TWO VIEWS OF BIG IMPROVEMENT UNDER WAY AT MONT A VILLA. HOUSE IS PRAISED Vacationists! Writer for Country Gentleman Tells of Work of Port land Institution. Take a Talking Machine and Latest Records to the country with you, from Eilers Music House. sideThe jllieSt tMnff f r dancinS under the trees, on the veranda, at the sea- VERNOM COMMUNITY f TP V. yNrDT 1 1 jm i . f ,'"- i j , nr-2 - .-. c ' : - 1 HOMEMAKIMG IS TAUGHT Visit to Place Is Described by Kan dall K. Howard, AVho Outlines Practical Accomplishments by Boys and Girls. The work which is being done by the Vernon Community House in making practical homemakers out of the boys and grirls of the Vernon Grammar School of Portland is related in an article appearing in the Country Gen tleman for July 17. written by Ran dall R. Howard. The writer also treats of the character moulding influence of the community house. "At a distance Vernon Community House seemed only an ordinary six room structure just an average home in one of the outlying suburbs of Portland," says the writer. "Drawing nearer there was soon evidence of a difference. A girl of 12 was mowing the lawn: a boy was digging at the side of the house: in the back yard could be seen a large, well-kept home garden. On the other side, at the end of the porch, several more boys were stretching wires for more vines. inaiue me nouse was like the aver age home of the community, except that there were, schoolgirls every where and except that practically all the furniture and furnishings were the handiwork of the pupils. Girl Are at Work. "In the dining-room two girls were framing pictures and hemming cur tains. Two other girls were arranging a small table for an unexpected lunch eon. In the kitchen and in the pantry several more girls were, preparing egg salad, baking oatmeal cookies and fluffy hot biscuits and making tea. Lpstairs the bedroom and the bath room and the storeroom were in home like order. More girls were appro priating the front sleeping chamber as a sewing-room, making practical articles of dress and house furnish ings. "Such is a .general picture of the ZZi u Ut, ,f a novel educational idea. The girls and boys of the upper three grades of the Vernon Grammar Scnool of Portland have become prac- uv.nnr,,, actually keeping bouse, learning to do by doing" The article takes up a brief history 01 the Inception and organization of the community house. Mount Long Planned. "Vernon Community House, which at the time of my visit was Inspiring 105 girls and almost as many boys with the home-making spirit. Is in the sec ond year of its history;' said Mr. How ard Its beginning goes back to the r? ay.,f e incumbency of the pres ent Portland City Superintendent, L. R Alderman. The idea is still older tor both Superintendent Alderman and the principal of the Vernon School, William Parker, had long had the germ of the community-house plan." 7 tLthe rfini"sr which the house gives says? 8 0t the 8cho1 the article hn'K the ,gro?p stimulus girls who work tbten ,the habit of doinK Z J?t hme found fun an lost no Th L scrubbinS and oiling floors. I hey made curtains that would have cost about $2 a pair for 24 cent,- SELL WOOD "RT? ATTRACTIVE COMMUNITY CENTER Be., Bundin. rilled tofeu , s.r,"re r.r Pp o.e .d Pop.Ur r,, f s.ud, LIUItIren Have Room for Amusement and Work. J iff feT ywt " THE new home of the Sellwood Branch Library, on East Fifteenth street and Nehalem avenue, is con sidered a model of convenience and beauty. It is a bungalow type of build ing, erected at a cost of $3000 and leased by the Portland ciatlon for five years. The structure I occupies a portion of the full lot facing Nehalem avenue. The main room Is 26 by 50 feet and Is furnished in oak. The books are in shelve, along the sides of the room, with reading tables placed about. Near ly 4000 books are carried on the shelves. The library also will supply calls for special books from the main .building. The main room is a pleas ant, light and airy room, and the at tractive feature Is its convenience. A children's room for the story hour was provided, which Is 10 by 10 feet, and has a family of dolls, which are a delight to the children. The story hour is one of the interesting features of the library work. The Campfire girls, a Sellwood organization, meets In this library. In the Summer the av- I 1 ai WtrU 7 tX- r.-y .. f fine dresser scarf. listed in the depart ment, mores at cost only 52. Bora Have Dntir, Too. "Likewise there were duties for the boys. In the manual training depart ment of the school they planned out and began making furniture for the house. At a total cost of J6.50 for ma terials they were able to make a fumed oak library table worth 140." Relative to the social life of the place the article says: "To the end that the community house be made all that a real family home should be. occasional entertain ments are planned. "The house must never bo permit ted to berr.rrif n lnhn,.iA... . . - " i u irtius r ine turning out of domes tics." the writer says In speaking of ROTARIANS START SOUTH AFTER BREAKFAST I.V PORTLAXD 200 LEAVE O-V STEAMER TRAI.. Party tor San Francisco Comprlaea lOO ' From Minnesota and 30 From Oregon. Arter breakfasting at the Benson iotei at 8 o'clock yesterday morning the Northwestern and Minnesota dele gations to the annual convention of the International Association of Rotary Clubs at San Francisco left at 9:30 from the North Bank Depot for Fiavel where they were to take the steamer Great Northern for their destination. I Jl e nartv mmnriaaX t.n... .ww . , - - . 7 " 4to inem- bers, of which number 100 were from Minnesota, 30 from Portland and the remainder from other Northwestern cities. Ti Northwestern delegation arrived In Portland yesterday morning on the 7 o clock train. Among the cities represented by the party were OHiIgary Victoria and Vancouver, B. C; Seattle" Tacoma and Spokane.- ' The Portland party included Mr. and Mrs E B. Morris, E. W. Tilden and party of four, Mr. and Mrs. A B Cal der , Mr and Mrs. F. C. Riggs,' Miss Mabel Riggo, Mr. and Mrs. J. H Diin dore. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Waters,' Jacob Grebel, Mrs. S. D. Levy, J. o. Esberg Fred Spoerl Mrs. Joe Sandvall Mr' and Mrs. C. E. Cochran. Charles H Carder, J. L. Wright, Mrs. George b' Lee and C. P. Little. The nntllno ,lva r,. i. .-. recall, was made r.oslb!e br an fniL. mon "r .l"001" The Germans came to . , , , 11 " . aim now an attempt Is E?Blan,d- Professor Perkin firBt pro ducerl colors from coal tar. ' AMPHT T TT3D A T - f r;v ',!... .... o w J ; t. IS' y erage circulation of book, is 3000. but in the Winter it runs up to 4500 a month. Miss E. W. Jones is the librarian in cht-rge of the Sellwood branch. At the opening day the libraries of the city were entertained at the Sellwood branch, and they admired its beauty and arrangements. It was built accord ing to the plans approved by the Li brary Association, and Miss Isom saya r v SW : . 4"...:.- '."-.,., V " 'J5" ' -h . -. .;.....;-. ', ': . .. . ' ( . 11 ' 1 , 1 s V" S T ...... CJOOCW SEWER BEING LAID Work On at Three Points on .Montavilla Trunk Line. JOE QUARTER FINISHED Project to Be 20,000 Feet Long From Kast Sixty-Third and AVII low to Base Line Road and Cost to Be 9148,000. Contractor William Lind Is workino at three places on the trunk r. the Montavilla diatrir-r v ciTiv. r t ri bil - f 1r V-ai X'-iMkMA" . JasrfN., she regards it a model communitr li brary building. Sellwood , Branch Library was first to organize as a reading-room and maintained by the people by subscrip tion In a building still standing on Umatilla avenue, opposite the Sellwood school. It was taken over and moved to 570 Tacoma avenue, which it occu pied until moved-to the new quarters July L. 5 i t 1 : -. 1 1 3 t 9 3 Hi r Si I thlrh and Wfllow streets. East Seventy seventh and llalsey streets and East Ullsan and East Eightieth streets, and approximately about 25 per cent of the construction work, including the mak ing of the big sewer joints, has been accomplished. Construction of the sewer Joints, which are of reinforced concrete and range from five feet to four feet in diameter, was started first, and the main proportion of this work has been completed. The trunk will be 20.000 feet long from where It starts at East Sixty third and Willow streets to the end of the Base Line road. The large sec tions of the pipe used are being laid ;.r,om. East Slxty-third street to East fc.lghty-second street on lialsey street, formerly called the Barr road. Here the pipe line will be five feet in di ameter inside. The trunk turns aouth at Halsey and East Eighty-second streets and the size is maintained for some distance southward. Bla; Pipe. Iiradr. The big concrete pipe sections for Eaat Eighty-second street have ail been fin ished and are strung along the street preparatory to the coming of the digger. At East Slxtyuecand and Willow streets the excavation for tha trunk lok a canal was being built. The trench Is more than 20 feet deep and about eight feet wide, and nTinterlalJ 1" p"ed alonf side, being dumped back as the concrete pipe Joints are lowered In the trench. Each pipe, section weighs more than a ton "t1,-"" iowe th ivy block On East Glisan street a smaller ,. vi ii i y-second to Last Seventy-fifth street.; where it TL?".n1eCt w,tn th trench already completed to that .... . r north .ye East Cillsan .treeY com! .rlc,jr tatcen up with the sewer con struction . k,. t, ? con- Slin ."."k" ?a.8t allMan- the trench 1. to prevent caving. ' ""tract Prlee la 14K.OOO. This is th under way m th. ..uJ -T"" l?nl"cl contract price 'iuloooV which u e.toubid25;?,'V"" than the "t est bid. Contractor Llnd expects to have the Job completed by about No- Th? S.T TdlUon' r favorable. The district m- nj.. . L . th?a--a--io""toVto StarkV.tr... . " part or the East into thi .,r"nk wh,ch empties of vi.t lV"tme,te U,ver the foot system. h.V. k "m"U Cwer systems haVe been completed at Ta- ..UIIn on can Stark street Engineer Mnrri. i... . . the people of Monta Mia that Tt would rout ttnnnonn t. .. . . ""l 11 would th. nt-iii 1 ou"" tie trunk from trlci tm.erft,te..R,V" through that dl" ii,.. Jrdctlon that has been rea- fortataenral,tlanrd W," b near,y S00 ttr .h."! "dprl.vat connection. f- -m iunK nag oeen finished. CALIF0RNIANS SET PICNIC State Society Will Hold Annual . Gathering at Oaks Wednesday. The' California State Society wm hold Its annual picnic at The Oaks Wednesday evening. A basket lunch will be served at 6:30 P. M. .T?a8t. t0 Ca"fornIa will be respond ed to by Senator Lane. ex-Governor Oeer, Frank Branch-Kilcy and others. A committee of 20 is In charge of 'e rra"ements for California Day at The Oak. and active charge of the preparations has been taken by Frank nn,""' President of the society. Mr Hilton, says it is the aim of the ?h .ly,t,Jnake the picnle bigger than that held by any other state society. CHARGE OF MURDER FAILS Jury at CortallU Acquits (icorgc Avery of Death oT lurcly. CORVALLIS, Or., Jufy 17. (Special.) George Avery, who was accused of the murder of William Purdy on the night of April 23, was released from custody today when the Jury returned a verdict of not guilty. The arguments in the case cloned shortly after noon yesterday and the Jury went out at 2:30. Between that time and 10:30 this morning they re turned twice for further Instruction, the latter time asking to have the in structions re-read entire.'-. Here are some used ones: Several, regular price S25.00. reduce tn. Reduced price includes one Two regular price $35.00, reduced to S21.40 Reduced price includes 28 selections of best records. Two regular price $100, Machines reduced to SG5.00 Reduced price includes 30 selections of best records. Quite a number of others, some old-style ones for $8, $10 and $12, records included. All of these and other machines sent by mail receipt of price. Will be sold on the well-know be sold on the well-lcnoWn-i71v4aWfAVJa ! Uhv' ;- K Eilers easy payment plan 2d Floor Eilers BIdg PARTY ON LONG TRIP Georgia Autoists Arrive' on 16,000-Mile Tour. . CAR DRIVEN 6500 MILES "o Trouble Encountered on Journey Iom Macon to Portland by Way of Tla Juana, Mexico, and North Along Coast. unving a 6000-pound ,slx-KlxtvM automobile a party of tanned nl.i.nr. seeker, arrived In Portland last night from the South on the last leg of what is thought to be one of the longest pleasure automobile trips ever taken. Dr. A. B. Hinkla and Mr nH .-- George Otto comprised the party that ien .Macon. Georgia. April 27. and ar rived In this city happy, and enthusias tic over the trip that has already con sumed close to three months. The party ha. traveled 6500 miles, and by the time It again arrives at Macon will have traversed practically everv ruri of the United States over which a ma chine could travel, and will have cov ered close to 16.000 miles. After leaving Macon th. Innrl.l ' Itinerary took them through Atlanta Chattanooga. Loul.-vllle. IndlanaDolls. St. Louis, Kansas Cltv. Denver. !.... ki Colorado Springs, the Royal George and Canyon City. They then doubled back to Pueblo and took the Santa Fe tr.il to New Mexico. ' Gransl Caayea Visited. They visited Albuquerque and Sprlngervllie and were delayed for two days in the latter town on account of a slx-lnrh fall of snow. From New Mexico to the Grand Canyon or the Colorado they went, and then they came across the California desert by way of Needles. No difficulty was experienced in crossing the hot sand and the tem perature of 110 degrees in the shade was to them only a passing inconveni ence. From Needle, the tourist, crossed to Los Angeles and then south to San Diego and to the Mexican bord er, stopping at Tla Juana. Mexico. From Mexico the party c.ime north to I CROSS-CONTINENT AUTOMOBILE TOURISTS WHO REACHED nmiLAAu lUitKUAY ON TRIP THAT WILL COVER 16.000 MILES. t I --:y yr "f. San Francisco and stopped at the Fair for a week. While there their car was on exhibition at the Transportation Building. The extreme Coast route was taken on the way up from California, and they passed through Crescent City. Urnnts Pass. Rugene and Corvallls In Oregon. While coming through the mountains in Northern California this trans continental party had the thrill of see ing the front wheels of their machine go over the bank on one of the hair pin turns In the Wilder Kldge Pass, but Dr. Hinkle. who has driven the car every mile of the way. controlled It be fore any damage ma. done. While en route Dr. Hinkle said that he had had no engine trouble, and the only delay caused by the machine oc curred when the pinion shaft was broken. During the ride over the Call- .'. .,T .VV i "tV,-., "I : - - - . . : . i' - r.- t i L : - : I Tin. A. B. HI.XKI.E AM) PARTY AMD l-OWKHFtL CtR. J i m m . m . .,... . ...... doz. of best records f24 selrtmns upon also rornla desert and on to Sun Dleiro and Angeies not even so much a. a puncture was sustained. Dr. Hinkle was enthusiast). over the trip thus far. saying it had been an unusually successful one because of the weight of the machine and its load However, this is not lr. Hlnkle's first extended trip by automobile, for he lured 21 states and part of Canada in ., Ur- Hinkle carries with him an out nt consisting of refrigerator, stove beds, chairs, etc, and has his camp" "s"' i nigni Dy electricity that the machine generates for him during the day. Dr. Hinkle and Mr. and Mrs. Otto were entertained last night at the Automobile Club by II. G. Terry, a local real estate operator, and thev will leave for Seattle today. From Seattle the route they intend to follow win take them through Spokane. Glacier Nation al Park. Yellowstone 1'ark. Cody Cheyenne and various other cities en route to ChicaKo. They will fol low the Lincoln Highway from Chicago to New York, and the National High way from there to Washington Th.v-I expect to arrive in Macon by October 1. Dr. Hinkle reports royal treatment wherever his party has stopped. PORTliNDFIElJDRAliVS I". S. TILER, TACOMA AUVKHTIMNU .M.,. LOCATES 1IKRK. Policy of Portlaad Maanfartarcra la Declared More Agareaalve Tkaa That la Seattle. - ' " mo i ) it r Advertising vi lacoma. lias located in this Ul mna "i associated with Arthur H. Deute. a Portland advertising agent. Before engaging i business in Tn- y" air. jyier was with the Ben B. Hampton Advertising Asrencv In v.w ork City, the firm that handles all the advertising for th. I'.c. i v. v. Company. Insersoll Watch a n. '"""o company. It. ae G. Corset Com- pany and many other large companies iie r.a. oeen In the NorthWeM for six ;r.m. passing niOUt Of that lim. I Seattle and Tacoma. and comes to Port land with a comprehensive knn.l.j cities. v ' uusmcss conditions In th. Vnrth.. In the opinion of Mr. Tyler there I. more advertising done In Portland than In Seattle and Tacoma. wl.ln. i. tributes to the more aggressive policy of Portland manufacturers. Mr. Tyler a t business associate. -m-- Mr. Deute. ha become well known here through his advertising work for the Pacific Coast mscuit Companv I ortland Seed Company. Coin Machine Manufacturing Company. McClanahan Incubator Company and Klrstin stump Puller Company. The new agency will be known as the Lee-lHute-Tyler Company and aft- ei .nuKUM i win do located Dekum building. in the Gopher Valley Moles Fought. SHERIDAN. Or.. July 17. (SpeclaL Farmers or Gopher Valley have be gun a war on moles. To date C. Rhondes claim, the championship a mole catcher with a record of 0. m. next best competitors are the cats of J. N. Grohe. whtt-h have caught 25 of the little animals. m. GRIFFITH IS ELECTED HISPANO-AMUItlCA SOtlKTV TO nnoiDKX scope of woiik. -New President Look a Forward to Cam Pa'sra for Isrrrasrd Intttnt After Vacations. At a meeting Thursday night of the Hispano-Amerlcan Society of Oregon. Gaylord C. Griffith, first vlce-preisdent of the society, was appointed president to fill the vacancy cu used by the resig nation of Hamilton Johnstone. A pro posal to broaden the scope of the so clety". work was unanimously adopted, to the effect that steps be taken to make the society a medium for the in terchange of information of commer cial interest, as well as in other lines. between the general public of the Pa cific Northwest and the Latin-American countries. A committee was ap pointed to work out the details of a plan of action with that end In view. Mr. Griffith look, forward to an ac tive campaign along these lines and to an Increased interest by the public In the society's work In general when It. meetlnna are resumed In September, following the Summer vacation period which beplns this week CITY YET MAY CUT WEEDS Threat or Arrest Kail on Out-of-Town Properly Owners. Inability to force out-of-town owners Of Portland property to ci;t weeds by threats of arrest may result In the city . lofting tlie system again of mowing the gr.is and assessing the cost to tho property as a lien. The plan Is being considered by Commissioner Pie., k. Poll.-e. through threats of arrest, have forced resident property owners to cut the weeds on hundreds of lots. It Is impossible to reach out-of-town owner. In this way. and it is said the assessment plan is the only one which can be made to work sin-cessf ully. Delay In I!oal Work Investigated. DAYTON". Wash.. Ju'y : T. Special. ) Mayor W. C. Ciodarri. County Com missioners Georce Spalinscr and Richard Prster. with a party of rep resentative business men. met State HlKhway Commissioners Roy and Kge Thursday to find why the appropria tion for the permanent highway be tween Dayton and Wnitshurg Is not being used. Th.- location of the road has been definitely decided. In ail probability the eroding will be brs-un In th. esrlv Atitnmn. Your Glasses Were Fitted When? If your eyes have not been examined within the past two years they should be looked after now ; particularly if you have suffered from a severe illness. Improper lenses can prove harmful not only to your eyes but to your health as well. In all Portland there is no better optical service than ours. Let us test your eyes and prove it to you. THOMPSON OPTICAL INSTITUTE 209-10-11 Corbett Bid?;. Fifth and Morrison