TOE MORNING OKEGONIAW. FRIDAY, MAT 19, 1916. BUYERS WILL GOME August 7-15 Set Aside for Out-of-Town Merchants, BIG PROGRAMME PLANNED Chamber of Commerce Directors AVill Vrepare for Entertain- . ment of Visitors and Ar range Keduced Fares. Portland in going, to have another Buyers' week. August 7 to 12 are the dates. The Chamber of Commerce will have charge of arrangements. This will be the fourth annual buyers' Incursion conducted under auspices of the Chamber. Merchants from all parts of the Northwest and in every oommunity within Portland's trading radius will be Invited. The Chamber directors at a recent meeting approved the plan for this year's event. Nathan Strauss, a direc tor of the trade and commerce bureau, is general chairman of the committee in charge of the arrangements. Other members of the committee are Frank A. Spencer. O. W. Mielke, George Law rence, Jr., A. H. Devers, A. C. Black, Jay Smith, A. J. Hale, W. H. Beharrell. K. S. West and O. H. Fithian. M. K. Kmead. who is assistant to the execu tive secretary of the Chamber, will act as secretary of the committee. Conditions similar to those prevail ing at previous Buyers' weeks will gov ern this year. The railroads will be in vited to grant reduced round-trip rates, as they have done in. the past. The Chamber will grant a refund of the railroad fare on all purchases exceed ing an arbitrary amount. The merchants of Portland will com .bine with the Chamber in providing adequate entertainment for the visitors. nian staff, is"ill!at a private sanitari um, 275 North Twenty-second street. J. C. Bourne is registered at the Cor? nelius from Rainier. I La. Graves, of Corvallis, is regis tered at the. Seward. C. A. Strong, of Tacoma, is regis tered at the Seward. J. D. Griffith, of Spokane, is regis tered at the Nontonia. , D. S. R. Walker is registered at the Perkins from Eugene. Mrs. A. D. Gear; of Honolulu, is reg istered at the Portland. Joseph Jones and Mrs. Jones, of Butte,-are at the Oregon. Mr. and Mrs. A. Ruykhaver, of New York, are at the Portland. John McFarland, of Clatskanle. Is registered at the Perkins. E. J. Moore, of Twin Falls, Idaho, Is registered at the Eaton. R- E. Parsons Is registered at the Eaton from Crescent City. G. V. Stapleton, Mayor of Gresham, is registered at the Imperial. . M. G. Thompson is registered at the Portland from Carson. Wash. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lilley, of Water bury, Conn., are at the Seward. .Mr. and Mrs. H. Kelly, of Dayton, are registered at the Cornelius. Mr. t.-.r1 Mrs. F. A. Haldy. of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, are at the Eaton. W. F. Eastham is registered at the Nortonia from Vancouver, Wash. W. K. Wadsworth. of the Chemawa Indian Agency, Is at the Imperial. CHICAGO. May 18. (Special.) From Portland today, registered at the Ma- estic. was Mrs. A. A. Lowe. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash. ington. May 18. Mrs. Miles Poindexter, wife of the Washington Senator, left for Spokane today. Mrs. Hadley, wife of Representative Hadley, of Washington, will leave for home Monday. 'ARADE PLANS TOPIC FESTIVAL Al'XILIARV WILL DIS CI S S ARRANGEMENTS SATURDAY. HARBORS BILL IS URGED CHAMBER OF COMMERCE TO COM BAT DELAY ON JETTY. Resolutions to Be Sent to Oregon Dele Kotlon In Congress; Quarterly ; Meetings to Be Held. " Every" effort ! to put through the rivers and harbors appropriation and prevent the cessation of work on the north jetty at the mouth of the Colum bia River will be urged on the members of Oregon's delegation in Congress, in a resolution that will be transmitted today from the Portland Chamber of Commerce. The matter of the appropriation and the opposition to its immediate passage which has developed in Congress, was one of the most important of the many things considered by the board of di rectors at its last meeting, and . the decision was to make the strongest possible protest in Washington against delay. Quarterly meetings of the member ship of the Chamber will begin June 23. At that time a demonstration of transcontinental telephoning will be given by the Bell company. The mem bers will talk to Chicago, New York or Detroit. ,! The Seattle' Chamber of Commerce resolution regarding the extension of the Alaska railway to the Bering coal . fields has been approved by the local Chamber. The Chamber, through the board, has expressed its willingness to co-operate in the movement for the development rf the nitrate industry on the Columbia Stiver and will urge the Government also to conduct experiments along the lines of extracting potash from kelp. Private enterprise has indicated that these lines of activity will be entered largely, provided the Government shows a disposition to co-operate and assist in the beginnings of the Indus tries. After Sesslcn of Chamber of Com merce, Musical and Literary Pro gramnie Will Be Provided. Fraternal and civic organizations of Portland will gather at the Chamber of Commerce tomorrow night for the greatest mass meeting yet arranged by the Rose Festival auxiliary to con sider the various features of the fra ternal, military and industrial parade. the morning feature; June 9. More than 100 organizations have advised the' festival management they will have representatives present and all "such bodies in the city and suburbs are urged to have delegates present whethev or not they have made plans to ent.ir the pageant. - - ' Addresses are to be made by J. H. Dundore, president of the Rose Festi val, assisting City Commissioner George ti. Baker, who was director of the parade last year; Dr. A. K. Higgs, in charge of this feature for the 1916 fes tival; J. E. Werlein, : chairman of the participation committee; Paul E. Struck, chairman of the Rose Festival auxiliary; Judge W. N. Gatens; John G. Schroeder. chairman of the parade committe, and others. Final details for the great spectacle will be gone over and the Hne of march outlined. The formations of this Pageant, of which Adjuant-General White is to be grand marshal, will be announced soon. At the conclusion of the business session, entertainment features will be provided by a committee,-of which Mrs. Gertrude C. Norria is chairman. The programme follows: Junior Artisan Band, selection; Miss Prlscllla Knight and G. W. Uillard. duet; Miss June Margaret Norris, reading; Miss Billy Vincent, dance; Mrs. Fred Olsen. solo Grand Army of tfie Republic Quartet; Robert Searcy, reading; w. J. Carkeek, 1ml tations, various instruments. PERS0NALMENTI0N. W. E. Wilson, of Salem, is at the Oregon. F. W. Hawkes, of Newberg, is at. the Perkins. J. Mattey, of McMinnville, is at the Perkins. R. Burns, of Walla Walla, is at the Imperial. Dr. Ellis, of Douglas, Or., Is at the Imperial. , A. W. Nietman, of Seattle, is at the Isortonia. M. Vincent, of Chehalis, is at the Nortonia. Jesse Porter, of Corvallis, is at the Cornelilus. James Chisholm, of Hood River, is at the Eaton. Edward Campbell, of San Jose, is at the Seward. Robert McCrow, of Goldendale, is at the Cornelius. A. O. Hunter, of Bend, is registered at tne Portland. George Hay is registered at the Ore Eon from Spokane. A. J. Rose, of Ellensburg, is regis tered at the Oregon. Miss Leone Cass Baer. of The Orego- TODAY HEILIG THEATER CONVENTION OPEN TONIGHT Epworth League Sessions Continue Cntil Sunday Night. The' 26th annual convention of the Portland District Epworth League of the Methodist Episcopal church will open tonight in the Sunnyside Method st Church, East Thirty-fifth and East Yamhill streets, and continue Saturday and Sunday. A rally of chapters will be held tonight." Saturday forenoon there will be department talks, with luncheon at 12 o clock, and in the aft ernoon chapter reports will be received and a round-table held. Saturday night Dr. George B. Pratt will speak on "The Fire Proof Man." Sunday afternoon a meeting will be held at 4 o'clock. Rev. T. W. Lane will administer the sacrament, assisted by other pastors. Sunday flight there will be resolutions and instillation of officers. Rev. Robert Elmer Smith, of Sunnyside Church, will deliver the con vention sermon. 1000 Seats 25c 1000 Seats 50c 800 Seats 75c 1 FOUR MORE PERFORMANCES MOTOR TOURISTS VISITORS Connecticut Couple Driving .Home After Southern Trip to Pacific. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Lilley. of Water- bury, Conn., arrived in Portland yes terday from San FranciSco by automo bile. They have driven the entire tdts tance from their Eastern home by au tomobile and intend to return after brief stay in this city and a visit to Seattle. - They left their home last October and came through the Southwestern states, arriving in Southern California about Christmas. Mr. Lilley said that the road between here and Oregon City was about as bad as any place he had encountered. Dr. J. L. Walker, of Sunnyside, Wash. was also an arrival yesterday from San IV.nnl.,. II.. 1 .1 A i uiiti.nu. lie U 1 u 1 1: VI ll VV II L U k.aiUQf nia last Fall, but chipped his car back, tie Jert yesterday for home via the Co lumbia Highway. ODDFELLOWS GET JEWELS Six Members of 25 Years' Standing Are Decorated. Veterans' jewels were presented to six members at the meeting of Orien Lodge, No. 17, Oddfellows, Wednesda night, in the lodge hall. East Alder and East Sixth streets. These jewels go to members who have been connected with the order for 25 years. Past Grand Master William i A. Wheeler presided, and the Jewels were presented by Grand Patriarch Robert Andrews. Those receiving jewels were A. O. Sinks, Seattle. Wash.; P. L. Cox T. S. Luke, J. A. Richie, Frank F. Toev and George W. Whitoomb. Brief ad dresses were made by Grand Patriarch Robert Andrews and others. A social time Sollowed. . 'It Iff if-fT"!'" f,:ir',-,;i"i"-T",'''",,H'j;"'T'i'tnf 'ni:i'"iiiti,'i ,n,i,.n.f SriK CHmbing t tlie skies : : ' , Thev New Britannica Way Before it is Too Late ? . Every business man, every buyer, every housewife, knows how rapidly prices are rising. In all that goes to the making of books, this rise has been especially marked. Many kinds of paper have doubled. Some kinds of ink have gone up even more. Some kinds of leather as, for example, the morocco used for one of the most popular bindings of the Encyclopaedia Britannica are now almost unobtainable. Even the paper boards used in binding having increased 50. One result of this increase is that we can obtain no more sets of the "Handy Volume" Issue of the Britannica at anything like present costs. After the number contracted for before the war began is exhausted we shall be able to continue the sale only if we increase the prices from $11 for the cheapest binding to $19 for the most expensive. 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DRUGGISTS ARE ACQUITTED Charge ot Misbranding Ethyl Alco hol Not Sustained. A Jury in Municipal Court yesterday afternoon returned a verdict ot not gruilty, after hearini? the case agratnst H. F. Stryker. of the Asplund Pharm acy, 110 Xortb, Sixth, street, and iC t. Scott, of the Brink Pharmacy, Thir teenth and Washington, charged with misbranding drugs. The complaint was signed by J. D. Mickle, State Dairy and Food Commis sioner, and cited the sale of ethyl al cohol to affidavit applicants without the bottles bearing proper labels. Rog er Sinnott appeared as attorney for the defense. John Calvin Lw Lb. of Loulsvil1. Ky., Is si!d to l the nearest living relative of George Washington. NEW $50,000 SUIT IS FILED Daisy fjtamm Seeks Heart Balm From Walla Walla Stockman. . Heart balm in the sum of $50,000 is asked by Daisy Stamm, Portland music teacher, in a breach of promise suit against John A. Wood, wealthy stock man, of Walla Walla, Wash., which was brun in Judge GantenNein's court yes t)uay. In. a former trial of the sunt case early in 1915, the jury was unable to agree on a ver.dict. The damages asked by Miss Stamm she outlines as follows: For loss of time and impaired efficiency as a music teacher. $5000; for humiliation and damage to health, $2000; for ruination of character and reputation. $15,000; for being deprived of a husband and injuries to prospects in life. $25,000; for deceit." $3000 punitive damages. About 1R2.000 acres of the-Madras pr-v I0-nc of India have been own in lndigv IMA j " - aeul twice tlw aonaal areav. CITY HALL OPEN TODAY Courthouse and Banks Will Close for Election. The City Hall will be open today, while the Courthouse and the banks will make it a holiday on account of the election. Kmployes at the City Hall will have an hour anf a half off in which to vote. Otherwise business sill TO on aa usual. While election day is a legal holi day, the City Council yesterday decided to work. Nothing of an official nature will be done, however, and Lhe officjal business scheduled for the regular Fri day Council meetinar will be postponed until next Wednesday. The Council, however, will hold an informal session at 10 o'clock to confer with a commit tee of physicians on the subject of the proposed ordinance permitting tuber culosis hospitals in the city. N'j MM ttiat i"-t.Tfo ha lnen protUt'Ctt will kUi ll'e n.-rm spot. ible to