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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1922)
TltE ' MORNDfG OREGONIAX, TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 21, 1922 EMPLOYERS' BOND. SCENES WHICH MARKED THE OPENING OF PORTLAND'S COMMUNITY CHEST CAMPAIGN. Miss ElviBe Huggins, Miss Gretchen I Coltou, Miss Marclle Carlock, Miss I Mary Alta Kelly, Miss Arlane that what is expected of the cap tains is expected of those who are visited by tliem and tbeir recruits: "The success of the Community Chest rests on you. i "The Flying Squadron work is go ing well, but the only thing that will take us over -the top is" "Good subscriptions from a very large number of people. : "That is your job. See every body. Sell them the 'give-by-the-month' idea." oounty Jail yesterday by District Judge Eeich on charges of shoplift ing, but sentence was suspended. The young women were alleged to have taken articles of jewelry from th Meier '& Frank store. A second charge alleged that they had takeu silk waists and blouses from the Lipman. Wolfe & Co: store. This case was continued for possible sen tence. The girls pleaded guilty to both charges. Cameron. . . Commercial artists who have been sketching for the chest cause will appear in the following business places today from 12:30 to 1 o'clock: Powers Furniture company, Bush & Lane Piano company, Sieberling Lucas company, Stewart Manufac turing company, Cassidy Tire com pany, Remick's Song shop, Frederick Post company. . - : ' General Sammons' instruction to his captains are indicative of the campaign attitude, and may well be here repeated with the annotation EQUIP i MORE Four L Votes to Abolish Se curity Hereafter. ' The prestiga of Oregonlan Want Ads has been attained not merely by The-Oregonian's large circulation, but ;. Mrytle Russle and Maxlne Muller by the fact that all its readers are were sentenced to 80 days in the interested in Oregonian Want-Ads. MOVE MADE BY WORKERS Employes Find Word of Lumber men Sufficient; Is Evidence of Association's Success. ' Evidence that the Loyal Lesion Pf Loggers and Lumbermen, as an association of employes and em ployers, is successful in the fuiiest degree was offered yesterday at the eighth semi-annual session of the directorate, convened in the Port land hotel, when by unanimous vote upon a recommendation of employe members the bonds which have heretofore- been required of employer members were abolished. This was consented to by the em ployers present only after it had bfen shown that the recommenda tion emanated from employe mem bers in more than half of the leg'on districts, and that it was the senti ment of such employes that it was not equitable for employers to post euch bonds when employes were ex empt from such conditions. Kxperience Satisfies Employes. There was also, it was shown, a growing disposition to accept em ployer associates solely upon honor, this disposition arising from exper ience with the present employer rt,embers, who for four years have met every test through good and bad times. The board represents the whole tiorthwest logging and lumber in dustry. Including the Inland tm pire. The members, 12 employers and 12 employes, sit and vote as a com mon council, no distinction existing between employer and employe. Em ployers present represent approxi mately 40 per cent of the lumber output of the northwest. The morning was taken up with the reports of President Coleman and the other executive officers, all of which showed the organization to be In a sound condition. Several expansion projects were outlined in the reports, to be discussed and de termined later in the meeting, wnich will take at least two days. ,. In the afternoon session favorable action was taken upon recommen dations of the executive siaff in re sard to extension and amplification of the work and service of the or ganization, with particular refer ence to logging camps, shingle mills and the employment department. Extensions to Be Discussed. i, During the three days of the con vention plans will be discussed for the extension of the four-L service throughout the northwest- Mem bers of the board are of the firm belief that there is as big or a bigger field for their organization than there has ever been. Those in attendance yesterday were: Employers A. C. Dixon, representing Booth-Kelly Lumber company, Eugene Or.; SI. 'C. Woodward. Silver Falls Tim ber company, Silverton, Or.f E. D Kinsley, West Oregon Lumber comp'anv: F. H. Hansom, Eastern & Western Lum ber company: R. H. Js'oyes, Noyes-Hol-land Logging company, Portland; Frank Gardlnier, Baker White Pine Lumber company. Baker, Or.; L O. Taylor, Shev. Hn-Hixon company. Bend, Or.; R. II Burn-side, Wlllapa Lumber companv. Raymond, Wash.; J. C. Shaw, Eureka Cedar Lumber & Shingle company, Ho quiam. Wash.; J. C. Buchanan, North End Lumber company, Seattle; L. E -Enle, Everett, Wash.; J. P. MeGoldrii-k . ilcGoldrlck Lumber company, Spokane; Huntington Taylor, Edward Rutledge Timber company, Coeur d'lene, Idaho. Employes W. H. Ferguson, represent ing employes of Coos Bay Lumber com pany, Marshfield, Or.; W. D. Smith and "W. A. Pratt. Portland; AJ Estes. Baker, Or.; H. B. Larsen, Grande Ronde Lum ber company, Perry, Or.; C. L. Simpson, Brooks-Scanlon Lumber company, Bend. Or.; L W. Storie, Raymond, Wash.; Bert Bradfield, Hoquiam, Wash.; Frank "Wilson, -St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber com pany, Tacoma; A. D. Chisholm, Sno qualmie Falls Lumber company, Sno qualmie Falls, Wash. ; J. C. McGregor, Morrison Mill company, Bellingham, Wash.; Charles F. S. Nelson. Spokane; Fenimore Cady Edward Rutledge Tim . ber company, Coeur d'AIene, Idaho. . ALIEN I. VV. W. DEPORTED , Another Will lie Sent Back to Na tive Laud Tomorrow. One alien member of the I. "W. "W. caught In the recent cleanup was ; deported Saturday and another will be sent back to his native land to ; morrow, R. P. Bonham, United States i. immigration inspector, announced yesterday. Gus Extram, who came into the United States unlawfully from Can ada, wan Rent hanlr tr, fiw.Han a boat which sailed from PortlandTlast ... Saturday, Jixtram was character lzed by inspector Bonham as a "good boy who fell into bad com- K Pany." The second red card hniHo who will be deported tomorrow is Charles Komard, a Canadian. fred ' C. Smithers, another Canadian, who ' has a criminal record, will be de--;portei with Romard. MR. PENNING IMPROVING Merchant Stricken With Paralysis f. Expected to Recover. ' Assurance of the recovery of Fred O. Jenning, president of Henry Jen nlng & Son, furniture, dealers, who was stricken, with paralysis Friday n:ght while attending the Shrine ceremonial at Marshfield, was given v last night- by physicians in charge. Prompt attention at the time of the attack, which was brought on by over-exertion, according to Dr. Ji. B. Marcellus, fellow Shriner, who attended him on the trip back from the coast, saved his life, it is believed. i . "wm: rzzz . r I ik 5 home woinefi rjiow ii 111.1 I A ! IB ? 1 j f -tl t , i!f Ills t " ? k4jt v , Kif vi $ k 1 5 i i i l r y - Vvjs- fVf w " ' 1 Lpper Some small guestti, and hungry, of the Chamber of Commerce, assembled yesterday at members' forum. They are community chest babies from Albertina Kerr Anrsery home and Waverly Baby home, lower AY hen the chest campaign opened officially, at noon yesterday, at Sixth and Morrison streets. CHEST H OPENED BAND AXD FIRE TRUCKS PRO- V CliAIJI APPEAL.. Host of Workers Enters Field to Solicit Downtown District and Homes. (Continued From First Page.) 1 t I LIBERTY, PEOPLES. MAJESTIC, COLUMBIA 3. it starts M c X- v". I earn C'J colonels and the captains, and the gleaners in the field, realized that no easy task is before them, and that, first of all, the heart of Port land must open to less spectacular appeal not for country, though it is, but for the homeless, the friend less, for citizenship, for cleaner liv ing, for babies who have had the misfortune to forget their paren tage. "We have no fear of the tissue," said E. C. Sammons, chairman of the campaign committee, "but we do be speak from this day forward the earnest attention and zealqus aid of Portland folks until the chest is , filled. Please -do not confuse your thought with the impression that tt is our drive, our project for it is yours, and we are but your ' agents." " j At any rate, whatever lies before them, the host of workers took the field yesterday afternoon to solicit every office building, every store In 1 the down-town district, every apart- ; ment house and every" home. There j need be no secret about it though j the larger business enterprises and 5 "the more wealthy , citizens have proved generous, as they were ex- J pected to be, it is upon the homes . .of Portland, upon the minor giver, j that the campaigners pin their faith i in speedy success. It is the city's ' campaign and thouga. tne chest is ! filled the drive will not have been ! entirely successful unless it is truly j representative or tne people 01 Port land. , Babies Are Object Lesson. . At members' forum, where the grave and the gay of Portland's Chamber of Commerce foregathers once a week, there were distin guished guests at noon yesterday. A score of rosy-cheeked babies from Albertina Kerr nursery home and Waverly Baby home were ranged at their own special tables, with their own special bottles, and they dined as well and as lustily and aa loudly as- the most rotund com mercial captain of them all. They dined like Tommy Luke at his best, and in this they had a distinct ad vantage over their elders paid no whit - of attention to the eulogies, the oratory, launched at them and about them by - proponents of the chest. 1 For they were community chest babies, and their motto is to let the chest worry. As an object lesson in practical benevolence they were -a Solar plexus ?unch, and so they were acclaimed. i The speakers' bureau is actively at work, having held the -following meetings yesterday: High school oi commerce, Davis school, Fernwoody Holmao, Ilosford, Linnton, Jefferson high, Portsmouth, Sellwood, Sitton j and Franklin high school and Port land Woolen mills. j Today speakers will talk at Ala meda, Creston, Hawthorne, Highland, Scott and Beaumont schools. To night at 8 o'clock Dr. E. H. Pence, chairman of the speakers' bureau, will address the Greeters' associa tion at the Portland hotel. One of the best organizations re ported to headquarters yesterday was that of Harold Jungck, colonel of division 3. He reported an im pressive list of &6 captains and workers, many of them leaders in the community. They will cover precinct 43 of the division, which includes four of the busiest retail blocks in the city, lying between Sixth and Tentb and Alder and Mor rison streets. "Workers were very easy to get and they responded enthusiastically," was the comment that accompanied the list. .- - ' . ' A full - military band, the musi ciana of- the seventh infantry regi ment from Vancouver barracks, will play at the noon rally at the Chest ometer, at Sixth and Morrison streets, today, when the first total of the drive will be chalked up. The band was obtained by A. C. Mc Miken, who has arranged for other musical groups to play each noon throughout the week. Judge Wal ter Evans will be the speaker at today s noon "exercises. Mrs. C. B. Baker, colonel under Mrs. Victor Brandt, general of the residence division, reported her'.' or ganization complete yesterday with the following captains all on the Job: Maurin, ILlrod, Mrs. Jerry Bronaugh. Mrs. R. Ireland. Mrs. B, Goodwin. "W. Payne. S. H. Sheldon. E. C. Griffin. Jack Howell. Mrs. Dia mond, Mrs. E. V. Littlefield. Mrs Jack Crossley. Mrs. George Beggs Constipation and Sluggish liver Don't take chances. Get Cartar'j Littl Live Pills right now. They never fail to make the S liver do its duty. They ."p cmm relieve constipa tion, bamsn i digestion, drive out bili ousness, stop dizziness, clearthecom- plexion, put a healthy glow on the cheek and sparkle in the eye. Be sure and get the genuine. Small Pill Small Dose Small Price llff Give C I ft 'H by the I m It'o'V Month Ihfll V ' . . Til I f5 - a J 1. ""M y I . I hi " - f ' 1 " i 1 I Iftrtliri,. 'HWilaWHW-'' ',J I You undoubtedly know at least one woman in whose home there seems to be no fear of how big the week's ironing will be. Her linens always spodessly fresh. The children always in clean clothes. Her own personal things crisp. You would probably think her a "slave to the ironing board" if you did not know that the evening of ironing day finds her as untired as any other day in the week. Perhaps a glance at the sketches below will give you an inkling of her secret. Don't Lose Yenr Hair Try Csdcnra If your scalp is irritated, itching and burning and your hair dry and1 falling out in combfuls try the fol lowing treatment. Touch apots of dandruff and itching with Cuticura Ointment and follow with hot sham poo of Cuticura Soap.,, Iunl luk Fm by VH Aidra: Cntlmn Lab. ontatim. Pit. 40F, Haldol l, Kim." Sold every where. Soap2Sc. CmtmQt2&andWe. Talcam&c... r Cutcura So&s 1it witlioat mug. fff Give Yv i I by the t lt n) 'n Month :$ VgX JIG I JhsiQ is always -a best "...' And most people want the best, especially when it doesn't cost any more. Sometimes it may even cost less in the long ran, as in the case y of the ligbt-running, quiet-running ' Royal Typewriter! Perhaps you have not. realized that there is on " the market a better -built-type-writer, a finer writing machine. Typewriters are not ell alike. There must be a best. ROYAL TYPEWRITER COMPANY, Inc. 9 K. Klnth St, Cor. Oak Tel. Broadway 61S9 ' i Branches aud Agencies the World Over "Compare the WorlC With her Hotpoint Iron because it has the strength-saving Cantilever Handle she applies the force in a straight line through the arm and wrist. A day's ironing is done more quickly and with out fatigue. She is not bothered by a jerking, kink ing cord. The Hinged Plug Cord Pro tector has done away with that. It pre vents breaking of the cord, too. Instead of lifting the iron to and from the old-fashioned ironing stand, she sim ply tilt? it back on its heel. The Attached Stand saves many hundreds of pounds lifting in a day. She saves her strength by using a light iron for doing up the dainty bits the three pound Iron chat came with her Hot point Boudoir Set. And some other helpfiil HOTPOINT SERVANTS Boudoir Set Utility Ironing Set Curling Iron Radiant Grill Hedlite Heater Heating Pad Immersion Heater Waffle Iron Chafing Dish Percolator Vacuum Cleaner Disc Stove Teapot Toastover Toaster Hotpoint-Hughes Electric Ranges RVAM EDISON ELECTRIC APPLIANCE CO., Inc. Boston New York Atlanta Chicago Sc. Louis Ontario, CaL Salt Lake Citr E-r-im-i' rn-nr rwrn-iir i'im mn 1"' Q -Y7l 0B "" 1 ' " at a , - : r "v. K I ; - A- " - L. ! iM-wiiiMiinnriii wirtiTHii r n-'--l-faWiMiriWif 'tri rranwMTmwri mwtmtrf"4 Give m M by the 11 IS IISV Month Jwi Phone Your Want Ads to The Oregonian , : Telephone Main 7070 t . 4