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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (May 5, 1916)
4 ANOTHER PULP MILL BE ERECTED MAY Oregon City Hears Rumors of Crown-Willamette Plans for Improvements. TWO PLANTS PURCHASED POPULAR M'MINNVILLE GIRL CHOSEN TO BE QUEEN OF MAY. Company to Build -$2,500,000 Mill in Canada, Dividing Equipment at . Marshfield Plant Between Two New Enterprises, Vs.. OREGON CITY, Or., May 4. (Spe-c.lal.)--Persistent tut unconfirmed re ports that the Crown-Willamette Pa per Company will greatly enlarge its plant here are being circulated in Ore gon City. Local mill officials say that they are not in touch with plans of the head offices in an Francisco and are unable to deny definitely or to con firm the report. The Crown-Willamette Company within the last month has completed the purchase of two more plants. One of these Is a pulp mill at Ocean Falls, on the coast of British Columbia, and the other at iiarshfield. Coos Plant to Be Moved. The company, according to the an nouncement of Louis Bloch. vice-president, will build a $2,500,000 paper mill at Ocean Falls in addition to the pulp mill already there. The complete sul phate mill equipment, now a part of the I'oos Bay plant, will be moved to Ocean Falls, where the strong odor of this alkali process of paper making cannot offend. - Tio new paper ma chines have been ordered. The property on which the present pulp mill is situated and on which the new plant will rise consists of more than 60,000 acres of timber, most of which is excellently adapted for pulp and paper purposes and for a sawmill capable of cutting 400,000 feet of lum ber a day. Oregon CltT Mill to Get Machine. ' A 136-inch Fourdiner paper machine, now at Marshfield, will be brought to Oregon City arm installed in new build ings to arise here on the west side of the 'Willamette, according to this re port. In this way the Marshfield plant will be divi.led. between Oregon City and Ocean Falls. The plans for dis posing of other machinery now at Marshfield have not been announced When the consolidation of the old Crown-Columbia and the Willamette Pulp & Paper companies was announced more than a year ago it was intimated that vast improvements were in store for the Oregon City mills. Site Is Now Available. The new corporation first dismantled the oldest mill and. cleared off the ground. The eite is now used for stor ing pulp, which will be used in male lng paper during the coming Summer, so that the site would be ready for construction in case the company is io enlarge us local plant. witn the Crown-Willamette mill now installing an eighth machine, the Haw-ley Pulp & Paper Company rush ing work on a $750,000 addition, and with all the mills running at capacity in a wild race to keep up with orders, an announcement of the expansion of the Crown-Willamette plant would not ne a surprise. . INSURANCE FIGURES GIVEN State Industrial Accident Commis sion Issues ltenort. NORTH BEND, Or., May 4. (Spe- jiei-eipis ot me state Industrial Ac ciaent insurance Commission for the period from November 5. 1915. to April 30. 1916. have totaled $1,061,675.53. while disbursements have been $906, 393.09, -iff cording to a statement issued lonay by the commission. 1 he commission now has a balance in tne accident fund totaling $155 1:83.41; $346,346.92 has been placed in the segregated fund to guarantee the payment of pensions. In compensation paid injured workmen -for loss of time since November. 1913, the commission has paid a total of $281,133.07; first aid payments amounted to $131,328.11 burial expense, $S660.9S; pensions paid $27,112.37. Hood Hirer Blossom Day, Slay 7. Low roundtrip fares via the O.-W R. R. & N. Ask the city ticket office. Third and Washington. Orchards now in height of bloom. Adv. Quail hunters have nearly obliterated the plrds In Missouri. Ten thousand quail have Veen imported from Arizona to restock the nepieied coveys. HUSBAND OBJECTS TO OPERATION Wife Cured by Lydia E-v Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Des koines, Iowa. " Four years ago I was very sick and my life was nearly spent. The doctors stated that I would never get well with out an operation and that without it I would not live one year. My husband objected to any operation and got me some of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. I took it and commenced to pet better and am now well, am stout and able to do my own housework. I can recommend the Vegetable Com pound to any woman who is Bick and run down as a wonderful strength and health restorer. My husband says would have been in my grave ere this if it had not been for your Vegetable Compound." Mrs. Blanche Jeffer son, 703 Lyon St., Dea Moines, Iowa. Before submitting to a surgical opera' tion it is wise to try to build up the female system and cure its derange ments with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound; it has saved many women from surgical operations. Write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for advice it will be confidential. grog .y ..WW.gWigy.'ft! WIMWWI . i .WWMWIWWWeW MfL I hi it i 2 M f 1 -tlzi "J I "i ll I r 4'.A I V-? ! I 1 i "T 1 r 1 11 : I r : I I '.s.B' i?" i t if: nl : j 'r vi It- i - ' iflrl - 1 . It - yiT"Jz 4- -.. H 'ix,- 7r, I " ; f S,t zA ? 1 S94A 5l J t J? . , , i : ; fr---. - . vu . J"" ' V TROOPS ARE PRAISED Earl Kitchener Says British at Kut-el-Amara Did Well. STARVATION WAS FACED MISS EVELYN BALLARD. M'MIXNVILLE. Or., May 4. (Special.) Miss Evelyn Ballard, a beautiful and popular young wornan. has been elected queen for the May day celebra tion to be held at McMinnviue college tomorrow. The lestiviues as piannea will be on a more elaborate scale than ever before. YUKON GE BREAKING Alaska's Inland Waterway Shaking Off Winter's Fetters. SMALL BOATS MAKE TRIP man of the Spiritual department, Er nest McWhipney, chairman. Missionary department, Mrs. Caney Hogan. chair man social service department: Miss Ida Testerman. chairman, social and literary department: Ellis S. Dorothy, treasurer; Guy Davis, recording: secre tary: Tom Swayze. corresponding sec retary; Ruth Brown, pianist; Finis A. Dunlap, chorister. Surrender Followed Scries of Most Brilliant Engagements 'and Was Duo Entirely to Lack of Supplies, He Says. " LONDON. May 4. In the House of Lords today Field Marshal Earl Kitch ener, the Secretary for War. warmly eulogized General Townshend and de fenders of Kut-el-Amara, and read Gen eral Townshend's last dispatch, which Is u follows: "Wo are pleased to know that we have done our duty and recogrnize that our situation is one of the fortunes of war. we thank you. General uornnge (commander of the British relief army) and all ranks of the Tigris force for the great efforts you have made to save us." Forces Starved Into Surrender. Imminent starvation compelled the surrender of Kut-el-Amara. added Lord Kitchener, and adverse elements alone denied success to the relief force. Lord Kitchener said he was srlad of the opportunity to pay tribute to Gen eral Townshend and his troops, "whose dossed determination and splendid courage had earned for them so honor able a record." After a series of brilliantly-fought engragrement. continued. Lord Kitchen er. General Townshend decided to hold the strategically important position at Kut-el-Amara and it would not Da xor Kotten that his dispositions for the de fense of the place were so excellent that the Turks, notwithstanding their numerical superiority, were not able to penetrate bis lines. All Possible Was Done. The House would not fail to realize. the War Minister believed, how tense was the strain on these troops, which for more than 2r weeks held their posl. tions under conditions of abnormal cli m&tio conditions and on rations calcu lated for protraction to the farthest period until, as it proved, imminent starvation compelled their capitulation. General Townshend and his troops in their honorabl'3 captivity, added Lord Kitchener, would have the satisfaction of knowing that In the opinion of their comrades, which was shared by the House and the country, they did all that was humanly possible to resist to the last and their surrender reflected no discredit on the record of the British and Indian armies. 16 WILL BE GRADUATED Stern-Wheelers Soon "Will Begin Task of Carrying- Supplies to Dawson. Ruby, Fairbanks and Otlier Isolated Points. SEATTLE. May 4. The Yukon River, the great inland waterway of the North, which stretches 2100 miles across the heart or AlasKa ana we Yukon territory, is rapidly shaking off its fetters of "Winter ice. In a few days the stern-wheeled river steamboats will begin their Summer task of chug ging up and down tho stream between White Horse, the head of navigation. and Dawson. Ruby. SU Michael and up tributaries to Fairbanks and Iditarod. The river has been a frozen mass since last Autumn.- but now that -the warm days have come, the ice is breaking and melting and jamming its way seaward. Long stretches. of the upper river are running' clear, but . until tne ice goes from Lake Lebarge. an enlargement oi the Yukon below White Horse, which Is never open until after the river is free, no boats can make the trip down. A fleet of steamboats at White Horse loaded with the first fresh supplies to reach the interior from the "out side" this year are ready to start as soon as word comes that the lake is navigable. The supplies were brought to White Horse over the 110-mile ran road from the port of hkagway. Several parties of adventurous voy atreurs have left hite Horse tor ijaw son In small flat-bottomed "Yukon boats" and launoh.es. They pushed their way through the clear water and rot ting Ice to Lebarge. dragged their boat 30 miles over Its frozen surtace. dropped Into the swift-running stretch known as Thirty-Mile, tioatea past Sel kirk. Bhot the dangerous J-'lve-ringer Rnnlds and continued on their way When the lake opens several fleets of little boats will start down and will be accompanied by several Constables and a patrol launch of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police, who go alone- to protect the travelers rrom the ice Jams. SUCCESS IS ASSERTED BERLIN SAYS AIRCRAFT DAMAGED IMPORTANT WORK S. Kennewick Commencement Exercises to Begin Sunday. KENNEWICK, Wash.. May 4. (Spe cial.) Commencement week tor the graduating class of the Kennewick High School will start Sunday. The baccalaureate sermon will be preached by the Rev. Charles E. Miller, pastor of the Methodist Church. The services will be held at the high school, all churches participating. Commencement exercises will be held Friday evening. May 12. Dr. Walter C. Beach, professor of sociol ogy of the University of Washington, will make the commencement address. The class comprises 16 members. The Kennewick Alumni Association will hold an entertainment and recep tion for the class May 13. if j ' i 2 .-. if - 0 L I ' i " I THE Extra Stamps Today and Saturday if You Bring THE COUPON C7 OPEX A MOJTTHLY CHARGE ACCOT"NT WITH FS TODAY. l"!R OI'R COMPLETES PHONE A.D LELIIEHI SERVICE 'TWILL SAVli IOC MOXKY UN KVKRY PlKCHASt. Use This Coupon SO EXTRA TO a.ysci' Bring this coupon . 1 and get 20 extra A H - Tradini 5 Stamp on yo firxt 11 cah P chas and double . nn h A on fir. t thr-e t loors rtoday -A tomorrow. May 5 We Are Agents for Likly LUGGAGE 'PAINTS AND YARNISHES FOR THAT "CLEAN-UP" JOB Order by Telephae. SHERWIN-WILLIAMS' PAINTS J A P-A-LAC FINISHES. t'Hl.NAMEl, VARNISHES, O-CKDAR POLISH. PLAIOAP CLEANER, SP02VGES AND CHAMOIS, DUSTERS AND DCST CLOTHS. PAINT AND VAR.M5U BRUSHES. DOUBLE STAMPS ON ALL KODAK FINISHING. P(l Bl K. QVICK SERVICE, "ANSCO" FILMS Double Satlnfnrlloa to Thow N tin K XPERT H n SERVICE. . i Ivy WHALING SEASON REOPENS Three Tiig Catches Are Landed Grays Harbor Plant. at ABERDEEN. Wash.. May 4. Spe- cial.) The whaling season on Grays Harbor reopened Monday with the catch of three big whaler. The season will extend over a period of four and one-half months, until the middle of September. Last year the four whal ing ships of the Bay City station cap tured 234 whales valued at 1200.000. A host of tourists is expected to visit the whaling station this Summer in the hope4 of seeing a whale beached upon the slip where catches are carved to pieces and prepared for the" trying pots," In which the fat is rendered out. PRISON REPAIR ORDERED State Board of Control Authorizes Needed Work.- SALEM. Or.. May 4. (Special.) Authorization to paint the administra tion building at the Oregon Peniten tiary, the wail, and the residences of Warden Minto and Deputy Warden Sherwood. wasBlven to Mr. Minto to day, by members of the State Board of Control- The buildings will be painted gray according to the superintendent. The work will be done by inmates of the prison. The present population at the prison is 5S3, which is a slight decrease. Twenty-one prisoners were released from the prison last month. Discovery that the roof of the re ceiving ward at the State Hospital is in a leaky condition will necessitate extensive repairs this Hummer. .Su perintendent Stelner advised the Board. The cost will be approximately $2030. The building is' comparatively new. The statements of the heads of the different state institutions show that the per capita cost of maintenance and the population last month were as fol- rvr Ciinlta. Oreson State Hospital Penitentiary 14.411 Institute for 'ecDit Minuea. .. j . tte TralnlDE -hool 17.:l3 Tuberculosis Sanitarium r.::.oil School for Blind ilium School for I K lT ;:5.uo fctate industrial &CD.OOI xor (ilrls 2129 Eastern OreEon Mate Hospital 1.1.H1 Soldiers' Home UI.qS SCHOOL CENSUS STARTED Iloquiam Returns Kxpected to Show Bit Increase. HOQUIAM, Wash.. May 4. (Special.) Enumerators have begun the work of taking the annual school census of Hoquiam. The census is expected to require about a month to complete. The enumerators are teachers in the Ho quiam schools, who are working after school hours and on Saturdays. School authorities expect the census this year to show a conHtderable gain over that of last year, when the total number of persons of school age re ported was 2060. That was a gain of about 6 per cent over the preceding year. Factories. Coast Batteries and Men of XVar at Entrance of Firth of Forth Reported Bombarded. BERLIN. May 4. (By wireless to Sayvllle. N. Y.) The German Admiralty gave out the following account today of the Zeppelin raid over England on Tuesday night: "A German naval air squadron on the night of May I-S attacked the mid dle and northern parts of the enat coast of England. Factories, blast fur naces and railroads near Mlddlesbor ough and Stockton. Industrial estab lishments near Sunderland, the forti fied port of Hartlepool, the oast bat terles south of the River Tees and British men ef war at the entrance of the Firth of Forth were attacked with many bombs. The success of these at tacks was witnessed. "All our airships, notwithstanding the fact that they were shelled heavily, re turned to . their home - port, with the exception of the L-20, which In conse quence of a strong southern wind was driven off her course to the north and getting Into difficulties at sea, was lost off Stavanger. The whole crew is safe." Kennewick Kp worth Icagtio RIecta. KEXKEinCK, Wash., May 4. (Spe cial.) At the annual election of offi cers of the Epworth League, A, Jt Cope land was re-elected as president, Mies Augusta Bretthaupt was chosen chair- UNION NAMES SCHOOL HEAD Directors Elect E. E. Arant to Office of Superintendent. UNION, Or.. May 4. (Special.) At I meeting of the board of school dlrec tors here, E. B. Arant was elected su perintendent of Union schools for the coming year. Mr. Arant was formerly principal of Island City achoola and for the past three yeara has been prtn clpal of the Union High SohooL. He succeeds Aubrey Smith, who haa le dared himself a candidate fur the county school auperlntenitenry. During the past year, Mr, Arant guided the agricultural work dona by the students of the high sohool. Wlnhkah Project Bids Open May 81, ABERDEEN". Wash., May 4, (Spa elal.) More than two dotan centraS' tors from various parts of the North west have made Inquiries ef Engineer L, D. Kelsey concerning the Wishkah water project, bids far the building of which will be opened on May 81. The eotlnvited cost of the project is 1390.000. to fit above Grill, enables you also to roast and bake. Prl-e S.50 after May 10th. Get I one today at. UNIVERSAL FOUR -HEAT GRILL For Qalelc Summer Mealu Is the lueal Dining Table ttttve. Cooks above and below the heat ing coil at same time. Toasts, fries, bolls, broils at a minimum cost. Guaranteed for five C flfl years. The price Is UiUU H0TPC1NT OVENETTE .$2.50 BETTER LIGHT BETTER SIGHT in the home or at work. Insist on getting -SI SBEASI" NATION AL MAZDAS, which give steady, white light at two-thirds less cost than the old-style globe, l'er carton of five, home J 2jj DID YOU GET VOUR ELECTRIC IRON? We still 'have a limited number of the "HOVER" GI'ARJITEED. KOR-Al.l.-'l IIf. IRO. Com plete with inverting stand for using iron as a stove. Reg ular 3.&l value, special. $2.83 LAWN GRASS SLEDS Morse Lawn Mixture, the 0C pound at tJ White Clover on sale at. carton Australian Rye Grass, shady places, the pound. Roselawn Fertiliser, pound palls for.. 'h?25c f"25c 50c 10 $3 Dr. Cooper's Sanitary I Q Oouche special at . 9 ' lialhtng Caps in all coi-OCpiin ors and styles UH 60c Frank's Kar Stoppers to 9Cn keep water out of ears udu CANDY SPECIALS Jumbo Jelly lie ana. the Cf pound at li pound at...."" Candy Plum Pudding new, lflf delicious, pound at aat U Ib.l Uo Ixvet Brittle, for the ktd-Cn dies: the pound lci "4 lb Riley'a Totlee. the Summer 4 fin favorite, .the pound HUl These Speelals Pat l"a In lOe Parkas; Delays far tbe Bir Man or Woman. OTR JAXDIt:S ARE 11 K I'TFR. Cane Sna-ar, FralC FUlsrs. Hersney'a Chocolate, A d bo Our Bnalaeaa Ororca. 15 SAVED ON AUTO INSURANCE Mo tvffeetlve In tlniralh.-r that In surance c o m p a nlfs reduce auto rate liri, on every car equipped with one. 2c'ually ef ficient In lha home. N o n - poisonous and absolutely harml-fs to anything e x- t"! cept fire. Price. .,vl "W'JOD-lARr FOUNTAIN PENS Best for n t u d e n t une. SI. SO Self-Kill- inp, lever type. 17 $1.J5 Regular Typftj-4crcw cap. fo r98c 63c ?.83c WATERMAN'S IDEAL FOUN TAIN PENS In RejrTr Self Killings Safety Tvpe. at from $2.50 to $27 0c Nail 00 Kiles for. . "0 75c S c I 0 sors for.. . 1 1 Ala rm Clocks for. New and com plete line of " K u b b eraet " S h a v i n K brushes at from 25c to $7.00 H o m c o pathlo Poison Oak Tablets. Inter nal remedy and preventive at 25c and 50c H o m e o pathlc Grlndella Com pound, local ap p I 1 c a t ton ftr poison oak Cf1r on sale at.. Ul 60c I'inex OCpJ for J0 60c Murine OIa T.ym Remerty J'rU f 1.04 Caldwell'a Syr-jp Ir-CQn sin for 60c M u I s lf'-d C o e oanut OCa Oil for. . . . J0li f'Oc Putnam Dry Clcan-OQf er for J3l SI tal He- 7 On patica for. 3li "7c J. B. L. CASCADE D O.V SMALL MONTHLY PAVMEMS. SSc F r e n c h's Vegetable Pills. 1 Llq uld7Q Arvon for- " 60c KormaM hyde now J9C L'6c" VplVltil Q Camphor. . w s ScKssence C r Pepsin I r."c Tr. Green . Soap n o w Qq lie Llmellp t ater Ill 3So Napthallne or MolO 07l Balls 10c Cn.car Bark f.ir.. 2ic O I 1 I Of. Cedar for.. I 60c Labia rh Face Pow- OQs der for U3U ioo Carmen Face Pow- 07 1 der for ' 5c Colgate's Dental Of Ribbon UU hue e m p 'r o 1 I o v I n e OQ( for only. . . uOU Six b.r.OC. Ivory toap .wlu rlx b.r.OU Kalry Soap J f51x bars Life buoy Soap l)Z now for. ..' six btriOCa Wool Soap Six bars V e r non Ulycer I n e Soap now OCn for onlv.. . 4 3U lUc Milled c, ly cerineSoap.O C e four for. . . . Ji 26c bar Float ing Castile I 0. Soap for.. . 101 10c L I s t e r s Antiseptic I Cr' Soap. 3 for I 01 ODD TRACK IS CLEW Wholesale Chicken Thefts Are Laid to P. C. Studer. half interest In the launch Kadem. which runs between Kelso and Kalnler. to John Larson, of the latter place. This Is the second recent deal involving- the Kadem. as G. 11. Gray sold his half Interest to Kd Howard, of Ktella. The boat will remain on the Rainier run. with the same schedule a here tofore. Both the new owners are ex perienced rlvermen. Popo latlon. JtM:: AH !."! MINERS ACCEPT COMPACT Anthracite Convention Formally Ratifies Working Agreement. POTTSVILLE. Pa.. May 4. The con vention of anthracite mineworkera to day by a ristns; vote agreed to accept the agreement recently reached between- theT scale committee of miners and opcrat'OrB. The new wage scale. amonKtner concessions. provides for increased wasres, an eight-hour day and recog nition of the union. It takes the place of the agreement which expired on March 31 and will be retroactive to that date. SPLIT MADE ON ARMY BILL Continued From First Par..) Wilson. The President was understood to favor it. althougrh no statement was made resrardlng: the conference. Repre sentative Hay is said to have" told the President that the House would not ac cept the volunteer force. This section of the Senate bill provides for a re serve Federal force of approximately 260,000 citizen soldiers in addition to the National Guard. Representative Hay in his talk with President Wilson discussed the nitrate plant feature and tha President in sisted that it should be left In the bill. This attitude of the President la under stood to have precipitated the dis agreement today, although the other phase of the dispute would have caused the break anyway. It the President, continues to Insist en the nitrate plant provision, it was declared, another clash between the Executive and the House wilt ensue. Republicans are standing- . solidly against the nitrate provision. Insisting that It la beta nrned by a -water-power lobby. Many Pemserata also oppose l. . HORSESHOE PRINT TRAILED Neighbors Complain of Loss of Hens and Later Identify Those at Studer Home Raid RcTeala 500 Ready for Market. OREGON CITY. Or., May . (Spe cial.) P. C. Studer has one horse. The cork on one front shoe Is long? and flat, on the other it is short and eharp. The track left by the horse is distinc tive. It can be followed even after several other wagons or automobiles have passed over the same section of road. It is principally because of these two corks that Studer is now in the Clackamas County Jail awaiting- a hearinjt on a charge of burglary after a series of wholesale chicken thefts throughout half of Clackamas County. Many hundreds of chickens are be lieved to have 'been stolen by Studer. lie has made a partial confession. The story reads like a page from Diamond Dick or Nick Carter, in which Jack Frost. Constable, and W. J. Wilson, Sheriff, take the stellar parts. Peculiar Track la Found. Harris Morehouse, of Beaver Creek, reported to the Sheriffs office today that 24 chickens and two guinea hens had been stolen from hla place and few minutes later William Martin. Mr. Morehouse's neighbor, found that 20 chickens had been taken from him. Sheriff Wilson and Constable Frost went to the Morehouse farm and found the track of Studer's horse and wagon. They noticed the peculiar track left by Studer'a horse and followed It. on foot and in an automobile, five miles Into Studer'a barn. The officers walked into hla house and found Studer and his wife dressing chickens, which Morehouse and Martin identified as their own. Between S00 and 400, all believed to have been stolen, were found in Studer'a place. Hoaae) Watched far Week a. It was his habit, according to the officers, to steal tha chickens at night. dress them early in the morning and sell them in Portland that day. Re porta ot chicken stealing have come to the sheriff's office almost dally for months, but the thief was always quick enough to avade capture. Studer's plaee, back ot Canemah Cemetery, haa been watched by the sheriff and Con stable for threo weeka. Launch Iutereot la Sold. KElefl, Wash.. May 4. (Special.) Fre,! Horbaeh, ef Keise, baa sold nls Congenial Work Found I ELM A. Wash., May 4. (Special.) Word has been received from W. H. Donohue, former Elms School Clerk, that he lies been placed in the state clerk's office at the State Penitentiary and has charge of all of the accounts. He says that, tha work Is very congenial. Spend Sunday Among the Apple Blossoms v MOTQR OVER The Scenic Columbia River Highway Saturday and Spend Sunday at HOTEL OREGON, HOOD RIVER U. S. A. Famous for Its Meals Phone Your Reservations HENRY SERR, Prop. TED SEER, Mr. SHARE WANTED FOR PORTS Grunt BUI Amendment to Be Taken Qer Heads of Committee. OREGOMAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington. May 4. Lsoiito K. Be tin. of Ku- gene, Or., conferred Wednesday with Senator Chamberlain and Representa tive llawley over an amendment he is u raring to the Oregon & California land grant bill giving the various Oregon ports a s hare in the proceeds from the sain of grant lands. The House public lands committee flatly refused to consider such an amendment when proposed by Repre sentatives Slnnott and Hawley. but Representative Hawley will present the amendment when th bill Is be fore the Houso, and If the House fails to accept it Senator Chamberlain will make an effort for it when the bill reaches the Senate. PASCO CONVENTION OPENS Governor I.lster Addresses Sundny School Delegates. PASCO. Wash.. May 4. Special.) Ernest LJster. Oovernor of Washing ton, addressed the several hundred delegates and visitors In attendance at the Inland Empire Sunday school convention, at the Masonic Temple lat evening. Precedlnn the address ny tiovernor LJtter, Mrs. Mary Foster Bryner, of Vhirago. elementary su perintendent. International Sunday School Association, gave a. 30-niinuie talk. - Nine counties replied at the rollrall. the largest delegations coming from Franklin County, Yakima South. Walla Walla. Takima North. Benton and Adams counties. The county honors were awarded as follows: Franklin, first rank: Adams and Yakima South, second rank: Benton. Columbia and Yakima North, third rank. Il!illlllllii:!lllillll!lll!l!!lllli:illllllllll!i:illllllllll!!lll!!!l!lll!lll!!nilll!! . 1 feJ W en When buying a fountain pen it is important that you think of what is put into it and what is back of it. Waterman's Ideal possesses not only many patented exclusive features, but that rock-bottom merit and genuinely satisfactory service v hieh have made it the chosen fountain pen of millions. Moreover, its world-wide adoption has inspired the development of the largest fountain pen organiza tion inexistence-This organization stands back of every pen it sells. Tha best sforvs eon the H aterman xlaealM insrlt-nUmr. Safety. Regular and Pocket Type. $2Q to ISQ.0Q. L. E. Waterman Company, New York, N. Y. ni1illllllillllillllllilll!llili!inilM 1V 1 1 A pen expert to care for your wants Th'rd and Alder Streets