THE MORNING OREGONIAN. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1918.
9
CITY NEWS IN BRIEF
CUT Editor Main TOTO. A OM
Sunday Editor Main TU70, A !
Advertising Department . . .Main 7f"o, A cnj
bupsrlniandeat of building-. .Maia TUTU. A GuS
AMUSEMENTS.
PANTACES (Broadway at Alder) Vaude
ville. Three shows daily. 2:30. 7 and :0.
HJPPODROJIE Broadway at Yamhill)
Vaudeville and moving- plctnrea. 2 to 6;
:4J to 11 P. M. Saturdays. Sundays, hoik
daja. continuous. 1:1 to 11 P. al.
CTRAKD (Waahlncton etreet. between Park
and Win park Vaudeville and moving
Pictures; continuous.
OAKS AMCSEMENT PARK (on Willamette
Klverk Band concerts and diversified, en
tertainment, afternoon and nla-ht.
OBECONUNS AT BESOBTS.
Subscribe with the following agents,
at your Summer resort, to secure the
most prompt delivery of The Ore-.
soman. City rates. Subscriptions
by mail are payable in advance:
Barvlew. Or.... t C. Robinson
Bay City. Or O. E. Shelley
Bay Ocean. Or H. U King
Brighton. Or A. W. Row
Carson. Wash
airs. M. C. Martin and Carl A. Smith
Columbia Beach. Or. F. M. McClure
Kcola. Or. ..Cannon Beach Merc. Co.
Garibaldi. Or a M. McMillan
Cearhart. Or . ..W. I. Robinson
Long Beach. Wash. ..W. K. fctrauhal
Manhattan Beach. Or.. Mrs. E. Elden
Manxanita. Or... E. Kardell
Kaheotta, Wash H. J. Brown
Newport. Or O. J. Hetron
Ocean Park. Wash..Emma S. Campbell
Pacific Beach. Vn.Lewis Burllnsame
Rockaway Or Frank Miller
Seaside. Or J. H. Jonea
Seavlew. Wash H. K. Perrln
Tillamook. Or .....J. S. Lamar
IVhee.c. Or R. H. Cady
THRIFT STAMPS
and
WAR SAVINGS STAMPS
on Sals at
Buslnesa Office. Oreg onlan.
Obkoon Vktzbjlms to Meet. All
living- Civil Wr Volunteers from Ore
gon, those who were members of the
First Oreg-on Cavalry and the First
Oregon Infantry, are urged to be at
the G. A. R. rooms at the Courthouse
et 2 o'clock this afternoon. Veteran
W. H. Byers. who was First Sergeant
of the .Cavalry Kegiment. A Company,
and veteran O. H. Stearns, who was
First Sergeant of the Infantry Regi
ment, I Company, have called the meet
ing and are particularly anxious that
all their living comrades gather there
for a good old heart-to-heart taiK ana
a get-together-again party.
Cascade Locks and return dally
exceDt Monday and Tuesdays. Leaves
7 A. M.. returns 8 P. M. Ash-street
dock. Broadway J454. Adv.
Columbia River Hiohwat Map ahd
Glide. Complete description all points
of Interest. Price, 15c. Gill's. Third
and Alder sts. Adv.
Oriental Ruos repaired and wash
cleaned by native weavers. Cartozian
Bros, Inc.. Tenth and Wash. Br. 3433.
Adv.
Milk and Rest Cure. MaKe healthy
flesh for underweight patients. The
Moore Sanitarium, East 47th. Adv.
See wonderful gladiolus display at
Crissey Gladiolus Farm, ten miles east
of Greshara. Bull Run road. Adv.
Souvenir Plating) Cards Oolumbia
River Highway. at Gill's, 3d and
Alder. 75c Adv.
Hill Military Academy offers pri
mary, preparatory and high school de
partments. Adv.
Dr. James Rosenfeld has returned.
Adv.
G. A. R. ARE GUESTS
State Societies Picnic at Oaks
Is "Home" Event.
Fish Ladder Bio Success. The new
Xish ladder at Willamette Falls. Ore
gon City, erected at a cost of S10.000.
has more than justified the expenditure
It Incurred, according to State Game
Warden Shoemaker. To It he attributes
the fact that there will this year be
available twice as many Chinook
salmon eggs as there were last season.
In previous seasons hundreds of salmon
were killed in attempting- to go over
me ians. but the fish ladder has re
moved this loss to a large extent. To
render It still more efficient, the com
mission will probably appeal to th
next Legislature for another approprla
Hon to Increase) its size.
Fires Under Control. The recen
rains have not been sufficient to en
tirely extinguish the fires in the
Rainier and Enoqualmio National For
ests. but the burning areas are now
easily controlled, according to R. H.
Chapler. forest examiner, who has Jus
returned from ten days in North
western Washington. The extreme dry
ness of the early Summer has per
mined the fires to burn In spite of the
general showers of the past few weeks.
Mr. Chapler Inspected the fire organ!
zations at Tacoma, Buckley, Eatonvllle
ana Mortonvliie.
Pheasant Poisontno Suspected. An
unidentified malady has wrought
havoc the past few days among the
Chinese pheasants on the Marmot
Pheasant Farm. Poisoning Is suspected
by R- D. Babb, owner of the farm, who
has sent one of the dead birds to the
fctate Fish and Game Commission for
analysis. The pheasants were dying in
large numbers, according to the letter
which accompanied the bird. The
pheasant farm is located at Marmot
and contains more than 2000 birds.
Child Is Badlt Hurt. Maurlne
Stille. aged 14. of 2110 Wasco street.
leu from the top of Rocky Butte yes
terday afternoon and sustained a frac-
tured skull and severe body bruises.
She had been playing with other young
girls when she approached too near
the edge of the bluff and toppled over.
She fell and rolled for a distance of
1-5 feet. She was removed to Good
Samaritan Hospital. Her condition last
sight was reported as precarious.
Jack Rose Is Sentenced. Jack Rose,
lias K- E. Eubanks, was sentenced to
) days In the County Jail and fined
12; cfte.- plerding guilty in District
Court yesterday to a complaint charg
ing him with sending forged telegrams.
Rose, it Is alleged. Impersonated
employe of the Crosby-Washburn Mill
ing Company In an effort to forge a
$100 check. He was brought back to
Portland from Seattle sevc al days ago.
Over joo Girl Pickers Wanted. A
call for 300 women and girls to pick
cranberries near Seaview is issued by
the women's department of the Public
Employment Service. The secretary
states that the wages offered are good,
accommodations are comfortable and
the proximity of the beaches provides
a chance for a pleasant outing. Pick
rs. who will be needed September 1,
are asked to sign up at 306 City HalL
Jewelrt Reported Stolen. A. L.
Inman. of the Brown Apartments, re
ported to the police yesterday that a
quantity of Jewelry was stolen from
his room on Monday night. The apart
ments of Sirs. Jennet Hall, of the
Almira Apartments, were entered by a
prowler when she was absent from
the city and several articles of Jewelry
were stolen, she reported to the police
yesterday.
St-rr roR 120.000 Filed. August
Kulisch is plaintiff in a $20,000 per
sonal injury suit filed yesterday in the
Circuit Court against L. Gerlinger for
damages as the result of injuries sus
tained in the Gerlinger building on
Slay 1. last. The plaintiff says he fell
through an open elevator shaft, sus
taining a compound fracture of the
right leg and other serious injuries.
Bot Caught in Act. Henry Holms n.
aged Id. was observed by F. A. Tracey
to seize the Belgian relief fund bottle
In front of the Strand Theater yester
day and was apprehended tnd turned
over to the police. Later he was taken
in charge by the Juvenile Court. Toung
Holman . says he came to Portland
few weeks ago from Montana, where
his parents reside.
Dr. E. V. SIcCollcm TO Speak. Dr.
E. V. McCollum, of Johns Hopkins Uni
versity, specialist In dietetics and nutri
tion. will speak in Lincoln High School
auditorium Friday evening at 8 o'clock.
under the auspices of the Oregon Dairy
Council and the United States Food Ad
ministration. -
Local Corps to Entertain. Lincoln
Garfield Corps No. 19 will entertain
all National officers and members of
Women's Relief Corp3 and Grand Army
of the Republic from 10 to 12 and 3 to 4
o'clock in room 525 Courthouse, Frl
day. August 23.
G. A. R. Visitors Welcome.
Dance Tonight: Cotillion Hall.
Don't Miss Seeing
Portland's Finest Amusement Palace.
Excellent Music: Ball-bearing Floor.
Washington at 14th. Adv.
e
A-
KEEPISG VOIR PLEDGE.
W. S. 9.
Buy your stamps early. Those
you purchase are evidence that
you are keeping your pledge.
You also pledged yourself to
economize during the war. Th
Government Is requesting that
you do not buy articles not nec
essary for your health and effi
ciency. Tou will thereby release
both labor and material for the
manufacture of articlea needed to
support our brave boys "over
there." who are just now so hero
ically driving the Huns back.
Tbey make good their pledge.
Are you keeping TOURS? Buy
all you can afford.
C. & JACKSON,
State Director W. S. &
WALTER HAY- IS CALLED
POST ACCEPTED IJf PUBLIC HEALTH
SERVICE.
BIG LUNCHEON PROVIDED
All Soldiers, Old and Toung, Ad
mitted Free and Made Acquainted
Through Hospitality of Mem
bers of Many Local Bodies.
Newspaper Mai Assigned to Division
of Social Hjsrirne Will Go at
Once to Washington.
Simultaneously with being approved
for the Marine Reserve Flying Corps
Officers' Training Camp, and passed
physically. Walter W. R. May. assis
tant city editor of The Oregonian, yes
terday was appointed officially assis
tant educational director of the United
States Public Health Service by Rupert
Blue, Surgeon-General, and called to
Washington Immediately. Mr. May will
te assigned to . the division of social
hygiene under the recent Army bill
creating a division for this work.
Mr. May will leave in a few days Tor
Washington, having formally" asked a
contingent extension of time to report
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A regular old-fashioned picnic out
under the wide-spreading oaks at the
picturesque Oaks Park, with home
folk and friends from even state so
ciety organized in Portland acting as
hosts to the old soldiers and the new
soldiers and their families, was one
of the -big events on yesterday's pro
gramme. Each state society maintained
an attractively decorated booth, Vith
plenty of hostesses in charge to look
after the handshaking and introduc
tion of visitors. The Iowa Society's
annual picnic day fell on yesterday
and so the occasion was doubly ceie
brated. Eveny one of the other 23 so
cietles made up of former residents
in other states held a picnic, too, and
asked each member to bring thei
lunch basket filled with "enough for
themselves and one other." In this
way the visiting G. A. R. and their
families were nicely looked out for,
and their happiness was completed
when the various state society mem
bers acted as introducing mediums,
finding old friends and comrades and
reuniting friends of other days tnrougn
their registration books.
There were over 22.000 people in
attendance and the visiting G. A. R
were all admitted free, as were also
all the new soldiers. Tables dotted
the greensward and the kitchenette
supplied hot coffee and tea for the
picnickers. Many families pooled their
baskets and made merry forest Dan
queters. All day the band played and
the gay. happy crowd of homefolks
visited with each other, just as they
would back in the shade of their own
oak trees in their home town. It was
a friendly get-together day, and the
spirit of neighborliness was abroad
In the evening a splendid exhibition
In fireworks completed the festivities.
The fireworks were patriotic in nature,
and included among the set pieces
Uncle Sam. soldier lads and miniature
bombing of German ships and villages.
One unique feature was the demon
stration of the use of trench torches, In
which huge bombs were sent into the
air, exploding and lighting up the sur
rounding country. 1
New Fall Hats
have been arriv
ing for some time
and we wish to
call . your atten
tion to the new
Beavers at $4
Brooks at $3
in their new shades of green,
cteel gray and forest brown.
They are comfortable felts the
best looking hats we've seen in
many a day.
Nexv Mallory Hats
$5 and $6
The Kuppenheimer House in
Portland.
Morrison at Fourth.
CHILDREN DIE IN FIRE
FATHER UNABLE TO SAVE FAMILY
FROM BLAZING HOME.
Walter W. R. May, Assistant City Edi
tor ef The Oregonian. Who Is Called
to Washington for War Work in
Pnblle Health Service.
for the Flying Reserve Officers' Train
ing Camp at Massachusetts Institute
of Technology (Boston Tech) for .-preliminary
training, in order to complete
the work assigned by Surgeon-General
Blue, with the privilege of being as
signed to active field duty In the fly
ing corps should the war be prolonged.
Mr. May accepted the Washington
assignment on receipt of a telegram
from Surgeon-General Blue which said:
"Public health work is vitally im
portant to vigorous prosecution of the
war and Is so regarded."
For the last six and a half years
Mr. May, who is Just 30 years old. has
been Identified with The Oregonian in
the editorial department, having been
copy editor and assistant .city editor
in that time.
VETERANS VISIT SHIPYARD
Delegation Is Invited to Attend
Launching of ISth Ship Today.
Headed by a fife and drum corps, a
delegation of 70 veterans last night
speeded up production at the shipyard
of the Foundation Company with mar
tial airs and a rousing patriotic meet
ing in the messroom at the luncheon
time of the night shift. T. J. Freeman.
of Long Beach. CaL, director of the
corps, called upon C. O. Holmes, a Chi
cago veteran, to address the men in the
messroom.
Judge Templeton, of Toledo. O.. an
other veteran, sang "When We Go Over
the Top," a song of his own composition.
Paul B. Thompson, superintendent of
the yard, invited the men to be guests
of the yard today at noon for the
launching of the 12th ship built for the
French government at this yard.
Third Child, Awakened to Find Dvrejfl-
Ing in Flames, Escapes With
Ximber of Serious Burns.
MADRAS, Or.. Aug.- 20. (Special)
Two children were burned to death and
another suffered serious injuries, when
the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Mor
ris, located a few miles from this city,
was destroyed by fire late Monday
night.
Mrs. Morris was away from home at
the time of the fire and the four chil
dren, two boys and two girls, were
sleeping in the house, while their
father occupied a tent nearby.
About midulght Mr. Morris was
awakened to find the dwelling in
flames. The two older children
escaped, but not before one of them
suffered serious burns. The .origin of
the fire is unknown, but probably
Ignited from a defective flue.
Besides their parents, the victims are
survived by several brothers and sis
ters. .
BLANKS HAY BE OBTAINED FROM
'UNIVERSITY. -
T. S. ROBINSON IS CALLED
Lawyer to Go to Training Camp for
Artillery Officers.
Mem Above and Below Draft Age an)
Eligible for Instruction at
Fort Hancock.
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene,
Aug. 20. (Special.) Applications for
admission to the course in ordnance
stores accounting and general ordnance
courses given at Camp Hancock,
Georgia, ate desired by the War De
partment, according to a letter received
at the university from Captain W. C.
North, of the Ordnance Reserve Corps.
Applicants, the letter sets forth, should
have a high school education or its
equivalent, and a college training is
desirable.
Men above and below the draft age
are eligible to these courses, says the
letter to the university registrar. A
supply of application blanks has been
sent to the university, where an ord
nance stores accounting course was
conducted during the greater part of
the last college year, and prospective
applicants are requested to write Reg
istrar A. R. Tiffany for these blanks,
which can be filled out and forwarded
to the office of the chief of ordnance
at Washington, D. C.
T. S. Robinson, for the past five years
with the legal department of the Port
land Railway, Light & Power Company.
receivea oraers yesterday to report to
ne training camp for field artillery
officers, at Camp Zachary Taylor, on
August 29.
Mr. Robinson is the third Portland
applicant to receive this coveted rec
ognition. He will leave within a few
days, acompanied by Mrs. Robinson
and their two children, who will make
their hqme in the East. Mr.' Robinson
a graduate of the Indiana Law
School and has been a resident of Port
land for seven years.
PLUCKY VETERAN WINS
ATTENTION! G. A. R.
Our reception parlors axe at 3
service this week, including souvenir
copy of our patriotic song. "Sail On."
Oregon Conservatory of Music, 1514
Fourth SU at Morrison. Adv.
your
Auto Is Wrecked.
Near East Twenty-sixth and Knott
streets there is an ocular demonstra
tion that a touring car cannot success
fully climb a telephone pole. The car.
which is reported to bear license tag
o. 1115. is lying on Its side with the
front wheels one one side and the rear
wheels on the other side of the tele
phone pole. The driver, a young man,
escaped with only minor injuries, x
JOHN KEELEY, AGED 77, WALKS
FAR TO ATTEND ENCAMPMENT.
With Two Thin Dimes as His Sole Cap
ital, Warrior Starts Oat
Find His Brother.
Just as lightly as he undertook the
long marches of Civil War days and the
chilly bivouacs of the field did Com
rade John Keeley set out from Seattle,
with two thin dimes as his sole capital,
to attend the Grand Army encampment
at Portland.
For eight days the veteran. 77 years
of age, walked toward Portland, camp
ing where night overtook him and sub
sisting solely on flapjacks cobked over
his wayside fire. On the seventh day
his flapjack flour gave out and the
chances for Comrade Keeley reaching
the encampment dwindled to the van
ishing point.
Within 80 miles of this city, near
Toledo, Wash., he was picked tip by
George M. Allen, or Portland, who
stopped his car to give the old soldier
a lift. Mr. Allen drove at top speed to
the nearest town and bought Mr.
Keeley a real meal, later bringing him
to Portland.
Telling Mr. Allen that he had friends
in Oregon City, the veteran thanked
him and. struck, out C himself again,,
He was in high hopes of meeting his
brother, whom he has not seen for 40
years, at the encampment.
He told Mr. Allen that he had served
throughout the war with an Illinois
regiment and had' seen his own father,
fighting by his side, struck down by
the saber of a Confederate cavalryman.
The son clubbed his rifle and killed the
rebel, who fell beside the body of the
elder Keeley.
He had been in an Old Soldiers' Home
at Leavenworth, Kan., for several years,
he told Mr. Allen, and recently songht
and obtained a transfer to the Soldiers'
Home at Roseburg.
WELFARE COMMISSION URGED TO
MODIFY NIGHT SHIFT RULE.
Portland Manufactnrers Would Us
Female Labor on War Work, They
Say in Petition for New Order.
Several Portland manufacturers now
employing women as a war-time
emergency yesterday petitioned the
Industrial Welfare Commission for
authority to emploj women on the
night shifts. Under previous rulings
of the Commission this class of em
ployment at night has not been
allowed, but a public conference prob
ably will be held at some early date
that the question may be more care
fully considered.
The class of work is said to be in
directly a war work, and it is for that
reason mainly that the employers are
seeking authority to have women
working on other than the day shifts.
Word was received by the Commis
sion that the minimum wage commis
sion of British Columbia will be in
Portland shortly to investigate the
workings of Oregon's minimum wage
laws. Members of the Oregon commis
sion win go to Olympia, Wash., the
latter part of the month, where they
will attend a war conference of in
dustrial welfare officials on Septem
ber 28 and 29.
Miss M. E. Howatson and E. B. Mac-
Naughton were the two members at'
tending the meeting yesterday. .
2: 1 5 TWICE DAILY 8: 1 5
D. W. GRIFFITH'S
WONDERFUL ROMANCE OF THE WAR
.H.slign
t"e WORLD
DAIRY HEADS TO CONFER
Professor Lamb, of Food Adminis
tration, Calls Session at Seattle.
Thomas Carraichael and Jacob
Luscher. members of the executive
board of the Dairymen's League at
Oregon, left last night foi Seattle to
attend a conference with Professor,
T.nmh nf th a Food Administration, who
has come to the Coast at the invita
tion of the dairymen to investigate
conditions in the districts wheret con
denseries are located.
J. W. Pomeroy. manager of . the
league, said last night: "If the public
doesn't awaken to the importance of
milk as a food and if more interest
Is not taken and there isn t relief to
the situation, there soon won't be any
dainies or dairymen."
Mr. Carmichael and Mr. Luscher wfll
represent .Oregon at the meeting in
Seattle."
NATIONAL FORESTS FILMED
Recreation Facilities in. Northwest
to Be Featured In Pictures.
Some splendid motion pictures of the
recreation facilities afforded by the
National forests were secured by For
est Examiner Jackson and Photograph
er Goergens on a week-end trip along
Herman Trail. Mr. Jackson returned
yesterday.
Pictures were taken of the new Boy
Scout headquarters at Wahtum Lake,
and several camping parties figured in
the views secured. An especially good
film was made of a fisherman landing
a 12-inch trout. Mr. Goergens, who is
the official photographer for the De
partment of Agriculture, will make
enother trip soon to secure views along
the Eagle Creek Trail.
WOMAN ASKS ANNULMENT
Complaint Says She Married Second
Time Before Six Months Elapsed.
Because ' she married G. E. .Town-
send before the' statutory six months
had elapsed from the time she divorced
her former husband, C. TT. Kitchen,
Bessie M. Townsend, in a suit filed
yesterday, asks that her second mar
riage be annulled because of Its si
eged illegality. They were married
two years ago, but it was only re
cently she found it to De illegal, tne
plaintiff asserts.
Simple desertion is charged against
Pearl Schield in a suit filed by E. C
Schield. They were- married in Port
land in February, 1912 and separated
more than a year ago.
The Sweetest Love Story Ever Told
Filmed on the Battlefields of France
Accompanied by a Grand
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
fc'rn iTisjssijjjJijaMiSMBTri m mm I
J
II
LADIES OF THE G. A. R.
WOMEN'S RELIEF CORPS
DAUGHTERS AND SONS OF VETERANS
AND THEIR FAMILIES
Can Secure
' SPECIAL REDUCED-PRICE TICKETS
at tr
LIBERTY TEMPLE ALSO AT
MULTNOMAH, IMPERIAL, BENSON,
OREGON AND THE NORTONIA HOTELS
PRICES:
EVENINGS 25c, 50c, 75c, $1
MATINEES 25c, 50c, 75c
These prices are universal throughout the
United States Under Bond to D. W. Griffith
Hearty Welcome
G. A: R;
TOD AY
BALANCE OF WEEK
Wm. Fox Presents
The Girl of a Thousand
Emotions
,
i I -rSh.
t - ,e ...
GLADYS
BROCKWELL
IN
will visit Astoria Saturday, September
14. The occasion, known as the Portland-Astoria
get-together trip, prom
ises much of interest. The trip down
will be made by boat, starting at 7
A. M., arriving at Astoria, at 1 P. M.
Accommodations will be"5 provided for
business men only arvd the. fare, in
fcluding lunch, will be.$2.
Tne city or Astoria-is arranging an
attractive programme forMhe .visitors.
Covering a visit to thejettl.esr and.cto
making reservations for the trip.
Government Leases 4 0,000 Acres.
SAN DIEGO Cel., Aug. 20. Approxi
mately 40,000 acres of land surrounding
Camp Kearney, near here, have been
leased to the Government for use as an
artillery range and camp site, it was
learned today from property owners
and agents who signed the leases.
BUSINESS COLLEGE
PORTLAND. ORECON
Tenth and Washington Streets
Open day and evening all the year. .
Enter at any time no term beginnings.
All commercial branches taught. Civil
service work specialized. Individual in
struction given. Continuous calls for
help. Position as soon as competent.
Illustrated catalog free. Call at college,
telephone Broadway 1821, or write.
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.v-.y.ryttfL-.-w.-.vvi;. . .v- w. v.w. .v.y-. .
Bellevue Hotel
SAW FRANCISCO
Management A. T. Lnndborg. Formerly
Manager Benson Hotel.
This excellent hotel is Northwest head
quarters in San Francisco. Rooms with
bath
S2.0O per day and upward.
T
G. A. R., Notice!
How to look 15 years younger. How
to make the skin smooth and firm. See
NIKK-9IARR DEMONSTRATION at
Woodard, Clarke Drug Co., West Park
and Alder. FREE BOOK and SAMPLE,
or send 3c stamp for book. Address
Nikk-Marr Xeo-Plaatlqne Laboratories
Tio. 7. 386 ",4 Washington St., Portlnnd,
Oregon. Office hours 1 to 5 P. M. Phone
Main 3371. "Made In Oregon."
ASTORIA TRIP IS PLANNED
Portland Business Men Arrange fot
Get-Together Meeting.
Portland business men, under the
auspices of the Chamber of Commerce.
The Third Edition
of Beyond
A study of the doctrine of the
Intermediate State by Rev. Will
iam Rldgely Powell. Just re
written, and dedicated to the
V e t e r an s, who today have
inarched so vigorously through
the streets of Portlnnd, but who
In the course of nature, must soon
pasa to that beyond. Hail nnd
farewell until we meet again in
'that Intermediate State.
vefflrs&Doeiis
ON THE
Great
Northwest
Books are the best souvenirs to
remember Oregon by. The fol
lowing books are interesting and
worthy of being kept always:
"The Guardians of the Columbia."
Completely illustrated with
photographs-of the primeval for
ests, snow-capped mountains, and
the mighty Columbia River.
Per copy 50c and $1.00.
"LEWIS & CLARKE JOURNALS," Special Edition, 25 Cents.
Post Cards, Booklets & Folders
The Great Northwest completely illustrated in booklet and folder.
The Great Columbia River Highwayj illustrated in every detail, in
folder, post cards and single photographs.
"THE BIRD
OF PREY"
A' thrilling tale of a lawless land
where; primitive love
reigns supreme. . '
Latest Strand Weekly
News from Over There.
4 High Class Acts 4
EASTERN VAUDEVILLE
Week Day Matinees,
Including War Tax....
10c
It IB m.'.Li lausjiii wrsysmw
BREAD
A Victory Bread That's
Wholesome and Wholly
Delightful.
f 7 i i
New Republic Grille
347 Yi Morrison St, near Park
First Class Cuisine
Special Merchants' Lunch.
Try our Sunday Special
Chicken Dinner.
Good Music during dinner
Dancing 9:30 to 12:30 P. M.
New dancing floor just installed.
r
Spend your vacation in
SAN FRANCISCO
HOTEL
m
STOP
AT THE
dlSWftnll
On Geary Street, Jnst off Union 8nirn,
close to everything worth while. Good
accommodations from $1.60 np. Breakfast
S5o and 60c (Sundays 76c), Lunch 60c.
Sinner II (Snndayi fl25). Municipal
ear line passes the door. Stewart Motor
Bns meets principal trains and steamers,
PLAYING CARDS
Of Columbia River Highway.
The best souvenir out. Best
grade playing card, high
slip, gilt edge, etc. r7
Price .. .
MAP AND GUIDE.
Of the Columbia River High
way. Complete guide to 1 T
the Highway. Price
THE J. K. GILL CO.
Booksellers, Stationers,
Office Outfitters.
Third and Alder Sts.
r MAKERS OF FINE PglMTINng
i nwSTUTStCOl Mill 178, A 1781 1
0 Qfir.M's'-J
i
i'hone your wp.nt ads to The Oreg"
t&lao, AUia 707.0, A. 6.095, .