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THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. SUNDAY - MORNINQ. JULY 19.
S ,
BOOTHS At THE SALEM CHERRY FAIR WHEE OREGON'S
WORLD-SURPASSING FRUIT IS ANNUALLY EXHIBITED
r
r..
X
r
TUCKER '
SUREAS SHOOK
j-
Drifts Into JnTcnile C(hirt
Jtight Out of Mother
Goose Book.
Booths at the Salem Cherry Fair.
DISPLAY
Fill
III OECElffi
r State Horticultural Society
Tlans for Its Big-
' gest Exhibit.
The biggest and best mid-winter
fruit growers," jiackers' and shippers'
meeting ever held on the coast is
planned for December 5, at Portland. It
Is the occasion of the annual meeting
of the Oregon State Horticultural ao-
clety, and also the sixteenth annual ses-
slori of the Northwest Fruit Growers'
association.
Representative horticulturists from
all parts of the Taclflc northwest will
5 be In attendance, and addresses, conven-
tions. lectures and demonstrations will
be given which will he of the greatest
educational value. All of the fruit
. jrrowlng sections are planning to send
In displays, and it seems evident that
this will be the most remarkable fruit
exhibition the coast has ever seen.
7 The Northwest Fruit Growers' asso-
f elation includes aKSodations and grow-
ers In Oregon, Washington, British Co-
Jumhta. Idaho and 1 tan. and the com-
prehrnsive character of the displays
mav well attract attention botli at
home and abroad
The Ort-Kon State Horticultural so
ciety will offer a number of fine cups
and business houses !n the city are
promising others to help to make the
event noteworthy and the competition
Interesting. It Is hoped that other busi
ness firms in the city will take the
matter up. The committee In charge
of awards would particularly like to
aee one sweepstake mp and other small
er awards donated for this purpose.
The visiting delegates, some of whom
will come from nhroad. will t. enter
tained in a fitting manner, and the
meeting promises to be most enthusias
tic and educational in tone.
E. L. Pmlth of Hood River, is presi
dent of the Northwest Fruit Growers'
association, and E. R. LJike of Corvallls
is the secretary.
IW JORK SOCIETY FEW PERSONS REALIZE FULL
n(ivp(1 flrrSlPa cruninn. jit aa
; EIGHTY-FOO niEHRIESjH ,w
AL ()E FOOT
Eighty-four cherries to the
fo.t is what Portland can do in
the matter of raising Royal
Anns. Hood River has her
records and Willamette valley
points are always springing op
with new ones of their own, but
the 54 to the foot U what Port
land is willing to s'ar.d on. A
modest subscriber to the Jour
nal brought in a little branch
from a tree In his yard yester
day. ; "'Connt them." said Tie simply,
laying the branch down and
making1 a quiet exit They were
Counted and there actually were
14 ripe and perfect cherries on
' th foot of branch, before the
office boy began eating them
off. Before anyone thought of
weighing the cherry branch it
was too late, but the foot must
tiara weighed eeveral pounds
whaa It vu loaded with the ap
petising Royal Anna.
MELCOITOUB
I
Local color will be given the visit
today in thiB city of the Brooklyn
Tourist club by an informal reception
to be tendered by a committee of the
New York Btate society of Oregon.
committee has been appointed by the
society to meet at the Oregon hotel
this morninar at 8 o'clock and re
ceive the New York visitors. The com
mittee Is composed of the following
Miss Lida M O'Brvon. Charles C.
Fisher .Tudee D. J. Havnes. Mrs. J
Mabel Miller, Mrs. F. I). Chamber in,
Mrs. B. T. Taggart. Miss Ella Huhbs,
Ielos Lh Neer. Herbert 13. King and
Thomas O. Hague.
The Brooklyn party's Itinerary in
cludes a trip on the Rallev Uatzeri
from Portland to cascade lkjcks. aim
this part of the program will take up
most of the .day. They will return at
5 p. m. A committee has Deen namea
by the trustees of the First Congrega
tional church to call on the visitors and
im-ltn thpm to attend a special service
and listen to a patriotic sermon by Dr.
nvntt formerly a Hrooklynlte. This
committee Is composed of Dr. Dyott, Dr.
roe and E. I.. Thompson. There are
ohnn 130 neonle In the tourist party,
and they are traveling In a special
train sent out by the New York Central
Railroad company.
COLLEGE PROFESSOR
ORDERED FROM CITY
TJrlnk did It. I'll never touch an
other drop In my life." That is the
declaration of Professor D. J. Erdman.
who fills the chair of I,ntln and com
mercial at Santa Clara College, one of
he beet known Catholio Institutions In
California.
Erdman faced a most unpleasant
oharge in the police court yesterday. He
was arrested Wednesday on the com
plaint of an Indignant father, whose
young son mane cna.rge nsnuni t' J
man. W. Peterson, a special officer
nrhln tn the Women of Woodcraft
building where the boy Is also em
Invert arrested fcraman. lie was ihh-u
In red
ti, -t the interval peiween ine ri-uiin i
Julv- and the hour when he awoke to
find himself In Jail is a blank ' F.v r
lne the Fourth I must have hern
waiktrg these streets In a trance I
hive n.it the slightest remembrance of
the or: urrence."
Erdman save he graduated from C..r
rus ChrlMi university, Galesburg. Ill
In the class of 16S9. and ais"
says that he intehded returning to
Santa iara college for the new yc-u
beginning In Peptember. He Is well
known in I 'enver.
w to CkJoac.
Extremely nw round trip rate to
Cy I'ng.i and ther eastern pnlnto n
J ;'t Jl ad II la the rMw
v Mum i It, fnr fttil lnforroHt
r r 'r n V. HaiJer. (eneral a (eat. lki-B
i... lllt
THREE-STORY BRICK
BLOCK FOR EUGENE
(Sl-Ul DUpetch to Tb Jnoruit)
Eugene. Or, July 1. The plans of
the proposed business block on West
Eighth street have been changed and
instead of a two-story reenforcej con
crete building a three-story brick build
ing, with a pressed brick front, will be
erected. Work on the structure will be
gin Inside of two weeks, according" to
ta present plans of Ihe promoters
When this building is under way there
will be in Eugene three large business
bkckft 8lx have be-n completed during
the summer end additions to aoveraJ
others have been made.
MEANING OF WORD- PHILIPPINES
Idttle Tommy Tucker,
Ring's for his aupper.
What shall he eutT
White bread and butter.
UtU Tommy Tucker, 9 years old, la
being: transformed at the detention
home. True to the tradition of Mother
Goose, he drifted Into the Juvenile court
yesterday without his supper. Nor had
he had breakfast" or dinner. For 80
hours or more l,e had come no closer to
a meal than to catch the whiff of cheap
restaurant grub aa he passed along the
street
Tommy Tucker, aa he came Into the
Juvenile court, waa a pathetic figure.
Pressed In a Jumper suit and a tattered,
coat four sizes too big, he was" hobbling"
on a broomstick. For he had run a
sliver in his foot and cou'd not walk
without assistance. Over all w'as a lib
eral coating of dirt, for Tommy had not
been swimming lately, and there has
been no rain.
Chief Probation Officer Hadley took
Tommy to a restaurant first of all.
Here the boy's stomach was filled.
Later ho was sent to the detention
home, where he will be made acquainted
with soap, nnd water, the silver will be
extracted from the foot, a new suit sup-
piled, ana tie will regularly attend to his
supper auries.
Tommy's father lives on Hood street
hut makes only a meager living, works
hard, and has little time to care for the
i hoy. Tho mother of the boy died two
years ago, and ne has nad little atten
tion since. Now he will go to school
and society will try to make up for Us
past neglect.
AUTOMOBILE VICTIM
LIES 111 HOSPITAL
3Tr. J. 31nller. Whose Hus
band Was Fatally In
jured, 3Iay Recover.
(Special Dlpitch to The Journal.!
Baker City, Or., July IS. Mrs. J.
Muller. who was seriously Injured In
the automobile accident several miles
southeast of Baker City last evenlnjr,
at which time her husband was killed.
! is resting very well in St. Elixabeth's
j hospital today. The city Is in sorrow
i over what Is one of the saddest acci
dents recorded in its history.
Mr. and Mrs. Muller and Harry Big
ham had started for Boise in a large
touring car belonging to Mr. Muller, to
visit friends, and while they were
coasting down a mountain side at Unity
the machine struck a culvert, where dirt
had been wasned out bv recent rains,
and turned over twice, pinning Mr. Mul
ler to the ground, the step of the ma
chine breaking his neck. Mrs. Muller
waa also caught under the machine, but
Mr. Hicham Jumped and escaped unin
jured. All were brought to Baker Cltv last
evening. J. Muller was proprietor of
the Kentucky liquor store In this city,
and one of the strongest and most sub
stantial business men here.
-making
Captain O. a Hunt, of the Thirteenth
infantry, who has Just returned from
the Philippines, arrived at the Hotel
Portland on his way to West Point
where he la to be stationed as an in
structor. Captain Hunt la accompanied
by his family.
Captain Hunt ;.as served six years all
told in the Islands at Intervals of two
years each term.
"I find that the majority of the peo
ple In the st-tes have no conception of
the great tracts of lands which no to
make up the Philippine islands," Cap
tain Hunt said this morning "There
VALUABLE KLAMATH
KANCH IS SOLD
are 3.100 Islands, all told. I think4 that I night for the east
the Spaniards claim went to the United
States . when our government took
charge. Many of these, however, are
hardly more than mere great masses of
rock which protrude from the waters.
"Luzon, on which Manila is located.
Is the largest Island. Its area Is greater
than that of the state of California.
Then there are the Islands of Mindanao, j
Panay Negro3, Samar and Leyte In the
order named. They are the largest. I
Leyte Is perhaps about one third as
large as Oreeon.
"There z.re now between 8,000 and 10
000 United States troops in the Philippines."
captain Hunt ana nts ramiiy leave 10-
JOHN D. AND A PERFORATED TANK
SECURES OILED ROAD IN LINNTON
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.
Klamath Falls. Or., July 18 The fin
est ranch in Wood river valley, com'
prising 720 acres, was sold this week
to Major C. E. Worden of this city. The
price paid was $25 per acre. The farm
is entirely under irrigation from the
private system owned by Wood river
ranchers, mere is a large artesian well
on the place, and the house Is piped
with water.
The automobile road now being con
structed by E. H. Harriman from Peli
can bay to Crater lake passes this
ranch. The deal la considered one of
the most Important ever effected In this
section.
you
a
present
of
ten
dollars
That is exactly
what thJs 25 per cent'
discount sale of the
Columbia Tailors
amounts to. Let us
figure it out for you.
If you started out to
buy a suit of clothes
and were willing to
pay $40 for it, you
would be quite sur
prised, would you not,
to wander into the
Columbia Woolen
Mills shop and be able
to pick out a $40 suit
on sale for $30? It's
the truth, however.
The same thing is
true of every suit we
have. No matter
what the original
price was, and you
know they were all
low enough, tlje suit
goes to you, if you
want it, for just
THREE-FOURTHS
what it ought to sell'
for. And Columbia
Prices have always
been from $20 to $40.
Yo u know that.
Think of what such a
cut means to a mer
chant with a stock
worth tens of thous
ands of dollars. If
you are going to take
in the Streetcar Men's
Outing at The Oaks
buy a ticket from
the conductor, read
the coupon, bring it
into this shop and
you will secure even
lower prices and big
ger discounts than 25
per cent. You can
save enough on one
of these coupons to
buy 100 tickets to
help the boys out.
And, mind you, Co
lumbia Tailors will
sell no suits at the
coupon prices un
less the coupon is pre
sented at the time the
suit is ordered. If
this will not get your
order for a suit of
clothes, you cannot
want one very badly.
mm 11 ff
CI
Grant Phegley, Mgr.,
Seventh and Stark Streets
Have You Anything for Sale?
List it with
L. L. MOFFETT, Lumber Exchange Building
If the price is right, we will find buyers.
ARE YOU FROM MISSOURI? Try us and we will show you.
DON'T FORGET If you wish to BUY OR SELL
L,. L. MOFFETT, 423 Lomber Exchange Bldg.
WILL OBTAIN RESULTS
Main street in Llnnton has been oiled.
John P. Rockefeller assisted In the
oiling. While John D. didn't come out
to sprinkle any of the oil. he assisted
nevertheless John donated the oil.
And there are several miles of the
oiled thoroughfare all the way from
Claremont to Llnnton. This stretch In
tho road has been oiled for obvious rea
sons, and particularly because Portland
mtomoblllsts were always hlklntr out
that way and kicking up irreat clouds of
dust. So the Llnnton people decided to
oil up a bit.
An om tanK also a nrt of John I).
was brought into play. The tank was
placed on wheels. The tank was punc
tured perforated. In other words. Then
the oil John D.'s was poured in thej
tanK. norses were nucnea 10 me wneeis.
They moved. The oil ran. Main street
was soon sprinkled.
The Improvements cost Llnnton people
but $35. Several wegks ago a delega
tion of Llnnton citizens came to Port
land for the purpose of securing a reg
ular oil sprinkler. The Porllanders
wanted something like $160 for the Job.
The Llnntonites said ha. ha, ha, lust
like that, and went back to the little
village by the river.
Then they set their Ingenious brains
to work. The tank, wheels and holes,
and the nice, dustless avenue, are the
result.
JOYCE SUES FOR HIS
MONEY LOST IX HOTEL
Although the municipal court de
cided that William O. Webber, prop
rietor of the Merchants hotel could not
e held criminally responsible for the
wholesale robberies of guests that took
place In that institution, an attempt
going to De maoe ry Attorney John
1 Stevenson to hold him financially
rPFjmnslrile. Mr. Ptevenson. represent
ing I'ntrWK jnvce. ine si-year-oiu man
who was robbed of $79 In the place,
has filed suit In Justice court against
William and William a. Webber, the
proprietors of the hotel, to recover the
money said to have been stolen by the
bellboy and other employes of the
hotel. The suit is brought under the i
law making- innkeepers liable for valu
ables lost or stolen from guests of a
hoteL
rean Russell of the University of
Wisconsin has selected Mrs. Scott Ou
rand to lead the movement for secur
ing pure milk legislation.
TIII Will TVrvrnt U. of O.
fTH1 PVnatr M Tto JoersaL)
Cnlversity of Oregon. F.ugene, July
It The university expwts to gain
much in athletic through taring Its
physical dtrector. "Bill" Harvard at
the Olympic games tn England. There
be will ft t&idea of the kinds of train
ing in A.Ttfit ol;g ttronchrt b
wrid. Haywar4 la t ! dmi - faaad
Ir jir la M,e BOTtbaett,
A QUAKER MAID RYE
"Highball"
A tall, thin glass,
lump of ice,
QUAKER MAID
RYE
J ;
Firx the aeltzrf or $ 11 the glass
wim ginger ale or soda
Ah! THERE'S a drink
mellow, refreshing, delicious: a splendid tonic
and a ka appetizer .
OTTAKrm Main t is a tkr-tM ..
tl eapara ta Rigbevt awarfe a at. Lvaia. lM: Nra,
Ml roruaaa, M. It kaa aaUapt4 right na nmi
-THX WHISICIY YVTTH A HJJVTATJOf
Tot aeJe a ail flrss class hmn, mfea aad drug atoraa
S. KRSCH a CO. KANSAS CITY. Ma
A Cootraatt
The Old Way Compared VeJflOlTf T5W&j U-lSc i Sfcx
with the "Garland" War. SJjHJfjSlJ ,""" v)
The "Garland" Way
0
RELIABLE" GAS PLATES
r
Tomorrow only we will again place on aale a
lot of the celebrated "Reliable Gas Plates. Every
plate Is up to the well-known "Reliable" quality In
every respect.
One-burner gas plates,
small else; regular II 24
Bale price Sl.OS
Two-burner gas plates,
mall sie;rrgular $1 75
Pale price XI 55
Three-burner gas plates,
small s're: regulsr $2 A
Sale price 2.25
One-burner gaa plates,
large six; regular It 21
Kale price Sl.OS
Two-burner gaa plates,
large slxe; regular i$ SO
Pale prlca S3. 15
Three-burner gaa pistes,
large else; regular $4 60
Sale prlca S3.05
The above cut shows the position of the operator
ivhen using a Garland Elevated Oven and Broiler Gaa
Range.
Note that when using the oven and broiler the op
erator Is always In an upright position no stooping
or back-breaking when you use the Garland Elevated
Gas Range.
We have the largest and most complete line of gaa
ranges shown In the city of Portland.
Our gas ranges have a price range that will accom
modate any "purse.
"Garland" Independent
Water Heater
Last Longest. Use Least Fuel
Proven to be tha most efficient and strongest Wa
ter Heater Ter produced. Hss cast-iron deflecting
plate extending down the center of the spiral coll,
which becomes red hot not only helps to Increase tha
efficiency of the heater, but retains the heat within
the coil.
The heater, which combines the latest improve
ment s. will hest sufficient water for bsth Ii4n mln
utes; will beat 1 gallons of water to Hi degrees la
one hour with the consumption of 10 feet of gaa.