FRIDAY, MAY "G. 191 6 RIVER NAV GATORS trade, shipping to California and for ship building-. Robert Kehoe, for years superintendent of the Porter mill, will be in charge. OARING TRIP COOS BAY CITIES TO ACT MarsliTicld and North Ben a Will JMscuss Buying Water Plant. That Are Head and Shoulders Above Any You've ' Seen. V When you put n one of our hats you change' your character. Is it a refined hat or a cheap hat a new hat or an old, slovenly one does it make you look short or tall young or old? These are the questions that suggest themselves to your friends. A new hat, bought right, is always a good invest ment. We have the right hat for you in every wanted shape and shade. ' Heavy Stampmill Taken Down Rogue Through Rapids and Whirlpools. MARSHFIELD, Or, May 25. (Spe cial.) Councils of Marshfield and North Bend next week, in joint ses sion, will consider the purchase of the Coos Bay Water Company's system at a flat price of 180, 00J. The company's mains supply both Marshfield and North Bend." and the proposal has been shaped to negotiate on a basis of pay ment as follows: North Bend. J50.000; Marshfield. $54,000; joint payment, 76, 000. The negotiations now being opened are delayed promises of the administra- CATAMARAN RIDES SAFELY RIDE ON THE TWIN LINERS WITH THE SPEED OF AN EXPRESS TRAIN EThrec-Mile Passage In Mule Creek Canyon Is Effected in Few Min- v ' utes Peril Enconntered in Jutting Rock. TR.I M8LC PILOT ROCK 1VOMIXEE GETS MORE VOTES THAN HER TWO OPPONENTS COMBINED. TRQIS EOGf THE MORNING- OKEGONIAX, " 7F " 7 TFI HATS MAKE I Si I J? 111 tOLD BEACH, Or.. May 19. (Spe cial.) Completing- a hair-raising voy age down Rogue River from Grants Pass in a home-made catamaran, after ehooting rushing waters, threading nar row canyons and rapids, dodging rocks and whirlpools where the current ran white. Captain John Auberry and his crew of four arrived here at noon today. The object of the trip was to deliver a stampmill weighing three and one half tons to the Blossom Bar mine, three miles below Mule Creek. The heavy stampmill steadied the vessel in Tough water, but added to the diffi culties of steering. The crew was made up of volunteers who desired to get to the mouth of Rogue River, and were willing to save the time and expense incident to the conventional trip overland. Thejri were iot concerned with the danges in volved. Besides the captain, tfJey in cluded J. G. Van Horn, FranK' Stone, Commodore Fleming and C. C. Vonting, end they took Van Horn's deg along. Gondola Model I'scd. ' The craft was modeled along- the lines of a double Venetian gondola, but of more ample proportions, with a length of 38 feet and 9Vfe feet beam. Captain Auberry, who has had years of expe rience in navigating the Rogue, de clares the boat was the largest that ever descended the river. The expedition was a succession of thrills and narrow escapes. The party left Grants Pass Saturday, May 13, and all day Sunday was spent getting the boat over Rogue River Falls. At Al meda it was necessary to weigh down the boat before it could be gotten under the bridge. The country is sparsely settled, but news of the expedition was telephoned ahead, and at every accessible point along the river bank the adventurers were cheered by the settlers. At night the party camped out on the bank, managing usually to catch trout for supper and breakfast. The dog fell ooard in one of the numerous rap ids and swam with the current until rescued in still water a mile below. "AVhlte -Water" Traversed. The most exciting incident occurred last Wednesday morning, when the voy agers shot through Mule Creek Canyon. The canyon is three miles long, and a mile and one-half of this is "white" tvater, where the grea-t waves raised by the current are torn into spray and whirlpools by rocks Jutting up from the bottom. The walls impinge so nar rowly in places that there was not room enough to put out the oars on both sides of the boat. The party reached the head of the canyon Thursday afternoon and de cided to wait until morning. Settlers warned them they would never get through alive, and came from miles around to witness the exploit. Captain Auberry navigated the boat from his position in the bow, and each of the crew manned an oar. Entering the canyon, the roar of the waters sounded like thunder. It was the cap tain's job to watch far enough ahead so as to note the position of rocks in time to clear them. The craft was tossed about like a chip. Rock Is Hit. When more than half way through, the boat crashed against a rock direct ly in the middle of the current. A stan chion was wrenched loose, the blow checking the progress of the vessel un til she shipped a wave. The captain ordered out two oars to steady her and they snapped like matches. By using other oars as paddles the crew straightened up the vessel in time to miss the next boulder, and she then rode through in safety. The three miles of canyon were traversed in a very few moments. Reaching still water, the crew rested and received the plaudits of the crowds. The stampmill was delivered at the mine, a short distance below, and the boat then came on to Gold Beach. Captain Auberry, Fleming and Stone will pass the season here fishing for the Wedderburn cannery. Van Horn and Ponting are bound for their homesteads near Port Orford. F ' t'f- 4 i Miss Grace Gilliam. PENDLETON, Or., May 25. (Special.) Miss Grace Gilliam, of Pilot Rock, who was nominated by the Republicans for the office of County Treasurer, received more votes than her two oppon ents combined. She was at the bedside of a sister, who is ill in Los Angeles, at the time of elec tion. Miss Gilliam is a daughter of a pioneer family in Umatilla County and has taught school in Pendleton and Pilot Rock. tions which were committed to th principle of municipal ownership of the water system. STOCK SHOW OPENS JUNE 3 Entries for Ridgefield Exhibit Are . to Close Morning of First Day. RIDGEFIELD, Wash., May 25. (Spe cial.) Entries for the third annual Horse and Cattle Show, which will be held at Ridgefield on Saturday, June 3, will close the morning of the same day. The Ridgefield Commercial Club is sponsor for the horse and cattle ex hibition and has restricted entries to Clarke County, that a full representa tion of this section can be made with out competition. Special prizes an silver cups will be awarded. The Commercial Club urges-all those who will exhibit horses and cattle to register with James E. Keith, secretary of the booster organization. No en trance fee will be charged exhibitors. First prizes will be silver cups in most instances, while the second prizes will be cash. CONTRACT SQUABBLE ENDS Pasco Settles for Iiight Bill That Had Run Since September, 1915. PASCO, Wash., May 25. (Special.) The contract squabble between the city and the Pacific Power & Light Company, drawn out since 1915, and which finally amounted to a bill of $4425.50, has been settled by the city bv the payment of the sum, less J828.80 which was due under a recent ruling of the Public Service Commission re ducing the rates for Pasco and vicin ity. This action reinstates the contract in its original form. A change in the system from arc to Incandescent will be made. 54 IN PENDLETON CLASS High School Graduation Exercises Will Be Held Today. PENDLETON, Or., May 25. (Special.) lity-rour students will be gradu ated from Pendleton High School this week. Graduation week opened Sun day with the delivery of the bacca laureate address by Dr. Carl Doney, of Willamette University. Class day exer cises were held today and graduation exercises will be Friday. The gradu ates are: Hazel Adams, Angela Bowler. Wilbur Badley. Claude Baker, Ernest Boylen, Paul Callison, William Chisholm. Margaret Coles worthy, Fanchlon Elliott, Pauline Rice, Xed Fowler, Gladys Flannlgran. Janet Jack. Paul Kerrick, Henry Latourelle, Arnold Minnls, Wesley Mims, Sidney Morton, Claudis Mc Monlea. Marcus May, Clair Myers. Rosa Monterastelli, Mabel Hampton, Kathleen McFaul. Joe Nerkaus, Bertha Prultt. Emily Quant, Edith Richardson. Donald Robinson, Fred Russell. Jean Reber, Charles Gordon. Freeman Hendricks. Marguerite Strausrhn. Esther Shea. Nellie Sloan, Eula Smith. Emit Seibert, Catherine Thompson. , Pearl Taylor, Myrtle Tyndall, Catherine Whitehead. Jessie Wood. Joe Wilcox. Raymond Wilkes. John Blgsby. Arlouine Clevenger, Mabel McCon nell, Irma Belles, Z.ela Cole. Everett Daub Tier. Chester Reed, Jessie CheBtnut and Ben Gerklng. Kelso School Census Shows Gain. KELSO, Wash., May 25. (Special.)- The school censjus of district No. 36 just completed by W. C. Patterson shows a slight increase over the cen sus figures of last year. The increase was manifest in each precinct. There are 766 children between the ages of 21 and 5, resident in the district, divided among the three precincts. FELT HATS JOHN B. STETSON $4 AND $5 Trimble and Leyburn at $4 and $5 And the "Multnomah," Unequaled at $3 Straw, Panama, Porto Rico or Bankok Priced Right Style Right $3, $5 and $6 Sam'l Rosenblatt & Co. The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Southeast Cor. Fifth and Alder GIRL OIES IN WELL endon, la., besides Mrs. Frentiss. Miss Inglls had lived in this county nine years, coming here from Los Angeles. PIONEERS ARE TO MEET Miss Emma Inqlis Survives Fall but Heart Gives Way. ANXIOUS CALLS ANSWERED Brotlier-in-Liaw Attcmps Itescue, tout Also Falls in and Slay Have Hit Young Woman ' in Water. Clackamas Coroner Puzzled. OREGON CITT, Or., May 25. (Spe cial.) Miss Emma oZe Inglis. aged 29 years, survived a fall down a. E0 foot well into six feet of water, to die, apparently from heart failure when her brother-in-law, O. F. Frentiss, fell on her while trying to save her life. The accident happened at dusk last night on the Frentiss farm a mile south of Canby. Miss Inglis was visiting her sister and late in the day went out with her brother-in-law to do the chores. She was pulling up a bucket of water when Mr. f rentiss, wno was working some distance away, heard her scream. He ran to the well. Anxlonn (.lurry Answered. "Are you all right?" he called." "Yes." she answered from the bot tom of the shaft. The well was open and a ladder reached down one side. Mr. Frentiss began to climb down the shaft, but be fore he reached the bottom his hold on the slippery ladder gave way and he, too, tumbled into the water. Twice he went under the surface, before grabbing the girl in one arm and the planks on the side of the well with the other hand. Mrs. Frentiss soon ar rived with other help and the two were pulled to the ground. Miss Inglis was dead when she was brought to the surface. Coroner W. E. Hempstead went to the Canby home to day and examined the body, but did not consider an inquest necessary, aitnougn he is puzzled. . , . - Heart Failure Believed Cause. "While Mr. Frentiss is not certain that he struck Miss Inglis when he fell down the well, it is hardly possible that he could miss her when the size of the shaft is considered," said the Coroner today. "Her skull was not fractured, and it is evident that she was alive after she hit the bottom, for she answered Mr. Frentiss' call. It must have been that her heart gave away under the strain. Miss Inglis' home was with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Inglis, who lived on the old Sheriff Maddix place, three miles from Canby. She is sur vived by a twin brother, T. W. Inglis, of this county; Charles Inglis, of Des Moines, la., and Clara Spring, of Clar- Sui-v Ivors or Original Colonies Washington to Be at ltcunion. of SEATTLE, Wash., May 25. Several evente are planned for the reunion of the Washington State Pioneer Associa tion to be held in Seattle June 6-7. Among those who will participate in the reunion will be Christopher C. Simmons, who, so far as known, is the only survivor of the first colony: Will iam Ward, of Alameda. Cal., and New ton J. Ward, of Chelan, Wash., who were left for dead after an Indian mas sacre of all the other members of their part-, while crossing the plains in 1854; Charles McKay, of Friday Harbor, Wash., 86 years old, is the only sur vivor of 14 Americans who settled on San Juan Islands in opposition to the Hudson's Bay Company, and Frederick Roberts, 77 years old. Fort Angeles, Wash, who was a member of a British surveying party in the diepute. RECALLERS ARE BUSY BOISE MAYOR IS ACCUSED OF AD MINISTRATION ABUSES. Attorney Is Put I'p aa Candidate to Replace Executive Said to Have Broken Pledce to Remedy. BAKERS ELECT OFFICERS William Matthaei, of Taeoma, Head of Northwest Association.' TACOMA, May 25. William Matthael. of Tacoma, was elected president of the Pacific Northwest Master Bakers'- As sociation today. North Yakima will be the next meeting place. The new vice presidents are Albert Jones, of Tacoma; David - Ackerman, -Spokane; Henry Mat thael. Tacoma: William Shelley, Van couver, B. C, and A. Davidson, Seattle; executive committee, Donald McPher son. Tacoma; H. F. Rittman, Portland; T. Rasmussen, Seattle; H. C. Davidson, Seattle; H. W. Lovenstein, North Yak ima; treasurer, H. F. Berger, Tacoma; sergeant-at-arms, J. Hauntzer. Seattle. The secretary will he chosen by the executive board. Mr. Matthaei held the office last year. The sessions close with automobile tours and a banquet tonight. BOISE, Idaho, May 25. (Special.) The administration of Mayor Robinson is the issue in Boise's first municipal recall election to be held here June 1. The campaign for the recall is now well under way. S. H. Hays, a promi nent attorney, has been put up against Mayor Robinson at the election while a candidate also has appeared against Councilman Eichelberger. who has shared with the Mayor the attacks of the recallers. In a statement by the "Committee of One Hundred" it is charged that the Mayor has failed to correct abuses in the city administration of which com plaints had been made and remedies for which had been promised and that he had broken his pledge to a delega tion of business men. At the same time he apologized for statements some of his supporters had made to the effect that the recall movement was being SS. Great Northern Northern Pacific cEKomS Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays BEGINNING JUNE 1 S. S. Northern Pacific Sails for San Francisco Sat, May 27. EXTRA COMFORTS WITHOUT EXTRA FARE. FARES INCLUDE BERTH AND MEALS. THROUGH SLEEPING CARS to the ships' sides, Flavel, from Vancouver, B. C; Seattle and Tacoma, via Great North ern Ry. and from Seattle and Tacoma via Northern Pacific Ry. Similar service northbound. . Low round-trip excursion fares to San Francisco daily June 10. Low rates to Los Angeles for Knights Templar conclave June 12 to 20. 1 North Bank Ticket Office 5th and Stark. Bwdy 920, A 6671. MM fostered by the vice and liquor inter ests of the city. The statement declared that imme diately after the pledge to correct the abuses had been given, the city ad ministration degenerated into such a state of incompetency that no remedy other than the recall seemed available. In reply, the Mayor demanded specific instances of broken pledges, where upon the Committee of One Hundred again charged that many raids had been made, John Doe warrants issued Indiscriminately and petty traffic prosecutions taken up. FERRY RATE CUT SOUGHT Hood Kivcr and While Salmon Com mercial Clubs Make Request. HOOD RIVER, Or.. May 25. Spe cial.) Co-operating with the White Salmon, Wash., Commercial Club, mem bers of the Hood River Commercial Club will endeavor to secure a reduc tion In charges made by local -ferry systems for transporting automobiles across the Columbia. It is stated by the clubs that the fer rymen are asking the same rate charged several years ago, when traf fic was so light as to justify the heavy price. Spokane ex-Official Absolved. SPOKANE. Wash.. May 25. Arthur A. Lewis, a member of the State Publio Service Commission, and ex-City Treas urer of Spokane, was freed of any lia bility for the loss of 13232. while he was in charge of the office. A Jury in the Superior Court, after hearing the evidence in the case, returned an instructed verdict for Mr. Lewis. More than 100.000 operatives are now em ployed In American slllc manufacturing mills. This Is exclusive of thoao employed In dependent lndujttrir. GIRL FLEES; WARRANT OUT Grand ' Mound Man Charged With Aiding Her Escape. CENTRALIA. Wash., May 23. (Spe cial.) A warrant was issued yesterday by the Thurston County Prosecutor for the arrest of H. H. Balch, a prominent mill owner of Grand Mound, on a charge of assisting Pearl Mann to escape from the State School for Girls at Grand Mound. It is alleged that Mr. Balch purchased the girl a ticket to Seattle. The warrant was issued following an investigation by the Prosecuting At torney, who asserted that several other residents of the town are implicated in the affair. The attorney says that it is the apparent belief of the residents that the girls are badly treated. LUMBER COMPANY FORMED New IMant at Xortli Bend Will Cut 60,000 Feet Dally. . NORTH BEND. Or.. May 25. (Spe cial.) The Bay Park Lumber Company was organized here with a capitaliza tion of J25.000. and all stockholders are .local men. The officials of the com pany are: Henry G. Kern, president; Jjennis Mccartay. vice-president; Will iam Vaughan, secretary, and Robert Hanks, treasurer. Other directors of the concern are Harry Noble, L. J. Simp son and K. v. Kruse. . The company has leased the old Korth Bend sawmill and front from the Simpson heirs for a period of 15 years and will place the mill in shape for operation within 60 days. Later the Kruse & Banks shipyard will be en larged and three ways Installed, where there is deep water and a straight away for a mile for launching. The mill will saw 60,000 feet daily and the lumber will be used in caring for local CM Children Need A Warm Table Drink Many parents understand that tea and coffee hinder mental development and body growth in their children, but are puzzled how to gratify the little folk's desire for a warm drink, without harming them. For years now, in a considerable number of American homes, the problem has been solved by nstant Postuiinn This pure food-drink is made of prime wheat, roasted with a bit of pure, wholesome molasses. It closely resembles the higher grades of mild Java cof fee in color and flavor, has a delightful aroma, and is so pleasing that the older folks join the children in this wholesome beverage. Where the rest of the family stick to coffee, Instant Postum for the chil dren causes no extra work. A level teaspoonful in a cup with hot water and cream and sugar to taste, makes a delightful drink instantly. There's a Reason" for POSTUM Sold by Grocers everywhere " Pass your cup again THHE cook Has followed the directions in the vacuum A sealed tins you wonder what's happened to your coffee ! Good ? Better than good real coffee ! Fine coffee such as Schilling's Best needs only one favor : please make it right. The result is worth while and economical. Not that the price by the pound is low, but a pound of Schilling's Best makes more cups of smooth, rich coffee. You can easily prove this. A great part of this economy is due to even grinding- and im mediate packing in vacuum sealed tins. Schilling' s Best is sold through grocers only. Schillings f Best J-