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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 27, 1916)
THE MORXIXG- OREGOSTAX, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1916. 9 ;. ' " Qte tfflWfc -eflwaiut&Qsft L i STARTING ms i I J&r itf Z f T VERY moving picture M ? Sil ' !i; Z jfi !yT - " P Patron on earth loves KX f A U R . V S's& J -. , 1 i Vl r 1-1 a real hero, whether '2& I vT tn v Vi J if IS) W yZZ he wears a soldier's uni- f$Ayt& I ' -J lX Vfl f Vy form or the -chaps of a y Ffi?H iS? J ; r ,r I - ft JZ& cowboy, "The Knight of f WW" I V 'M i"- 4- i if I llL S the Range'Ms a tremen- ' " 14" Hi , I' IV I VCT! dous story of the chivalry -T f I tC , rf?rA mt i , t - f - 3' of a true-hearted son of 1 'MMl ti f 1 V'Tsd 5' l ik'7 the West, where -men L)f fl llwA 11 fiU j ' yUL- . grow big of soul as well Wj$ $ffl I fSfc t '41 J.A" 'V nVC 7 I fv Jr as of body: His sacrifices I f J 'P. f for a friend are incidental f X? I ;S " M ' It V- I (C- flK Ci CTTD Q O O tooneofthemostromaii- 1 f J li i l x A ': I VSS CfJ . 1 1 FT - j3 L A r-C tic of love stories, and the (&$Mf? V f 11 I b I I A I 1 CTNCIVA r x-S r magnificent Western set- JitM V U" ? V f li f 4. 1 , I A : f 1 ft I I KJ A ill A I tings, the dash and go of JWf -iWV2 l r ISTTrl - IV V J II li iV I I 11 I CO J I theS spirited, action com- fj 7X WTV fH il&ZL A WSlf - 11 Hi J I d5w tL5 3cJUdJrOiiJ bine to make a feature as -lvlP- I S I v2T :Jj V i P I KiVfTN?V5 The big play will fas- K J "V-J J J , fj IfjfljK kvIDJlJiMs fStSxisi !?o Hi other c x iv U U OUUJU 07s- thriUing climax at the . .vSS2 1 - - fJ NUMBERS w.ife UOXMW wi&iim iX ' ' k': V i UNCLESAM i: Jl 'Jte (Tbtei) n u f . Y atnHk ! r ; ' . .. . . . i i . .y - I Cartoon Comedy . 'ft.. iii i . f i VI E I 1 I I II I X I II K VI. I A i ! I 1 First Run Pictures Park, Stark West Park "SKIDS" READY FOR LIQUOR VIOLATORS Judge Stevenson Passes Out ''Salty" Sentences and Says Maximum Will Prevail. THREE ARE GATHERED IN 1. II. Snabb, Proprietor of Shasta Hotel, Betrayed by Customer Who Declares Ho Was Robbed ol $20 and Sought Revenge. With $J00 In fines administered in the Municipal Court yesterday for violations of the local option law. Judge tvenson announced a new polity of heavy fines and jail sentences ior bootleggers. "The skids are greased." lie said. "I can see that bootlegging has com menced ail over the county and I'm going to do my part to stop it. From now on 'every conviction will mean the maximum fine and the violators will go to Jail, too. if I see fit." Charles Thornton and- Henry Oakly. arrested at Hi North Third street sev eral nights ago, were fined J200 and Jli" respectively. They admitted con cealing the liquor in a sawdust pile in the woodshed. They were arrested by Patrolmen Kiohards and Wright, who took 11. T. Colson out of jail as a decoy. All were dressed as loggers. "We've got to be careful there's two or three of those "fly-dicks' in here every day. but I know them all." cautioned P. H. Swabb. proprietor of the Shasta Hotel. 2S Glisan street, as he delivered a bottle of-whisky and a bottle of beer to Patrolman Wright, in plain clothes, and accepted the police man's two marked dollars In exchange Tuesday night. 'Well. I'm one of those "fly-dicks'," .plied Mr. Wright flashing a star, "and j ou're under arrest." He also arrested Saddle Rumpf, a pretty 2ft-year-old half breed Indian girl who s-iid she came from Coos Bay. and that she was employed by Swabb as chambermaid without wages except for room and board. The girl, it was charged, had helped serve two other botllesf hisky and beer. swabB was fined $-50. the heaviest fine yet administered in Portland for bootlegging since the advent of prohibi tion, and the girl was discharged. The court, in this case, stated that he would throw any liquor case out of court in w-hich it was shown that the purchaser declared himself in need of the nhisky for sickness. The arrest had another angle of in terest in that the police were "tipped t'ff" to the place by a bridge con tractor who said he had been ac customed to buy his drinks there, but declared he was robbed of $J0 in the liouso and for revenge betrayed the ITOprietor. This charge Swabb denied. When the policeman and his guide arrivtd at the house the girl said he was out. When he failed to return after some wait she confided an ap prehrfision that he might have been arrested, as were Charles Thornton and Henry Oakly. next door neighbors. Junction City Creamery Elects. JUKCTIOX CITr. Or, Jan. :. (Spe cial.) The stockholders of the Junction City Creamery. Inc., met in Danish Hall, elected directors and discussed business relative to the institution. The plant has two pasteurizers, and the building and entire equipment is valued at J9000. The board of directors re elected was: B. L. Jennen, C. H. Preston. H. C. Peterson. A. R. Martin and J. A. Holcomb. Officers are: S. L. Jensen, president; C. H. Preston, vice-president; N. P. Jensen, secretary and manager. The secretary's report shows that 46, 514 pounds of butter was manufactured, and the average test was 32.1 per cent. WEBFOOT CAMP IS HOST Xew Members and Campaigners Are lCntertained at Banquet. Xew members of the Webfoot Camp of the Woodmen of the World initiat ed between September 1, 1915, and January 25, 191, and the members of the camp who had been active in the membership campaign which brought the new men into the order, were en tertained by the lodge at a banquet at the Portland Hotel Tuesday night. Nearly 500 new members were added during the campaign, bringing the to tal up to about 2000. Speakers were C. W. Skewes, man ager; A. I Barbur, clerk; Frank blot ter. E. P. Martin, deputy head consul; William Reidt, past consul; Jay Stev ens, F. W. German, past consul; J. H. Ponnay, consul commander, and L. G. De Young, sentry. The Ad Club Trio and the Wood men's Orchestra, under direction of Harry Parsons, furnished music. 0.-W. R. & W. MAP IS ISSUED Other Uiies Also Are Depleted and Petal Is Are Declared Accurate. A new map of the Northwest has just been issued by the O-W. R. & N. Co. and is being distributed among patrons of the road. The map shows the com pany's lins in Oregon, Washington and Idaho, but shows the lines of other roads as well. It was prepared by the company's engineering department in Portland and is said to be accurate in every detail. The state and county boundaries are properly placed and towns and places not on the line of any railroad are designated. Rivers and other streams also are outlined. A new departure in the way of maps of the Northwest territory is the in sertion of a map of Alaska, showing the railroad now being built there by the government. PASTOR DEFINES COWARD "TRAITOR AND "ATHEIST" ARE I'SED BY DR. LOVELAXD. Term Are Applied to Man Who Would Not Defend Home and Country, in Address on Preparedness. "I believe in preparedness for de fensive purposes, not for aggressive war, but to preserve this country from the wolves of the earth, and I believe that the man who will not defend his home and his country is an atheist, a coward and a traitor to his country," said Rev. F. Ij. Ioveland, in his ad dress last night Tiefore the "Men's Club of the Central Presbyterian Church, at the dinner served by the women of the church. Dr. Loveland said that Christianity was facing one of the most stupendous problems it had ever been called on to face. Dr. Loveland closed his address with a plea for preparedness that would defend America. He declared that it was the business of true American citizenship to sea that the flag of this country is never trailed in the dust Dr. Loveland's address was often in terrupted by applause, and his remarks were listened to with marked interest. A musical programme was rendered. Elton Shaw told of the coming lay men's convention. Ed Werlein. presided. Doty Mill Is Operating. CEXTRALIA. Wash.. Jan. 28. (Spe cial.) The Doty Lumber A Shingle Company has resumed operations fol lowing a shutdown caused by the snow. An effort will be made to keep run ning in spite of the additional fall yesterday. . There are more than 1,000, 000 feet of timber in the mill boom that was washed down from the camps, and a crew of river men is working day and night In an effort to , save the logs. O. A. C. Professor Gets Study Leave. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, Corvallis, Jan. 26. (Special.) Profes sor H. V. Tartar, chemist for the O. A. C. experiment station and head of the department of agricultural chemis try in the Oregon Agricultural College, has. received 15 months' leave of ab sence to pursue advanced studies in chemistry and allied sciences in the graduate school of the University of Chicago. E l ACT ASKED OFFICIALS DISCUSS MEAT INSPEC TION ORDINANCE. Object Is to Make Measure Conform to Federal Rule and Need of Law Emphasized. The City Council Is to be asked next week to amend the Portland meat inspection ordinance so that features objected to by the State Supreme Court in its decision of Tuesday, in which most of the measure Is held to be valid. will be changed or eliminated. City Health Officer Mareellus held confer ences yesterday with Mayor Albee and with Deputy City Attorney Davie and arranged for changing the measure for presentation to the Council. The changes asked by the Supreme Court are of little consequence, accord ing to Dr. Mareellus and Attorney Da vie, who handled the case for the city. When the ordinance first was adopted the provisions of the United States Bu reau of Animal Husbandry regarding disposal of condemned meat were in corporated. Afterward the Federal Government changed these rules. It is proposed now to change them in the city ordinance to conform with the Federal rule. City Health Officer Mareellus says there Is great need for the enforcement of the ordinance, as evidenced recently, when four deaths and a number of caaes of serious sickness resulted from the sale of pork infected with trichi Be Careful in Using Soap on Your Hair Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali, which is very Injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair brittle. The best thing to use is Just plain mulsifted cocoanut.oit. for it Is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap, and beats the most expensive soaps or any thing else all to pieces. You can get this at any drug store, ami a few ounces will last the while family for months. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in. about a teaspoonf ul is all that is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather,' cleanses thor oughly and rinses out easily. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy, and easy to handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. Adv. Three Days Only! Thursday, Friday and Saturday PRESENTS- 7 1' ' T By William J. Locke Featuring Edward Arden and Kathryn Browne-Decker This Wonderful Subject Has Been Produced in Nature's Most Beautiful Colors. Direct From the Strand Theater, New York. A Pathe Gold Rooster Play