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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1913)
4 HUERTA DENIES HE INTENDS TO RESIGN Rumor of Intention to Abdi cate or Flee Capital De clared False. REBELS ALWAYS HIS FOES "I Have Money fop My Require ments, He Adds, Saying It Is His Secret Ruler Works ' Strenuously at Post. MEXICO CITY. Oct. 18. Provisional President Huerta has not resigned, nor has he fled the capital. When seen at the national palace at 6 o'clock today he said he had no Intention of doing cither. ; " "When I resign," General Huerta said, "it will be to seek a resting place six feet in the soil.. When I flee the capital it will be to shoulder a rifle and to take my place In the ranks to fight the rebels." This was President Huerta's answer to nuerles as to whether there was any foundation for the reports which have hwn freel-v circulated in the capital andJoujid. their way to . the ..United States. - Reslirnatioa Not Intended. it lo reported that I have' fled,' he said. "You can see tor yourself I am here at my post.. To say that I hare resigned or intend to resign- is a falsehood. I have no intention oi re- ui p-n f nr. "Should the elefctions, which will be held as I have promised, lnaicate an other for the Presidency, I shall step aside. Until that time you will find me here complying with my promises to the nation, which are to re-establish peace within the law If possible but to rA-esia.blish neace." PrniHMt Huerta Interspersed his talk with anecdotes Illustrative of his points. - Money rleary, Says Chief. "Another thing," the President said "I have monev for my requirements Don't think that I haven't Where did I get It? My secret." tapping his chest with a satisfied smile, "but I have It. General Huerta is working from 15 to 18 hours daily. Bleeping at odd times when fatigue overtakes him. He adopts various ruses to" escape from the scores striving to reach him with personal affairs. He slips out of unused en trances and takes round-about routes to hide his whereabouts. Colonel Car los Aguita, bis son-in-law, who is with him almost continuously, sougnt mm in a half dozan Haunts before finding: him in the palace. . Church today adopted a resolution in troduced by Charles M. Clement, a lay delegate from the diocese pr iarris burg. Pa.,' providing for the establish ment of a publicity bureau for the Episcopal Church. The resolution was sent to the house of bishops for ap proval. At an executive session of the house of bishops two prelates reconsidered their resignations. Bishop Joseph Mar shall Francis, of the diocese of Indian apolis, agreed to continue at his post on learning that the people of his dio cese had offered him a residence in the outskirts of the city. He had asked to be relieved because of the health of his family. Bishop Edward William Os born, of the diocese of Springfield, 111., decided to remain at the request of the episcopate, which promised to lighten the burden of his duties. He had de sired to "resign because of age and in firmlty. The house of deputies made certain that there would be no change in the method of judging heresy trials by re fusing to establish a final court of ap peals. " Under the present system each dio cese adjudicates Its own' heresy trials and their decisions are subject to ap peal to courts of review. The proposal defeated today was to estaDiisii a su preme court, consisting of the house of bishops. The principal objection to the report came from deputies who declared that laymen should . be represented in the proposed tribunal. PATHETIC PLEAS MADE REMEDIAL LOAN ASSOCIATION ANXIOUS TO OPERATE, IS WASHIXGTtET IS DISAPPOINTED Administration Had Hoped lor Dic tator's Elimination. WASHINGTON. Oct. 18. Throughout the day officials heard various reports and rumors that Provisional President Huerta of Mexico had resigned, or in tended to do so; that he had secretly left the-capital and that General Blan- auot would succeed him. The fatate Department received so many Inquiries that It cabled unarge j snaugnnessy for information. The receipt of the statement from Mexico City that Huerta did not intend to resign somewhat clarified the situa tion, though Administration officials hoped that the elimination of Huerta would eventually 'materialize. Among Constitutionalists here the report was construed as meaning mere ly that Huerta had taken occasion to point out that he alone was able to deal with the critical state of affairs. They believe he may even use that argument as a basis for becoming a candidate next week in the election of October 26. Dispatches from Charge O'Shaugh nessy today were on routine subjects. State Department advices from else where reported the Governor of the state of Colima had resigned and that the state congress had designated in his place a military governor. General Juan A. Hernandez. Comparatively few Americans are , now left in Torreon,Asarca and Ve Iardena, according to 'information re ceived from Monterey, and the diffi culty of getting foreigners out of dan-, per in places where they are cut off from communication appears to have passed. It probably will be several days before rail or telegraphic con nection between Monterey and Laredo Is resumed. VALE WHIRLPOOL OF FIRE i ,i Santa Clara Valley Forests With Scores of Ilomes ATe Charred. SAX JOSE. CaL. Oct 18. Zayente Canyon, connecting the Santa Clara Valley, California's garden spot of the south, is a whirlpool of' flame tonight, with scores of mountain homes of wealthy city people reduced to charred ruins. The Southern Pacific Railroad's right of way for miles through th? canyon Is wrapped in fire. The tele graph poles burned long ago and com munication with the southern part of tha state along this route Is cut off. All Southern Paciflo trains are being re-routed from here or else helS up. On tralnload of men from San Fran cisco passed through here today en route to relieve fire fighters who are exhausted by nearly a week's frightful exertion, and another trainload from this point followed them. The loss In standing timber Is said to be large and great fear exists that the fire may leap out of the canyon. RODMAN LAW IS INJURED Aviator Diving From Fast-Going; Fly ing Boat Misjudges Speed. . NEW YORK, Oct. 18. Rodman Law, who" frequently has been hurt when performing unique feats of aviation, was injured today when he dove from a flying boat Into Staten Island waters. He was taken to a hospital with a strained back, after a head foremost plunge from the air machine while It was traveling 70 miles an hour. Law was in th'e flying boat with Wil liam Thaw, of Pittsburg, and Stephen McGordon. There were seats for two In the machine, but a place was rigged up for Law on one of the wings, and from this Law made his dive from a height of 60 feet. He miscalculated the speed of the flying boat and struck the water on his back. Men In rowboats rescued him. Proposal to Reduce . Operating Fund Voted Down and Day" Cam paign Raises Total $3000. SUBSCRIPTIONS TO REMEDIAL LOAN FUND RECKIVK1 YESTERDAY. Mn. Caroline A. Kamm f 1.000 Friend - 1.000 Clementine F. Lewis 500 Henry. Welnhard Brewery.... BOO J H. Voght ' 100 H. A. Well 10O David S. Stearn J0O H. H. Newball 100 John R. Westvelt. JO H. N. Wallace - go A. E. Danley ................ Jj E. H. Thornton.. ...... .., 10 tu P. Hewitt...,. ' 10 Cheater- Haeue 10 R. J. Marsh 10 C. M. Idleman. JO Mrs. Daley P. McConnell 10 W. C. Herrin 10 M. D. Lewis 1 G. E. Welter 10 Rev. Jonah B. Wise 10 Total' 8,630 Previously announced 18,445 , Grand' total $22,073 BRITAIN OFFERS TO STAY NAVAL PLANS Churchill in Name of Govern ment Calls on Germany to Take Similar Action. - GOOD FAITH IS ASSAILED "Serious Indiscretion of Human En ergles'' Topic of Address at " Manchester Proposition. Open for Two Years. "If men of means would pass one day in this loan office the money needed to finance the Portland Remedial L.oan Association would have been raised in less than a week." said Manager Ham blen vesterdav. as he related the stories of applicants for loans. A voune widow, with a eaby a year and a half old, and a brother 18 years of age, whom she helps to support, has been told by her physician that she has cancer of the stomach and must go to a hospital at once for an opera tion or her life may ne a matter oi few weeks. 6he is regularly employed by a big corporation, with offices in Portland, and has been given leave of absence for two months by her com pany and the assurance of her position again upon her recovery. She holds a life Insurance policy of 1500 which she offers as security, and can also get good Indorsement on her note. She wants a loan of $50 for six months. She says this is the first time in her life she has been obliged to approach a loan company. She has tried to get the loan at several loan companies of the city and the cheap est rate offered her is 12 per cent a month, which, by the peculiar system emoloyed. will amount to 86 per cent a month. Manager Hamblen says. The young brother, who has tem porarily been out of employment, will start on a new job Monday, but the sis ter says about $50 will be needed to tide him over and to provide some things for her while In the hospital. She Is not seeking charity, but a straight business loan on good security, but security that is not negotiable at a bank. The loan association is not pre pared yet to take care of loans and a private loan Is sought for the young woman. She can be reached, through Manager Hamblen, 412 Commercial block, telephone A 3004. Because of the urgency of sucn cases as this, which are reported daily, those promoting1 the .campaign for funds to establish the loan association took under advisement a plan for reducing the capital stock that an office might be opened at once for business. To this end an effort was made to close the campaign last night, but after a con ference it was decided to continue so- . liciting subscriptions for stock until 150,000, half the amount for which the company' has been Incorporated, shall have been raised. More than 1300O was raised yesterday and other promises of substantial sub scriptions have been received. With a capital stock of $50,000 with which to begin business and a board of directors from leading business men of the city to organize the association on a sound financial plan, assurance is given that the enterprise will prove not only a boon to those needing short-time loans, but an investment for stockholders, Subscriptions are received by Wilfrid Jones, Merchants National Bank; Robert S. Howard, Ladd & Tllton Bank; V. R. Manning, Associated Charities ;- James Hamblen, 412 Commercial block. LONDON,' Oct 18. The Invitation of Germany to indulge in a "naval noli day," was repeated today by Winston Spencer Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty, who. in the name of the British e-o vein men t. made a specific of fer to delay the fulnllment or treai Britain's naval construction programme next year if Germany would consent to do the same. The First Lord was addressing great Liberal meeting at Manchester when, in the middle of lamentations over the "serious misdirection or nu man. energies" involved in the enormou expenditure of armaments, he remarked that the only way of effecting retrencn ment was along the lines or interna tional agreement. 'The proposal I put forward in the name of the British government for naval holiday is quite simple," he added. "Next year, apart from the Canadian ships, or their equivalent, and apart from anything that may be re quired "by any development In the Med iterranean. we shall lay down lour erreat shiDS to Germany's two. Now, we say to Germany: 'If you will post pone beginning to build your two ships for 12 months, we will put on in sdso lute good faith the building of our four ships for exactly the same period. 'If Great Britain and Germany take the lead, all the other great countries will follow suit, and they will all be just as great and as sound as if they had built the ships at present projected, If Austria and Italy do not build, the obligation would be removed from France and Great Britain, and the fact that the triple alliance (Germany, Aus tria and Italy), was building no ships would make the proposal possible with out the slightest danger of risK. ''Isn't it likely that so great and memorable event would produce an er feet on the naval construction of the United States and Japan? Scores of millions of money would be rescued for the progress of mankind. "That is the proposal I make for the year 1814, or If that year is thought to be too near, for ibid." Mr. Churchill declared himself lm oervious to the objection which would be raised by armament firms here and In other countries. "They must be our servants and not our masters, he said. He warned his hearers that apart from such an agreement, "the naval expenditure of next year will be sub stantlally greater than that of this year." CHARLES HAAS WOUNDS WIFE AND WILLIAM HEIL, FLEES. PRESS BUREAU FRAMED Episcopal Churcli Will Have Pub licity Department. NEW YORK, Oct. 18. The house of deputies at the Protestant Episcopal WOODMEN WILL PARADE Combined: Portland Camps Pledge Aid to Interstate Bridge Move. Promising enthusiastic support of the Interstate bridge bond issue at the No vember elections, the combined Port land camps of the Woodmen of the World marched into the hall of the Multnomah Club Friday night to at tend the bridge meeting. They pledged themselves to take part In the big bridge parade November 1, and assured the committee that they would boost for the measure whenever It was possible.' - - - Addresses were made by Frank Branch Riley, chairman of the inter state bridge committee; Whitney L. Boise, Judge Morrow, City Auditor Bar bur, and others. Attempted Killing; Takes Flaee Adopted Home of Woman Three Children Sea Tragedy. Charles Haas, a meatcutter, shot his wife, Mrs. Christina Haas, through the side as she sat at the dinner table in the home of William Hell, 490 East Emerson street, last night. Haas then turned his revolver on Hell, who Is an old friend of tie Haas family, and shot him through the left side. Haas fled through the back door of the house and made bis escape. Two daughters of Mrs. Haas and the young son of Mr. Hell saw the shoot ing. Haas entered the Hell dining room through the kitchen and com manded Mrs. Haas to throw up her hands. Before the woman had time to obey he fired. As Mrs. Haas fell, Hell rose from the table and received the second bullet through his side as Haas fled from the back door into the yard. Mrs. Haas separated rrom ner nus- band a week ago and went to the home of. Mr. Hell. She took her two children with her. and took up the cars of the Hell household. Haas was employed by the Jones Meat Company and was under Hell, who is foreman of the concern. Two years ago Haas suffered a paralytic stroke and aocordlng to Mrs. Haas has acted queer ever since. She attributes the attack to jealousy. Haas was arrested in Portland three years ago on a warrant from Colorado, oharglng him with laroeny. Haas was taken to Denver, where he was con victed and served a sentence In the Col. orado state prison. He was released about eight months .ago and came to Portland. VALET IS BIRTHDAY GIFT "Lucky" Baldwin's Daughter Gives Present to 80-Year-Old Servant. LOS ANGELES, Oct 18. A birthday present of a valet was made today by Mrs. Anita Baldwin McClaughrey, daughter of the late E. J. ("Lucky") Baldwin, to her father's 80-year-old servant Silas Colverfc For tfl years Colvert was an em ploye of the famous turfman and to day, when he reached four-score years, he gladly accepted the life use of a valet Edlefsen's yards, at Alb ma and East First and Salmon, stocked lately, 20, 000 fuel ties and several thousand tons coal; bunker price, $4.60 to $9.25. Adv. THAW GROWS IMPATIENT Supplementary Brief Raises Ques tion of Good Faith. - CONCORD, N. H., Oct 18. In a sup plementary brief on behalf of Harry K. Thaw, filed today by his counsel with Governor Felker. it is declared that Thaw has been detained under arrest nearly six weeks on a defective requisition petition supported by the allegation of an Indictment which never existed, and dusing all that time no Indictment has been obtained. The brief question Is asked whether the requisition for Thaw's extradition is made in good faith. FARMER DIESJDF LOCKJAW Fatal Malady Develops From. Out and Bruise on Hand. SIOUX FALLS, S. D.. Oct. 15. Lock jaw developing from his hand being cut and bruised in an elevator con veyor caused the death of John We naas, a farmer living in the northern part of Minnehaha County. It is said he also cut himself on the leg with a rusty scythe and did not treat the wound. VICE POLICY REVERSED Churchman Attacks Demand, Rather Than Supply. ' NEW YORK, Oct 18. ''Segregation doea not segregate. Regulation does not regulate, but rather gives a false security. Absolute annihilation is the ideal." Rev. W. T. Sumner, dean of the Cathedral of' St Peter and Paul, of Chicago, made this declaration tonight about commercialized vice in an ad dress at a social service mass meeting. No commercial organizations or city clubs or social settlements are to lead the movement to suppress vice, but the church must undertake the work, he said. 'Too long we have approached this business from the supply side," he aid. "It is time to discuss it from the de mand side, because so long as there is a demand there is going to be a form of supply. The change is not coming with vice commissions; it is not com ing with legislation; it is not coming with prosecution; it is coming only with the change in the hearts of men." Dr. Sumner said his cathedral was situated in the "most vicious poverty stricken and immoral district" in Chi cago. "Turn away from that district for a moment" he said, "and I'll take you to the part of Chicago where live people of wealth and assumably of culture and refinement; people who, because of their education and culture, should set the standard of conduct for the community and what do I see? "I find in their drawing-rooms the same licentious, immoral, fantastically named dances that I have just left in the immoral resorts of my district dances which have been borrowed from an Immoral source and which are in themselves immoral. The police check these dances in the dancehalls of the poor. What but a social regeneration can check them in the halls of the rich?" GJUBEIN Ifi RAGE EX-JUDGE WOULD RETURN CIRCUIT BENCH. TO Candidacy for Republican Nomination in Primaries Next May Is Announced, C. IT. Gantenbeln, ex-Circuit Judge, yesterday announced his candidacy at the primary election next May for th Republican nomination for judge of Department No. 6 of the Circuit Court of Multnomah County. This Is th department now presided over by Judgi Cleeton, who has been mentioned as a candidate for the Supreme Bench. Judge Gantenbeln has lived In Port land since 1874. He began the prao tice of law here in 1892, and followed It until 1906, when be went on th Circuit Bench as Judge of Department No. 4. He served there until January of 1913, not being a candidate for re election. At present he is not practicing law, all his time being devoted to the law school of the University of Oregon In Portland, of which he has been dean for- ten years. In the Spanish-American War and the Philippine Insurrection, Judge Gan tenbein served as senior Major in the Second Oregon regiment As suoh, he was In command of the first battalion of the American army to enter the walled City of Manila. After the war he was appointed Adjutant-General of the Oregon National Guard by Gover nor Geer, and served ten months In the same capacity under Governor Chamberlain. As a member of the bench. Judire uantenbein had the reputation of be ing prompt in the dispatch of business. He also had an excellent record on ap peals to the Supreme Court I was judge of Department No. of the Circuit Court for this county for six years and a half, said Judge Gan tenbeln, " and would refer anyone who Is Interested in my judlolal record to the judges who served at the same time with me; to the jurors, litigants, attorneys and witnesses who appeared In my department" YEGG MEN'S HAUL IS $250 Safe of D. Sondheim. Concealed From View, Is "Cracked." Under the glare of hlirhDower are lights on two all-night grocery and fruit stores across the street, yeggmen early yesterday entered the store of D. Sondheim, formerly Hamburger's, at 145 Second street, blew an old-fash loned safe and escaped with about $250 tn cash. The men entered the hallway to the Hotel uomaine, overhead, and passed out a back window which leads to an alley behind the store, climbing down uy a ladder. They wrapped clothes and bedding about the safe, after preparing it for nitroglycerine, and blew off the outside door, escaping without awaken Ing the persons resident In the hotel above. Following the report of the safeblow- ing. Chief Clark yesterday morning Is sued a warning to store owners. In the Sondheim store the safe Is In the rear, and out of the view of the police man on the beat, which is handicapped also by the fact that the entire window space of the store was covered by signs of the sale which was going on there. Safes which have been lighted, and in view from the street, in the East Side manufacturing district, have been un touched for years, though they are near the railroad yards and out of the war or mgnt trarrio. Columbia Defeats Paciflo College. NEWBERG. Or.. Oct 18. Columbia University of Portland defeated the Paciflo College eleven here today, 17 to 0. The fast Columbia backs took advantage of fumbles by the ooile- glans and two touchdowns resulted Columbia s other score came lrora bucking the ball to within striking distance, wnere a place kick was lifted over tne goat. A hard stubborn Cold that banes on. is broken up by Humphrey's " Seven ty-seven. " Cold houses, cold . offices, cold churches or places of amusement, be fore the artificial heat is turned on, are the most prolific causes of catch ing cold. A vial of "Seventy-seven" in' the pocket is the nearest thing to a self heater, because a dose taken at the first chill or shiver will either prevent or break up the Cold at once. If you wait until your bones begin to ache; till you begin to cough and sneeze, it may take longer- "Seventy-seven" is a small vial of pleasant pellets, fits the vest pocket, 25 cts. and $1.00. All Drug Stores or mailed. Humphreys' Homeo. Medicine Co., 156 William Atreet, New Torn, Advertisement OUR STOVE DEPARTMENT REZNOR GAS HEATERS AND PERFECTION OIL HEATERS ARE CURES FOR. COLD ROOMS HAS BEEN MOVED TO LARGER AND MORE COMMODIOUS QUARTERS ON THE SECOND FLOOR, WHERE WE ARE SHOWING THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE STOCK OF BRIDGE, BEACH & CO.'S HEATING STOVES AND RANGES EVER SHOWN ON THE PACIFIC COAST. ALL THE OLD FAVORITES AURORAS, I0NES, WOOD SUPERIORS AND WANDAS ARE INCLUDED IN THE EXHIBIT. THE STOVE BUYER IS ASSURED IN BUYING BRIDGE-BEACH QUALITY OF GETTING FULL VALUE FOR HIS MONEY. A CAREFUL INSPECTION OF THE STOCK IS EXTENDED TO THOSE DESIRING TO BUY QUALITY STOVES AT PRICES THAT ARE RIGHT. ''PITTSBURG'' AND BUNGALOW AUTOMATIC GAS WATER HEATERS ARE INSTANTANE OUS IN ACTION AND GIVE HOT WATER "QUICK AS A WINK." ANDIRONS, FERE SCREENS, FERE SETS, SPARK GUARDS, BASKET GRATES. HONE YM AN HARDWARE COMPANY FOURTH AT ALDER TRAINMEN ARE RATED SUBURBAN AND CITT SERVICE DE CLARED DISTINCT. Board of Arbitration la California De cides Different Pay Scale Should Prevail.- That there Is a difference between the duties of the crew of a streetcar and the crew of an electric suburban car declared the arbitration board sum moned under the provisions of the re cently enacted Newlands act to decide the controversy between the Southern Paciflo Company and some of its em ployes operating trains out of Oakland, Cal., in a copy of its findings filed in the United States District Court yesterday. This difference between the occupa tions of the men, the board says, justi fies the company in granting them dif ferent schedules of wages. The issue between the company and its employes was one of privilege. The same conditions that apply in Oakland also govern the situation in Portland, where the Southern Pacific Company is about to electrify some of its steam roads and operate them through the Portland, Eugene & Eastern, a subsidiary- The question originally submitted to the board of arbitration, which con sisted of M. E. Montgomery, vice-presi dent of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers; W. R. Scott, general man ager of the Southern Pacific, and Judge John F. Davles, appointed by the Fed eral Board of Mediation, involved only the . status of men employed on the Southern Pacific electric service be tween the Sixteenth-street station In Oakland and Alameda and Manning. The men Insisted that these men should be considered as suburban train men and paid as such; the company contended that they should be classsd as street-car men and paid the same as men operating street-cars in the city service. The differences were discussed in conference but without result The question of seniority also became in volved. The Southern Pacific granted its con ductors and englnemen In the steam service the right to take similar posi tions, at similar rates of pay, in the electrlo service, continuing their seniority. COURT DENOUNCES CULPRIT Salem Judge Bewails Inability to Commit Offender to Penitentiary. SALEM, Or., Oct 18. (Special.) "My only regret In passing sentence on you Is that the law does not permit me to send you to the penitentiary," declared Circuit Judge Kelly today, when he Im posed a fine of J500 on William Twee die, convicted of - conducting a place where statutory offenses were com. mltted. "You have shown yourself to be a contemptible man, and one whom your wife should abhor." In default of payment of the fine Tweedie will have to serve a Jail sen tence of SO days. 10 ARE FOUND GUILTY SOUTH BEND JURY COWICTS WELSH AND JACKSON. Chargre of Conspiring; to Obstruct Jus tice Upheld In Verdict Which Acquits Peter Culver. SOUTH BEND, Wssh., Oct 18. (Spe cial.! J. W. Jackson and Martin C Welsh were found guilty tonight of having conspired to obstruct Justice. Peter Culver, who also figured In the trial which has been on here for the last week, was found not guilty. The Jury was out a little more than six hours. The trial arose out of a damage suit brought by one Coleman against the City of Raymond for damages alleged to have been received Dy a lau on a defective street ELEGANT, REFINED PIANOS 8265 Instead of $375 during Removal. See Graves Music Company adv. page 10, section 3. Adv. German Emancipation Celebrated. LEIFSIC. Oct IS. Nationals of Ger many, Austria. Russia and Sweden at tended here today the dedication of a m.mnriil ct tha "battle of the nations" at which, 100 years ago, the allies de feated the French. The emancipation of Germany was the result. MsasEassmww scene mmmMiim LAURELHTJRST PARK -ijfPw-Vts;'.v'-'''v.y.S "KID PARADISE" - TOUR KIDS can romp, shout or roll in the grass here, and fill their little lungs with puro, fresh air, scented with .health-giving fir balsam, from morn till night, with ne'er a soul to molest them or an auto or team to run them down. DOCTOR BILLS are unknown in LAURELHTJRST, and our youngsters are all growing intoTtrong men and women. THAT'S "WHY WE HAVE SO MANY DOCTORS BUILD ING THEIR HOMES IN LAURELHURST NOW. WHY NOT build your ideal home on the border of this most beautiful, healthy, natural senic park, where the breeze rustling through the branches of the immense fir trees sounds for all the world like the surf and puts one to sleep like a child. DON'T YOU owe it to your family to give them a chance at this? Take a peep at the pictures in our windows at 270y2 Stark Street, showing what we haye accomplished in' three short years ; then COME IN and let us show you how little ready cash it will take to put you in your own ideal home in LAURELHURST. Phone for our auto, Main 1503 or A 1515, and well be delighted to show you our addition, and if you don't desire to buy now, we'll still be the gainers, because we know YOU'LL COME BACK TO US. MEAD & MURPHY, Sales Agents for The Addition with Chorwicr A