I THE MORNING OREGON-TAX, TUESDAY, AUGUST 1. ' 1811. ; : " ! FIRE AT THE DALLES MILL Wasco Warehouse & Milling Company and Great South ern Depot Burned. RAIL TRAFFIC IS DELAYED flames Supposed to Have Marled From Infective Wiring M-t .Fire to Mill Dust and Violent Explosion Results. THPJ TAJJ.ES. Or.. Jul . - (Spe cial) TVlth an estimated less of JCn. OOO. partly covered by Insurance, fire, supposed to have started from defec tlva wiring- In the mill of the Wasco Warehouse Mining Company, last nlirht destroyed tha mill. valued at IlIOoOO: tba Great Southern Railway depot. vslued at ItO.OOO; the rolltne; stock In the yarda of the O.-W. R- N. Co.. valued at several thousand dollara; a section-house, several frelaht sheds and aharka and a larae quantity of hay. The buildings were located at the east end of the main street. The town wu threatened by the flamea for more than an hour. me winu from the west, savins; the town. No fatalities accompanied the tire and the only person hurt was an un identified man. who fell In front of the volunteer hose cart and was run over. Before the first alarm waa given, the intll dust, which had been set afire br the wires. eaploded and threw flamea and burning- chaff 250 feet Into the air. spreading- It over freight ears of the O.-W.. R. N. and the Great Southern Railway in the yarda. setting fire to them. The cars in the yards were practically all empty. When the Are department arrived It was seen that the fire In the mill waa beyond control and tha effort waa made to save the brewery of the Eastern Oregon Brewing Company, across the street from the flour mill. The direc tion of the wind blew the flamea away from the brewery and although It scleral timea caught Are It was saved. During part of the evening buildings worth approximately $200,000 and resi dences In the cast end of town, worth about 1:0.000 were In danger and a sinft of the wind would have wiped tliem out. The tracks of the O.-W. R. N. Com pany lines were so warped out of shape by the fierce heat of the fire that they had to be replaced and the traffic over the division will be held up until about I o'clock this morning. At a late hour this morning the wheat In the mill wa still burning fiercely. COMING WEEK TO BE COOL (-hovers and Seasonable. Weather Is Official Forecast. WASHINGTON-. July 31- Showers and continued seasonable temperatures will feature the weather generally throughout the county the coming week. The weekly forecast issued yes terday says: The general barometric pressure dis tribution shown by the International weather chart Is such as to indicate that there will be no unseasonably high temperatures the coming week In any part of the country, except possibly the extreme Southwest and the Interior of the South Pacific States. Fairly well distributed precipitation Is prob able during the week In all district from the Kocky Mountains eastward to the Atlantic Coast. A disturbance was promised to be attended by general showers, which will appear In the Northwest about Wednesday and move eastward, cross ing the central valleys Thursday or Friday. This disturbance will be fol lowed by considerably cooler weather in all middle and northern atates from the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic states. SPOKANE LIMPS INTO PORT Wrecked Steamer Arrives In Seattle In Tow of Tug. SFATTt.R. Wash.. Julv 31 (SDecial Blackened, bruised and boken by the terrific rush of waters through her hulk after" she struck Seymour Nar rows June 29. the excursion steamer Spokane arrived In port today from Plumper Bay. where she waa beached on the night of the wreck. In tow of i.ne British tug Salvor, her own steam assisting on the haltering voyage. The picture was In contrast to her depsrture from this port three dayi before the wreck, when the decka were aflutter with waving handkerchiefs, light hearts and fond goodbyes. Of the ITS passengers the Spokane had on board on her last voyage to A. asks, two did not return. The water soaked baggage In the staterooms, aa d'srlosed by the sesrrh begun for the first time todsy by offlt-lsls of the com pany, told the story of the mad flight to the lifeboats. BARRETT TO BE HONORED Knights of Pvtlilas and Commercial Clnb to Entertain. H. Beckwlth. president of the Port land Commercial Club, will make ar rangements this morning for the re ception of John Barrett, director of the Pan-American I'nlon. who will reach here today on the Shasta Limited from San Francisco. A banquet will be ' given In his honor Thursday evening. The Knights of Fythlas also will ar range to entertain Mr. Barrett at the regular meeting of the lodge Tues day night. Mr. Barrett has been a member of the lodge for many years anj has been entertained by them on previous visits to Portlsnd. Arrange ments were made to telegraph him a special Invitation from the Knights of Pythias yesterday. Probably a single speech of intro duction will be given Thursday, and the remainder of the time given to Mr. Barrett fof his address on "What tne Panama Canal Means to Oregon." Tickets for the banquet are on aala at the Commercial Club. SLAYER BAFFLES POLICE o Trace of Murderer of Seattle - Chauffeur Is Found. ' SEATTLE. July SI. The police have been unable to find a trace of the man "who murdered Joseph Tsro. an auto mobile driver. In bis automobile at 200.00 Twenty-seventh avenue and Cherry streets last night. The finding of the passenger a revolver with three empty shells in a yard near therene of the shootl.ig and the l.lent if icatlon of a re volver found in the automobile belong ing to Taro disclosed the fact that Taro and his assailant engaged In a brief battle before the driver was mortally wounded. Two shots had been fired from Tarn's revolver and a hole In the tonneau cover shQwed where one of them went. Cr V. Lamont. president of the Mo ran Company, shipbuilders, who. with his wife and a party of friends, were In tha automobile Taro was passing when the crime was committed, said today that he believes Taro attempted to drive ihls machine Into the Lamont car. as a means of ridding himself of his unwelcome passenger. Umont turned his car aside and avoided a collision, at the same time warning Taro, who shouted In reply that he was being held up. The shoot ing followed Immediately, and Taro a assailant escaped as the dead man drove hla automobile into an tp; proachlng street car. ofrceFgetsIpeeder H. M. COVEY LEADS POLICEMAN IV MERRY RACE. Patrolman, Finally Victor, Taes Dealer, Who Has Engagement to Catch Train, to Station. H. M. Covey, manager of the Covey Motor Car Company, waa arrested by Motorcycle patrolman 81ms Sunday evening at Fast Sixteenth street and BelmorU avenue, after an exciting chase laating half an hour, for exceed ing the speed limit, covey expiaineu to mln Bailev that he tried to run away from 8!ma because he intended leaving Portland for the East at 7 o'clock thla morning, to be gone a month, bad his ticket and reaervatton. and did not want to be detained. Covey was advlaed to call up Judge Taswell. He did so and entered a plea of guilty over the telephone in advance of hfs hearing. He was released on $25 ball, which he agreed to forfeit, but which will be applied as payment of his fine on a plea of guilty. Motorcycle Patrolman Sims "tacked In to" Covey when he saw he waa exceeding the speed limit. Covey drove several blocks before he discovered that the officer mas after him. Then, thinking simultaneously of the police station and the necessary appearance In court, hie 7 o'clock train and his urgent bualnesa in the Fast, he opened up all the speed valves, clutches and gears and started to smash track rec ords. 8lms noted the sudden spurt, and bis motorcycle was soon a streak of sputtering sparks. Up one street snd down another the chase led. the motorcycle gaining lit tle by little, particularly when cornera were turned, until Covey gave up at Sixtieth and Belmont and aubmltted to arrest. Covey was profuse In hla apology, and was so pleased to make the ad vance arrangement about pleading guilty that he thanked Judge Taxwell and 'the entire police department and agreed to pay for the extra gasoline Sims burned In catching him. HOPOFFERSAREREFUSED WASHINGTON GROWERS TURN DOWN 2 CENTS. James Plncus, Tacoma Broker, Pre dicts That Crop In State Will Reach 22,000 Bales. TACQMA. Wash.. July SI. (Spe Washington hop crop la very good this year and will average about the same as in former years. We ex pect about 12.000 balea In the Yakima country. In Eastern Washing ton, and about 10.000 bales in Western Washington. Including the Pugtt Sound region." said James Plncus. the hop broker, yesterdsy. "A long period of dry weather haa shortened the crop greatly. Our crops here are about the same. In this state we have the hop lice to contend with, but that Is easily and successfully sprayed. Our market looks fine. "Growers are refusing offers of 25 cents for hops In the field. There Is no telling how high the price will go. You simply cannot buy hops on the Coast. "Offers of I cents are refused by Pierce County growers, and- It Is said no surprise will be caused if offers are made soon at 20 cents. A few dealers believe hops w'll go to 40 cents, while several say the price may poasibly go to iO cents. In recent yeara growers here have been forced to sell at a BANKER TO -BE RETURNED Requisition for Head of Prarl, 111., Institution Sought. SPRING FT KLD. 111.. July 31. G. C. Weaver. State's Attorney, and David Allen. Sheriff of Tike County, appeared before Governor Deneen to obtain a requisition for the return of Carey E. Manker, the absconding president of the Bank of Pearl, at Pearl. Ill, who fled from there almost three years ago with his accounts short about 145.000. The requisition was issued and Sher iff Allen atarted for San Francisco, where last Saturday Manker eurrend ered himself to the police. Manker will be brought, to Pike County to stand trial. He is said to be penniless. BROADWAY'S HERMIT DEAD Spaniard Lived S0 Years In New York Without learning English. NEW YORK, July St. "The Hermit of Broadway," as Manuel Matrlnex. a Spanish gentleman, had come to be known because he had lived In a hotel on Broadway for the laat SO years In such seclusion that he never learned "Kngllsh, and almost never spoke with anyone, died yesterday. He was 85 years old. He rarely left his room and then .it waa only to alt in the hotel corridors and watch the people walk to and fro. MEXICANS PLAN CAMPAIGN Llheral Party Organlxed to Name Candidate to Oppose Madera. MEXICO CITY. July SI. For the purpose of placing In the Held candi dates fit for the Presidency and Vice Presidency, the Liberal party has Just been reorganized under the direction of Dlenando Agleslaa Calderon. who an nounced yesterday that early In Au gust a geneiul convention will be held to name Msdero's opponent. In association with Colonel Calderon in hla venture are a number of men prominent in Mexican affairs. KAISER ANGRY AT CABINET MEMBER Emperor Furious at Situation Baron'Placed Germany in During Absence. COUNTRY IN- NEAR-PANIC Klderlon-Ware Waechfer Thou;ht Great Britain Was Indifferent to Morocco and Would Desert France He Gels Shock. PARIS. July SI. The Matin's Ber lin correspondent says he learns on high authority that the German Em peror is furious because of the situa tion In which Baron von Klderlen Wara Waerhter. the Foreign Secre tary, placed the country In the Em peror's absence. It was believed by the Secretary that Great Britain was utterly Indif ferent to Morocco and would abandon Francs In the moment of danger. The arma of France then would be turned against Great Britain. However, Instead of this, France kept her bead, and the British Gov ernment officially informed the Ger man Ambassador that If Germany at . .-J . r... ... . nv noint in Mo- iemiicu iu . u 1 j w - rocco, there would be the grand set tlement with England which had been so long talked of. The outcome was a panic many. The Foreign Secretary asked the advice of bankers and other ad visers and all of them .-told him he must abandon most of 'his demands. WAR SECRETARY IS GUEST Porto Rlcan Governor Gives Recep tion at San Juan. HAV IITiV Pitrtn Hico. Julv SI. Governor and Mrs. Colton gave a re ntion at the nalace late Saturday night In honor of the American Secre tary of War. Henry L. sumson. The Secretary today made an inspec tion of tho Irrigation work In the Guayama district and the Cay Melpost. The American visitors were ruicruiucu tonight at Jajome Alto, the Governor's nnuniain home. There will be a re view of the troops today and the Secretary expecta to nave a long con ference with Governor Colton on Porto Hican affairs. HURRICANE TOLL GROWS Eleven Uvea Known to Have Been Lost Off New England Coast. BOSTON. July Jl. Grlrn loss of life and disaster to shipping 'by the West Indian hurricane which swept the New England coast Friday, continuing Sat urday night. Eleven Uvea are known to have been lost and the long list of fishing and coasting craft and yachts wrecked or disabled Is constantly growing. 105 DAYS' SLEEP BROKEN Girl rwaUens for Five Honrs, Eat Three Meals, and Slumbers. VANDALIA. 111.. July 31. After .1 .ln..l -intlniiniii.lv for 105 days. Miss Hazel Schmidt, the 18-year-old girl, whose strange case has pux sled physicians for weeks, was awake day. She said she felt no ill effects from her slumber. Attending physicians ssy the girl's trance Is broken and that she soon will be herself again. HAIL RAVAGES FRUIT BELT Many Growers In Nlaga. Peninsula District Face Ruin. TORONTO. Ont.. July 81. Ninety per cent of the crop In one of the rich est sections of the Niagara peninsula fruit belt was destroyed by a terrlfio hall storm yesterday. Between St. Catherines and Winona small fruit trees were stripped of their branches and many farmers face finan cial ruin. Hundreds of chickens were killed by the hall. FIREBUG RUINS FACTORIES Incendiary Blase In Dubuque, la.. Cause Loss of $100,000. DUBUQUE. la.. July SI Fire of ln oendlarv origin yesterday destroyed property valued at 1190,000. distributed as follows: - Fpahn Rose Lumber Company, $50,000; Wlneckohorr Canning Com pany $40,000; lretcnmor manufactur ing Company, manufacturers of plumb ers' supplies, building and stock. $100. 000. MILK CONCERN UNDER BAN Oregon Creamery Proclaimed Vlo , lator of Pure Food Law. OREGON" NEWS BURR. IT. Washing ton, May 30. The Sclo CoJen"sed Milk Company, of Solo, Or.. U the latest Northweatern concern to go on the of ficial blacklist of the Department of Agriculture. This concern pleaded guilty to a charge of having violated the pure food act hy selling condensed aklm milk. The official pronunclamento with reference to this company, as given out by the Secretary .of Agricul ture, reads aa follows: "On or about December 1. 1909. the Sclo Condensed Milk Company, a cor poration. Sclo. Or., shipped from the state of Oregon Into the state of Wash ington a quantity of a food product labeled 'Country Club Brand Condensed Milk. Sclo Condensed Milk Company, Sclo, Or. The Milk of Quality. Country Club. Directions. Pure High Grade Milk, evaporated and preserved by per. feet sterilisation. Country Club Brand. Used for every purpose that you would Natural Milk from the Cow. Give the same care and attention you would fresh milk or cream. Every precaution has been taken in the handling of this milk, to produce a food product abso lutely pure. This product complies with the Pure Food lew. Samples from this shipment were procured snd analysed by the Bureau of Chemistry. United States Department of Agriculture, and the product was found to contain water I 7S 7 per cent, fat 7.20 per cent, pro- j ..I- r ac nr rani lactose 10.4S per cent. I ash 1.5S per cent, undetermined 0.6S per , cent, tne per cent ui ioii 27. S3, and the proportion of fat in said solids being JS.S per cent. As the find ings of the analyst and report Indicated that the product was adulterated with in the meaning of the Food and Drugs Act of June '30, 1906, the Secretary of . ....in.r. an-orHed th said Scio Con densed Milk Company, Incorporated. 1 and the party from whom tne samples were procured opportunities Ings. As It appearea ancr hm'"'8 1,-1.4 that the shinment waa made In violation of the act, the Becretary of Agriculture reported; tne tacta 10 mo Attorney-General with a statement of the evidence upon which to base a prosecution. "In due course a criminal Information was filed In the District Court of the United States for the District or ore rnn raini the lad Sclo Condensed. p. p. t f 1 1 1- tf'nmrtnnv Tnrnrnnm lAll. CnarSTlng the above shipment ana aiiegins "i the product so shipped waa aouiteratea In that a product made from skim milk hart Keen substituted and narked In said shipment for condensed milk, and in that a valuable constituent 01 wnoio milk, to wit. milk fat, had been wholly or In part abstracted therefrom prior to or during the process of manufac turing the said condensed milk. "On January 11, 1911, the defendant entered a plea of guilty to the above Information, whereupon the court Im posed a fine of 125 AMMONIA RIVER FLOWS MAN NEARLY ASPHYXIATED When tank bursts. Companions Brave Deadly Fumes to Rescue Unconscious Worker; Creek Polluted by Chemical. SPOKANE. Wash., July 31. (Spe cial.) A peculiar accident which near ly resulted fatally to a man and killed thousands of fish, occurred at Pullman, Wash., yesterday evening. A valve in one of the ammonia tanks In the Star Bottling Works' Ice factory burst, al lowing the ammonia to escape. The fumes drove the workmen from the building and one of them was so over come that he lost consciousness and was rescued by heroic efforts of his companions, who braved the fumes to drag him to the open air. The Ice plant was shut down' and the town Is threatened with an Ice famine. ln ammonia, which flooded one of ths floors, found Its way to the waste water sewer and Into the creek at the bridge on Kamlackum street. People passing over the bridge noticed a com motion in the water and hundreds of fish were seen Jumping and capering about. The river Is now covered with dead fish, while hundreds lie on the bottom of the stream. The city health department is con fronted with the problem of removing and burying these fish, which cover a pond probsbly 100 feet wide. There Is little current to the stream at this point snd the ammonia seems to have lost Its strength after getting a short distance above and below ths sewer mouth. PROPOSALS OF MARRIAGE Question-Popping In the Long Ago and In ltll. Kansas City Star. Everybody knows how a man was expected to offer himself in marriage 60 or 100 years ago. According to the most approved custom, he was sup posed to' slid gracefully down on one knee, take the young woman's right hand firmly in both fists and murmur, "Amelia, may I have the temerity to beseech you to bestow your band on my unworthy self?" Manners have changed since those days. Half a dozen new novels were picked up at random from the latest assortment sent out by the publish ers, with a view to observing modern ways of proposing proposing as it is done by our most popular modern au thorities. Consider, If you please, "The Girl in the Other Seat," by Henry Kltchell Webster. It's at the end of a frightfully exciting motor race Just won by Longstreet. Clarissa, who has learned to drive, offers to take him home, but she turns off from the direct road. " 'That's not the way to New York, you know," said Longstreet. " "Shan't we explore a little,' said Clarissa, "the new world T . "His hand went to the wheel and rested on hers. " 'Out to the very rim of it,' he said." That's all. Neatly and quickly done, isn't it? Of course, they lived happy ever after. In Marthe Troly-Curtln's "Phrynette" the proposal takes this somewhat matter-of-fact form: " 'Oh, Monty. I am so glad, but, do you know, I have not a penny?" "Yes. I don't care. 1 have quite a beastly lot of money myself.' " "And that I am very fond of pretty clothes and things; In fact, that I am rather expensive?' ""So much the better. I hate dowdy girls." - "Then you know all my drawbacks and you want to marry me all the same? Monty, I adore you." " "Then It Is "yes"?' " 'Certainly not." " Just a little plauant surprise in the refusal at the end; enough to- give va- n.iv Nobodv wants everything musn- mush. Jn "Dawn O'Hara," by Edna F.rher. the nroDOsal comes aa uawn and Doctor von Gerhard are walking along the lake front on New Year's day. The jjoctor merely taacs " nuitAfi. "When I have told you." he said, of my love for you, although already you know it. then you will tell me. Hush. Do not deny this thing. There shall be no more lies between us. After all it Is no secret. Three months ago I told Norah. It was not news to her. "I felt my face to be as white and tense as bis own. Koran Knows. Very business-like, you will observe, words wasted. It's a rather unconventional bit of proposing that is done in er nifn n nnonvmously published ro mance. While the hero Is cooking breakfast, skillet in nana, in nis cuiv. Hilda rushes in. I "Hilda! "Now she was in my. hungry arms and I was gazing ecstatically Into her lovely face. The long, dark lashes veiled her gladdened eyes, her cheeks bloomed like the. roses In one of her German gardens yonder. Stay; what was It she was murmuring? " 'I think. Jo-Joslah, you will manage b-better If you drop that thing."' What need of more? Out of a vast experience In novel writing Anthony Hope produces this proposal In his latest volume. "Mrs. Maxon Protests." "They walked in silence for a long while Then she felt her eyes Irre sistibly drawn to him. As she turned her head he held out his hands. Slowly hers came forward to meet them. "You couldn't send me away now, could you. Winnie?" Why foolishly wait for an answer? Of course Winnie couldn't. Still not all of tha moderns are so thoroughly matter-of-fact. The old fashioned sort of thing appears In 111 Levlngton Comfort's "She Bulldeth Her 1.-, I I Buster Browns and No. 2 Buster Brown, sSi inches 2.00 No. 2A Buster Brown 2y2x4 ins. $3.50 No. 1 Folding Buster Brown, 2x314 inches irrm ffKLiS LSi -Hi pi- -a ii s-rWu. simplicity in amateur photography. - -We develoD and print photo films sent to us by our enthusiastic friends all over the. North- cSSJix We S? develop and print yours if you wish. We prepay the return postage. -Everything is here that is needed by the amateur photographer. We want to help you make good pictures pictures that you will cherish as the years go by. Woodardj Clarke & Go. Photos enlarged and framed attractively; picture framing at lowest prices. A BURNS GAS IN SUMMER, COAL IN WINTER. Takes up room of only one range, fl CHANGED FROM GAS TO COAL IN THREE SECONDS. Anyone can do it; no discon necting, no mechanical work, no -trouble. g A GREAT SAVER OF GAS One 'oven burner bakes or roasts; ordinary gas ranges re quire two. . ,. g NO WASTE HEAT Heat from top burners passes around oven and heats it. ordinary gas ranges waste all this. ' A PRACTICAL AND SENSIBLE COAL, WOOD.AND GAS RANGE-INVESTIGATE. UNIVERSAL STOVES AND RANGES-$17.00 TO $65.00-ROUND OAK RANGES J. J. K A 130 First, 131 Front House." Mount Polee Is in full flight and the rescued heroine has come to consciousness in the hero's arms in the shelter of an old cistern. Whereupon he makes this dissertation to Paula: "Were you to die, I should love you and know you were near. This is love above Flesh and Death the old mysti fying Interchangeables. This happi ness Is the triumph over death. It is a revelation, a mighty adoring not a mere woman in my arms, but an in effable Issue of eternity. A woman, but more Love and Labor and Life and the Great Good that Drives the World. This Is the happiness I have and hold today: Though you died I should know that you lived and were mine." Do you get that about the "mystify ing Interchangeables" and the "ineffa ble issue of eternity?" Anyhow, Paula did though how she knew there in the dark that all those Impressive words were to be spelled with capitals. Isn't explained. t Girl Kidnaped, Says Mother. Mrs. Cora Kiel, living with her mother at 815 East Twenty-seventh street, reported to the police last night that she feared her husband. Fred Kiel, from whom she recently separated, had kidnaped their 6-year-old daughter, Myrtle, and now has her in hiding in the city or took her to Hoqulam. Wash. She said he came to the house at 2:30 Saturday afternoon and represented to her mother thst he wanted to take the little girl to the playgrounds for an outing. He had not returned with the girl at 9 o'clock last night and she reported that she feared the daughter had been kidnaped. The Mexican sovemment hs been ked bT chemists of thst country to e.t shlii .h a nitlonal -hon! of chemlMry snrt phnrmao. Fermentation the Chief Cause of Most Sickness Many people who are sick do not stop to think that fermentation Is re sponsible for their aches and pains. Stomach trouble usually begins with food in the stomach that cannot digest. Instead of this, it begins to ferment. Fermentation forms wind in the stomach and bowels, causing Intense pain in the abdomen after you eat. Fermentation causes lack of appetite, severe headaches and often leads to constipation and a hundred other ills. Take a glaes of Baldwin's Cel-so two or three times a day to stop the fer mentation and remove the cause of your troubles and you will soon feel like a new person. Baldwin's Cel-so is mildly laxative, is a pleasant and refreshing drink that contains no opium, morphine or other habit-producing drug, and Is sold by all druggists In 10c. 25c. 50c. and 11.00 slzee. No. 1 Box Ansco, 3x3 inches.... 5.00 Folding Ansco Junior, 2x44 ins- $12.00 No. 9 Folding Pocket .Ansco, 4X inches $--0OO ,...$b.OU , TiTTorr-c-o T5TnwM tln"a Rmnmpr. and huY for yourself an Chainnipioini INTERCHANGEABLE COAL, GAS and WOOD RANGES g TWO RANGES IN ONE A high-class gas range and a high-grade coal or wood range, equal to the best. Costs hut. a trifle more than either alone. D D E 1" JL-i Established 1878. P I A N O s DOWN, DOWN THEY GO Never have high grade pianos been so ruthlessly slaugh tered, but we are going out of busi ness and they must be sold. See us to day. PIANOS HERE ARE SOME OF THE MAKES: Ivers & Pond, Davenport&Treacy, Melville Clark, Behning and the Apollo and other Players. A N O s My Optical Department Is for You " sT5 s ! . tT V i V Vvt i A f I EMPLOY A GRADUATE OPTOMETRIST. Staples, the Jeweler 162 First Street, Near Corner of Morrison Street Anscos "SsT" The it Hardware Man Next to Waiting-Room BUY TODAY We are quitting business and every thing goes at cost and some for less. If you can use a piano, now is your opportunity to save money. PIANOS H0VENDEN PIANO CO. 106 Fifth Street, Next Perkins Hotel For everybody who wishes to take advantage rf it We correct all forms of aonormai visiuu vwm me am i - t remove headaches, relieve the results of strained and iLk ination no charge. -J Sphero lenses in your '-'1 frame Sl.00 Sphero lenses in your rimless frame $1.50 Sphero lenses in alumi- - , . n num Irwin.. . . . . vaw Sphero lenses in gold- filled frames $3.50