Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, June 12, 1920, Page 3, Image 3

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Tills MORNING OREGONIAN. SATURDAY.
JUNE 12, 1920
'S NAME- PUT
CARTOONIST DARLING LOOKS IN ON THE REPUBLICAN CONVENTION.
NICHOiAS MURRAY 0 TVER
WHO AsIAAlTS C MAS rxfC-
BEFORE CONVENTION
FUNNY
eats That Are Cheaper
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LtTTLE1-
3
THE KANSAS
THE
LAST TO
WKAYCBVHS
Nominating Speech Made by
Governor Allen.
loKLYoNIDErr
Meats of the Best Quality
That Is What You Buy at the
1 or we tuiAi.
bl-D CHARD
CO TARS
ASPIRANT'S VIRTUES TOLD
WOOD
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Candidate Is Described as "Plain,
Iilunt Man With Blunt
Belie! in yacts."
CHrCAGO, June 11. Described as
the "outstanding candidate in the
minds of the whole people," Major
General Leonard Wood was formally
placed in nomination for" the presi
dency today by Governor Henry J.
Allen of Kansas in the republican na
tional convention.
"A plain, blunt man, with a blunt
belief in facts," Governor Allen said
of General Wood, "he is today the
best-known American.
"No man in America has been given
no many constructive things to do
in this generation, and no one denies
I hat whatever he has undertaken he
has done well.
"An unexpected period of confusion
has come upon us in the aftermath
of the great war. Old ways are lost
and leadership, hesitant and inde
cisive,, drifts upon an uncharted sea.
"Under the weak hands of a timor
ous government the social disorders
and class-mindedisms, caught from
the world 6trugple, have grown to
alarming- proportions.
Nation Denandi Jleal Leader.
"The unchecked encroachment of
sinister greed, the appalling waste of
public money, the immoral pandering
to clas3 interest and class prejudice
have brought us to a point where the
nation demands and the world ex
pects from this great council a leader
hosen out of the great need and not
through the cunning of political ex
pediency. "In seeking for the initiative and
the prophetic wisdom to guide us in
an hour that must be wholly con
structive, we are fortunate in a can
didate whose record reveals the quali
ties needed for the task.
"It is not necessary to ask for
assurances from General Wood. There
Is the witness of his service.
"You ask for a business man. We
present to you a record of four years
as governor of Cuba, a record which
gained him international fame as the
most successful civil administrator
the country has known. Leonard
Wood's services in Cuba constitute a
page of history which records the
cleanest and most unselfish thing the
nation ever did for a needy people
Chosen to work out the benevolent
policy of McKinley toward the peo
pie of the island for whom we have
sacrificed our sons, he was given
free hand.
"He reorganized the island and
framed a model of government which
stands today as proof of his sanity
and constructive genius. His wisdom
encompassed all the activities of the
people. He touched with his vital in
terest its dead agriculture, developed
its railways, taught the Cubans how
to make laws relating to everything
from municipal administration to gen
eial taxation. He builded American
intelligence into a school system, re
organized the struggling forces of
civil life into orderly government,
made roads, introduced sanitation and
hygiene, stamped out yellow fever
and pernicious malaria and fashioned
it all with humanness and a stabil
ity that has withstood the strain of
the changing years.
Organizing Ability Shown.
"Possessing the highest degree of
business capacity, it was something
more than the work of a business
man. It was the work of a states
man who had not narrowed his vision
to the purely business life. It was
the accomplishment of a great na
tional organizer.
"A president must be a business
man and more. He must be a states
man. He must have a broad view of
the Internal situation. He must know
politics, for politics is what gives us
our government, be it good or bad.
Government is no better than its poli
tics and to improve the one you must
improve the other.
"The vague longing for a business
man for president will not be satis
fled by one who knows only business.
The president must understand world
affairs and the crossing and re-cross
ing currents of social and economic
aspirations. It was the possession of
this broad capacity that brought to
Leonard Wood at the conclusion of
his work in Cuba the commendation
of the leaders of the period.
"A president must be able to inter
pret the shadow of coming events.
We do not need to speculate concern
ing Leonard Wood's foresight.
"When the great war broke upon
the consciousness of the American
people with a terrific shock, it found
that Leonard Wood had been prepar
ing. We heard from him no plat!
tudes about a million men springing
to arms over night. On his own ini
tiative he established the Plattsburg
training camps, created the first line
of national defense and gave to the
thousands of magnificent young
American men who volunteered a new
definition of loyalty, a new opportu
nity for service, a new vision of their
national obligations.
"We saw him accepting whatever
task was given into his hands with
the cheerful obedience of ihose who
submerge self in service. In our
state, where he trained many of our
splendid young men. inspiring them
with his spirit, fashioning them into
the S9th division, the people witnessed
his work with such pride than when
the governor of our state, my hon
ored predecessor, made him "by proc
lamation a citizen of Kansas, every
other citizen applauded.
Great Denlre
Not Granted.
"We watched him go away to th
point of embarkation and then at th
last moment we read with consterna
Hon that his great desire to take hi
division to the field was not to b
granted.
"This man was no whimperer. Not
an hour was lost in sulking. Not a
word was wasted In criticism. Not
an instant spent in mourning over
his personal disappointment. We see
him coming back to train another
division.
"If wc can, he said, "we'll make
it even better than the one with which
I had hoped to serve In France.'
"The American soldier Is a citizen
soldier. Leonard Wood holds fast to
the traditions of the great citizen sol
diers of the republic. A plain, blunt
man, with blunt beliaf in facts, he Is
today the best-known American. In
the frank expression of his beliefs
there is no hidden motive. No candi
date for high office has ewer gone to
the people of this nation with soul
and mind so frankly revealed as
Leonard Wood.
"There Isn't an American worthy to
be here who does not believe In the
future leadership of this country.
We'll have the leadership when we're
worthy, and that leadership will not
depend upon any international so
ciety we may Join. It w-ill depend
TMC DARK i-fcOSLS- STABLES
upon the success which we make of
the experiment of human government
here, and to that call the instinct of
every man must rise.
"With full appreciation of the chal
lenge of the hour. I present the name
of the man who fits the hour Leon
ard Wood.
EMPIRE STATE FOR BUTLER
Head or Columbia University Is
Declared Needed Leader.
CHICAGO. June 11. Dr. Nicholas
Murray Butler, president of Columbia
university, was placed in nomination
for the presidency before the repub
lican national convention today by
Ogden Mills of the New York delega
tion. Mr. Mills said in part:
"I know of no man who Is more
constructively minded than Vr. But
ler. In many of our party platforms,
with which you are familiar, he has
invariably contributed the note of
construction and progress in definite
and concrete language. This quality
has been recognized by every presi
dent since Harrison, with the excep
tion of Cleveland and Wilson. He is a
tried and proved executive. No man
is better qualified by training and ex
perience to give that wise leadership
that is so necessary to the re-establishment
of a sound, consistent Amer
ican foreign policy.
"A man of vision, but not a vision
ary; a thinker who does not make
thoughts his master; an idealist who
does not make dreams his aims; a
man whose ambition is deeds, not
words, and who has realized that am
bition in practice: a believer first and
last in his country and its institu
tions, Nicholas Murray Butler is a
truly representative American, worthy
of the high esteem in which he is
held by his countrymen and of the
high position to which he aspires.
"With full realization of the sol
emn responsibility the state of New
Tork presents to your earnest consid
eration the name of Nicholas Murray
Butler as the candidate for .he re
publican party for the presidency of
the United States."
TRIBUTE PAID TO HARDING
Former Governor Willis Nominates
Buckeye State Senator.
CHICAGO, June 11. Frank B. Will
, former governor of Ohio, assailed
the present administration as an oli
garchy In which the few rule the
many and told his hearers that the
country faces a problem more serious
than those faced by either wasning
ton or Lincoln, when today he placed
the name of Senator Warren G. Hard
ing in nomination for the presidency
at the republican national convention.
Former Governor Willis charged
that production had been hampered
by so-called government regulation
of businesfti and declared that the re
publican party had been called upon
to rescue the country ana save Amer
ican institutions. He recited briefly
Senator Harding s career in the sen
ate, characterizing him as a man
whose record Is the party platform.
"for the record of Ohio s candidate.
he said, "is the record of the repub
lican party in the last decade.
"In personal character, " continued
former-Governor Willis, "he ha? the
dignitv. urbanity and breadth of vis
ion of McKinley. Like that other
great Ohioan, he is one of the com
mon folks best-loved fighting repub
lican, who believes in the efficacy
of representative government under
party sponsorship.
"In the name of Ohio republicans
I present for your deliberate consider
ation the man wno can carry unio
and thus Insure republican triumph
that modest, 'dignified, substantial
citizen, that aggressive, sane, cool
headed leader of men, that typical
American, Senator Warren G. Hard
ing of Ohio
LOWDEN IS HAILED A LINCOLN
Illinois Governor's Record in Gov-
, ernment Is Cited.
CHICAGO, June 11. Representative
William A. Rodenberg of Illinois to
day placed the name of Illinois war
governor In nomination for the presi
dency of the United States by likening
Governor Frank O. Lowden unto Lin
coin and telling the delegates to the
republican national convention that
once before many years ago Illinois
was called upon to furnish a man
when the nation was in dire distress.
Three score years ago, Mr. Roden-,
berg said, at a time when the pas-1
sions of men were stirred to their,
depths, the nation turned for leader-j
ship to Illinois. We gave them Lin
coln and grandly, nobly, he met the
test. Illinois in 1920 stands ready to
consecrate to the service of the re
public another of her great sons. We
present the patriotic governor of a
patriotic state, Frank O. Lowden.
At no time since the birth of the
republican party, he said, has there
been greater need for the exercise of
calm, deliberate and dispassionate
judgment in the selection of a stand
ard bearer than there is today. A
spirit of rebellious unrest Is abroad
in the land. Oh all sides are heard
murmurlngs of discontent. The times
are pregnant with the prophecy of
gloom and despair. Confidence has
disappeared and the splendid optimism
of former days, once our proudest na
tional asset, has given way to an ever
present fear of impending disaster.
Illinois, the state whose soil has
been sanctified by the blood of the
immortal Lovejoy, our first great
martyr to the cause of fress press and
speech, gave Abraham Lincoln to the
nation in 1860. and Illinois, the state
that is still the well spring of re
publican hope and inspiration, stands
ready in 1920 to consecrate to the
service of the republic another of her
great sons one. whose brilliant rec
ord of public and private achieve-
EXTEU AS EAKS Tn Eye "WM 5
ments is the very best and surest
guarantee that under his leadership
our beloved country will be raised
from the obloquy into which it has
fallen and again, placed on the road
that leads to national honor and na-1
tinnal glory.
Delegates, a solemn responsibility
rests upon, the republican party today.-
Many difficult and perplexing
problems, social, economic and indus
trial, growing out of the world war
are pressing for solution. The best
constructive ability of our great con
structive party must be utilized in the
solution of these problems. In that
critical period upon which we have
now entered the nation demands as its
chief executive a man of clear brain
and steady nerve, a man of vision,
but not a visionary, a man of ideals,
but not an idealist a man of works
and not of words.
Illinois has sucb a man.
We present him to you as our candi
date for president.
We present the patriotic governor
of a patriotic state. Frank. Orren
Lowden.
KEYSTONE STATE HEARD FROM
Governor Sproul of Pennsylvania
Placed in Nomination.
CHICAGO, June 11. Selection of an
eastern candidate for the presidency
has become a matter of importance,
Mayer J. Hampton Moore of Philadel
phia told the republican national con
vention today in nominating William
Cameron Sproul, governor of Pennsyl
vania.
'The great empire state now has a
democratic governor," Mayor Moore
id. ao have New Jersey, Ohio,
Maryland and West Virginia. The
situation is embarrassing to national
republicanism. Pennsylvania is now
n reality a republican oasis surround
ed by normally republican states in a
desert of democratic executives. And
this on the eastern front where re
publicanism hitherto has been regard
ed as impregnable.
'We cannot afford to further weak
en this republican stronghold. The
selection of an eastern candidate,
therefore, becomes a matter of im
portance."
Recounting Pennsylvania's history.
Mr. Moore said that "as it was the
keystone of the arch in the beginning
of this republic, so is It the keystone
of the arch today.
"Pennsylvania has been the bul
wark of republicanism, the anchor of
our destiny in every national cam
paign," he said.
"In all fairness, the time has come
when a candidate of the republican
party qualified. to be president of the
United States should hail from Penn
sylvania. We know we have the man
In common with our sister states.
Pennsylvania seeks the overthrow of
this seven years' blight that has
shocked our American institutions
and burdened our people.
Pennsylvania realizes that a
strong man is needed and it presents
candidate who is in good health;
who is physically fit; who mixes with
the people and knows their hopes and
ambitions.
Mayor Moore said Governor Sproul
was known as the father of good
roads. He told of the many, laws
that had been simplified since the
governor entered office and referred
to the governor as a modern Mc
Kinley whose election to the presi
dency would assure the country of an
early and sane resumption of normal
business.
HI HAILED AS BOSS-SCOCRGE
Power of Candidate Is Told In
Nomination Speech.
CHICAGO, June 11. Hiram Johnson
was hailed as the man to "scourge
the last of the bosses from the temple
of the republican party," by Charles
S Wheeler of California, who formally
placed the senator in nomination to
day for thp republican presidential
candidacy.
"The great responsibility is yours,"
the speaker said. "The American
voter everywhere is saying of Califor-.
ria's son just as Roosevelt said of
him of all the public men in this
country today he is the one with
whom I find myself in most complete
sympathy.
"To the end that men and not mas
ters shall administer the great trus
teeship of the republican party; to the
end that this convention may make
no mistake; to the end that you who
j hod ,n your handa the partyB destiny
may go forth from these halls, trium-
phant in the assurance of certain vie
tory; to the end that a republican ad
ministration may once again broad
cast the nation with happiness and
prosperity; to the end that the con
stitution of our fathers and the high
est traditions of the American peopl
shall endure; to the end that the pa
triotic principles and the lofty ideals
of Washington, of Lincoln and of
Eoosevelt shall live on and on and on
the sovereign state of California
places before you in formal nomina
tion Hiram W. Johnson.
The orator described Senator John
son as the man first brought forth for
presidential honor by California after
70 years of statehood, and left no con
troversy in recent political history
untouched as he sketched the sen
ator's career.
Mr. Wheeler attacked the argument
of political geographers against can
didates from the far west.
"California would say to such men
that this progressive world of ours
has been moving right along," he said.
"That the course of empire has stead
ily pursued its westward way; that
the hand and briin of men have not
only spanned rivers and leveled hills,
but they have now leaped athwart the
ether and new highways through the
very heavens themselves, "until the
east and west are one.'
"The California delegation claims
the right to speak authoritatively for
the rank and file of the republican
party. It bases that claim upon the
fact that It was sent to tnis conven- i
tion by the stupendous majority of
160.000 American citizens, who in lit
eral truth hailed from every nook and
cranny and corner of this nation.
By every sign of the zodiac this
should be a republican year. The dis
gust for the party in power Is uni
versal. But notwithstanding all this
there has never been a time in the
history of the republican party when
a failure to name the right candidate
would so surely spell party defeat.
"This proposition may be laid down
with axiomatic certainty;
"The November election will not be
won by the platform of either polit
ical party. The personality of the
candidate and not the party affilia
tion Is going" to elect the next presi
dent of the United States.
"The man who will enter the White
House on March 4, 1921, will be that
republican or that democrat in whom
the average American voter places
the most faith.
"These voters have learned within
the last few years that the most pow
erful ruler in the world is the presi
dent of the United States. They are
smarting under a sense of personal
oppression. No man can make them
believe they are not the victims of
the profiteers. They believe that the
remedy for their economic wrongs will
be found when there is again in the
White House a man of vital force and
broad human sympathies, and they
?re grimly determined that never
again with their consent shall there
be elevated to that all-powerful place
any man who ha? not convinced them
by his record th vt he is in touch with
the needs of the average man.
"These voters form the great middle
class of the nation. They hold the
balance of power and they will not
stand for a reactionary administra
tion. "A 'yellow dog' is impossible and a
'dark horse' cannot win. If you expect
their vote, do not offer to them a
cold, capable, nerveless, unsympa
thetic, business administration. They
are in no mood to take it on.
"What they want and what they de
mand of this convention is a candi
date whose red-blooded, forthright
Americanism transfuses it3 warmth to
the cockles of their hearts and whose
words of ringing righteousness bring
new hope to their troubled souls.
"Is it not the truth that the most
important duty that confronts thi
convention today is to see to it that
the republican party is once again re
turned to power?
"Do yoa want another four years
of economic chaos? Do you want
other four years of the Wilson family
in the White House? If you Insist
that the father of the dynasty shall
abdicate, do you want the people then
to take up the crown prince?
"If you do not, why then gamble
with chance? Why close your eyes to
the obvious? Why not admit to vour
selves what every man of political
vision knows that there is one re
publican who can sweep the country;
whose nomination will carry with it
the absolute certainty of his elec
tion?
"It may be true that our near-officer
class, the captains of industry, the
disbursing officers or the primary
army, and the colonels of the com
missary who advance the sinews of
war would prefer a military leader.
But lam here to say for the rank and
file of the republican party that
" 'The plain Yanks
"'Who fill the rinks.
" 'That have the votes,
" 'Are calling for the son of Cali
fornia.'
"Men of the south, if it be true that
there are among your number hand
picked delegates who have forgotten
the obligation they of all men owe to
the flag of freedom; men of the north
it it be true ttiat mere are in your
ranks political slaves who are being
lashed into line by the blacksnake of
some party Lessee, tell them that
they hold within themselves the power
to strike the shackles from their own
limbs."
WEST VIRGINIAN NOMINATED
Name of Senator Sutherland Pre
seated at Convention.
CHICAGO, June 11. Joseph M. San
ders of West Virginia, In placing the
name of Senator Howard Sutherland
in nomination for the presidency ' at
the republican national convention
here today, told his hearers that care
should be exercised in the choice of a
candidate inasmuch as the greatest
crisis In the history of the nation is
being faced. Mr. Sanders pictured
Senator Sutherland as a man who
could be depended upon to meet this
crisis.
"The people of the country want the
hand of tyranny removed from about
their throats," said Mr. Sanders. "The
rule of despotism should not be al
lowed longer to stand...
"We have a man who measures up
with requirements from West Vir
ginia, whom I propose to place in
-nomination here today. West Vir
ginia has never presented to a con
vention a candidate for the nomina
tion of president.
"West Virginia's candidate has
risen from the position of editor of a
newspaper "to that of United States
senator, filling during -his career
many offices in the county, state and
nation, and rs serving a term in the
United States senate, acquitting him
self with credit and bringing honor to
the people he so ably represents. His
experience as a public official and
successful business man, and his com-
LEONARD WOOD
prehenslve vision upon governmental
matters eminently fit him to serve
the people and discharge with credit
the duties of his high office."
BAY STATE SON PRESENTED
Representative Gillett Nominates
Governor of Massachusetts.
CHICAGO, June 11. Representative
Gillett of Massachusetts, characteriz
ing Governor Calvin Coolidge of that
state as a man who believes obedience
to law Is liberty and declaring that
this is a government of laws and not
of men, placed the name of the gov
ernor of his state in nomination for
.the presidency at the republican na
tional convention here today.
Speaker Gillett told the republican
delegates that the placing of such a
man as Governor Coolidge in the pres
idential chair would clear the murky
atmosphere of Washington like a
bracing northern breeze.
'I have nota word of deprecation,"
he said, "for the eplendid men whose
names have been put in nomination.
I can follow any one of these veterans
with enthusiasm and confidence. But
it is to the glory of the republican
party that there constantly emerge
from the ranks young men able to
bear forward our banner to new glory.
Such a man is our governor. He is
patient as Lincoln, eilent as Grant,
diplomatic as McKinley, with the po
litical instinct of Roosevelt. Hi
character is as firm as the mountains
of his native state. Like them his
head is above the clouds and he
stands unshaken amid the tumult and
the storm.
'I nominate for president, Calvin
Coolidge of Massachusetts."
NJURED LOGGER DIES
Accident in Camp on Necanicum
River Proves Fatal.
ASTORIA, Or., June 11. (Special.)
W. Julian, a bucker employed at
the Hammond Lumber company's leg
ging camp in the Necanicum river
district, died here last night as the
result of injuries sustained yester
day. He was bucking a log near the
'high lead" at the camp landing,
when the log was struck by another
and in rolling crushed his body.
The injured man was brought to
this city for attention, but died soon
after arrival. He was 40 years of
age and had worked at the camp
about three weeks. His only known
relative Is his father, residing in
Grandfleld, Okla.
MORPHINEXAUSES ARREST
Ray Thompson Accused of Theft
From Employer.
Ray Thompson, who is said to have
taken 100 pounds of white lead from
Oscar Henderson, his employer, 6
North Fourth street, and sold it for
$10 with which to purchase morphine.
was arrested yesterday morning by
Inspectors Phillips and Tackaberry on
a charge of larceny.
Thompson received $8 a day as a
painter but, according to the inspec
tors, this was not sufficient to pur
chase all the morphine he wanted. He
is said to have had a duplicate key
for the establishment of his employer.
He Is 36 years of age. .
Czccho-Slovaks to Cross Canada.
QUKBEC, P. Q. Orders have been
received to provide quarters at Val
cartier Camp for the first week In
June to accommodate 3500 Czecho
slovaks who are due here at that
time on their way from Vladivostok
via Vancouver and Quebec to north
western Hungary after serving with
the allied troops in Siberia. Valcar
tier Camp was established in 1914 for
the mobilization of the first Canadian
contingent for overseas service and
has accommodation for 30,000 men.
See page 9 First-class Utah coal,
$10.75 for steam, $10.50 to $13.50 for
the home: dumped at curb. Adv.
That you would travel 87,000
miles if you made one trip only
over each of the nine Ellison
White summer Chautauqua circuits.
ELLISON- WHITE
MUSIC LYCEUM " CHAOTAOQOAS
OMOef TMRCE FLACiS-Ofl TWO MCCMSPrlCRCS
PORTLAND CALGARY AUCKLAND, tiOU ZEALAND
wo army rs.etan
We are justly proud of the business that we are doing at our two gov
ernment markets. It proves that Portland appreciates and realizes
the big values and the substantial savings that we are giving them
in delicious meats.
Fresh Frozen Pork Shoulders
Daily shipments of this pork are being received and 11
sold quickly, for the meat is unusually good and very F I Bo v
reasonably priced at fc-l Vr aeJt
Pork Sausage
Made in our own markets
Pot Roast, 12y2c lb.
Sirloin Steaks, 20c lb.
Boiling Beef, 8c lb.
Round Steaks, 18c lb.
U. S. Army Retail Store
Army Retail Market No. 2
Fourth and Yamhill
FILM VIEWERS HEAR TALK
INSTRUCTIONS AND ASSIGN
MENTS ARE GIVEN.
Rumors or ConHict of Opinion
Among Members of Board
Emphatically Denied.
More than 50 viewers, recently ap
pointed by the motion picture censor
ship board, received instructions and
assignments tor viewing motion pic
tures during the next two weeks, at
a meeting held yesterday at the city
hall. The meeting was the first held
by the newly organized board of
censorship.
Rumors of conflict of opinion
among members of the board were
most emphatically denied by Mrs.
Alexander Thompson, a member of
the board.
It was agreed at the meeting that
two viewers would be assigned to
each viewing, but that where one
viewer fails to appear at the ap
pointed hour the other viewer will
proceed with her work unassisted.
C. S. Jensen and Rabbi Jonah Wise,
the other two members of the board,
spoke briefly at the meeting, ex
plaining that the work would be that
as a board of appeal, and that no
chairman would be appointed, each
member sharing equally the respon
sibility of the action of the board.
KIWANIS CHIEF COMING
Henry J. Elliott, International
President, Due Here Today.
Henry J. Elliott of Montreal, pres
ident of the International Kiwanis,
ill arrrive on an early train this
morning and will be met by a dele
gation of local Kiwanis, led by E. R
Wiggins, president of the Portland
chapter, and George Lvejoy, general
chairman of the convention. A num
ber of the officers have already ar
rived, among them being Samuel
Cummins, international secretary, of
Chicago, and Assistant Secretary Dean
Clark. Rowe Fulkerson, editor of the
national magazine, is scheduled to
arrive Sunday. Letters calling for a
final meeting of committeemen only
Frozen Beef
Fifth and Pine Sts
Sts.
in the Benson hotel next Monday
noon have been sent out. This will
include practically every local Ki
wanian. A call has been sent out for 400
automobiles to take the visiting del
egates over the Columbia highway
iext Saturday. Anyone wishing to
offer their car should call Broad
way 1.
University President Re-Elected.
REN'O, Xev.. June
wwi v ri ?
Suppose, for instance, you write a
long letter to a man explaining fully
some proposition on which you would
like to have an immediate decision.
Why not tell him in your letter that
you will phone him at his home at
9 o'clock on such-and-such an evening
for his answer? Perhaps there's
some point on which he isn't alto
gether "sold" that you can explain in
a few words. The deal is made with
no time wasted waiting for an inter
change of letters. By phoning him
at night on a number-to-number call,
you are able to talk two or three
times as long at the cost of a regular
day message.
Get the home numbers of your busi
ness friends and use "Northwestern"
Night Service the efficient, inexpen
sive long distance service.
A Few
' omber - to
!
4:30 g:30 12:00
A.M. P. M. P. M.
to 8:30 to 12:00 to 4:30
P. M. P. M. A. M.
lbnr... S .4S .25 .2S
C'arvallis. .K5 .:to J
rhrhallx.. .AO -to 'JZr,
Rplllnsham l.KO .75 .40
Srattle... 1.K -lO M
Tnroma.. .SO .40 .SS
Aberdeen. .NO .40 .25
Rates are for initial period
of 3 minutes except those pre
ceded by asterisk ), whlcn
are for initial period of five
minutes.
ILoflig
lviarKets
IK
JLR
Rump Roasts, 15c lb.
T-Bone Steaks, 22c lb.
Flank Steaks, 20c lb.
Flank Boiling: Beef, 10c lb.
Firehouse Market
Clark has been re-elected president
of the University of Nevada by the
board of regents. The salary of this
position was increased at the same
time from $7500 to $12,000 a year.
BRISTOL, R. I., June 11. The proc
lamation of Insurrection in this town
issued by Governor Beeckman, May
28. after riots growing out of strike
over wages at the National India
Rubber company's plant, was with
drawn today.
WW,
to
MAM
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Sample Rates
- niimber Calls
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