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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1917)
21 U.S.T0 BUY WHEAT yijumimiiiumnmuiumimummimtmninm S Wonderful: Record of the GIRLS POLYTECHNIC SCHOOL FURNISHES OPPORTUNITIES TO ACQUIRE 00D TRADE Work for Coming Winter Starts Under Leadership of JIUs Anna K. Arnold, Formerly of Columbia University. enrollment Is Large. ' . 1 $1095 5-Passenger Touring 4-Passenger Touring 13. H. Houser Announces Plan of Grain Corporation. (f.V.b. Chicane) SURPLUS TO BE TAKEN OVER -" r l 'IV Purchased Oraln Will BcTTeld Until Millers Nerd It, or Diverted KIsen licre, as Situation May Require. r-, M&i? -. V I 'Z ?-,t 1 SI? V.'- THE SUXDAT OREGOIAX, TOKTULSV, SEPTEMBER SO. 1917. - . ' . .. ; ' : I- . - f 1 It-. ii W"tf "tugs." - .... fc-Jf 5 t The Grain Corporation of the United Btates Food Administration will begin buying- wheat in the Northwest tomor row. Thtt announcement, made yester day by M. H. Houser, second vice-president of the corporation and ag-ent in the Pacific Northwest f the Food Administration, has been awaited with interest by farmers and dealers throughout this section. 1 p to thin time the fiour millers had not been fee t tin enough wheat to sup ply their wants, but they have all In hand now, under the Government's 3$ day regulation, that they can carry, and the Ira in Corporation will take over the surplus offerings by farmers. The wheat will b carried by the Cor poration until the millers need it, or will be diverted elsewhere as the situ ation requires. Farmers are becominjr better ac quainted with the workings of the a: rain law and are now selling freely at nearly all points in the Northwest, Thrf is still some confusion, however, over the matter of Federal grades and discounts, but the growers are expected to become posted on these matters soon. trades Price a Ffxed. To clear up any misunderstanding that may exist, Mr. Houser last night prepared the following; statement of grades and jiricea: "The t'oast basic price of $2. 05 a bushel has been established, in accord ance with which the following is a schedule of values of the various varieties: 1 Dark hard Winter $2.09 ". 1 Hard Wlnlprbailt 2.00 No. t Red Winter Immit No. 1 Yvliow hard Winlt-r No. 1 Soft rei Winter 5!.tt No. 1 !ark Northern Spring 1MK No. 1 Northern Spring- baric No. 1 Rtd Spring N. 1 Huir.noack l.W No. 1 Amber durum i.0V No. 1 Durum baa It-. .................... J.Ui No. 1 Wall LPS No. 1 Red durum l.tS No. 1 Hard white basic 3.0o No. 1 ft white S.O.I No. 1 Whit" rliib U.Ol "No. 2 grade. 3c lesa; No. 3 grade, 6c Tesa. Mixed wheat, also No. A wheat. No. 5 wheat, sample wheat and lower trrada will be handled by sample on merits and bought accordingly. "These prices are bulk. Delivery and Payament. "Oelivery The Cast basic price is for jrrain delivered in store in approved terminal warehouses or elevators, to be denipnated by this office early next Week. : "Payment Payment will be made only against warehouse receipts for wheat delivered in approved public and private terminal warehouses or ele vators. "The Food Administration Grain Cor poration will not solicit conslg-nrnents. "Will not pay drafts or advances. "Direct consignments to Grain Cor poration will not be encouraged and a charpo of 1 per cent will be made for handling such direct consignments. "It is the purpose and intent o" the Food Administration to interfere as lit tle as possible with the buying, ship ping and forwarding prrain. as this would necessitate an army of employes, leaving this work as much as possible to the warehouseman and elevator man, , dealer and commission merchant. "The Food Administration will en deavor to retain sufficient stocks at advantaReous points having: in , mind the milling facilities and require ments." ' Milling Division to Open Office. " The office of the milling division of the United States food administration w-ill be opened in the Wilcox building Monday with George V, Hayes in ehara-ft a.- divisional manager for the Pacific Coast division, of which T. B. "Wilcox is chairman. Mr. Hayes ha been lor the past year in charge of the New York office of the Portland Flour ing Mills Company and he was request ed b- Mr. Wilcox to come to Portland and assume t he management of the Government's flour operations on the Coast. POLICE AID ROBBERIES? Company Says Palms of Officers AVer Greased With Butter. HARTFORD. Conn.. Sept. 25. A po lice scandal probably will develop as a result of the arrest at College Point, 1. J., of Henry Myers, a former em ploye of Dillon It Douglas, of New Haven. That firm's butter and egg warehouse here has been robbed sys tematically, and It is charged several policemen have profited. Myers Is in the Queens County Jail on a charge of embezzlement. Arrested here on the same day were Tony De belle, driver of a bakery wagon; James Couray, a bartender, and Edward Ross, an automobile dealer. They are charged with receiving stolen goods. Ever since the robberies became pub lic the police have been exceedingly reticent, because It was known, mem bers of the force were involved- Chief Garret J. Farrell was loath to talk until when he was informed of Myers' arrest. He then told how that man had been traced to College Point. The police did not act until private detectives had established a good case and the scandal got into the news pa pern. Dillon &. Douglas entered a formal complaint. Innocent policemen urged that something be done and the identity of the guilty be made known. They deeply resented the inactivity of their superiors. A meeting of the Police Commission will be held. As a result it is fairly certain that certain policemen -who have been receiving "presents" of but ter and eggs will be dismissed from the department and arrested on the charge of receiving stolen goods. The total of the thefts amounts to thou aands of dollars. It 1 urged that It would have been Impossible to rob the place night after niaht and take the plunder away In trucks without policemen being; aware of it. Fiheiicn Hook Up Mystery. MH-FORD, N. J., Sept. 25. Fisher men at this place found human hair and flesh attached to their hooks when they reeled in their lines. As a result of the find the authorities were no tified and dynamite was used in the Delaware River where the men were fishing and portions of clothing came to the surface. Chief of Polle Frank A. Brown was notified and Dr. Lava lie was summoned. After an investigation the doctor said he was satisfied the flesh was that of a human being. The hair was short and is believed to be that of a man. Grappling irons were too brought into use, but failed to bring anything to the surface. The authorities will continue their search. ., . Sf . " - ji'V us 1 ' l ,1 u x -ut -,.,Mi ill;; -vi t n III'..:. ' ' J.":-, W-"- 1 1 is MS. 1 Mem Sera f tbe Sewing; Class KlnlealMa;' Shirtwaists. 2 Canning Fruit for Vse In the School Cafeteria or Individual lac. OPPORTUNITIES for ntting- women and girls for a life of usefulness in the commercial world and in the hovie are found in courses offered at the Girls' polytechnic School, on Fourteenth and Morrison streets. The work for the "Winter started recently under the leadership of Miss Anna E. Arnold, formerly of Columbia Unlver- Ity. There is a large enrollment in all of the classes, which are divided into trade classes and horoemakem' courses. The school is especially for girls who are not planning upon enterlpc college and two-year courses in uomestic science, -millinery, industrial arts and other useful lines of work, as well as academic studies, are given. Girls who are not adapted to the studies present ed in the high schools find that the courses given at the Girls' Polytechnic School are - interesting and useful in everyday life. For women who do not care to enter the classes with the younger girls special classes have been provided. Hvr to Make Hats Told. ' In the millinery course the girls are taught the making of hats, from, the cutting- and wiring of the shapes to the last touches In completing the model. As many of the wholesale houses In the elty are not employing- apprentices, the girls are given a chance tu secure good positions in both wholesale and retail stores after they have com pleted a course of millinery in the school. In the cooking classes innumerable quarts of fruit have been canned for use in tbe school cafeteria and In in dividual homes. As an example of what the girls who bring their own fruit do, one girl recently put up I quarts of tomatoes, 12 quarts of peaches and It quarts of pears. The fruit is canned according to the best methods and the girls are glad of tnr opportunity to help supply the family larder with edibles for the Winter. Tn addition to the cooking1 classes there are classes in . food chemistry and dietetics. There are classes In design and In lacemaking. which are of use to the girls who are sewing. From these Ideas are derived which aid in adding Individualistic touchesto the garments. Mot-t of the girln make their own school dresses and in the women's classes the women make their own garments, as well as garments for the whole family. They are given detailed instructions and as a consequence the finished gar ments are always satisfactory. In the shirtwaist classes,, tailored waists are completed first and then lingerie and gerfrgetto crepe models. . "WeaTtna? Art Tugtat. Tn the lacemaking- classes the mem bers are instructed in the art of weav ing the very finest of fllet and Venetian laces. Instructions are also given, in crocheting;. One of the most Interesting courses offered la the industrial course. Here one may make everything, from all sorts of Jewelry to raffia baskets, which are fashioned in odd shapes and stained. Book ends of either brass or wood .may be roade-c The designs used by the girls are unusual and the arti cles are welt made. The members of all of the classes are glad to take ordera from people for sewing-. Jewelry, millinery, canned fruit or lit fact any of the things made at the school Beginning- with, tomorrow evening; clauses will - be held on Monday, Wednesday and .Thursday evenings from 7 until 9 o'clock. Instruction will, be given in all of the courses, with the addition of tailoring classes, which are to be a new feature of the work. "The Car of the Hour" Read What This Champion Light Six Is Doing for the War Department Farm ISO On iMt . bim l-Jirtira Pl L" Bim mit imii w rrt 1 -'! i'y"? '"' "" nw M am ol thM thrM lyinbols jfl " 6" H Kl5oT(fe3Sl A " "" ynol .MOtMiltitfay mnmf.Othm- B ' .onf.thsbdsr InWM.Ortw m, . , n.. am. j CEOpae w t ATKINS. VIC,PIONT BELVIOERB BROOKS. VKI FIIllBtHT -l 1 . 1917, Sept. 11, A. M. 1:45. RE2GS 124 COLL NL COUNT PERIODS & COMMAS .NEEDLES, Calif. 10. '" ' C.S.RIEMAN, Pres. Elgin Motor Car Corporation, 2427 Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. Elgin Six War Department Road Reporter and Official All-Trails Scout Car crossed the state of California, from Los Angeles to the Arizona border, in less than a day! Following National Old Trails road across Great Mojave Deserts; here at noon. The heat registered 125 degrees. In spite of severe desert difficulties we covered over 425 miles in the last 23 hours. You can not appreciate the worth of this record for a regular stock car. Car in perfect condition. Our hood, clutch, transmission and differential, sealed at Chicago by American Automobile Association, are still sealed, after traveling 3460 miles. We leave here tonight. ROY S. MARSH. Varying temperatures seriously affect the performance of the average car. Isn't the above showing marvelous, distance and time considered? BRIDGE EARNS SURPLUS INTERSTATE SPAX HAS 920,173 TO APPLY ON BOND ISSIEC. 1 . Rnfai C. Holm... I. Miirrmm Befar RuMellvlll Gramme, Announces Total Income of T34,110. After deducting operating expenses and. interest on the bond, the net revenue from the Interstate Bridge from February 19, when the structure was opened, until August 31. inclusive, was $20,173.72, according to figures compiled by Rufus C. Holman, chair man of the Board of County Commis sioners, and submitted In an address before the Ruasellville Grange last night. According to Mr. Hotman's figures, the daily average tolls from the bridge during that period were $413.09, the grand total being 184,110.11. The total includes an item of J250.10, being the interest allowed by the banks at the rate of 2 per cent on average daily balances on tolls collected, all of which are deposited daily. The total operating expenses for the seven months, including damages to the bridge, aggregated $15,273.23, leav ing a net income from operation of JOS, 836. $8. Deducting the accrued In terest on 'bonds of $48, 863. It there is $20,173.72 left as the net amount avail able Tor retirement of the $1,750,000 bond issues that were floated for the construction of the bridge. In other words, the net average daily surplus from the operation of the bridge, after deduoting operating expenses and in terest on the bonds, for the first seven months, was $99.35. Every month has shown an Increase in the daily aver age Income from the property. SNAPSHOTS OF BRIGHT WESTERN BABIES WHO WON HIGH SCORES IN RECENT EUGENIC TESTS, 1 mi I-- r - - v- :-:r: v I " 72L si v fcjgHM-lff- - - " ' fct-. . ..-yv... v -. . . - SJ Baby tests and the fc.alth and welfare of the little people of the state h-old' the interest-of the mothers and fathers. Tbe Parents' Educational Bureau, bi Courthouse, maintains enge nic tests each week and many lovely babl-n are found. Those mho nH care or hel0 are given advice free of-charge. Today's - pictures show some examples of health)', happy Western children, : , ASHFORK, Arizona, 10:45 A. M. Sept 13th, 1917. C. S. RIEMAN, Pres. Elgin Motor Car Corporation, 2427 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, 111. . It would be impossible for any car to withstand worse punishment than the Elgin Six War Department Scout Car endured yesterday. We plowed through thick mud, deeper than our axle, mile after mile, in pouring rain, with water over our running boards. Roads so terrible it was impossible for us to travel more than thirty miles all day, but car is still sealed and in perfect condition. R. S. MARSH. " 12:42 P.M. ELGIN MOTOR CAR CORPORATION of Chicago A. C. STEVEN Factory Distributor for Oregon and Southwest Washington 23d AND WASHINGTON, PORTLAND -Just Around the Corner g 1 Dealers Write for Open Territory LEE L. GILBERT, Sales Manager 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiifiiiiiiiin iiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiitiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii TAG DAY, OCTOBER 6, APPEALS FOR AID IN WORK OF SAVING UNFORTUNATE MOTHERS AND BABIES Nearly 100 Now Being Cared For at Louise Home and Albertina Kerr Nursery and Funds for Maintenance of Institution and Continuance of Its Rescue Work Are Necessary. SATURDAY, October 6, will be Tag day for the benefit of the Louise Home, where unmarried mothers are sheltered and taught how best tp assume the responsibilities of parent hood, and the Albertina Kerr Nursery, where their babies are cared for until their mothers can take them Into' their homes, or until they can be adopted, The City Council has granted.; per mission for this publio appeal for the conservation of human life, and -the Mayor of the city and the Governor of the state have indorsed the character of these Institutions for the saving of infant lives and the restoration of -unfortunate mothers to lives of useful ness. - There are at present 93 of these mothers and babies in the two insti tutions, which are branches of the Pa cific Coast Rescue and Protective So ciety. It requires 15 workers, includ ing the day and night nurses, for the babies, to take care of this huge, fam ily. Some of the ablest physieians in the city contribute their services in emergency cases at the institutions.. It is one-of the striking things about this work of conserving the lives of habies who have "no name," an Wllkle Collins described it, that there are many families ready to adopt - the babies. N Slather's Leve Important. However-, these mothers love" their babies, and, what is more important from the public point of view, the mother's love for her child furnishes the strongest incentive to keep her In the ranks of good motherhood and save her from the slums. . The work of the Pacific Coast League is to furnish the ignorant and often Innocent mother (there was a mother 15 years old at the Louise Home this year), a refuge.' a lying-in' hospital, a nursery for the babe and a school for the mother, together with such instruc tion In cooking and sewing as will make her a housewife, so far as her capacities permit Re long as thousands ef bora and girls grow up without proper Instruc tion in matters of sex, so long the truUron of the homo will, listen to stories of ' ignorance of adolescents and neglect on the part of parents, which result in happenings which would be promptly declared absurd and impossible if it were not for material evidence. This is the work of the society from the moral and economic side to save human beings. , There is a financial side also, which includes ' feeding, clothing, nursing and sheltering a fam ily of 100 people or more, and next Saturday the public will have an op portunity ' to contribute and become partners in conserving the "lives of the babies. - With the present 'prices of food, fuel and clothing, this is impor tant. - ; Visitors Interested in this work are welcome 'and can make arrangements tp see the' Louise Home and tbe nurs ery by telephoning Broadway 1665 or A 726. ... ' The Louise Home has good And sub stantial .buildings and1 nine .acres of land, -which can be. reached by going out the Base Ltne road to Barker road, and thence north a short distance. Ad ditional land was rented this year and the girls cultivated a 12acre garden. At .Tag day.- headquarters on Kifth street, just north of the Perkins Ho tel, there will be next Saturday a dis play., of needlework and canned ' fruit and vegetables, which have been pre-pared-as part of the work of the girls under ' the direction .of Miss Beatrice Prosser. the matron of the home. There is a debt of (9000 on (his home. ' T4ie nursery is on Fourteenth street, just south of 'Washington; and Miss Lenora Bennett, the matron, will wel come visitors who want to see nearly 50 babies in one house. Tlie proceeds of Tag day will go to continue this work of saving mothers and habies. The babies are innocent, and the mothers, in the great majority of cases, are ignorant of the responsi bilities of their sex, due to their youth and' lack of proper training. Parrot Yells 'All Right'; Kirc Falls. NEW YORK. Sept. 25. Two firemen were slightly burned and a parrot was burned to death in a fire which started In the International Millinery Com pany's shop on the eighth floor of 2 West Thirty-fifth street and spread to the hairdressing and manicure rooms of Madame Pons on the same floor. Miss Helen Steiner was dressing th hair of Mrs. Marion Kilpatrick when she smelled smoke. They found the millinery shop in flames and hastened down the stairs. In spite of the fact that Madame Pons' pet parrot con tinued to yell: "It's all right!" Two alarms were turned in and a huge throng gathered. In it was Mayor Mitchel, who was on his way home. Men of engine No. 26, . in charge of Lieutenant Head, had reached the Wn of the stairs on the eighth floor when they were bowled over by a back draft. Firemen Deacey and "Whittle were the most severely scorched. Dr. Harry Archer attended them, and they went home. The others returned to their work. HAVE COLOR IN CHEEKS Be Better Looking Take Olive Tablets If your skin is yellow-complexion palJ -tongue coated appetite poor you havs a bad taste in your mouth a lazy, nogood feeling you should take Olive Tablets. Dr. Edward' Olive Tablets a substitute for calomel were prepared by Dr. Edwards after 17 years of study with his patients. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. You will know them by their oliva color. To have a clear, pink skin, bright eyes, no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy lika childhood days you must get Rt the cause. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act on the liver and bowels like calomel yet have too dangerous after effects. - They start the bile and overcome consti pation. That's why millions of boxes ar sold annually at 10c and 25c per bet. Ail druggists. Take one or two n!gb?.y and note the pleasing results. 1