner exhibitors will show up this afternoon to enter and arrange for the benching of their dogs. The committee sets their fears at rest by announcing that the poundmaster and the dog catcher will be excluded from the halls until 24 hours after the show. Tommy Swivel- took his notebook in hand the other day and went forth. He showed up yesterday with a list of more than $100 worth of prizes pledged by various mercantile concerns of the city. The prizes run all tne way rrom a can of gasoline to a box of dog bis cuits. Phil Metschan. Jr.. will.be judge; George L. Baker, umpire, and Dorr E. Keasey, referee, and everyone expects to be mighty busv at the snow to night, before the awards of prizes are made. Entries Mount Vp. The entries have brought out a good sized list of dogs from various sec tions of the city. This afternoon is expected to be the great time, how ever, when the eleventh-hour entries will begin to pour in for every boy who enters a dog in the Mut show will get free admission to the bi blowout" tonight. Whether there will be 100 or 500 dogs entered is still to be shown by the entries of this afternoon. As for classes there is a wide variety, the principal stipulation being that the dog have no especial pedigree. There will be bone hounds, and Ford re trievers, and curs, and mongrels, and bone setters, and flea hounds, and yaller dawgs. and Missouri houn dawgs. and a great big variety of "sooners." The "sooners" are entered on tho strength of what they would "sooner do than something elee." For 5-;t ' - - -W instance, one boy entered a' dog, say ing he would sooner eat , up other dogs than anything else. There's jio limit to the possibilities in this class. And as for noise and excitement- well, the beet plan, no doubt, would be to drop in and risk an ear on it tonight when the show is in full swing. MAIL THEFT NET SPREADS Arrests by Government for Looting of Santa Clara Wreck Threaten. SPOKANE, Wash.. Nov. 12. Scores of arrests growing out ol the reported looting of tho mail steamer Santa Clara.wrecked a few days ago off Marshfield, Or., while carrying 200 sacks of parcel poet matter from Port land to Marshfield, are threatened by the Spokane postoffice inspection de partment, which has charge of parcel post matter in the entire Northwestern division. A telegraphic report from In spector P. N. Neil, who was sent to investigate, stated - today that only 87 of the 200 sacks of mail had been re covered. Not since 1S92, when a mail train was looted in the Coeur d'Alenes dur ing the mining riots, has a case of the present magnitude occurred in the Northwest, according to the postal au thorities. The Couer d'Alene case re sulted in the indictment of 50 men. The theft or receiving of stolen mail matter is punishable with a maximum fine of $5000. five years in a Federal penitentiary or both, say the postoffice inspectors. 3D .PARTY NOT EXPECTED Democrat THinks 1916 Campaign Will Be With Republicans Only. OR EG OX I AN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, Nov 12 A few days before tho recent elections, Mr. McCombs, chair man of the Democratic National Com mittee, expressed the conviction that the campaign of 1916 would be fought out between the two big- parties, the Republicans and the Democrats. "The Progressive party," he said, "has prac tically disappeared. Most of its mem bers have drifted into the Democratic party." The returns from Massachusetts, from Pennsylvania, from New York and. New ejrsey confirmed one-half of Mr. McCorab's prediction. But those re turns showed plainly that most of the men who voted for the Progressive ticket in 1912 not only have returned to he Republican party, but were suf ficiently enthusiastic this year an off year- to go out and vote the Repub lican ticket. SHIP SEARCHED FOR FUSE Piece Found on British ship Turned Over to -Authorities. HALIFAX, X. S Nov. 12. Pieces of the time fuse found in No. 2 hold of the British Bteamer Rio Lages, which put in here last week with a portion of the cargo of sugar afire, were today distributed among local officials for further examination. The fuse is composed of a compound of leather and rubber, and a part of it. about a foot in lengrth. was discov ered by stevedores. It is believed that the fuse extended almost from the top of the hold to the bottom, and more- of it is expected to be found as additional cargo is discharged from that hold. To make sure that no bombs were placed in the other parts of the steamer the hatches of the other holds will be taken off and an examination of the upper portion of the cargo made. Geneseo Knights Install. GESESEE, Idaho. Nov. 12. (Special.) The Knights of Columbus held their annual gathering here last night in tne local opera-house with a large crowd present. A luncheon was served at the Tobin home. John M. Regan, state deputy, installed the newly-elected of ficers. A programme was given. Cards ami dancing finished the evening. CARD OF THANKS. We wish to thank the many friends and neighbors for their kind svmpathy and assistance in the death and burial of our beloved son and brother. Anrir.u; We wish to especially extend our thanks ior me Deaunrui iiorai triDutes. SIR. AND MRS. E. LINDQTJIST Adv. AND FAMILY. Owing to abnormal conditions prevailing in loo rice market in .japan, trie poorer poopre are looking to other foodstuff lor thrtr main diet. Manchurian millet iA rap- icuy growing ia mior. AWARDS ARE MADE Prizes for Booths and Ex hibits Announced. HAZELWOOD HIGH WINNER R. D. Carpenter, S. C. Tier and X. A. Perry Devote Nearly Week to Deciding Best Displays In Section of Industries. Prizes for booths and exhibits in the industrial section of the Manufacturers' and Land Products Show were an nounced yesterday morningr by the corps of judges that had been working on the awards since the first-week of the show. Judging: was made on the basis of 100 points, distributed as follows: Gen eral appearance 30, method of presenta tion 25, workmanship 20, originality 15, and artistic arrangement of display io. Judges were R- D. Carpenter, S. C. Pier and N. A. Perry, Following is the complete list of awards: Grand prize for -the best exhibit by an Oregon manufacturer The llazelwood Com pany, $100. Working exhibits First prize. Coast' Cul vert & Flume Company, $75; second prize, Portland Knitting' Company. $50; third prize, Portland Pump Company, $30. Special prises Portland Railway. Light & Power Company, $10; Philbrook Bros., lt. Exhibits occupying- three or more booths First, Welnhard Brewery; second, J-og Cabin Baking Company, Holsum cake, $40; third, - Lennon'i, $20. Special prizes Edlofson Fuel Company, Shope Brick: Company ondero & Nelson. $13, divided between the three. Exhibits occupying less .than thre'e. booths First, Portland Pure Mnk & Cream Com pany, $riu; sreond. Union Meat Company, $a0; third, "Warren Bros. Company. $15. Special prizes of $10 - eaon Portland Woolen Mills. Pacific Stoneware Company, Oregon Mirror- & Beveling Works, Zancker Sign Company, Bluraauer-Frank Drug Com pany, Oregon Fruit Juice Company, North west Fruit Products Company. Special prizes of $5 each Mrs. Joseph ln Othus. Gifford Studio, Kiser Photo Com i pany. Enamel Bake Ovens. Iron Clad Silo Company, Henninger & Ayes Manufacturing Company. Forbes Manufacturing Company, f acme coast saie Ac vault, company, xjri Fresh Company, Coin Machine Manufactur ing Company, Knight Packing Company, Berger Bros., Mcintosh &. Filzhalb, Arrow Cement Laundry Tray Company, Crescent Manufacturing Company, Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Company, J. G- English Com pany. Flelachner-Mayer & Co., Closset Devera. M. J. Waish Company, Ignt Ed wards Company, Pacific Coast Btseult Company, Jobes Milling- Company, Powers Furniture Company. Independent Coal &. ce Company, Northwest Rug Company. A. J. Kirstin, Sperry Flour Company. Harmonious section of booths (prizes to be divided pro rata in accordance with space occupied among exhibitor in winning sections.) First. Furniture section, furni ture display consisting of five exhibits made jointly bv the roiiowing: First prize, $100 ($-0 each) Oregon Chair Company, Carman Manufacturing Company, Portland Furniture & Manufacturing com pany, Freeland Furniture Company, Rud gear-Merle Company. Second prize. $75 Log Cabin Baking Com pany. 521. 4(; coast t,uivert a v lumo uom- pany, $21. 40: Oregon Fruit & Juice Company, $10.70; Closset & Devers, $10.70; Union Meat Company. $10.70. Decorated concession booths First, -Ma dame Kelene. hatter, $25; special, Mrs. A. B. Schwartz. Marie Antoinette toilet prep arations. $15; Hood River cider, N. F. D'Nellv. $10: most popular demonstrator, Mrs, Luella Williams. Sperry flour booth. 120; for the best made-in-Oregon slogan displayed in booth, Oregon Fruit Juice Com panv. "Oregon Made for the World's Trade." :.iy GRESHAM FOLK HERE SEVERAL HUNDRED VISITORS HOLD AliTO PARADE IV CITY. Boring Delegation Swells Crowd at Armory School Take Part la Portland Day KxercUea. Gresham, the home of the Multnomah County Fair, atoned for the failure of Multnomah County to have an exhibit at the Manufacturers' and Land Prod ucts Show, by sending a delegation of several hundred citizens yesterday to visit, the show in a body. The Gresham delegation was joined by a smalj delegation from Boring, and the whole party came to Portland by automobile. It was a pageant of fully 100 auto mobiles decorated with pennants and with signs setting forth the attrac tions and advantages of Gresham, that made its march through the streets of Portland before the opening of the show in the afternoon, and throughout the remainder of the day the Gresham autos were parked up along the curb for blocks on every side of the Arm cry. Mayor George Stapleton headed the delegation, and the following committee of prominent Gresham citizens handled the event: George F. Honey, Benjamin Cameron. H. L. St. Clair, H. E. Davies and C. M. Zimmerman. The visitors gave no formal programme but spent the afternoon and evening examining thoroughly all of the exhibits shown in the various pavilions. One of the most popular entertain ment features offered yesterday aftcr nuon was the four-reel production in motion pictures of the Pendleton Roundup, which was given In the little theater. The series of films closed with the thrilling smashup and runaway in the stagecoaca race at the Roundup. All afternoon the little theater was packed while the films were running. The City of Portland, which had its day at the show yesterday also, was represented by several classes sent from the playgrounds by Playground Super intendent J. D. Convill. They held their programme in the auditorium and gave a series of drills, folk dances and games such as are featured in the play, ground work." To Get The Utmost for every dollar he spends, a man cannot afford to spend much less than Twenty Dollars for his Suit, Overcoat or Raincoat. If he demands the greatest value in all things that go into a gar ment, then he will find all that he can possibly demand in Benjamin Clothes for men and young men,, at $20, $25 and up to $35. You will be more than satisfied with them. Buffum & Pendleton Morrison Street Opposite Postoffice CLUB THRIVES ANEW Reorganization of Chamber at Vancouver Completed. MEMBERSHIP GAINS 250 Paul K. Poindextcr, Expert in Charge of Campaign, Finishes Task and Work Will Bo Perfected at Meeting Wednesday. VANCOUVER. Wash.. Nov. 12. (Spe cial.) Paul E. Poindexter, organiza tion expert, who has been working'with the reorganization committee of . the Vancouver Chamber of Commerce for the past several weeks, has completed his work here and has gone to another point. The re-organization committee men, including w. J.. Kinney, chairman; Donald McMaster, Chester C. Turley, Charles W. Davis and John H. Elwell, will go ahead with a "follow-up" cam paign. During the past several weeks the members of this committee have given a large amount of their time and per sonal service in reorganizing the Chamber, and at the last two meetings of the club have received a standing vote of thanks for their hard work. The committee was authorized to ap point four other members from the club to assist them in their follow-up campaign. Already .about 250 members have been obtained and 1t is the aim and hope of the club that at least 400 mem bers will be had when the new Cham ber of Commerce is in full operation A meeting of the new members will be held next Wednesday night to perfect the reorganization. The committee also will suggest an outline for by laws and a constitution for the Cham ber. There is more interest being taken in the organization than ever before. FOUR AUT01STS MANGLED Car Ground Under Wheels of Train on Illinois Crossing. ELGIN, 111.. Nov. 12. Four Chica- goans were killed when a passenger train struck their automobile at grade crossing near here today. The dead are: Mrs. William S. John son, wife of an attorney; Miss Ethel Briggs, R. Flagg and Leonard Lansing. The car was ground to splinters and its occupants tossed in the air and ter ribly mangled. " Registration at Centralia Low. CENTRA LI A, Wash., Nov. 12. (Spe cial.) Last night the total registration for the coming municipal election was only. 2170. against a total registration of 3356 last year. The registration books close Monday night for both the primary and general election. With Your dealer gets them fresh every morning. A Pure Pork Sausage s, A? x XX " (Government Inspected.) U VC Make a Delicious Meal (r .Sw Their appetizing: aroma in cooking is fol- Jvi . l S. lowed by complete satisfaction in eating. J f S.r J NUNION HEAT CfUf We brings pleasure and comfort for the meal or the social hour! -at your dealers 40c per pound. an even 20 candidates In the field, a much larger registration was antici pated. SALES TO FRANCE LIMITED Steel Corporation Withdraws Quota tions on Heavy Tonnage. NEW- YORK, Nov. 12. Elbert H. Gary, chairman of the United States Steel Corporation, issued a statement today confirming reports that the cor poration had withdrawn temporarily from the French market Quotations on its finished gtel products, with certain exceptions. "The United States Steel Products Company," Judge Gary said, "has re called, temporarily, quotations in the French markets, except as to pipe, tin plate and some specialties that involve small tonnage, for the reason that steel products for delivery in the near future are sold well up to maximum capacity. "Until the general questions of sup ply and demand are carefully consid ered, it is impossible to tell how much surplus we shall have for sale in France for the present." CRIME WARNING IS GIVEN Judge Announces Determination to Deal Severely for Violence. Crime of violence will not be. lightly excused this Winter, eclared Circuit Judge Gantenbein yesterday. Two alleged highwaymen and two accused burglars had just been ar raigned before him. , "If this caurt can do anything to prevent it." said the iudg-e, "there will be no Winter wave of crime in Por land this year. I will deal severely with all those convicted of any crime of violence. All such will go to the Penitentiary." II ;- iff 1 1 "Jcnjfflnn dinted firfdm "Serving the Men and Young Men of Portland Since 1884." 3Q Cauphe Maid 20 is a' bad complexion your handicap? Many an otherwise attractive girl is a social failure because of a poor complexion. If your skin is not naturally fresh, smooth and glow ing, or has suffered from an unwise use of cosmetics, Resinol Soap will clear it easily, in a normal, healthy way. Simply use Resinol Soap rf larly once or twice a day, and you will be astonished how quickly the healing, antiseptic Resinol medica tion soothes and cleanses the pores, removes pimples and blackheads, and leaves the complexion clear, fresh and velvety. When tha akin is in a vcrr nef-lected condi tion, spread on just a Hula Resinol Ointment for tea or nfteen minutes before nsinf Resinol Soap. Resinol Soap ia sold by all drucrista. For a trial size eake, write to Dept. 9-P, Res inol, Baltimore, Md. Sold only in 1-lb. Sanitary Cartons. t IT