THE MORNING ' OREGONIA.N, MONDAY," SEPTEMBER 5, 1910. if BANKER MAY WED E ELLIOTT MAXIM Leopold De Rothchild's Atten tions to American Act ress Marked. GOSSIP CAUSED IN LONDON LONDON GOSSIPS SAT BEAUTIFUL ACTRESS IS TO WED LEOPOLD DE ROTHSCHILD. I APACHE TANGLES Ills rrank Admiration of Beautiful Player I Said Deeply to Con rem Member of Mature FI naneler'a C1annl.h Family. i : LON-DOV. Sept. . (Special.) Is Max- j !n EJliott. tne beautiful American act--. to marry Leopold At Rothschild. I l.rother of Faron Rothschild and one of" Kr and a rloheat and moat Influential I hankers? Tendon la aeklns; thla que- ! tlon c-er Iti tea-cups, for the financier ra been most open In hi" admiration or and auen'.ion to in irimi wmtw h came here after the cloee of her tour In th- atatea. Neither one will admit that the'lrs la anythinr more than a casual friendship, hut tnelr friend are Inclined to think ti-at De Roth-htld"s Interest In the beau tiful player Is very keen. He Rothrhlld Is Wldovrer. . Iopoid de F.othachlld ia a widower, crav-halred and mature but very ;ll lier-ed. He la famed not only because of hie great wealth but for hla Interest In art and homed ard for hla cleverness t aft'r-dlnner speaking. Miaa Elliott, .tvde from her fame a a dramatic mar. I rhlefly known a an ex-wlte of the much-married Nat C Goodwin. Mr. De Rothschild's attention to ills Kll!ntt are mid to have Riven hia family much concern. The Rothevhllda are moet a lannlsh and It la understood that they Tpotic thrtr relative frank admira lion for the actre". He Is often i with her and occupied her box at th orera. Family la Powerful. The Rothschilds are the most powerful family In Kiirope. If "Leopold decided to marry' Mis Llltott It will be the first time In the history of the clan that auch union wa- consummated. In their mar rulers the Rothschild a very r'nnlh. For example, the late Karon Rothschild married the daughter of FViron Charles de Rothschild, of Naples; and I Jrrl Rnthsx-hild. the eldest aon of that marriace. married the daughter of Flaron Charles de Rothschild, of Frank fort. It seems to be. Indeed, almost the rule for a Rothschild to marry a Roths child, a notable exception to this be In a; w ncn Ixrd Roaeberry married the dau-rh ter of Karon Meyer de Rothschild. Min All.-e de Rothschild, a sister of the late hrnn Ferdinand Rotrachlld, has a hou: In Piccadilly, next door to Lord Roth cr.iid s residence, but she Uvea chiefly at . urorpo-w ar.or. In Buckinghamshire one or the finest country mansions In Kncland. and famed for the beauty of Its s.rucn-. to tne cultivation of which their owner oerotes a "Treat deal of her time. ns r.iuott maintains a magnificent er!d. nee In England which la continual ly rrowcie.1 with guest e. Not Infreonenti. it Is said. Leopold de Rothschild Is among . . .f I r e'.A 4 :-4 L2l RIVAL COUNTRIES French Fugitive Run Down in Portugal Causes Session of Hague Court. EXTRADITION COST $12,500 MiMre-'"' Betrays Man waniea '"r Parisian Murder Portugal Re- fux? to ""Surrender Man Because France Has Death Penalty. carrying four or more men be listed by the Federal Government and the au thority be given In time of war to the Government to take over as many of the automobiles as it needed, paying: the original cost of the machine to the owner. "if that were done." says the report, "the Government could have at hand, and without cost, a supply of trans portation for the rapid movement of troops, and in case of need the cost would be vastly less than would be necessary under present conditions. lie development of the- motor truck has been very great during the last few years, and Its use in the Army cannot now be made with economy of both money and time. It Is recommended that the War Department consider t..e construction of a motor truck for the rapid transportation of supplies In the" field." General Grant reports a decrease in the number of desertions; advocates a preliminary training for recruits, and commends the work of camps of in struction for the militia. Store Closed Today Labor Day MAXIXE KI.LIOTT. YOUTH-SHOT ler callers. MICHIGAN HOLDS PRIMARY All Parties In State to Nominate Ticket Tuesday. I'KTf'.DIT, Sept. 4. Primary elec tlona will he held by all parties in thla tae Tuesday. Membera of the legis lature will be placed In nomination, but ondldatea for all state office except iovernor and Lieutenant-Governor will . be nominated later at party conven tion. The three candldatea for the Repub lican nomination for Governor are Lieutenant-Governor Patrick H. Kelly. Oiarles K. 8. Osborn. of gault Ste. .Marie, and Amos P. Musselman. of lirand Rapids. I'nlted States Senator Burrows la op posed for ren.ml nation by Representa tive Charles K. Townsend. of Jackson. n the ground that a young man la needed and that Senator Burrowa has been too closely aligned with Senator Aldrlch. Senator Hurrows has made a strrnuous automobile campaign urging that a long record for genuine Re publicanism emit lea him to re-election, und that certainty of hla obtaining the chairmanship of the Senate committee n finance would give him an Influen tial position in the Senate that no new S. nator could attain. In four districts those opposed to th renominatlon of the present Congress men are upholding the banner of "In surgency." In the Third District both Represenratlx e Gardner and his op ponent. J. it. c. Smith, of Charlotte, have declared themselves against the re-election of Mr. Cannon as Speaker. DREDGE ORDERED SOUTH Mork In Coos Bay to Be Begun I .al ter Part of Thla Month. J-AI.J-.M. Or.. Sept. 4. (Special.) Kf preventative Willis C. Hawley. who returned today from a trip through Coos County, aald today that he had just received word that the dredge Ore con had been ordered from Puget unil waters to Coos Bay Harbor, where a large amount of temporary dredging and Improvement work will rw done. The dredge ia expected In the bay the latter part of this month. Mr. Hawlev secured a StOO.Ofta appropria tion for loos Bay In the rivers and harbora bill In the last session of Con grea. On his way home Mr. Hawley ad dressed the Woodmen at Rooeburg. and the I-ane County assembly at Kugene. and stopped at Cottage Grove. He will go to Albany tomorrow night, con tinuing his tour of the First District. Firewater Causes Tragedy on Siletz Reservation. LAD IN TENT HIT BY BULLET Prunkrn Redman, Recklessly Firing riMol. Fatally Wounds Clie mai Graduate Shooting Is Second In Month. NEWPORT; Or.. Sept. 4. (Special.) For the second time In a little more than a month, whisky supposed to have been aold Illegally to the rcdmen by white bootleggers, waa the cause of a tragedy among the Indiana on the Sllets reservation last night, when Noble Felix, riding home Intoxicated from the little town of Toledo, reck lessly fired his revolver af a tent by the roadside, one of the bullets fatally oundlng Odell Lane, who waa sleep ing within. Lane, who Is a young man educated t the Chemawa Indian School. Is still live, but the physicians hold out no hope for him. The bullet struck him on the right side under the arm. pierc ing the abdomen. Lane Is the son of Scott Lane, one of the most highly respected and influential men on the reservation. Sheriff J. II. Rosa went to Sllets aa soon as he received word of the shoot ing and arrested Felix. The Indian waa brought to Toledo and placed In the Jail there. On July 30 In a drunken brawl Bob Felix, a Sllctt Indian, shot and killed John Spencer and Martha Metcalf. also members of the tribe, at the reserva tion. anf then turned his weapon- on himself. Investigations by the Indian Agent and a Government Special Agent brought to light startling evidence of thriving liquor traffic with the In dlana bv white men. Curiously enough, Felix, the youth held for shooting young Lane, la I relative of the Bob Felix who com mitted the Sllets murders, according to word received here tonight. With young Lane in the tent when he was shot was another Indian named Jim Watts, against whom Felix la said have a grudge. atts and Una were grading on the ' Toledo-Sllets wagon road. cold storage until ' the exhibition is begun. In this way many early fruits the season of which will be over be fore September 29 may be kept for ex hibition. Some of the earlier apples, whose season Is short will be kept until the last of tills month In coid storage. Berries also will be kept. The streets around the City Park, which is two blocks square, have been divided off already and booths are be Ing bulit by the merchants and many wholesalers from Portland. The Clark County Poultry Association will erect coops for poultry, and the coops will become the permanent property of the Association. To persuade the County Commission ers to appropriate 12500 for county fair purposes is the object of the Harvest Show Association. The Commissioner' are willing, but are hindered by the state law. which requires a county fair association to have permanent buildings before it can, receive aid from the county. Work will be atarted to seoure permanent quarters for next year. STATE WANTS 2 PEK CKNT OF ALL PKOPEKTV LEFT THEM. Law Drives Out Women and Money, Italics Interest Kates and Brings Joy to Spinsters. MAWSON TO STUDY POLE KXPIXREIt WANTS TO LEAKS CAl'SK OFQI KFK WEATHER. Australians Puxilcd Over Odd Be havior of Elements and Hope Research Will Glte Relief. BOY ARRESTED AS VAGRANT Youth of 14 Held Till Parents at Everett Are Ixrated. vl rile Hall, aged 14. was arrested at T o'clock last night by Officer A. A. "oopcr on a charge of vagrancy. The l.r said he had come from Everett with mi m-n to sell popcorn for them at Ihe fair this week and that after reach ing Portland he had lost track of them. H say hla parents consented to Ma maklrg the trip to Portland with the Popcorn vendors. The youngster was wandering about the stret :ien picked up. He haf no money and fuld he had had nothing to rat all dey. Ijtt.T last night he waa taken to the Detention Home, where he wl.l be held until h.s parents are located. MELBOURNE. Sept. a. t Special.) To And out why Australia haa queer spasms of weather a I times. Douglas Mawson, of Sydney, plana to run an Australian expedition to the- regions round the South Pole. Not a dash to the Pole Itself, it eriould be borne In mind, but a long resi dence In Antarctic quarters to study the magnetic and meteorological conditions thai reflect their Influence on the cli mate experienced by those living under the Southern Cross. The rum of Australian agricultural ists ia drought. Some Summers all seems set for a banner harvest, when auddenly the cyclonic depression shifts and the rams that would have been a boon are wasted on the ocean. Other times hurri canes sweep whole provinces, leaving a track of destruction auch as the fringe or the Mexican Gulf occasionally, ex periences. These conditions absent and the weather conditions -remaining nor mal. Australia, haa bumper crop and record clips of wool: squatter million aires are turned out by the back blocks and boom limes set in for town and country. For the gamble of life la heavy In the Southern Commonwealth. COLD STORAGE ENGAGED Clark County Fair Exhibits to Shown Out of Season. Be VANCOUVER. Wash.. Sept. 4. (Spe cial.) Space for 300 tons of fruits of various kinds, rslsed In Clark County, to be shown at the Clark County Har vest Show. September 29. 30 and Octo ber 1. has been seecured In a local cold storage plant. Clement Scott, manager of the show, has lsued a rail for exhibits to be brought Id any time now( to b put la DES MOINES. Ia.. Sept. 4. Widows are leaving this state and spinsters ara rejoicing at the prospect of Iowa becoming wldowlcss. Spinsters who had abandoned hope of marital felicity are manifestly perking up. The day is not yet lost. The reason for it all is not that men do not die nor the divorce mills fail to grind, but because a heavy penalty devolves upon the Iowa woman who once has entered the realm of matrimony and strives afterward To live without it. Every year scores of widows, graceful, charming and pos sibly lovable, pack their little grips and hasten beyond the two great rivers that form the eastern and western ex tremities of the state. It la all because uf the hateful tax law, which decrees that widows must pay a t per cent tax on all the moneys and credits left them by tl.e last will and testament of the late deceased. It has been figured out that at the preaent rate of departure of widows from the state It will be but a few short years until Iowa has no charming widows, unless, of course, the grim reaper gets busy with the husbands. Yey, when one stops to think that the widow who Is left a small fortune by the will of the husband is compelled to pay a 1 per cent tax on that for tune, which Is often Just enough to carry her In comfort to the end of her days, while rich nren. who know all the tricks and devices of tax dodg ing, and who Invest their moneys out side that state escape the law. there comes a feeling to them that possibly the law is unjust. The question haa a financial side as ell. a phase which actually affects In terest rates. Most of the widows who are left money to any amount usually loan it out on good farm mortgages. When they discover that while they are loaning the money at a small rate of Interest they must pay 2 per cent of It hack in taxes they begin to get wise and either send the -money out of the state for Investment or remove from the state to those states where no such law is on the statute books. Their removal or the Investment out side of the state reduces- the loan com petition, and tbe result Is that interest rates advance because there Is not the money to loan that there was when this money was kept In the State and loaned out. An Interesting case In point In that of Cedar Rapids widow who has Teft moneys and credits to tne amount of $185,000. She lll.ed Cedar Rapids and had hoped to spend her remaining days In the old home there, enjoying the In come from her little rortune. Rut she was a practical woman -as well, and when at the end or the first year she found that she must pay I per cent tar on her little fortune she slmplv pulled up stakes and went to New Vork City. never to return to Iowa to live. The case Is but one of doxens which occur every year. YAMHILL GRAIN CROP GOOD Flouring Mills Handle 300,000 Rnshels of Wheat. PARIS. Sept. S. (Special.) Albertlnl, called "Le Foil." Is not only a danger ous apache, wanted In Marseilles and numerous other French cities for a series of horrible murders, but he has been the cause of a curious diplomatic tannic between France and Portugal, only solvable by the Intermediary of an International tribunal at Tne ague. The Marseilles police, after an excit ing chase, finally ran their man to earth in Llsbon.-through the treachery of his mistress, and nothing seemed more easy than to demand his extraai tlon from the Portuguese government. but the Portuguese officials saw things in quite another light. The crime for which you wisn to ar rest Albertlnl is a capital onense in France, and therefore If he is taken back to his native land he will be hand ed over to Monsler Deibler and his head will be neatly cut off." said the Portu guese. The French police nodded ac quiescence In this simple statement of fact. Well. It Is imposible." said the Por tuguese. '"He cannot go back, once on our territory, for the death penalty has been abolished In Portugal and we will not hand over any criminal to death!" The French argued that assassination Is still considered a crime in Portugal, andthat It was the nature of the crime on which they based their claim for ex tradition, and not that of the penalty to be Inflicted. These arguments might have been carried on Indefinitely if by common consent the international arbl tratlon of The Hague court had not been decided upon. Now It seems that each arbiter at The Hague asks .2500 for his services and the court is composed of five of them. Therefore the decision of this court would cost the French and Par, tugucse governments 1 12.500. which Paris thought was more than the head of Albertinl was worth to France. How ever, the affair went to The Hague and was finally decided In favor of France. When the steamship Atlantlque, from Lisbon to Bordeaux, sailed the other day, she carried Albertlnl, murderer of his fellow-thug, Paradis, killed In a bloody quarrel over spoils in one of the worst of the old "quartiers of Mar seilles. During the 48, hours of the crossing the prisoner was closely watched by the three secret service men sent to arrest him, in order to prevent any attempt' at evasion or suicide. "I am certain that I will get out of this fix. as I did be fore," he told one of his guardians. The only sign of feeling that he man ifested was when he asked that his overcoat might be folded on his arm in auch a way that in disembarking the telltale handcufs might be concealed In this way he went through Bordeaux and on to Marseilles unrecognized and the sympathetic uprising on his behalf which the police feared from the water side toughs, to whom he has become a sort of hero, was thus avoided by his unconscious help. L TARIFF LAW SPELLS RCIX FOR FRENCH WORKERS, THEY SAY. EUCOLIC JOY ATTRACTS TITLED MARTHAS SEEK TOXIC FOR JADED NERVES. M'MINNVILLE. Or.. Sept. 4. (Spe cial.) Yamhill County farmers have harvested this season the largest groin and hay crops in several years, in olnt of acreage and yield. The two flouring mills at this place have handled so far about 000 bushels of wheat, oats and barley, and the managers are" confident that there In yet enough grain coming In to foot up 500.000 bushels before the market closes. More than "00 tons of hay have been shipped from here already, and 500 tons are held on storage awaiting shipment. The JiDn.w prnrea of dwarfing a pine tree takes about 10 cara Lady Wolseley's Latest Fd Engages Arlslocrucy and Gives Joy to Real Farmhands. IjONDON. Sept. 3. (Special.) Women of title, aided by combating Socialism and by the fatigues of. the season, are finding unique opportunities for calming their over-wrought nerves. Lady Wolse ley, head of the Ladies Park Club, has conceived the happy Idea of enabling the blue-blooded members to live as form hand?. The retreat that has been pro vided for them is far from the mad ding crowd In an antique country house in MMdler?x county. Duchesses tired of tbe social whirl go there to commune with nature and to enjoy the delightful luxury of plain fare. Life on the farm will b- almost severe for the epollt darlings of society. They ure not allowed to play bridge or to smoke cigarettes within the charmed walls of the farmhouso. But there is nothing to prevent a countess1 from sneaking away to enjoy a whiff In the cowshed. Titled farm hands may also disport themselves among the poultry. Experts are on the premises to teach bee keep ing, bread making, how to run a poultry farm and how to spin. It is not com pulsory for countesses to kill fowl for he market, though wayward fancy may lean tnem to enliven their week-ends by waiting or. the pigs. Spinning is Included in the category of interests because rplnnlng l held to be such a restful and poetic occunation. Spinning wheels have been imported from Scotland end lesson are given at $1.50 ny a proricient Instructress. The role or snepneraess at the farm is papular, but the rnopt amueed people on the premises are the rustics who do the real work. Clause in Schedule Permits Ameri cans to Import Machines for Manufacturing, Free. LONDON, Sept 8. (Special.) The latest and one of the most interesting International trade complications aris ing from America's much disputed Payne-Aldrich Tariff Bill Is seen in the case of the French lace-makers. Be cause of a provision In the new bill allowing the free importation ot lace making machinery for two years, you have now developed lace-making in your own American cities. Though tucked away in the free list columns, this clause really spelled pro tectlon. For In support of it, the duty on French lace was raised from 60 to 70 per cent ad valorem. A still larger Increase was attempted, but on the plea of the French Government, a compromise was reached at the 10 per cent increase. Lace-maklng is the staple and tradi tional Industry of many of the older French towns, and the prospect they now face Is a dreary one. "The Ameri cans have Imported," says a local man ufacturer of Calais, "some 400 or 500 machines, and about 430 more are or dered before the two-year Interval closes. After this period, which Is up In 1911, lace-making machinery will be switched to the protective list again, on the basis of a 45 per cent ad valorem duty." In the typical case of Calais, the re- DOrt of British consul C a. t-ayton exDresses grave concern over the fu ture of the lace-maklng Industry. American business, on which thousands of people depend for their livelihood, will inevitably be taken away from them. Even the trade in the finer grades of Valenciennes, for which some of the Calais manufactories are iamous, will go with the rest. Last year lace machinery was shipped from Calais alone to the United States to the total value of over $70,000. ; Make a Test Perhaps you've never bought at Our Store. That being the case, we invite you to make a test. The next time you have a personal or household need to satisfy be it great or small make a test. Test our Merchandise. Test our salesmanship that is, our ability and our disposition to sell you JUST what YOU specially want. Test our Dehvsry System. Above all T tt our Money-Saving PRICES. We shall not know when you come no special preparations can be made your own good judgment will render the decision. If there is a store in Portland that can really SERVE YOU AS YOU'VE NEVER HITHERTO BEEN SERVED, it is for your interest to know it. Make a Test. Our Windows Exhibit Fcsh'ons That Will Pt Vail ihe Coming Season RAILWAY lAPa YUNNAN FRENCH ARE ELATED OVER COMPLETIOX OF LIVE. Promoters Now Hope to Extend Road Into Rich and Populous Province of Szcchuan. SEAT IN SENATE REFUSED Governor Sanders Devotes His En ergies to Panama Fair.' WASHINGTON, Sept. 4. Governor Sanders- appointment of Judge J. R. Thornton as Senator from Louisiana probablv will be questioned when Con gress convenes in December. The Louisiana Legislature was in ses sion at the time and Governor Sanders was elected to succeed the late ben ator McEnery as senator. uesiring however, to devote his energies to the proposed Panama Canal Exposition In New Orleans, the Governor has re signed the office of Senator and as Governor has appointed Mr. Thornton Senator. It Is contended that the proceeding violates the rule laid down in the Quay rase, which was that a Governor of state has no power to- make a tempor ary appointment as Senator to fill vacancy which may have occurred wheo the Legislature of the state was In session. Having resigned while the Pennsyl vania Legislature was in session. Mr, Quay sought re-election. Failing in this effort, he was given the appoint ment by the Governor. By a majority of one on a vote of 63, Congress re fused to award the seat to him. LONDON, Sept. 3 (Special.) The French periodicals are giving promi nence to the fact that owing to tne recent completion of the railway from Haiphong to Yunnan-sen, the Province of Yunnan, China; is now in direct com munication with the sea, and that late." on If the intentions of the promoters are crowned with success, the prolonga tion of . the line Into Sxechuan. o"e of the richest and most populous Chinese provinces will be an accomplished fact. For nearly half a century, the con nection by rail of these two provinces with Bhamo and Rangoon lias been a favorite theme with Anglo-Indians, bu. the project has never materialized. Lord Curzon, among others, having strongly opposed the suggestion. The French railway has now been actually opened to traffic, the line from Laokal to Yunnan-sen, a distance . of 300 miles, having been thrown open on the first of April last. It is less ad vantageously situated than a railway from Bhamo to Talifu would be, In that Haiphong, the outlet on the sea ia the former case, is much further from Europe .than Rangoon, but tha French railway, which now is first in the field, will be a great success in its facilities for the conveyance of min erals, a product of great Importance in Yunnan. The Laokai-Tunnan-sen section lias proved a very trying job iii Its ascent up the valley of'the Nam Ti, which ia steep and continuous gradient from 0 feet to about 3600 feet in height. In this ascent extraordinary climatic changes are passed, and the transition from tropical to temperate regions is very curious, pines and palms being in close juxtaposition. The rains are con tinuous from June to October, and the hot and humid air favors the conver sion of the fields and paths into vast expanses of mud and jungle, ' where tigers, panthers. , wolves, bears, wild cats, snakes, deer, goats, and a great variety of birds are found In profusion. The heat along tills section Is described as stifling, and the mortality among the coolies employed on the line was 500 per month. Had it not been for thrf assistance given by the Viceroy of Yunnan it would have been Impossible to have brought the construction of the line through this unhealthy tract to a successful conclusion. On the whole, this new line is said to be extraordinarily up hill and down dale, and it Is anticipated that equal difficulties will be encountered In tlio prolongation of the line into Siechuan in the descent to the valley of the Up per Yang-tse and the reaseent to the level of the Cheng-tu-fu in order lu reach the interior of the province. Cases In the medical hook show that somnambulists have walked as far as 15 miles In their sleep. CLIMATE EXCELS OTHERS TILLAMOOK BEACH POSSESSES FEATURES MANY DO NOT HAVE. Returning Campers Entbuslaatle Tbelr Commendation of W eather Conditions There. In 'Climate has more to do with Sum mer resorts than anything else in the world," said a well-known Portland ; man yesterday, upon his return from , Tillamook Beach, where he has been camping for several weeks. "People will put up with almost anything hearty to eat, whatever they can get to sleep upon, and they may be left alone, when it comes to amusing themselves. But. you- let rain, or wind, or storm, or heavy surf step in, and their pleasure Is all gone." Speaking of Tillamook Beach, this same gentleman said that while he was there not a drop of rain fell, and there, was no strong wind, all being stopped by the mountains that border the coasl, north and south. There was plenty ot game. fish, and sleeping at Tillamook Beach he describes as being the cliniss: of satisfaction. Tillamook Beach, for which C. K. ( Fields & Company is agent in Portland, with offices In the Board of Trade building, has been famed for many 1 years as the ideal coast of the Oregon 1 shore. Its mild, equable climate, splen did air and wonderf ully beautiful en- , vironment make It the resort par ex cellence of Oregon. With the new rail-' road completed this Fall. Tillamook Beach, it is said, will have no compe- ' tition. Literature concerning this tract will be sent on request. MEDFORD HAS NEW DEPOT Southern Pacific Spends $50,000 for Handsome Structure. MEDFORD. Or., Sept. 4. ( Special.! The new 150,000 Southern Pacific depot at this place is now complete and will be ready for occupancy October 1. The building is the finest of the kind be tween Sacramento and Portland, resem bling the one at Walla Walla. The old station requires the trains to stop on a crossing of the principal busi ness street of the city. Postal Receipts Show Rig Gain. WHITE SALMON. Wash.. Sept. 4 Special.) Postmaster Crow reports that for the past year every month has shown an increase of business over the preceding month. The month of Au gust, heretofore the dull month, was the busiest month in the history of the of fice. 75 per cent greater than August, 1909. A few weeks ago the White Sal mon office was raised from fourth class to second class and the salarv increased to .1500. GRANT VVOULDJEIZE AUTOS Arm y Officer Wants Power to Take "Private Cars In War Time. WASHINGTON. Sept. 4. Ma jor-Gen- eral Frederick D. Grant, commandant of the Department of the Lakes, recom mends In his annual report a plan where by in time of war the Army could be supplied with automobiles and auto trucks. His plan la for legislation un der which all automobiles capable of LITTLE PRICES FOR SOME GOOD PIANOS Good Used Pianos Received in Part Payment for Our Grands to Be Closed Out at Once. If you'll pay an even $200 for a really nice piano, take your choice of. an ex cellent mahogany Emerson, or a Vose, or an A. B. Chase piano. For 194 we will sell a ' Marshall Wendell piano, a little old-fashioned, but very good. Pay us cash or $3 a month. . 165 will buy a little sweet - toned piano made by a Frenchman named Falvre. Someone anxious to get start ed in music at little expense will buy this piano the moment he or -she sees it. A very, beautiful, almost brand new. mahogany Knabe piano which came to us in part payment for one of the won derful new Hallet & Davis player pianos will go for exactly $350; This surelv is a piano buyer's opportunity for saving money. Terms cash or as much as 3 years' time to complete pay ment. We have a nearly-new Weser piano for $165. and a very elegant Decker square grand tor i6, still another for $60. A very nice aiason Hamlin upright In fancy mahogany for which creat claims were maae a rew months ago. This Instrument was received In part payment for a Kimball baby grand, and will oe soia tor wnat it will bring, even If only 40 per cent of Its original price. There is also an ebonlzed case Newby A Evans piano for $118. All of these low prices are the cash prices, but for the mere additional sim ple interest we will sell any of these ' exchanged pianos " on payments to suit any reasonable buyer. K'very instrument has" been placed in perfect haoe. we iruarantee each so or "money back." Kilers Music House, largest and most responsible dealers. Retail Department. Washington Street, at Psrk (Eichth); East Side Store 4 Grand Avenue , EARNING MONEY There is no better way to do this than by saving it. Considering the class of goods carried here and the services we offer, you can make no mistake buying your glasses here. "This one thing we do." Columbian Optical Co. 133 Sixth Street FINEST SAFEST FASTEST Grand Trunk Pacific Steamships FRIiCE RtPEHT" AND "PHIiVCE GEORGR" I.R4VE SEATTLE THUKSD4.VS AND t.D.VS AT MIDNIGHT FOR VICTORIA, VANCOUVKH. PRINCE IttPMRT, STEWART. AND MAKES CONNF.CTION" AT PHI.MK Rl'PERT WITH S. S. "PRINCE ALBERT" FOH 4LEEN CHARLOTTE ISLANDS. Victoria. Oae Way Vancouver, Oae Way Prlatee Haaert, Oae Way.... Stewart, One . Way - . . 9 2.00 Return S.OO Heturn I Meals and Berth .918. OO Return $24. OO Return 3. SO 5.00 Ext i a.) 93S.OO -I S.OO Including Meal and Berth.) For Through Tickets and Reservations Apply to Loral Rallnay Agents r J. H. Burgls, General Agent, Klrnt Are. and Yesler Way, Seattle, Wash. t