Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, December 05, 1922, Page 13, Image 13

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    THE, MORNING OEEGONIAN, TUESDAY, DECE3IBER 5, 1922
13 '
70 RESTAURANTS
HIED ABOVE
95
Marked Improvement Noted
in bannaiion.
CITY OFFICIALS REPORT
Equipment and Slethod Also Ta
ken Into ' Consideration, by
Municipal Inspectors.
Ra.'incs of restaurants, compiled
by the sanitary, division during the
City Commissioner Mann yesterday
by Gordon Land, chief Banitary in-.
specior. The report showed that 70
restaurants rate 95 points or better, ,
a classification of excellent, where
as ayear ago there were only 67,
estp-blisliments in this class.
' The restaurants rated between 95
and 90 are considered very good; 9ff
to 85 good to fair. All places under
75 points must show immediate im
provement or licenses will be denied
them on the first of the year.
Sanitation 1 Factor.
Tha rating pertains only to equip
ment method and sanitation, -with
no consideration given to the quality
of the food served
Ratings included in the report
were:
Between 100 and 5
O'ds, TVortman & King, 393 Morrison;
Martha Washington, 3SO Tenth street;
ilessee cafe, 2$ Third street; Oyster Loaf,
84 Hroadwav; Portland hotel grill, 15
JUorrison; Oriental cafe. S4j "Washing
ton; Broadway Hazeiwood. 17-9 Broad
way; Pacific Teifcptione company, 14H0
Belmont; Pacific Telephone company. 352
Oak street; .Jewel restaurant, 40ti Wash
ington; Peoples restaurant, 303 Burnside;
ifrmnber of Commerce, 301 Oak street;
University club, 275 Sixth street; Camp
bell hotel, 134 Twenty-third Mreet -"sortn,
Meier & Frank tea room, 301 Morrison;
Victory r-taurant, 25 North Fifth street;
Iripmaa.- Wolfe & Co., 300 Washington;
"Elk's :iub, 32!) Stark street; Arlington
club 3S5 Saimon; Wyckoff' restaurant,
.7 North Broadway; Estea grill, 108 Sixth
street;; Aime -Miaur mt, 91 North Sixth
strfiftt: -Haiakj-; restaurant, 130 North
Sixth street: Imperial dairy lunch No. 3,
103 Broad way; Van Noys restauraut,
union d&POt, 17" North Sixth- street;
SpwhhV ferill. Tenth street; Rialto
b:41iiTU pafW, 348 Alder strict; Toke
Puint oyster house, 310 Siarlf. street;
-Mallory hotel, 171 Lownsttaie; Model
lunch, 50 Third street; Pacific Telephone
company, 416 East Ankeny; Imperial
dairy Junch .No. 2. 375 Washington; ,Hu-
ber's cafe, Stark; Moonlight cafe,
' 123 North Sixth street; Beam's cafe
teria. 145 Sixth street; Multnomah A.
A. club, Ml Salmon; Merrle Sunshine tea
room, 231) Eighth street; Terminal caie,
'188 Park street; Pacific Telephone com
pany, 36y Alder street; Chesterbury
hotel, 201 North Twentieth street; Hazel
wood, 388 Washington; Hoover's bakery
lunch. 454 Washington; Swetland's, 344
Morrison; Panama restaurant, 109 Broad
way; Toke Point oyster house, 63 Sixth
street; Portland woolen mills, 60O Bal
timore; Old Taraale Place, 192 Fourth
street; Marquam restaurant, 324 Alder
street; Campbell Hill hotel, 741 Washing
ton; Kenwood hotel, 118 Kiipatrick:
Electric Waffle house, 240 Burnside;
House restaurant, 12H Third street; Royal
cafe, oVi North Second street; Stein's
Cozy Corner lunch, 223 Fifth street;
New Popular restaurant, 97 Russell; New
V irg ima reetauran t, 161) Park street
Northwestern - Investment company
municipal dock No. 4; Knickerbocker
restaurant, 104 Broadway; Louis Ebeling,
8ti West Park street; Philip Knauf, 2S
East Twenty-eighth street North; Pacfiic
oyster grill, 241 Washington) Multno
mah hotel, 271 Pine street; Scof fin's con
fectionery. 400 Morrison; Parkview hotel,
3SH Montgomery; Bohemian restaurant,
3S4 Washington; Lamb'a club lunch
counter, 107 Sixth street; Pacific res
taurant. 333 Burnside; K. S. restaurant,
52 North Second street; Woodard &
Clark, 3S5 Alder street; Highland cafe,
1017 Union avenue. j
Between 95 and 90.
Klock bakery, 22!) North Twenty-third
stieet; Y. W. C. A. cafeteria. 194 Broad
way; H. & H. restaurant, 861 Stark
stieet; Salver Grill. 113 Killingsworth;
the Chief Lunch, 414 Morrison; Damas
cus Lui ch, 148 Broadway; Hotel Benson,
81 Broadway; John's Chop House, 254
First stieet; K. Mikawa, 74 North Fourth
-street; Rainbow restaurant, 424 Wash
ington; Golden Gate cafe, 170 West Park
street; Snyder's Crawfish Place, 467
Washington; Steres' restaurant, 406 East
Burnside; Alexander Court hotel, 53 Ella'
street; Maryland cafe, SyO East Burn
side; Liders & Splidsboel, 25 North Third
street; Derick's cafeteria, 384 Oak street;
Petty Johnson, 53 Third street; Jake's
Famous Crawfish, 101 Twelfth street;-
.urs. unsfie toriier, aao r irst street,
Kline's cafe, 93 Russell; cfarno hotel,
243 Holladay; Newport restaurant, 147
North S.xth street; Union Oyster House,
25 Washington; Oregon No. 2, Thomas
Kataras, 528 Union avenue North; New
Market restaurant. 251 Union avenue
North; New Chef, 2l2GJ,s Morrison; Oregon
Hotel Grill, 95 Broadway; Haael Grill,
35 Thlid street; Women's Catholic
League, 2s7i Washington; W. F. Rodg
ers, 270 liurnsida O. K. restaurant, 268
Kussell; Grand- Union restaurant, 27
lirand avenue North; Oregon restaurant,
133 Grand avenue; Red Mill cafeteria, 87
Fifth street; Owl restaurant, 67 .- North
Sixth street: Eastern restaurant, 155
North Sixth street; D. & D. restaurant,
12W East Twenty-eighth street North;
Miss Ryan Tea Room. 287 Washing
ton; Tom Golomis, 36 North Fourth
street; Two Girls restaurant. 241 Couch
street, K. Numata, 50 North Fourth
street; Little Kosher restaurant. 88 Sixth
street; Manhattan restaurant, 206 Third
stieet; Koseland restaurant, 212 Madi
son; W. C. Willis, 2Sii Front street; U. S.
restaurant, 227 Burnside; Mast's Lunch
Room, 44-46 North Twenty-third street
Tiffin Lunch, 132 Third street; Zack's
Oyster House, 413'4 Stark; Shamrock
cafeteria, 439 Stark street; Mandarin
cufe, 362 !-2 Morrison; The Pheasant res
taurant, 309 S'uth Jersey street; Ben
dor's Lunch. 1190 Sandy boulevard;
Nir-kle Lunch, 63 North Sixth street;
Medical cafeteria. Eat Sixth and Ore
gon ; Green Oyster House. 64 North
Sixth street; Millionaires' Club cafeteria,
YOUNG STUDENT MEETS
ATTRACTIVE VISITOR
""Where are you going with that
big book, Jack? You don't mean to
say you read all of that thing.
You'd have brain fever."
"No danger, Bill; that's a law
book. I'm studying law nights these
days and I m headed for my class.
Say, I'm busy."
"Oh, gee, do you go to that school
every night? I wanted you to come
out to dinner some night soon. The
wife's sister will be here for a few
weeks. You know how the married
women are. They always begin to
cast their eye around for the single
foilows to amuse the girl.
"Well, if the sister is half as at
tractive as your wife, I'd like to
meet her."
"Here, here; don't you go to ad
miring my wife too much. But how
about it? Are you busy every
night?"
"All but Saturday and Sunday. But
listen here, I can't afford a new suit
for a while yet and I wouldn't go
visiting until I could get a suit."
"forget the suit. - Let's call it
Sunday. We'll expect you at 1
o'clock for dinner. Weill all go some
where in the afternoon and come
home for a light supper. How
about it?"
"But I tell you I haven't the
clothes."
"Oh, you're the limit. But if -you
insist, why don't you take a run
. up to Cherry's at 849 Morrison
street, second floor. Boy, they have
fine clothing and you can buy on
credit. Six rdonths to pay."
By the way, their store is open
Saturday nights until 8 o'clock.
Adv.
FAMOUS VIOLINIST IS CHIEF.
OF TRIBE IN NEW ZEALAND
Toscha Seidel Tells of Initiation Into Maoris as Result of Playing
' Selections at Native Ceremony. ,
j'p
OSCHA SEIDEL, violinist of in
ternational fame who will play
a series of solos for the formal
opening and dedication of The Ore
gonian radio station Tnursday night.
following his con
cert with the
Portland Sym
phony orchestra
at the H e i 1 i s
Wednesday night,
is three things: a
great violinist, a
i.;. .nthneinnt
and the chief ofl
the Keati Rau-
, i kauwa triDe 01
r 4 Otaki, a branch of
?J tho TVTnnris of JNeW
Zealand.
Ha had some-
"' J -thing to say of
fne last two yesterday afternoon
land with his mother, Madame Tauba
Seidel, and his accompanist, Fran
cesco Longo.
Thursday night will be the rirst
time that Toscha Seidel has ever
played for radio. He said yesterday
that he has a radio receiving set in
his New York -studio and intended
telegraphing the rest of his family
to listen to the concert to be broad
cast from station KGW Thursday
night. He is vastly interested in
the experience of playing for radio
and says that it will be the first
time that he hag ever played to an
audience of at least BO. 000 persons.
Story la Amusing.
In appearance Mr. Seidel would
seem to be anything but a Maori
royal chieftain, and he told the
amusing story of his coronation
with as much. delight as though he
were going through the actual cere
mony. It was during his ' recent
complete circle of the globe, while
he was playing' in New Zealand,
that Mr. Seidel was taken to wit
ness a huge ceremony to be held by
seven different tribes. The oc
casion was. shortly after the death
of one of the seven chiefs. In ap
preciation of the privilege of seeing
such a ceremony, after it was over
144 Fourth street Crystal restaurant, 282
Russell; "White launch, Linnton; New
England restaurant, 273 Burnside; Man
ning's Lunch, 2BS Yamhill; J. Smith, 108
North Ninth street; R. D. Matlock, 317
Russell; Tennessee Waffle House, 269
Salmon; U. P. restaurant, S2& Russell;
Savoy restaurant,. 132 Grand avenue; S.
& R, restaurant, 30ti Burnside ; Coney
Isiand. 232 Third street; Pie Plant, 70
Broadway; Rose City hotel, S2t) Balti
more; Oscar's Bank cafeteria,- 82 Third
street.
Isan Rose, 49 North Third street; Fritz
restaurant, 23 North Second street; Im
perial Dairy Lunch, 291 Washington;
Yuton grill, 265 Morrison; Griffin
Bros., 428 Hoyt street; Sign of the Rose
Tea Room, 167& Broadway; All White
Help restaurant, .26 Burnside; C. One
take, 281 Burnside; A. B. restaurant,
Burnside; James H. Burk, 288 Burn
side; Golden West cafe,. 345 Everett
street; M. L. Dial, 116 Union avenue;
Fred'B restaurant, 84 North Sixth street;
Yellowstone cafe, 82 North Sixth street;
1". S. cafeteria, 269 Russell; Quality cafe
teria, 308 Oak street; Columbia restaur
ant, 227 Morrison; Wacuna hotel. Linn
ton; Grande Avenue Oyster House, 145
Grand avenue ; Allen's Quick Lunch,
1134 North Broadway; Klees Candy
Slop, 89 Broadway; Jordan Lunch Room,
1189 Alblna; Rose City restaurant, 109
North Sixth street; Palace cafe, 127
Eleventh street; Washington Oyster
House, zr Washington; King China, res
taurant, 543 Washington; Venetian res
taurant, 407 Stark street; London res
taurant, 129 Russell ; Charlie's Chop
House, 228 Morrison; H. Kaser, 999
Belmont; Griffin cafeteria, 62"4 Broad
way : Cheshire's Lunch, 1734 Denver
avenue; Kenton restaurant, 1723 Den
ver; Nick Papas, 15 North Fifth street;
"G" restaurant, 94 North Sixth street;
Cottage restaurant, 9123 Foster Road;
Claremont Tavern, Whitwood Court ;
Chefs Lunch, 89 North Third street ;
Herbage lunch counter, soO Yam
hill; White restaurant, 23 U
North
Sixth street; L cafeteria,. 128 Sixth
street; Burnside restaurant, 283 Burn
side; Majestic lunch, 312 Burnside; Home
cafeteria, 211 First street; O M P cafe-
'teria, 32 North Fifth street; Tacoma res
taurant, ao JNortn Tnira street; American
Legion lunch, 269 Washington; B & B
restaurant, 107 North Sixth street; Polly
Ann cafeteria, 135 Tenth street ; Turkey
& Campbell lunch, 108 North Sixth street;
De Luxe Lunch, 132 Fourth street; Mu
nicipal Golf Links. 830 Bybee avenue;
Dream restaurant, 106 North Sixth
street;. Bartholomew Lunch Counter, 141
iuuiv.i.v v. UUuu - ' .
North Sixth street;- R. M. Lewis, 5328 I
Twenty-ninth avenue Southeast ; Nor-
tonia hotel, 90 Eleventh s street; G. E.
Horton, 107 Fourth street: Olympia cafe,
309 Washington; Oregon Liberty club,
311 Pine street; Herman's restaurant. 225
Alder street; Good Eats, 106 Philadel
phia; California restaurant, 404 East
Morrison; Ixird's cafeteria, 1751 Denver
avenue; W. S. Bennet, 109 North
Broadway.
Between 90 and 85.
Coffee Den. 10 North Second street;
Verstrom, Larkin & Longien. 71 Third
street; Kin Sun Low, 61 Second street;
Progress rescaurant, 100 First street;
Whitehouse restaurant. 291 First street;
Pine Street Coffee House, 226 Pine street;
Favorite Dairy Lunch, 26a Oak street;
New Oregon cafe, Liunton; Anderson's
bakery, 147 Killingbworth; New Palace
cafe, 248 Buraside; Wisconsin buffet,
138 North Sixth street: Perkins hotel.
108 Fifth street; Purity bakery, 115 North
Jersey: Eagle restaurant, 3S6 Hawthorne;
Pioneer restaurant, 24i couch street,
Pari restaurant, 213 Third street; White
Ki tchen restaurant, 24 Second street ;
Soller cafeteria, 13 North Third street;
Portland cafeteria, 61 North Sixth street;
S. Hare, 94 North Fifth street; Liberty
restaurant, 121 Russell; Orpheum restau
rant, 225 Madison ; Neustadter Brothers
cafeteria, 202 Grand avenue; Gong Nom
Low, 283 Everett ; Phoenix cafe, 270
Third street; Hoy Sun Low, 81 Second
street; Old Seattle restaurant, 8 North
Third street; Bean Pot, 154 Fifth street;
Rudeen's cafeteria, 311 Washington
Margaret Chapman, 623 Washington
Young's dairy lunch, 429 Stark street
John Solman, 95 Grand avenue; Nom Kim
Low, 73 North Fourth street; Mrs. O. E.
Wilson, 411 Hoyt street; John's restau-1
rant, 293 Hawthorne; Cascade lunch !
counter, 260 Yamhill; Carver's restaurant, !
108 First street; Multnomah restaurant, !
52 Third street; Chin Sing restaurant,
293 North Sixteenth street; Bob White,
291 Stark street; Virginia restaurant,
406 Stark street; Mavrikes oyster house,
422 Morrison; Charles cafeteria, 206 Mor
rison; Doyle & Collins, 4t3 Jefferson ; Hotel-
cafeteria, 206 Columbia; Overland res
taurart, 42 North Third street; Fair
Site restaurant, 518 Union avenue North;
Dan's restaurant, 119 Philadelphia;
American restaurant. 107 Grand avenue;
J. Henderson. 162 Grand avenue; Fre
mont hotel, 42 Fremont; Broadway cafe
teria, 16 North Broadway; Nick's restau
rant. 262 Taylor; Snyder & Nichols.
104 Killingsworth; W. Ewart, 462 Glisan;
Royal Palm restaurant, 396 GUsan; T. S.
Dimitry, 269 Couch Bluebird cafe, 149
Second street; Lloyd Anderson, 47 Second
street North ; Blaziera restaurant, 10
Third street North; S. Kurimoto, 31 Third
street North: Little Elephant, 250 Mad
ison; Couch restaurant, 245 Couch; Amer
ican restaurant. 94 Third street North;
Richelieu restaurant, 191 Fourth. street;
Tom Lekas, 473 Washington; K. & F.'res
taurant. 251 Burnside; The Lotus Grill,
Chamber of Commerce building; Wash
ington hotel, Linnton; Liberty restaurant,
Linnton; Ed La Miller, 391 East Morri
son; G. F. McCurdy, 409 .East Morrison;
Jay's restaurant, 4620 Sixty-seventh
street Southeast; On Time restaurant. 71
Tenth street North; H. Leane, 16T5 East
Thirteenth street; Busy Bee restaurant
53 Sixth street North; C. L. Price, 135
Fifth street North; ABC restaurant, 31
Third street North ; Athens restaurant,
460 Washington; Baker Brothers'
lunch, 20 Grand avenue North; Royal
club, 110 Fourth street; C. D. Campbell
354 Ankeny ; American Can company,
Twenty-sixth and Wilson; Sugar Moon
restaurant, 119 Grand avenue; Coffee
Cup, 332 Washington; M. & E. restau
rant, 32 Second street North; San Fran
cisco restaurant. 64 Sixth street: W. S.
Watson, 127 Fifth Mreet North; Whit
Star restaurant, 508 Washington; Buffalo
lunch, 385 East Morrison; Mont Carlo
No. 1, 2m Grand avenue; Julian lunch,
186 Broadway; Y. M. C A. cafeteria. 193
Sixth streat: Lacy lunch counter, 103
Sixth street; Mrs. A. H. Pennish. Whit
wood court; New Washington restaurant,
247 Washington; Cornelius cafeteria, 133
Park street; Alameda restaurant, 227
A i. S i
Tosejia Seidel played the violin to
the vast gathering of Maoris. His
nlaying held the natives spellbound
and immediately he was finished L
tne Bix cnieis wunarew. rresenuy
they returned and adorned him with
elaborate robes and paraphernalia.
Then they crowned him king 6t the
Ngati Raukauwa tribe of Otaki for
playing the violin.
Seidel's coast tour, which ends
with his Portland engagement, has
been unusually successful. In Van
couver, B. C, a large audience rose
to its feet and cheered him for more
than five minutes. Dispatches to
the Steers & Coman bureau in Port
land said it had been impossible for
him to refuse encores there, the en
thusiasm had been so great.
Trip la Postponed.
The management had planned to
send Seidel Thursday morning to
StPaul, where his next public con
cert will take place. He agreed to
postpone his trip one -day in order
to play for The Oregonian, radio
dedication service Thursday night.
His programme at the Heilig the
ater Wednesday night will be a
notable one, embracing the Wien
awski Concerto No. 2 for violin,
Schumann's Symphony No. 1,
"Spring" B flat major. Opus 38,
Tschaikowsky's "Andante Canta
bile" and several other numbers.
Just what he will play for the
radio has not yet been decided, but
It will be a series of three solos.
The formal opening will begin at
8 o'clock Thursday night, and Fran
cesco Longo, Seidel's accompanist,
will play two piano solos. Mr.
Longo s a famous pianist, and
played the accompaniments for Ma
dame Tetrazzini when that noted
singer introduced radio broadcast
ing to New York city.
Roy Wv Ritner, acting governor in
the absence of Governor. Olcott, and
Edgar B. Piper will make addresses
at tho formal opening. Mr. Ritner
agreed to talk for the opening of
the new broadcasting station yes
terday afternoon and will come to
Portland Thursday to take part.
After the speeches the microphone
"will be turned over to Toscha Seidel.
Madison: Sweet shop, Konig- Brothers,
10ti Jersey street North; Liberty lunch,
126 Fifth street; Baltimore caftterla, 86
Third street; Stella's restaurant, 73
Sixth "streeet North; Beck's candy shop.
307 Washington; Goodell & Rumbas, 209
Morrison; Otto Luscher, 210 Columbia;
Yanacakis & Rigaa, 2 Fifth street North;
Marine grotto, 92 Fifth street; The
Luncheon, 571 Washington; Bab's res
taurant, 326 Stark street; One Minute
restaurant. 43 Second street North: C. E.
Beebe, 6009 Ninety-second street South
east; Alexandria restaurant, 445 Wash
ington; Pony lunch, 382 E. Burnside :Haw
thorne restaurant, 404 Hawthorne avenue;
L. t. inman lunch counter, 2io Yamhill;
Rose City cafeteria, &69 Union avenue
North; Unique restaurant, 765 Thurman;
D. P. Powell. 291 Salmon: Swetland's,
269 Morrison ; Quality restaurant, 789
Mississippi; Cross & Carpenter, 400
GUsan; Diamond restaurant, 408 East
Morrison ; Wisconsin restaurant, 547
Hood street ; Burke's coffee house, 61
Third street; White House, 107 Deca
tur ntreet; J. Vardeman, 122 North Broad
way; V. & V. cafeteria, 487 Washington;
D. J. Lytke, 2t5 Second street; Acme
dairy lunch, 13o North Tenth street
Gem waffle house, 247 Alder street
Crescent cafeteria, 266 Alder street ;
Portland restaurant. 93 North Third
street; Montgomery delicatessen, ' 382
Third street; Lunch Box, 17 Third
street; State cafeteria, 213 First street;
Occidental kitchen. 210 Alder street
Red Feather restaurant, 360 Twenty-third
street; Ernst Bon Boniere, 341 Washing
ton; .Portland chocolate shop. 245 Mor
rison; The Central restaurant, 103 North
Jersey; North Bank restaurant, 432
Hoyt street; B. & A. cafeteria, 204 Broad
way; Beverly cafeteria, l&l Park street.
Between 85 and
Daisy restaurant, &I North Sixth street;
H. McBrlde, 11 North Second street;
Montgomery Ward company, Twenty-
seventh and Wilson; Y. 8. restaurant, 83
worth irirst street; Purity dairy store.
133 Fourth street; The Royal, 248 East
Broadway; Gus Logus lunch counter,
Second and Yamhill; Pillsbury's Beans,
100 W. Park street; O. K. lunch, 230
Washington; Stark Street cafeteria, 206
Stark street; M. Goldberg, 114 North
Broadway; Quaker's cafe, 5404 Twenty
ninth avenue Southeast ; Keystone res
taurant, 7o0 Washington: Willamette
hotel lunch, 210 Morrison; Post Office
cafeteria, 130 Broadway; Wigwam res-
Mwicua, -raruaaway ; wigwam res-
taurant, 233 First street; White lunch,
248 Washington; Majestic restaurant, 465
v ainingiom m. & m. lunch, oil Wash
ington; C'Yukiware, 267 Couch street;
&iuuiT3 .u.Lriei(u., cast xsurnsiae; urn
ner Bel! cafeteria, 269 Alder; Pendleton
restaurant, liiy Third street: E. Pres.
cott, 171 Second street; Model waffle
nous. 46 j Washington; Oiymnia, cafe.
434 Washington; Marine restaurant, 383
iNonn aeventn street; cosy dairy lunch.
323 Washington; Burke's coffee house,
i ixorcn &ixtn street; Old Corner res
taurant, 493 GUsan; Coffman's. 152
oroaaway; uooa iiiats restaurant.
Hawthorne; Superior bakery lunch, 675
waanington; wood's lunch, 101 Sixta
treet; ji.. Aieiaoen, 1775 East Thirteenth
Globe dairy lunch, 67 Washington
uirarus cafe, 030 Washington;. W. M
Preston. 110 Philadelphia; Patchen hotel,
144 Kiipatrick; New Chinese Republic
grin, i:o jiiaaison; area's Lunch, 793
Mississippi avenue; C. A. Dellinger, 111
North Jersey; Northwestern Coffee house.
246. Burnside; C. Osborn, 542 Washing
ton; A. F. Schultz, 754 Savier; D & D
cafeteria, 241 North Sixteenth; Wiliard
restaurant, 352 First.
Below 80 Points.
Alder Coffee house, 38 East Alder;
Sterling bakery, 251 Morrison; Grimm's
restaurant, 33 North Sixth; Knight Drug
company, 296 Washington; Rising Sun
restaurant, 267 Burnside; Broken Drum
restaurant, 240 Third; Oregon Coffee
house, 253 First; Tony LaDone, 207 Jef
ferson; Olcott's restaurant, 413 Wash
ington; Jack Johnson's lunch counter,
Second and Yamhill; Grand restaurant
ana caieteria, iftfl Hawthorne; Vera Ann
Waffle house, 552 Washington; Burke's
coffee house, 208 Madison: Great North
ern hotel, 510 North Twenty-first; Jake
& Shy's restaurant, 249 First; Stout
Lyons, 255 Morrison; George's Coffee
house, 230 Burnside; Lee's Chili parlor,
252 Second; Triangle cafeteria, 85
Grand avenue; Pet Uglesich, 375 North
Sixteenth; Trainmen's lunch, 1803 East
uiieventn; untcago restaurant, 252 First
street; E. L. Black, 663 First; The Pie
shop, 267 Fifth; P. O. C. railway res
taurant, 354 Hawthorne; Tom & Jack's
restaurant, 230 First; St. Nicholas cafe
teria, 125 Sixth ; Ernest confectionery,
420 Washington; The Kitchenette, 184
Fourth; Frate's lunch counter, 294 Yam
hill; Electrfc bakery, 269 First; North
Bank hotel, 511 North Twenty-first; Mrs.
Johanna Newland, 323 First; C. D. Gar
man, 170 Fourth.
CO-ED GARB IS RAPPED
Mayor Intimates College Girls
Dress Worse Than Demimondes.
PUGET SOUND BUREAU, Seattle,
Wash., Dec. 4. "If the girls in the
dance halls below the line dressed
like some of the girls at the recent
varsity ball there would be some
cause for complaint from the
clergy," said Mayor Brown today.
The mayor's outburst was due to
last night'e proclamation by Rev.
Chaoncey Hawkins from the pulpit
oft the Plymouth Congregational
church that Seattle is the most
wide-open and vice-ridden city In
the country. Dr. Hawkins told of
visiting the lower end dance halls,
lately reopened by permission of
Mayor Brown, and while the
preache. said enough to shock his
congregation he declared that he
saw many things so far beyond the
bounds cf decencythat he could not
mention them in public
The mayor has stoutly defended
the dance halls from the time he
let them open as necessary to the
entertainment of workingmen and
kept harmless by the watchfulness
of the police.
IHARD1NG MAY NAME
JITOiBAIEl
Farmers Distrust Present
Reserve Board Governor.
EUGENE MEYER WANTED
Geographical Objection Prevents
Appointment of New Yorker
in Favor With Producers.
BY MARK SULLIVAN.
(Copyright by New York Evening Post,
inc. .FUDnshea by Arrangement. j
WASHINGTON, D. C, Dec 4.
(Special.) Every additional aspect
of the progressive or radical move
ment reinforces the proof of how
much its fundamental concern is
with currency and banking and how
deeply It reaches into this subject.
The federal reserve board, which
is the heaa, essentially, of the coun
try's banking system, is a subject of
inquiry and discussion having large
ly the nature of criticism through
out those parts of the west where
the new political group arose, to a
greater degree than is realized in
the other parts of the country where
the board and the existing system
and its methods and personnel are
taken for granted; It would be
fair guess that the long delay on
the part of .President Harding m
filling the vacancy in the office of
governor of the board has been
caused by this condition in the west.
Opposition Causes Worry.
The vacancy has existed since
August. In the east the banking
and business community has de
manded that the present head of the
board, W. P. G. Harding, who is
democrat originally appointed by
President Wilson, be reappointed, in
order to establish precedents of non
partisanship and continuity of per
sonnel and policy. President Hard
ing probably has not been troubled
by the fact that W. P. G. Harding
is a democrat, but it is clear that he
has been troubled by the fact that
his own party in the west was
strongly and most vocally opposed
to him.
The opposition was based gen
erally on the allegation that Gov
ernor Harding reflected the thought
of bankers and business men, and
specifically on the fact that Gov
ernor Harding had carried out the
policy of post-war deflation, on
which the western farmers put the
blame for many of their troubles.
In the consideration of an alterna
tive, many interests in the west
urged Eugene Meyer Jr. for the
post. Mr. Meyer's private business
experience has been that of a New
York banker, but moat of the past
six yeara he has spent in the gov
ernment service. Lately he has been
at the head of that branch of the
treasury which has been lending
government money to the west and
south in order to prevent the forced
sale of farm products at a sacrifice,
and otherwise to ease the distressed
farmers over their line of trouble.
The manner in which Mr. Meyer
has carried out this project is re
sponsible for that good opinion in
the west which urged President
Harding to give Mr. Meyer the
vacant headship of the federal re
serve board. There are serious geo
graphical objections to tfhis, how'
ever, because Mr. Meyer is .from
New York and that state already ha
one of the seven members of the
board in the person of Edmund
Piatt.
Controller May Be Named.
In this trying problem of many
angles which has faced President
Harding for more than four months,
it is the judgment of many that he
will seek the answer in appointing
David R. 'Crissinger. Mr. Crissinger
is at present controller of the cur
rency, to which office he was ap
pointed by President Harding. As
controller of the currency he is an
ex-off icio member of the federal re
serve board and has acquired ex
perience and knowledge of its .poli
cies and practices. Originally Mr.
Crissinger was a banker and law
yer - in President Harding's home
town of Marion and has had a lifer
long intimacy with the president. As
a small city banker from a point
within the reasonable geographical
limits of what can be called the
agricultural west, Mr. Crissinger
would carry no -liabilities of odium
to those western farming interests
from which most of the present em
barrassment comes. As one jvho
came into the treasury as late as
March, 1921, he would be free from
charges of having initiated or con
ducted the policy of deflation.
A the same time, his nearly two
years of experience as controller of
the currency and ex-officio member
of the federal reserve board would
carry reassurance to those who de
mand a man of sufficient banking
experience. Excepting Mr. Meyer,
whose relation to the western farm
ers happens to be unique, any other
appointee who had acquired his
banking experience in the - larger
cities undoubtedly would bring upon
President Harding the embarrass
ment of opposition from the sus
picious and truculent farmers.
Ft HYDRANTS HEME
HOSE COUPLINGS PRECLUDE
OUTSIDE ASSISTANCE.
Call for Needed Help In Case of
Conflagration Would Be Use
less at This Time.
Portland stands in the perilous
position of being unable to eall on
any outside aid In case of a con
flagration, due to the fact that the
threads on its hydrants are not
standardized.
, Investigations made by the tax
conservation and supervising com
mission disclosed this fact and city
officials have been requested to
correct the condition" by changing
the threads on the 5300 hydrants in
the city 64-100 of an inch, which
will make them standard.
One year ago the tax commission
informally notified members of the
city council of the condition, and
during the last year the fire under
writers' association, in connection
with a nationwide campaign to have
hydrants and hose couplings stan
dardized, also notified the city of
the need of having thiB work done
as soon as possible.
Commissioner Mann, at an Infor
mal meeting of the council, sug-
gested that immediate steps be
taken so that 100 new hydrants
recently ordered and 12,000 teet of "
hos now under contract, but not
delivered, can be made Btandard. i
The advantage of this. h nointed ,
out, was that standard couplings i
are made without extra cost, while
special threads now required cost
the city extra money.
w
Commissioner Bigelow announced
that he would have the municipal
shops pregre estimates on the cost
of re-threading the hydrants.
Among the northwest cities that
have standard threads on hydrants
and hose are Seattle. Tacoma, Aber
deen and Everett, Wash., and Cor-
vallis and Astoria, Or.
UPTON BACKERSTfl MEET
EASTERN OREGON SENATORS
TO DECIDE ACTION.
Election of Crook County Solon
as Senate President Depends
on Conference Votes.
A caucusu on their course of
action regarding- the presidency of
the state senate will be held by
eastern Oregon senators tomorrow
in Pendleton. It is understood that
all will be present with the excep
tion of Jay Upton of Crook county.
The conference is to decide
whether the delegation will remain
with Upton and continue support
ing him for president or ask release
of their pledges to him. Roy W.
Ritner, now acting as governor by
virtue of being president of the sen
ate, will leave Salem for Pendleton
tonight. Following the conference
Mr. Ritner will return to Salem to
resume the duties of chief executive.
Mr. Ritner is the heir apparent to
the governorship until the 1923
legislature elects his successor as
senate president.
Provided the conference agrees to
stick to Upton the latter has 16
votes and can be elected president.
There :s some doubt, however,
whether they will remain with him,
owing to Upton's acceptance of
Mser'e support following an ex
plicit understanding that looser was
not to be made the deciding vote
either in the Upton camp or the
Eddy camp.
Providing the majority of the east
ern Oregon delegation concludes to
ask its release from Upton the lat
ter may then release all the remain
der of his supporters. While the
Eddy people do not say so in so
many words, they expect that in the
event of the Upton strength going
to pieces, enough will come over to
Eddy to give him the election.
HUSBAND IDLER, CHARGE
Wife Gets Divorce Because Man
Will Not Support Her.
VANCOUVER, Wash, Dec. 4.-
(Special.) Merrill Regan decided to
take a permanent vacation when he
married Mrs. Uloretta Regan, 17,
two years ago, and she was com
pelled to support him and herself,
too, when he was at home, she tes
tified in superior court today. She
told the court that ' Regan was a
railroad man when he married her.
The wife said she had to provide
food and clothing for herself out
of her earnings as' a waitress in a
local restaurant. Regan was often
unkind to her, she testified. He is
32 years old.
Mrs. Regan received a divorce.
The couple have no '.children and no
property fights to settle. -
NEW MAYOR TAKES JOB
Recently Elected Baker Executive
Goes- In Today.
BAKER, Or., Dec. 4. (Special.)
At an adjourned meeting of the city
commissioners to be held tomorrow
Mayor-elect Palmer will assume the
duties as Baker's executive, suc
ceeding W. W. Gardner. It is be
lieved that Ed Rand, for many years
a resident of Baker and once sheriff
of Baker county and federal 3gent,
will be appointed chief of police to
succeed Walter E. Palmer. Frank
McCulloch probably will be named
city attorney. Other city hall offi
cials will be retained for the time.
Mr. Gardner's future plans are not
completed, but it is thought he will
devote the coming months to his
mining interests in this county.
HANGING TO BE ASSAILED
Abolition of Capital Punishment
Object of Resolution.
SALEM, Or.. Dec. 4. (Special.)
Letters received in Salem today indi
cate that a resolution is being pre
pared in Portland asking the legis
lature, at its next sessfon in Janu
ary to refer to the voters of Ore
gon at the following general flec
tion the question of abolishing capi
tal punisnnieni in this state.
Capital punishment, after being in
effect in Oregon for many years,
was abolished in the year 1914 by a
vote of 100,522 to 100,395. In 1920
the death penalty was restored, after
a bitter campaign, by a vote of 88,756
to 64,589.
AUTO HITS THREE GIRLS
Oregon City High School Stu
dents Injured on Highway.
OREGON CITY, Or., Dec. 4.(Spe
cial.) Miss Essie Putman, student
WOMEN! DYE
NYTH1NG
IE
FOR FEV
CEH3
Dresses
Skirts
Coats
Waists
Kimonas
Curtains
Sweaters
Coverings
Draperies
Ginghams
Stockings
Everything
Diamond Dy
Buy "Diamond Dyes" no other
kind and follow the simple direc
tions in every package. Don't won
der whether you can dye or tint suc
cessfully, because perfect home dye
ing is guaranteed with Diamond
Dyes even -if you have never dyed
before. Jut tell your druggist
whether the material you wish to
dye is wool or silk, or whether it
is linen, cotton, or mixed goods.
Diamond Dyes never streak, spot.
, fade, or run Adv.
at the Oregon City high school, was
injured this morning when she was
struck by an automobile driven by
Georre Harvey of Oreg-on City. Her
companions. Miss Audrey Johnson
and Miss Thelma Huovinen, also
were run over and bruised, but were
able to go home. Miss Putman was
t&ken to the Oregon City hospital.
The accident occurred near, the
Holmes' Lane road. The girls were
walking on the new pavement and
walked in front of the auto, which
they expected to take the other side
of the road. Harvey drove off the
road in an effort to dodge theppedes
trians, running his car through a
barb wire fence and Into a field. The
windshield on the car was de
molished. The driver also suffered
Acratohes and bruises about the
body.
SNOW CAUSES ACCIDENTS
Driver Drops Over 80-Foot Cliff,
but Escapes 'Without Injury.
THE DALLES. Or., Dec. 4. (Spe
cial.) An inch of snow, which fell
late yesterday and melted, to form
an icy glaze on the paved streets,
caused a veritable epidemic of auto
mobile accidents. Seven -omewhat.
serious accidents were reported by
local garages this morning with a
score or more of minor wrecks, .
An automobile driven by E. J.
Kennedy of Wamia skidded from
The Dalles - California nlghwajr
where it is paved about three miles
east of the city and toppled down
an 80-foot embankment. The car
was wrecked, but Kennedy escaped
uninjured.
An automobile driven by w. H.
"Woodard, local hotel proprietor,
skidded off the Columbia riverjhigh
way near Crates Point, going over a
30-foot embankment. Woodard also
escaped uninjured.
The big motor bus, which runs
between The Dalles and Hood River,
slipped off the road but was not
badly damaged. In none of the ac
cidents was anyone injured..
NEW TRIALS REFUSED
Man Convlcted.on Jointist Charge
Has Chance to Appeal.
VANCOUVER. Wash., Dec. 4.
(Special.) W. J. Meagher, operator
of a soft drink establishment here,
convicted of being a jointist, todajy
lost his motion for a new trial.
Meagher was sentenced recently to
a term of from one to five years
in the state penitentiary, the mini
mum sentence for the charge. He
still has time to appeal the case.
A new trial was denied the plain
tiff in the case of J. W. Brothers
against the North Coast Power com
pany, in which Brothers sought
$10,000 damages as a result of a
collision two years ago. The case
was tried twice here and once in the
supreme court. The second trial in
this court resulted in a verdict for
the power company.
Phone your want ads to The Ore
gonian. All its readers are inter
ested in the classified columns.
Today Until Friday
Fritzi
BRUNETT
A Wife's Awakening
and
7 Varieties 7
. 10c Children Always 10c
pIpfgThe Cheney
Don't make the
mistake of buy
ing an ordinary
Phonograph the
Cheney costs no
more.
CM'A The Cheney
i--'.' "';- iL-1 Like an old violin
-improves witn
age. "The longer
you play it the
sweeter it grows."
Priced
$110, $120, $150 and Up
Console models $265 and up.
Sold In Portland by
G. F. Johnson Piano Co.
149 Sixth Street
Mail orders grlven prompt attention.
MEN
WANTED
FOR SHOPS AND
' ROUNDHOUSE
RATES:
Machinists 70c per hour
Sheet-Metal W'rk's70c per hoar
Boilermakers . . . ..70-70Vic hour
Passenger-Car Men 70c per hour
Freight-Car Men . . . 63c per hour
Mechanics are allowed time and
one-hall for time worked in
exeesa of eight hoars per day.
Btrii&e conditions prevail.
APPLY ROOM 312
COUCH BLDG, 109 FOURTH
ST, NEAR WASHINGTON
PORTLAND
FAIR DIRECTORS NAMED
STOCKHOLDERS OF COTJJJTY
SHOW RE-ELECT BOARD.
Demand for Economy , Indicates
Proposals for Buildings Will
Sot Be Approved.
All members of the board of di
rectors of the Multnomah county
fair were re-elected at an unusual
ly well attended meeting of stock
holders at the office on the fair
grounds yesterday afternoon. The
directors are H. A. Lewis, Sam
Howitt, Theodore Brugger, Frank
Heine and Tom Kruder.
The stockholders evinced consid
erable more interest in fair plans
than has been the case at past meet
ings and many voiced their views.
Economy was the keynote of the
majority of talks and as a result
board members expressed the opin
ion that proposals for construction
of new buildings be rejected.
Mr. Lewis, as chairman of the
board, probably will call a meeting
of directors within the next ten
days, at which a president, vice
president, secretary and treasurer
will be elected. All officers with
the exception of secretary are, as a
rule, members of the board of di
rectors. Books of the fair associ
ation probably will be audited at
this Besslon of the board and plans
for the fair next year discussed.
LICENSES GIVEN TO 213
Marriage Bureau at Vancouver Is
Busy in November.
VANCOUVER, Wash., Dec 4.
(Special.) Two hundred and thir
teen marriage licenses were issued
here during November. This is much
better than the record for November.
1921, and indicates that the marriage
industry here, which slumped badly
after the war, is reviving.
Only 168 licenses were issued in
November, 1921. More weddings
have been performed here in the 11
months since January 1 than in the
same period in 1921. The record for
Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii:
$8a
Good walking heels in patent leather,
brown kid, black kid; a new two-strap
pattern. .
Hosiery
Section
A practical gift
and always ap
preciated, Allen
Black Cat"
a
i and Gordons .
Knight Shoe Co.
Morrison Near Broadway 1
iiiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHilliiliiiiHiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir
Crisp, golden brown
toast
buttered while hot and cof- "
fee. That's a satisfying break-
fast for these cojd, misty
mornings.
. m - cv in
toasted has a delightful fragrance and an
individual milk-and-butter flavor.
Davidson's "IdeaV Bread
for ideal toast. "It's Different"
grocer can supply you.
Davidson Baking Co.,
Bakers of Davidson's Honey-Health?
and Davidson's Whole Wheat Bread.
the past 11 months is S155 Hoenses.
while from January 1. 1921. to the
end of the following November only
2131 licenses were obtained.
The prestige of Oregonian Want
Ads has bfen attained not merely by
The Oregoniaji's large circulation, but
by the fact that all its readers axe
interested in Oresronian WeTvt-Ads.
Th longer pi bremf
S1
NATIONAL CREST
onee
-the betteritgefr'
Telephone Direct
East 7054
1.800.000 cup -were Jcrved
Atthe. PANAMA-PACIFIC)
International EXPOSIIION-
E
IDEAL
Bread
Your
0 A H B
taswell
r