THE MORXIXG OREGOTAX, THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1911. 1 0UGHL1N AND BUNDY wNNEKS Western Tennis Team Is Chosen to Go East for Country's Honors. JOE TYLER 'TAKES -TITLE frpokan Boy I defeats Idaho Cham, ptoa In Grilling Match for la Land Empire Championship. ljr Sutton Victorious. LONO BEACH. Cal.. July S. Tha most gruelling tennis match ever played on the Lon Beach court wu the first set today between Bundy and McLoua-hltn and Hardy and Koley for the Coajt championship In mens ooa hint. Bundy and Mclughlln beat their two San Kranclsco opponents. Ii-14 Hardy and Foley won the second set. -4. and Bundy and McLoughlln took the next two. Thla Tietory this afternoon entitles Fundy and McLouarhlln to enter the National championship matches In J'hlraro next month. Mar Sutton, world's champion, also won her match and retained the title of raclnc Coasts best at the tennis Kama. M.ss Sutton practically had a walkover la this tournament, a neither her sister. 1 ore nee. nor Hazel Hotchklas were rttted aa-ainst her this year. both the latter playing this week In Flttsburg.. TYI-EU C.UTTRES TITLE AGAIN Inland Kmpnrr CbatnpJon.hp.Cors to Spokane) Lad. SPOKANE.- Wash, July (Special.) Joe Tyler, former Seattle boy. cap tared ui Inland Kmplre open single tennis rhamplonstilp here today, defeating- Theodore C Fulton, of Spokane. In the final round. In a fectacular, hard-fought contest. Tyler lost the frit set. -. but took the last three In order. -4. (-1 and 10-8. Tyler and Vulton then won the doubles In the final round from Wright and Gray of 1 wliton. (-1. t-1. -L The two I.ewtnton women. Misses Kathrlne Fix and Mabel Anderson, had eery women's prise at their mercy ex cept the women's single. In which Miss Fix bad to defeat Mr. W. H. Cowles. of Fpokane. In a hard fought Anal round content. The final In the worn'i doubles was a hollow victory for Miss Fix and Miss Anderson and. the two Lewlston team. 'Wright and Anderson, Uray and Fix. had the mixed doubles final con test, the latter winning. The tour nament tats a bis; success, upwards of la competing. It lasted four days In which time about 12S matches were played. .WPREWS WINS TEAM PLACE Victory Orer Wakeman Won In Fast ' Tennis Game. The "round robin" tennis tourney be 1ns; held at the Multnomah Amatenr Athletic Club courts will not likely be concluded before Saturday, as the com petitors will await the return of J. F. Kwmg to the city before playing- off the final Karnes. Testerday afternoon' Fred Andrews defeated A. f. Wakeman two out of three sets In fast style, assuring- An drews a place on the Multnomah team. Andrews won the first set. to S. while Wakeman came back In the second and won. I to I, while Andrews won the deciding set and the match by the score of to 2. Wakeman la now scheduled to meet "twlng on the return of the latter from hla vacation. STEAD LAUDS WASHINGTON London Editor and Author Presides at Fourth of July Celebration. LONDON'. July I. W. T. Stead, editor and author, presiding over the annual Fourth of July celebration at Browning- Hall for the veterans of the Civil War. said to no man did the British Kmplre owe thanks more than to George Washington, "the greatest Englishman of the 18th century.", Washington, aald the speaker, had Indirectly taught Great Britain how to extend and maintain the British Empire. VICTORIA'S UGLY MEMORIAL All the Bad Taxto of Victorian Art In the Huge Structure. i London Cor. of the "Boeton Transcript Further along the mall, the huge memorial to Queen Victoria has been lately unveiled. It still lacks many ac cessory statues, but otherwise It la com plete In all Its dimensions from the bronze and shining Victory that crowns It. through the great statu of the Queen, out Into the pyloned court that jinrrounds It. Behind Is the blackened, ehabby, stuccoed, crumbling front of Buckingham palace, and conjecture Is plentiful that It will soon be rebuilt. The King. It Is said. Is well disposed to the rebuilding of such an Insignificant royal residence. The Parliament could ' be easily persuaded to th necessary grants. By common agreement. Buck ingham palace Is sorely disillusioning as the official residence In an Imperial capital of a King and Emperor. Not so long ago. the suggestion of life was one thing that the British w-ulptor shunned In a public monument. Was It not a) memorial of the deadT Al legory was dead. too. and so. perhaps, he used It- Unfortunately, the memorial to Queen Victoria returns to this an cient and lifeless fashion. For seme years visitors to London could see th pylons that suggested the Inrlosur of a circular space, between the Oreen park and St. James' park and the grill of Buckingham palace. They were rec tangular stone prions that bore the wreathed names of colonies and domin ions beyond the seas and that were crowned by excessively chubby figures of boys that mocked those lean youth that were once a scandal on the face of the Boston public library. Last Summer the Idler could see th marble basis that Is the visible founda tion of the memorial. It was a delight to th eye beyond almost anything of Its kind In London. The water flowed below and against a frieze of sea fig. lire nerelds combing their long hair, little sea urchins bestriding their dol phins, trltons watching gravely, and so on through all the range of the ocean folk of the classic poets. The frlese had grace, fancy, freshness. Imagina tion. Th bronses out of which the water poured at once relieved and so lidified th design. Th basin and th base were generally praised. They promised much for a memorial that should make the Corjurg Aioeri gin and gingerbread monument in Hyde Park seem yet more cheap, hideous and Victorian than it really Is. For tnotisn these words be written of a memorial to this same Victoria, the derivative Victorian Is now. for many purposes. th 'favorite adjective of contempt in British speech. Ae the memorial now stands, the promise of the basin Is all unfulfilled. Fries and fountain were Edwardian in their grace, fancy, elegance their mild freedom from commonplace. The rest is Victorian to the core Victorian In Its height and In the bulk of its marbles, which yet fall to make significant the Intrinsically Insignificant: Victorian in Its colossal figure of the sitting Queen, too vast to suggest her as she really was. too dull and lifeless to transfigure her Into a kind of ruling majesty; ic torlan In Its marble allegories of moth erhood. truth and Justice with a due scattering among them of . angelic Torso man arrrrMBs to iix- K-S THREE WKKKS AFTER FATHER DIES. ir L - . V.J . riareae B. Kaser. But three weeks after the death of his father. Clarence B. Kaser. 23 yean XJ, died Sunday at hla late home at 172 fast Fourteenth street. The young maa was stricken' with tonallltls and succumbed to the severe attack after aa Illness of three weeks. He had been employed by his brother at the plant of the City Market Cold tttorese Company. Be la survived by bis mother, four brothers and two sisters. The funeral was to have been held tday from the Holman undertaking parlors, but has been postponed, swatting at ar rival of a brother. Dr. K. 1L Kaser. from Juneau, Alaska, and will take place Thursday at 3 o'clock. In the afternoon at the Crematorium. wings; Vlctorlnn In a queer, fat-bellied Victory that might ba a sort of Woman of the Bedchamber to borrow a court title to the Victory of the Louvre that stirs all the world to admiration and casts. Th whole memorial bears no sugges tion of the Queen that her people knew. of their common life and time, of their real feeling toward her. It expresses nothing but a large expenditure of money and a small expenditure of Imag ination. The whole scheme of It th basin aside Is of conventional com memoration by allegorical figures and colossal st4us. Th execution is of dulness. all lifeless. Th memorial might have been nobly austere and it Is not. It might have been richly or nateand It Is not- It Is of th limbo wherein dwells "official art." It had Its Just guerdon when the German Em peror blessed It out of an honestly ap proving heart and esthetlo standards. GUESTS FLEE FROM FIRE FLA.HES THREATKN' HOTEL AND AWAKENED SLEEPERS HUN. ' hherwood Business Houses Burned In Early Morning Blaxe Cltl Bens Work Saves Town.. SHERWOOD. Or, July 6. (Special.) Guests fled from their rooms In the Sherwood Hotel In scanty apparel when they were awakened to find th build ing threatened by a fire that broke out at S o'clock this morning, swept away a livery stable, a barber shop and two saloons, and was only prevented from burning the whole business section of Sherwood by the strenuous labors of the cltlxens and the fact that there was little wind. Th Or broke out In Meltzer's livery stable. When It was discovered by M. and C. Meltxer and A. Haper, who were sleeping In th barn, they had barely time to loos th horses and run for their lives. All th horses escaped except valuable driving animal be longing to Robert Colfelu From the stable the fire spread rap- Idly to A. Zlnn'a saloon, the barber shop of Jack Weston, and Folfolt's sa loon, next the hotel. Here the cltlxens. who. though handicapped by lack of water, did yeoman service with a vol unteer Cro-Oghtlng brigade, mad a stand to -save th hostelry and suc ceeded In holding th flames In check. The fir Is supposed to have started through th carelesenoss of someone sleeping In th haymow of the stable In smoking a pipe.. All the buildings in th path of th fire were entirely de stroyed. Th loss will total about 15000. POLICE FIND FIRE PLOT Lodger' LWes Imperiled bjr Oil- Soaked "Plant." E. G. Baumgart. proprietor of a con fectionery store at 7J1 Williams ave nue, was arrested Tuesday night by Pa trolman George Adams, after he ar ranged a series of boxes saturated with coal oil and short candles and piled paper about them for the alleged pur pose of burning the building down to get the Insurance. That the building was not burned and perhaps a number of Uvea lost, as the upper story Is used aa a lodging-house. Is due to J. T. Read, who says Baumgart hired him to light the candles promptly at 10 o'clock last night, but Instead of doing so, notified Patrolman Adams. Detective Price was detailed to as sist Patrolman Adams and called En gin Company No. i. to remove th "plant." said to hava been arranged by Baumgart. Detective Price learned that Baumgart recently insured his place for $800 and carried the Insurance papers In his pocket. He also found Baumgart's grips In a check-room at the Union Station. Baumgart was held at the police sta tion without bail pending further In vestigation. - - - RECIPROCITY TO WIN, SAYS BANKER American Embassy Associa tion Head Confident After Tour of Canada. SENTIMENT NORTH FOR IT E. Clarence 'Jones, New York Mil lionaire, Scans Dominion for Fi nanciers and Reports Favor ably on Trade Plan. "Reciprocity between the United States and Canada is virtually assured, said E. Clarence Jones, president of th American Kmbnssy Association and millionaire head of the firm of E. Clar ence Jones A Co., of New Tork, at the Portland last night. The object of Mr. Jones' visit to the Dominion was to learn at first hand, for the benefit of himself and other bankers and financiers In th East, the exact situation In respect to public sentiment In Canada on the subject of reciprocity. In which Wall street is deeply interested. "Judging by what I have seen and heard.' said Mr. Jones, "th majority of Canadians favor a reciprocal trade agreement with us. The Eastern prov inces, in which the so-called 'big cor porate Interests' are supreme, are op posed to it. but the great West, which, in my opinion, will dominate the Do minion, is strongly in favor of iU Great Benefit Predicted. "This section of the country has been largely under-represented In the Canadian Parliament, but with the adoption of the new census this year, that condition will be changed and the membership from the West will be in creased to such an extent that Its will must prevail. "Reciprocity means that the United States and Canada the two halves of North America will be drawn much closer together, which will be a good thing for both. True, the new ar rangement may hit big Interests on both sides of th line and cause a tem porary disturbance of business, but eventually It will work out all right and redound to th benefit of the mil lions of consumers In both countries, whose Interests, after all, are para mount to those of the large combina tions of capital. "In addition to that I regard reci procity with Canada as an opening wedge for the reduction of the high tariff unjer which we have been la boring so long and which has effected Its purpose so well that many of our Infant Industries, which It waa Intend ed to foster, nave grown Ino giganltlo monopolies." Portland Thanked for Aid. While in Portland Mr. Jones, as president of th American Embassy As sociation, will embrace the opportun ity personally to - thank the Portland members of the organisation of which he is the official head for the aid they extended In the association's movement to induce Congress to pass a law pro viding for the acquisition by the United States of suitable residences for its representatives abroad. Among the Portland members of the association are th following: Arthur H. Devers. Circuit Judge Gan- tenbeln, J. Wesley Ladd. William Mao- Master, A. L. Mills. Beneca C. Beach, E. C. Oiltner, Frederick V. Holman, F. C. Knapp, Theodore Rowland. Alex Sweek. William D. Wheelwright, Charles T. Whitney, Theodore B. Wil cox and Herman Wittenberg. The movement also was officially in dorsed iy the Portland Chamber of Commerce. . "With the aid of our members In Portland and other cities In the coun try." said Mr. Jones, "we have caused bill to be passed that In our-bellef will prove of inestimable value to the exporters and manufacturers In this country. Portland, in Its progresslve ness. was one of the first cities to real ise the meaning and importance of the movement and its Chamber of Com merce was one of the first of the 600 similar bodies In the United States that have officially Indorsed it. Society's Influence Wins. "Benjamin Franklin was the first man in the United States to advocate the suitable housing of our representa tives abroad in the Interest of our for eign commerce. Succeeding genera tions took up the work but. although the men engaged In It were prominent. nothing was accomplished until the American Embassy Association was organized. That was two years ago. Last year the Influence of Its members, of which that of those In Portland was by.no means tne least poweriui. was so great that the necessary law was enacted. This statute carries an an nual appropriation of 1500.000 for pro viding homes for foreign Ambassadors, not more than $160,000 to be expended in the construction of any one Am bassador's residence. "New the President of the United States can appoint to foreign posts men of ability and worth, regardless of their financial status and these men, in our opinion, will do much more for Americana and American business In terests than the raultl-mllllonalr whose sol object In accepting the ap pointment has been, in many instances, merely the furtherance of his own so cial ambition and th desire to hobnob with royalty: and persons of title." ABE RUEF IS MINSTREL Ex-Boss of San Francisco Writes Sketch for Fellow Prisoners. SAN QUENTIX. CaW July 5. The convicts In the State Penitentiary ob served today as a holiday by giving a minstrel show. One of th vaudeville sketches In th olio was written by Abe Ruef. ex polltlcal boss of San Francisco, now serving a term for bribery. NO FIRES BY FIREWORKS Portland's "Safe and Sane Fourth" Saves VI re Department Labor. No fires traceable to the explosion of fireworks was the result of th "safe and sane" Fourth in Portland yester day and the usually long list of minor biases which are started by firecrack ers or rockets was lacking. The only fire which occurred yester day, a small blaxe- In WooOlawn. was not started by fireworks: The First Recorded Strike. Engineering Magazine. Th first strike recorded In history was a strike against a cut in piece rates. "And the Egyptians made the children of Israel to serve wltn rigour: And they made their lives bitter with hard bondage. In mortar and in brlcK, and In all manner of . service. . . . And Moses and Aaron went in and told Pharaoh. .Let the people go that they may hold a feast. . . . And the King of Egynt said unto them. Wherefore do ye . . . let the people from their work? ... ye niaks the rest from their burdens. And Pharaoh com manded the same day the taskmasters . . . saying. Ye shall not more give the neODle straw to make brick as here tofore. . . . And the tale of th bricks which they did make heretofore, ye shall lay upon them; ye shall not dl. minlsh ought thereof: for they be idle therefore they cry. saying. Let us go . . . Let there more work be laid upon the men . . . and let them not regard vain words. Pharaoh said to the children of Israel, ye are idle, ye are idle: . . . Go, therefore, now and work; for there shall no straw be given you, yet ye deliver the tale of the Brigadier - General Mans, Who soon Takes Command Again of Department of Columbia. bricks." What followed Is a matter of history. They walked out and stayea out for 40 years, and then their de scendants got other and better Jobs. T GENERAL. LEAVES BORDER TO RETURN' TO VANCOUVER. Department of Columbia 'to Be in Of ficer's Charge Again Taylor to Preside Over Post. VANCOUVER BARRACKS. Wash., Julv B. Srecial. General Marlon P. Maus, who has been in cnarge or a brigade on the Mexican border, at San Antonio, Texas, since March 8, 1911, and who has taken part In the man euvers held by the United States Army since that time, left there bunaay night for this post to resume com mand of the Department of the Co lumbia, relieving Colonel S. W. Taylor, of the Second Field Artillery. Hs Is to arrive Thursday. Officers at the post believe that Gen eral Maus will be accompanied by Lieutenant Williams, as his aide-decamp, as he has been acting in that position In Texas. Lieutenant Arthur T. Dalton. who has been aide-de-camp to General Maus, will be the other aide. a General being allowed two. assistants. Lieutenant-Colonel r . J. ivernan nas been assigned as Adjutant-General of the Department of the Columbia. Me has assumed his new duties, relieving Colonel 9. W. Dunning. General Maus, with his two aides. and Adjutant-General, will be all of the officers assigned to the Depart ment of the Columbia. When General Maus resumes com mand of the Department of the Co lumbia, Colonel Sidney W. Taylor will be relieved, and he in turn will as sume command of this post, Vancouver Barracks. Colonel George K. McGun- negle will assume command of the First Infantry. When General Maus left for Texas, Colonel Cornelius Gardner, of Fort Seward, Alaska, assumed command 'un til relieved by Colonel Taylor. POST CELEBRATES FOURTH Soldiers at Vancouver Vie in Army Sports. VANCOUVER BARRACKS, Wash., July 5. (Special.) Fifteen thousand persons, tnousands being from Port land, Vancouver and otlfer cities, to day witnessed the greatest field day meet ever held in this post, when the best athletes from the 1200 soldiers In the srarrison competed for cash prizes offered by the Commercial Club of Van couver. The events won: Company drill to music, three minutes by each company Won' by Company D. Captain Alfred Aloe; second. Cotnpany F, Lieutenant Cazlarc; third. company as. Prldgen. v.ntl three minute Won by Company C. Lieutenant B. O. Ruttencutter; second. Company 1. Lpim . Company O. Lieutenant Goodale. Mountain Battery section contest Won by Serceant James and lection. Company D. n k , nt nf three beats. After the first shot was fired, the gun was advanced 24 yard and a second shot was fired. Equipment race "J pany B: second. Dlnsieoine, company u. third. Howard, Loropinj ximmtd wrailllm match, from th backs of mules Won by Kirk, of A Company. Hula obstacle race Won by Glover, D Battery second. Oreen, Macblne Qua Platoon; third. Muier, oriuiiuuu. The wall-scaling contest was won by rnmnanv A under Lieutenant 8. A. Camp bell- second. Company L. Lieutenant Malone; third. Company K. Lieutenant Ullo. The First Section of the Macblne Gun Platoon, of the First Infantry, won the machine gun platoon contest. Shelte-tent pitching contest Won by Cor poral Boyer and Private flobeck. or" F. Company. Corps of Engineers; second. Pri vates Moore and Calloway, Company A; third. Khlpp and Mellon. Machine Gun Platoon. . i.uk.var.1 dash Won by Murphy, F. Com pany, lo seconds; second. Smith. R. S-, M. Company; tnira. uarcy. w luhhj.uj. "..- .-rt hurdles Won by Hinds. C Com pany; second. Gibson, E Company; third. Darcy. G company. Pole vault Won by Welsh. B Company; second. Hinds: third. Wlthrow. 220-yard dash Won by Murphy. F Com pany, 12 seconds; second. Ecu, O Company; third. Paul, F Company. Corps of Engineers. Puttlne le-pound shot won by (jorporai Kidd. I Company: second. Davis. O Com pany: third. Courtney: 36 feet, 7 Inches. Bicycle race Won by Flnnlgan. B Com pany; second. Newman. H Company; third. Kinney. E Company. Machine sun Platoon, finals Won by First Section. Weity. Clymentson. Goings: sec ond. B Company. 8erant Williams, par- rlsh and Lamb; third, K company, serceant Ptterson, Mocsernlnk and Zeller. Auto Crash Hurts Four. VANCOUVER. Wash., July &. (Spe cial.) When speeding at the rata pf between u ana sv mues an cour on Eleventh street at 7:45 o'clock ' to night, Frank Tingley, driving hla five- "I lore to dis wells by the ocean. 1 lore the sweet breath of tbs sea. Bnt the loreiiest notion Tht stirs my motion Is Campbell' Soup waitisx lor me," They have never been "trustified." . The 'quality of. Campbell's Soups is better today than ever. But their price remains the same. From , year to year as our production con-' stantl y increased, every economical ad vantage has gone into the quality of Although . every ingre dient we use has steadily increased in price, Camp bell's Soups are now big ger value than ever before They are the greatest value in a food product ever given for the money. 21 kinds 10c a can JuMt add hot water, bring to a boil, and serve. Joseph Campbsli. Compavi Camden N J Look for the : red-and-white label I passenger automobile, with three friends, lost control of the car, which turned turtle, pinning; the four "occu pants beneath it. Tingley was unconscious, but will recover. The other occupants of the car were Paul Meszett, who suffered a scalp wound: A. G. Gates, a broken arm and body bruises, and John SIbeer, an old soldier, who was badly bruised. HIGH COST OF SUCCESS Doe9 tbe Anjerican Hastier Expend Too Much Xervous Energy? Washington, D. C, Herald. "Judging; the American hustler from my observations of him In his own country." Joseph Lyons, painter, novel ist, dramatist and one of the greatest hustlers of England, said. "I should say that the American hustler shows a lack of adaptation of means to ends, he cause he puts more mental, physical and nervous energy Into his work'at all times than It demands. Regarded ,as a machine, he Is not an economical one. He breaks down and has to be laid up for repairs too often.. He tries to do everything too fast. "He ruins his digestion by eating too fast: he plays havoc with his nerves by trying to work too fast. I hold that a man pays much more for nis success than his own success Is worth no mat ter how many millions It represents when It demands of him the expendi ture of all his powers and leaves him no time. Inclination or energy for the exercise of his faculties or talents in other directions. "The typical American, the hustling American, never seems to be satisfied, as most Englishmen are with what might be called moderate success." Accuracy of Fir in Our Navy. Engineering Magazine". The measure of -the battle efficiency of any vessel is her ability to deliver the greatest number of hits in the shortest possible time after the enemy is sighted, and with the least expendi ture of ammunition. The advance of the Navy toward this goal may be seen by a contrast of Its hitting ability during the Spanish American War, with its most recent performance In battle-practice, and in firing at the old battleship San Marcos (old Texas). The Texas was one of the American ships engaged In the battle of Santiago. Iess than 3 per cent of all the shells fired in this battle by the American fleet hit the enemy. There Is no record that a single 12-inch or 13 lnch shell took effect. The ranges were less than 3000 yards. Recently the New Hampshire used the old Texas as a tar get. She fired at ranges from 10.000 to 11.500 yards, and landed whole salvos on the Texas whenever she wished. Re cently at battle-practice off the Virginia Capes the Michigan, an au-Dig-gun ship, made 22 12-lnch hits at ranges Qf about 10.000 years, while steaming at "Summer Tired" Tha old fashioned theory of summer tired being; a condition that must be tolerated because. It Is due to hot weather and Its enervating effect upon tha system has been proven a false one. ... "That tired feeling" simply Indi cates most clearly a run down condi tion a lack of proper performance of organic action a fore-runner of sick ness upon the slightest exposure. Fortify vour system against the In roads of disease by the regular use of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey Taken as directed, this wonderful tonic will quickly bring to their nat ural healthful condition every diges tive organ, the lungs and heart, and in a short time extremely hot days will be passed bv without any feeling of physical discomfort or Mepression. Daffy's Pttre Malt Whiskey Is the onlv whiskey that was taxed by the Government as m medicine during; the Spanlah-Aaierlcan War. , Tne genuine is ,sold IN SEALED BOTTLES ONLY by druggists, grocers and dealers, or direct, tl.00 per large bottle. Medical booklet and doctor's advice sent free on application. The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co, Roches ter, a. ' Ml Medium-Priced Extravagance is unnecessary in the -purchase of a really good piano. Time was when a piano under $500 could not be considered either well made or musically dependable. Improvements in methods of manufacture and development of mechanical aids in finest machines have made the production of really good pianos possible at prices so reasonable that any home may now pos sess a thoroughly good instrument. In medium priced, as in pianos of the highest possible grade, our house offers more value at a given price than any on the Coast. Here may be seen pianos at any desired figure, and they are g'ood ones, every one guaranteed fully by maKers and ourselves. For $195 we are selling' a spe cially built piano that sells at $250 and $275 else where, and justifies that price. The difference is only in business methods and quantity selling. $210 buys one still better, on easiest terms, $10 down and $6 monthly, if you HKe. Good enough for any home, cheap enough, for any income. Then there are many at $225, $250 and $275, that are wonderful pianos when compared with those elsewhere at equal prices. $10 as a first pay ment, $7.50 or $8.00 monthly, maKes you the owner of one, and your satisfaction is guaran teed by a house that is solid and substantial. No matter what your piano desire, we are in position to satisfy it and to save you money in the transaction. Besides, your dealings with our house will get your confidence and Keep your re spect. There can be no aftermath of misunder standing's and dissatisfaction. It's a square deal to all aliKe. .. -1 Or. ft J -W - - TJt. ' Fm 304 Oak Street Bet. 5th and 6th 15 knots, the target being only 60 feet long by 80 feet high. She fired 48 12 inch shells. Her percentage of hits was therefore about 46. The rate of firing was about two shots per minute per gifn. This In a moderately rough sea, while the sea was smooth at the battle of Santiago. Won't Need Help. Mariner's Advocate. "My husband is particularly liable to seasickness, captain," remarked a woman passenger. "Could you tell him what to do in case of an attack?" " 'Taln't necessary, mum," replied the raptain. "He'll do'it." ' r . , .mt.. .!....-. --.ill, . i.! . . . I iH Cool Down and Cool Of fin B.V. D. TT'S the summer underwear of certain canrfbrt Ioose fitting, free-draping, soft-feeling. These Coat Cut Undershirts, Knee Length Drawersand Union Suits ward off summer faz and fret. - This Red Woven Label B. V. D. Union Suits Pat. 43007) S1.00, S1.50.(2.00, S3.00 and SS.OO a lint. MADE FOR THE .Ml BEST RrTAILTRADgJ B. V. D. Coat Cut Un dershirts and Knee Length Drawers, 60c, 73c. S1.00 and S1.S0 a garment. (Trade Mark Rtf. V. S. PaL Off. and Foriitn Countries.) is eswtd on aery B.V. D. Undergarment. Take so undergarment uilkout this label. The B. V. D. Company, New York. 111! ! I ! MM illni.'