I
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIU 24, 1921.
TOWN TOPICS
i COMING EVENTS i
Modern- Woodmen of America, j state camp,
B-ni. May 10.
.. Military Order Loyal I-ecIon. Portland, May 10.
Ktate Muter I'luiabers association, Portland,
lliv -JO. 21.
Foresters of Auifnn, grand conrt, Portland,
May 82 and
KnieKU of Columbus, state council, Portland,
Mv 8U.
Htate- Mliral ajwociation. Jon. 1
Ken Festival, June M, and 10.
A. K. and A. 11. itrand lodge, June 14.
Kastm Star, irraod chapter, .June 1 5.
llu.H.ng Ownen and Mjiiuirn, Portland,
Jane 21 Ui 24.
i. A. II. department encampment, Pendleton,
Jue. i
Nortliwett Conference of Graduate Xursea,
June "ii to 24.
- Ktat Ijctu-r Carrier association, Eugene,
Jnne 5.
inaian e&rrvns oi iorco J fn: ic ioaat,
June ao.
Buyers' week, . Portland, Aueu.it I to 6.
i i . i . "i j a, ... . ....;!
AiWina. 'AuKUxt 2. '
Oregon Stale fair, Salem, September 26 to
Ort-.ber I.
-Itoyai Arcanum, grand council, Portland, October-
:t.
Knights 1 Temilar. (rand - commandery, I -a
fjM&f. (h-tolior IS.
1'atjfu: International I j restock ' exposition,
PorUaud, ?woeBiber 6, 2H.
Orvnuu l!ar association, 1'ortiand. lecember.
'To ..Plan for Convention Twenty-five
of Portland's leading business men and
a committee from the Oregon Christian
Kmieavor union will have la luncheon
Tuesday noon. May 3, in. the blue room
of the Hotel Portland to make definite
plans to bring the 1S23 world's Christ
tiai Kmieavor convention -to Portland.
The Ical committee, under the direction
or ti. Kveret Baker, has been making a
nation-wide publicity campaign adver
tising. Portland as a convention city.
The t?omrnittee is offering a cash prize
ot $5 to the person who submits the
beef fluKTiii to be used on publicity
matter concerning' the world's C. K.
-convention in. Portland.
Patent Case Nettled The suit in
equity brought by the Pacific Coast
Kiscuit company- aRainst the Superior
Candy company to cover certxiin alleged
patent Infringements baa been settled
out of court, according' to an announce-
, ment made Saturday by the clerk of
the federal Court. Trial,; which was
tur-posed to t.aive started .Friday, lias
been canceled. . Similarity of trado
rnarks used by the rival compatiiea on
various brands of-candies, to which one.
company claimed the exUuaive right,
was the basis of the suit.
Shepard's An to Bu Mne vortlani
Bt Helens division Leave Portland 7 :30
a. m., 10 a. ra.. 1 p. m. and 4 p. m. dally
ana mm p. in. Da.iuruayr ounuay ana
holidays. Leave St. Helena 7 :30 a. m..
10:65 a, m., 1:15 p.' m., 1:45 p. m., -5:15
p. m. and 9:45 p. m. daily, and 6 :15 p. m.
Saturday, Sunday and holidays. Buses
leave St. Charles hotel, 204 Morrison
street. Telephone Marshall 4381. Adv.
Rabbi Wis to Speak Rabbi Jonah B.
Viso will speak at- Ahavai Sholotn syna
Poruo this morning- at 10:30 o'clock on
"The Jew and the Non-Jew: Their Jle
lat ions. Vast and Present." Rabbi Wise
returned a few 'days ago from the cen
tral conference of American rabbis at
Washington, IX C. He was elected a
member jof the executive committee of
" that body, i
Khepard'g Aoto Bu lines Portland-
7:30 su m., 10 a. m.. 1 p. m. and 4:15 p.
m. daily. Leave Astoria 7 :15 a. m., 10
a. m., 1:30 p. m. and 6:15 p. m. Direct
connections at Astoria to and from Sea
side and Clatsop Beach points- Buses
1 leave St. Charles hotel, j 204 Morrison
street. Telephone Marshall 4381. Adv.
Wheelwright Speaker William D.
Wheelwright, president of the I'acific
Kxiiort Lumber company, will deliver
..an address to members of the B'nai
-Monday evening at 8:15 o'clock. He will
epeak under the auspices of. the forum,
his subject being' "Relationa With the
Orient" I
Shcpard's AntoBus Linen Portland
Mulfnomaii Kallsdivlsion Leave Port
Und 9 :30 a. m.- 10:15 a. m.. 11 a. m. and
4 :30 p. in. dally and 11 :15 p. m. Satur
day, Sunday and holidays. Leave Mult
nomah Kails 7:15 a. m., 12:60 p. m.. 4
V in. and 6 ;20 p. m. daily. . Buses leave
St. Charles hotel. zo Morrison street.
Telephone Marshall 4381. Adv.
Sentenced, VarnXeA- C. J. Lacey plead
ed Kuiity before I'residing Judge Kava
' jiaugti Saturday of larceily from a
: tHvelling and was sentenced to three
' years' in the penitentiary and paroled.
A revolver and a few I other articles
were V taken from the borne of Chris
John'on.
Favorable Impressions are created
through good teeth. In business or so
cial itffairs the condition of your teeth
I." 1IIHU1 1,1.111. iv rti iniiuvu icii
now may tie a great asset in the fu
ture. I Oecay is preventable. Pr. C.
Smith Long & J. E, U?tevenson. dentists,
SM Hush and Lane building. Adv.
Revival Services Monday Bethel Bap
tist church of Cresham, Rev. J. K.
I'.rown pastor, will besin a series of
revjval services Monday night, with
Dr.! Willis E. Pettibone of Oregon City
in charge. Special music will be pro
vided " and a feature will be made of
old-time revival songs. !
Shepsrd'e Aoto Bos tines Portland
Hood River division Leave Portland
9 :30 a. m., il a. m., 2 :45 p. m. and 4 :30
p. m. daily. Leave Hood River 9 :30 a.
m., 11 a. m., 2:20 p. m. and 4:20 p. m.
tiaily. Buses leave St. Charles hotel, 204
Morrison st- Telephone Mar. 4381. Adv.
In Order to I'se More Jloney in my
business 1 wish to borrow for a period
of three years twenty to- thirty thousand
dollars on improved city property, valued
. about J70.000. Address J-922. Journal.
Adv. - . i
We Snpply satisfactory artificial teeth
after extracting natural teeth, painlessly
by our nerve-blocking method. Killings
placed and other operations performed,
all without pain. Urs. Hartley. Klesen
dahl & Marshall, Journal bldg. Adv.
We Hand - Wash, Repair and Clean
Oriental rugs when leaving them stored
with us and insured at your own valu
ation. Cartozian Bros.j 393 Wash. st
Adv. . i
C'birnpractic Three hundred thousand
know lr. Mcilahon throuKhout Oregon,
AVashington. Idaho ; ;ancl California.
Twelfth successful year. Extended time,
31 treatments 13. Adv. -
Salem-Mlll City Stag Line Connects
O. E. No. 5 lor Mill City; connects O.
E. No. 9 (to Stayton only). Jos. Ham.
man. Salem phone 44. Adv..
Steamer America, ror St. Helens and
way landings, daily at 2 :30 p. rru, foot
of Alder street- Sundays. St. Helens only,
at 11:30 a. m. Mair- S323. Adv.
Rerman Saner Accnsed Daniel D.
' Davis, alias Herman , Sauer,- who is al
leged to have transported a 15-year-old
Portland girl to New York, wtil go on
trial Monday morning in the federal
court on a charge of white slavery. Al
though at the time of Davis arrest the
cane was declared by officials to toe
one of the most aggravated ever called
up their attention, but little time will
t-n i,tod in tryinir it. Assistant United
States Attorney Veatch. who will prose-
i e, said Saturday ; he would present
the government's case as quickly as
possible and- not force the Jury, to sit
l'stn to a long list of undesir
able (ales. i Davis has been awaiting
li.ai s.nce January. When Davis took
the girl East he is said to have prom
ised her an attractive position in South
America as a telephone operator.
Dr. K. C. ! Knsaman, artificial denture
specialist, makes plates that please par
ticular people. Journal bldg. Adv.
rortland-Salem Stage Leaves Seward
hotet Tenth and Alder, every hour from
7 a.m. to 7 p. m. Fare $1.75. Adv. ;
Cordwood, I8.i0 F. E. Bowman Co.
Adv. j -.
Safety Boxes le Dally. 284 Oak. Adv.
0. A. C. Girls Given!
Certificates for
Shorthand Work
Oregon Agricultural College, Corvallis,
April 23. Co-eds numbering 27 have been
awarded certificates for proficiency; in
shorthand, sis follows:
Lila Ashworth, : Warrenton ; Lois
Beard, Falls City; Genevieve Betts, Se
attle : Ethel Curran, Victoria, B. C. ; Wil
ma Dobell, Corvallis ; Cora Eldridge,
Pendleton Esther Erickson, Oswego;
Clara Ferguson. Marshfield ; " Mildred
Forest. Delta, Utah; Ethel Glover and
Ida Granberg, Portland : Marie H. Had
ley and. Lillian Hout, Corvallis; Grace
Ifumphreys, Salem ; Kathryn Murray.
Fails City : Marjorie Mclntyre, Sedro
Woolley, Wash. ; Nellie Murray, Falls
City ; Loretta Prest, Chinook ; Alma- Rei
man, St. Maries, Idaho ; Beulah Rog
ers, Tillamook ; Evangeline Rose, Boise,
Idaho ; Madge Sheerer, Weiser, Idaho ;
Helen Sims, La Grande ; Irva Tidd, Cor
vallis ; Ora Waid, Lohman. Mont. ; Hel
en Woodward, Long Beach, Cal., and
Clara Adams, Corvallis.
Letters From the People
Mountain Pair Gives Advice to Hikers Birth Control 'and the
Unfit The Dandelion in VerseBusy Men and
Idle Sons Advice to Farmers.:
Student Control
In University High
School Is Success
University of Oregon, Eugene, April
23.- Student control of affairs is work
ing successfully. In the state of Oregon's
model prep school, the university high
school, according to Professor Harl R.
Douglass, supervisor of the campus high.
Classes are managed by the students
and assemblies are worked up according
to student ideas. .
The idea of socializing the recitation
is being tried to make this part of the
c'.ass work more of a social situation
and less a part of ordinary schoolroom
routine.
Paving Is Begun on
Milton-Weston Road
Milton. ' Or., April 23. The Wrarren
Construction company is laying bitu
lithlc pavement on the uncompleted
road between Milton and Weston, and
a detour of about five miles 'near Wes
ton Is in use. The state highway be
tween Pendleton- and Walla Walla will
be ready; for use and the highway com
pleted in about 10 days.
.THE CASCADES IN SUMMER
A Mountain.. Kan Tells How Cheap and
Safe Hiking Is.
Portland. April 19. To the Editor of
The Journal I object to the impression
of inaccessibility left in the minds of
our mountain lovers as to that portion
of the Cascades lying between Mount
Hood and Mount Jefferson. There is
absolutely nothing to it.- There is no
need for 11. G. Hayes, mountain guide,
and a big pack train to take Mary Rob
erts Rinehart and Dr. S. b. ilinehart
over this part of this range of moun
tains. The reason "this trip has never
been taken by pack train before," as
Hayes is quoted as saying,' is that there
is no need for a. pack train nor even a
pack horse nor gruide. : There is no
more danger of going astray or getting
lost or of failing to see all the match
less beauties of this trip than there
is need to have the same equipment to
see the Columbia highway. Three days'
rations, a pair of blankets and simple
camp kit that anyone fit to enjoy the
mountains is . amply able to carry in a
pack, 'and a government map, is all that
is required, and the same applies to all
the rest of the trip clear down to Crater
Lake. 1 have tramped all of it; except
a little piece below Lake Waldo, and I
know. Supplies can e had at Breiten-
bush or Detroit, and at Belknap's or
McKenzie Bridge, from Hayes' ; own
store. There is no need for a big supply
at the start. I have tried packing, and
for this trail it is a nuisance, if one
goes out to really enjoy the mountains.
We have a girl friend who has gone
over ;: the northern end of this trail to
Detroit alone, and she is far from husky
at that. She carried ail she needed and
had a great ? trip. s
Right at our doors we have a real
mountain trip that anyone can take
after July 15. This summer a thousand
of, our people should take this little
tnree-day hike and end with a hot bath
in the hot springs at Breitenbush. ' Then
it they wish they may go by Lakes Pa
melia, Marion and Duffy, the Big
Meadows, Fish lake and Clear lake to
Belknap's. A fresh supply can be had
of B. F. Russell at Detroit, another hot
bath at Belknap's and auto Btage to
Eugene, and thence home.
Thirty dollars will cover the entire
expense of a most glorious two weeks
in real mountains, made absolutely safe
by fine government trails and the gov
ernment hunters. O. G. Hughson.
ELIMINATE THE UNFIT
Portland, April 14. To the Editor of
The Journal Birth control is today the
greatest question of the age, certainly
the greatest question to be solved by our
country the birth control of the degen
erates. Men of thought, men of action, stop
and consider. You must realize that the
life of our nation depends upon your
children and the children of those like
you. Men and women must be brought
to the realization of this great issue.
You have but to " look around you
to realize that the great majority of
the children born are coming from
the unfit the degenerates. The con
tamination in their blood will go on
aind on for "generations; the Bible
says. "Yea, unto the third and fourth
generation.", Like the scrub animals,
they" are prolific, and have great ten
acity of life. But the .farmers have laws
to protect their thoroughbreds from be
ing contaminated by scrubs. They can
have the owner arrested and kill his
scrubs. '
I believe in birth control. A child
well born will be an asset of great worth
to his country the other, a curse. When
the call to arms came, your sons and
the sjms of other normal men rushed
to its call and passed the test ; the sub
normal failed. The "boobs," as the sol
diers idubbed them, were allowed to go
home, and propagate their kind. The un
fit snould not be allowed to propagate.
Sterilization is a simple and benign rem
edy. It protects humanity from the
unfit, and the unfit from themselves. It
will protect the unborn children, upon
whom we must depend for the life of
our country. I said before that big
crowd of physicians in Portland the
other evening, that I believed we would
have a federal law in 10 years requiring
a health and mental test for every
adult. The dean of the medical college
said to me, "Doctor, I will put it five
years." May God grant his prophecy
will come true. I ask that you help
make Oregon the first state in the
Union to try to protect the unborn child
from a diseased body and mind.
Dr Owens-Adair.
IN DANDELION TIME
A Versifier Presents His Own Tribute
With That of a Master.
Portland, April 11. To the Editor of
The Journal As the time is now here
for the annual onslaught upon the hum
ble dandelion, permit .me to offer the
two following poems In its defense.
of the existence of the other or any
other. I find, however, there are about
a dozen, of which It seems o me
Lowell's is the best. I invite comparison
not through any egotisticpresumption,
but in behalf of the theme of both poems
as being a curious instance of the reality
of sensuous ideology, in that the same
object has the power to suggest to two
such diverse observers ideas and Images
so similar. My own poem follows:
The be-it of the eifts of the great ood God
Are those most eerierously aupplied.
"H! lorea the common people best
And so they ererywhere abide."
And what they lore in normal state.
They find in their own door yard.
Shut in, not ont, by Kdcn' (rate.
While armored angela - guard.
The bees abuzz in the apple trees.
The honey in the comb.
The lily'i nonl upon the breeze,
Carets the lowly home.
The infant on the velTet award.
With gleeful greed it gathers in
The yellow coin of the cottage yard,
Full current they, in Bab land.
In Babyland! In Fairyland!
I'pon the aod the gold 1 spread. .
In Happyland! In Homeland!
The green, green grass beneath the feet.
The blue sky overhead.
The ' deep rich coins - of the dandelion,
S6wn broadcast on the sod.
The gold way down in the dank, deep mine.
Hid away by the selfsame Uod.
The dirty coins of the market place.
With their stamp and bae alloy,
May be the choice of a slavish race,
lnfettered man for childhood's, joy.
But give me the richee without aloy.
The finest gold on earth,
I'll join with the child in its simple joy,
And beg a share of its mirth.
The sky and the grass and the winds between;
The chiid and the golden bloom
Where are the riches can these surpass,
r like them atirmouot the gloom t
And this is Lowell's "To the Dande
lion" :
"Pear common flower that grow'st beside the
way,
Princing the dusty road , with harmless gold.
First pledge of blithesome May,
Which children pluck, and. -full of pride, uphold.
Hiah-hearted buccaneer, o'erioyed that they
I An Kldorado in the grass have found.
tTLl.V . - IV. wlK . mHIi, aanU mnii .
IIUKB UV1 WIV iivh ' t mmmrrw "-.-
May aoatch in wealtlu thoa art mors mom deaf
TaaafsU the prowler summer blooms may be.
GoM sttch ma thine ne'er drew the Spanish prow
Tbroagh, the primeval hash of Indian seas.
Nor wrinkled the teen brow
Of age, to rob the lover's heart of ease;
"IU toe spring s largess, wmra ne Ktmn ovw
To rich and poor alike, with lavish band.
Though moat Hearts never understand
To take it at Ood'a value, bat pass by
The offered wealth with unrewarded eye. .
"Thoa art my tropics mod mine Italy :
To look at thee un locks a warmer clime;.
The eyes thou giveat me
Are in my heart, and heed not space or time:
Not in mid-June the golden cuirassea Dee
Feels s more summer-like warm ravishment .
In the white Uly'a breezy tent.
Hi fragrant Syberis, than I, when first i
From the dark green thy yellow circles burst.
My childhood's earliest thoughts ere linked
with thee: i
The tight of thee calls beck the robin's song.
who from the dark old tree
Beside the door, ssnz dearly all day lone
And 1. secure in cnildisn piety,
fastened aa if I heard an angel sine
With newt from Heaven, which he con Id bring
Fresh every day to my untainted ears
When birds and flowers and I were happy peers.
"How like. prodigal doth nature seem.
UVn thnn for all the enld. so eammnn art!
Thpu teachest me to deem i
More "aacredly of every human heart,
Since each reflects in Joy its scanty clean
Of Heaven, and could some wondrous secret show.
tna we out pay tne love we owe.
And with a child's nndoubting wisdom look i
On all these living pages of God's book. i
J. B. Ziegler. j
airy of say 95000, a vice president at a
salary of $3000, a secretary and treas
urer with salaries of $3000. and a
stenographer, salary $1800, and , each di
rector salaried at $2000 ; then g-o to work
and have all your work done as cheaply
as you can have it done, and at the end
of the fiscal year have your secretary
make out a correct statement of income
and expenditures. After you have -sold
all you raised on your respective farms.
then call a meeting of the public service
commission and you will have no trouble
to convince it that you are not retting
6 per cent on your capital invested, and
It will Immediately issue' an order to
raise the price r the product you are
raisingy or it will issue aft order on
the state) to pay the deficiency. Tou
are assisting; in paying the. public serv
ice commissioners., fair- .and reasonable
salaries for their work. Why not have
them work for your interest? I trust
that' this suggestion will serve to sim
plify and assist in eliminating the great
losses in reconstruction. If the public
service commission will accomplish
fully what I have suggested I will guar
antee that the recall petition will fail.
. A Friend of the Public
0
rihti
500 Business Cards
500 Linen Cards
500 'Statements'. .
500 Bill Heads
.$1.25
-S2.50
$2.50
.$2.50
LIBERTY PRINTERY
1655 Fourth Street
Phone Main 5263 i
Sale of
Shirts
$1.65
Beacon Shirts that former
ly sold at $4.00. The stripe
patterns are mighty attrac
tive and in a big color
range. The stripes woven,
not printed; an excellent
quality of madras. Special
$1.65.
Hart Schaffner & Marx
Spring Suits
$35 $40 $45
$50 $60
All men like to look stylish and
you will find the best styles
portrayed in these fine suits
made by Hart Schaffner &
Marx, the right style for every
taste and age.
Maybe you are short or tall,
stout or slim there's a model
here for every build made to
fit your particular figure.
The best fabrics and the finest
tailoring go into these suits.
You can't get more style or
quality anywhere.
Satisfaction
or money back
Men's Spring
Hats
$5 $6 $7 $8 $10
Sale of
Union jSuits
$1.15
Men who have been wear
ing .heavy underwear all
winter will be glad to get
into some of these medium
weight "Augusta" U n io n
Suits. Made in three styles.
Formerly priced at $2.50.
Special $1.15.
am?l Rosenblatt & Co.
Fifth at Alder
WHO PAYS?
Answer Framed by One Who Moralizes
on the Busy Man's Idle Son. -
Portland,- April 21. To the Kditor Of
The Journal When reading of the sui
tide of the son of a very wealthy man, a
man grown rich buying; and selling the
commodities that go to make flesh and
bone and ultimately the mentality of
your child and mine, we begin to ask.
Who pays? Without knowing the inside
story we can sum up the life of this
rich man's son. He was denied the sturdy
growth" that comes with sacrifice and
hardship and when too great u pressure
came he could do no else than succumb.
Perhaps the father, so absorbed in the
fascinating game of making money for
money's sake, did not lend himself to
his boy nor "stand by" when moral
habits were being1 formed. The father's
game may have necessitated a keener
watchfulness over our own moves and
caused us some anxiety as to the result,
but if we emerged with strengthened
moral fibre and a greater win to carry
on, we would not exchange places with
the parent who now views the wreck of
a human life. 1 !
And this time, contrary to the rule of
most games, the world-adjudged winner
pays. Mary Hogan.
ADVICE TO FARMERS !
A Sarcastic Suggestion for Getting
Profit Out of Farming. !
Beaverton. April 15. To the Editor of
The Journal It is not very often I try
to- make use of your valuable columns,
but now I feel it my duty to' make a
few suggestions to the farmers who are
now struggling under great difficulties
on account' of the great reconstruction
of the world. My suggestion is as fol
lows : Let five or more formers organ
ize, with a board of five or more; ap
ply to the state to- be organized under
the laws of the state ; adopt a name ;
incorporate ; elect a president, at a sal-
SHIItTS TO ORDER j !
t
Jacobs Shirt Co.
Raleigh Bldg., 27 , Washington St.
ESTABLISHED SINCE "HISCK
WAS A PUP" i
.... 1888 j
CLOSING OUT
At Great j
Reductions
Our Entire Stock of Popular
SHELBURNE
G or ham Plated Flatware i
This beautiful pattern has often been
called Gorham's "Masterpiece-" and- its
universal: popularity bears out that
statement.
Those who ish to complete sets, as well
as those wishing to start a set of. this
famous Gorham plate will welcome this
bona fide clearance aa ja golden oppor
tunity. - ..
These. Prices Tell Why
8 Tea Spoons, were $4.60, Q OC
nOW ....W'Wie.w
S Dessert ' Spoons, were $7.60,
now ........ .
S Table Spoons, were $.00,.
.now
6 Soup Spoons, were $8.60,
now
6 Salad Forks, were
now .............. : ............ .,
6 Butter Spreaders, ' were $6. .
now i
6 Table Knives (La Tema t
Blades) were $13.60. now..-...-..
6 Dessert Khlves (La Tema
Blades) were .412.50. now..,.,'.;
6 Table Forks, were $9.25, -
now
6 Dessert Forks, Were $7.75,
now
6 Bouillon Spoons, were- $6.50, CC nr
f (j . a 6OysteV "Forks". ' were 4-&b " jq OC
now i. ......... ww.
6 Coffee Spoons, were $4.00, . 4 J QQ
3-Piece" Carving SetTiiarge), was' ill Cfl
$15 00. now ..... ...i.... .sflhOU
3-Plece. Steak Set, was $12.00, Q QQ
- Caution
While these prices , hold for one .week'
we recommend that you come "early,
NOTICE TO DEALERS
We will supply dealers '-at wholesale
prices while the stock lasts.
Mail Orders Promptly Filled
Jaeger Bros.
Portland's Only HALLMARK Jewelers
131-133 Sixth Street, Oregonian Building
$4.75
....$6.50
...$6.25
...:$5.50
..,.$3.75
$9.50
$8.50
$6.50
$5.75
Shoe Repairing
Ladies' half soles. . . .$1.10
Men's half soles.'. . .$1.50
fl-HOCR SERVICE
vTE FICI CF AD DELIVER
VERIBEST
WET WASH
E ART 7s4 or EAST
$2.00 -"K.e. .
fw
i r- irrr-
WINKST IN
THI NORTHWEST
waewavaiBaawaveBwaewweaWeeewwaBKsewwaweM
RATES S1S0 A DAY AMD UP
Our Urowa Uuaaaa Iteet All Traiaa .
WE IN'TITE XOO TO EAT IT TIT
SEWaARD HOTEL
tbs "Horma or cheek"
end we Oelieve out .
CLUB BREAKFASTS and em
LUNCHEONS. 40e, 0e. ami ear
DINNERS, eOe, 7 So, S1.00, and cot
euNOAT TABLE D'HOTE DINNER,
1.00, are uneejuaJeel.
We have finished mt new dlnlns rooaa.
which almost doubles oar former capacity,
and we are now able to take aaoKUoni
care of small banqarta and parties.
W. O. CULEBRTEON, Propria tor.
50
burs a brand
new Corona
Dortable type
writer. Other makes
at attractive prioas.
bee us before you buy.
E. W. PEASE OOV
110 TH STREET.
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IT'S 1 MADE IN
OREGON
Your
vaes imm etMTtaaav
Desk
Made in Oregon
to the smallest
detail
You cant forget
the Original
name
All Styles
Oak or Mahogany
The Oregon Table Company of Portland have granted Kilham Sta
tionery & Printing Company, exclusive representation of their com
plete line of WEST-MADE Desks arid Office Furniture.
They're Better Designed and Built .
They Uphold Oregon Leadership in One More Industry
15 Oregon Factories make WEST-MADE Parts
YOU SAVE ALL THE FREIGHT
THEY COST YOU LESS
"EVERYTHING
FOR THE
OFFICE"
PRINTING
ENGRA VING
BOOKBINDING
Mar. 6080.
FIFTH and Oak Sts., Portland", Or.
Aut. 565-48
f '