,,viiy u Liivi'slH V. MAUCII 0, gllfa MOii.M.'" i I ROOSEVELT GLAD OF TAR'S STAND Colonel Scores President's Ad ' visers as Enemies of Pref erence Primary. BOSTON SPEECH DISCUSSED Oylrr llaj Man Kipre-s Hop Ad mintMratlon Manacrr Will .! Purport lo Bill of Kind In Varku Stmtr. NEW TORK. Mr-h 1 . Theodora noexrvrlt Uued a talment todar M.-h he dirud rrrstdent Tart i. h In Bofln ytrrdr. I am vellnslr 'd that ihe rr id.nl (vora he PruldentiaT primary, an If hl campatn mMf elacera lr will bak him In tha proposition, he wfil ha abia at cnrl to IK rha Pr lntil prtrrnttal prlroarr In Mlchl En. Iliino.a. Maryland, tha Dlatrlct of lolumbta and X, York." ald Mr. Tru-id-nt Taft l rportd a aar tns at lumton Yetrrdy." Mr. Rooe rli Haul, "that tha roluntary primary power. a li rll It. the aoap box prtmarv that l. a method adopted by n. peopi I ha only war In whlrh to exprr.a ttselr wlyliea when their l.rsisiaitirra deny them any other op p..riunlty to do o. U aorae than notn ins Hut the President continued to ' that he tavored a preterentlal pri mary t"r t ie ITealdenrr- Male Aaaa part. "m t:ie fifth of thla month Matthew lla'e of ltoaion. a tins on behalf of f e Ma.-ea-;iuetl" TrelTe Repab h.n. who were roaklnr a desperate fia'H for the paae of the Prealden tial preference primary bill, tele craphed the ITeeldent at tha White Mouse, aakln him for Ma moral aup jM.rt In aecurlnr the passage of the Maa.huett Mil. Mr. Hale referred specifically to the fact that the Presl lent adherent In Maachuetti were iilne eerr meana to defeat tha itaa-aae of the bill. on tne th of March, the President a rr.reiary. Mr. Utiles, wrote Mr. Mala a brief note sayln that hla message had been received and. by direction of Mr Taft. referred to hla campaign manager. Representative McKlnley. 4 who at the time was doing all lie could t. defeat a similar measure Mn Illinois). Pablle Oelalea Arawaed. Nothing further was heard from tha President or Ills campaign manager. Mr. M Kinley. by air. Hale, or by any one else In Massac buaetts. aa far as I know, and no moral aid, comfort or support was given by the President or his managers to the men In Massa chusetts, who were making a most des perate fight to overcome tha efforta of the ITeeldent'e supporters In that state- to drfeal the bill. -However. public ' opinion was aroused and the bill went through. ah.l I am enceedlngly glad that the President now nearly a week after the bill has become a law should say. he d.s, that he favors It and wel comes It. "Hut 1 earnestly hope the Prealdent and his supporters In other statea will support such legislation before It passes and not after It passes. Hill I la Maryland. There la pending In the Legisla ture of Marvland a bill providing for the ea-t kind of legally safeguarded Presidential preference primary which tl.e President say he favora. The Collector of Custom at Bal timore, the most aotlve of the dent'a party manager of Maryland and the head of the of f tce-holdera there has been opposing the enact ment of Ihe measure by rrvry meana In hl power. Kvrry Roosevelt mem ber of the Marvland legislature Is for the primary Mil and all have been en .leavorlng to secure the assistance of collector :one and Governor OoMs boroush and the other supporter ot president Taft. Osaaltlea la sets. "n almost similar situation exist In Michigan. There the Legislature was called In special session to enact a presidential preferential primary law. The gentlemen In that state who re leading the movement for Mr. Taft nomination oppoaea in dmi i all the meana In their power. It wa flnallv passed, despite that opposition. . but It larked in the Senate the neee- . t - v.tA t ft make It lm- mcllatrl, effective, the upportera of ti- r-resKient rmi U" k- - o.ition ard holding more than a third of the legislature. Oovernor Osborn l a, now called the Legislature to re convene on March SO. .... ... . . . .,. President take of the law that ha been enacted In Massachusetts l taken by hi UP .oners in Michigan, earnestly and In -Icood faith, there will be no difficulty in immediately securing the Presiden tial preferential primary In Mlchlgaa. iku Mtwattea Masllar. -in Ohio the situation Is not far dif ferent. Ist week mate Chairman w . . ... .A i. i-avlin. man- hros n 1 ' - . er of the ITesldenf campaign In t.hlo a proposition that the atate eon .. - . i. -m elect the alx dele- veriioo. " E.tea.at-larse from Ohio. houVd ba composed of the 41 delegatea to Chl-.-awo chosen from the Congreaalonal dtatrlrts under the tate primary law. thus !vlng expression to the people wishes in tne election - . i.... im last Saturday Mr. .. i k . .nawc in xlr. Hrown. Tlltl. IB ' , refused to accept the sasgestlon. and has Insisted that the delegate to the state convention nan oe riis-i . ik. maiiU at larae. The sM'tatlon In llllnol la eimllar. Oovernor I-eoeen haa tted publicly that he will convene-the Legllatur in special session to pas a Preslden :. . ..ini.rr bill In ease tha necessarv two-thlrda of the member hi irrw beforehand to adopt a measure. Taft Iadevw Arrayed. I eader, of the Presidential party In Illinois. Including Representative McKtnley. director of the National Taft bureau, to whom the Presidents secretary referred the request for help in getttrg the Massachueett primary - bill throueh. are using every possible effort to prevent Ut agreement In iiiejttlort- "If tiie Tsfl leaders in Illinois, who ' include tVe leader of the National com paln committee which 1 conducting h, president' canvass for renomlna- t win. will now act In good faith In ac cordance wltn the Presidents speech approvirz the b.Il that has already w n- ...H in the Massachusetts Ig- tlt'H at'ire. inry can rnui. Illinois. Hit'k.. v. . . Ai.iurrfl In Oklahoma in- - . 1 1 - wilt In di.ates the need of Presidential pri maries and show how the patronage CANDIDATE FOP. PRESIDENT, ' WHO CARRIED DAKOTA PRIMARIES IN CONTEST WITH THEODORE ROOSEVELT. ROBERT M. KOI.I.KTTrV fMTK.n sTATKf M-:.ATOK CO"l. is at thla moment being used to defeat the will ot in people. Fear of Trraaay Kawrcea. . k. Kn mn mnrh recent expression of fear of the tyranny of a majority. It may b worth while point ing out that the only tyranny of which there la any danger at thla moment aa regards Ihe Presidential nomination I tyranny of a minority led by the of- nceholder ann tne agems ui deal, and these men have been doing everything in tneir powr oov '"-i"" lo mislead, but to misrepresent and de- rraua tne rignia wi in i- v In Oklahoma a convention In one dis trict was held very early and elected two delegates Instructed for the Pres ident. Then a primary for the tat convention waa held and that Identi cal district gave a two-to-one rot ic-alnst the Prealdent. mia waa a genuine primary I do not know t.ihr lis annonenta hare called It a soapbox primary or not. In this case the only tyranny exercisea or i" '' Jorlty waa to express, their preference for President ana tney were ennuu out of thla preference at the prerlou convention." Letter la Qawrtew. w. DA.AvAt tier., ouoim a letter trnr Renubllcan Chairman Harris, of Oklahoma, promising a postmaster re appointment 11 ne orousrni. i.n uu. gatlona to atat and district conren- tlons. Ha continues. -Rump convention nave oeen nti In cae after case n auuouri, r" . v. nm.rlri have shown four and five and eight to one against the very men wno ncia ie t"'i' tions. There Is no present danger or. tyranny- of a majority; the danger I or iirinnv over an honest majority by an uncnipuloua minority.. "Here In New York the progrelTe member of the Legllatura and a non- nartlsan committee omsiuo """ . .w.i. tn secure a ererytning in i"r i genuine Presidential preferential pri mary and tooverinrow ' - posteroua primary bill which .wa passed by the machine of the two parties last yesr. wnn .no pose of preventing the people from getting control of the management of either party. - . The aupportera of Mr. Taft have ab solute control of the Legislature and If they choose to act on the principle of the President s speech In Massachu setts, made after the Massachusetts primary bill had been enacted Into law. they can ecur tor tnts siaiv - responding bill. -If these aupportera will now. In good faith, work for the Immed'ate passage of a proper Presidential preference pri mary In New York State, we doubtles can obtain tt. THF.ODOP.K ROOSEVELT." TAKT MUX BOLT IX MISSOVRI IVartenth Congr!.onal OlMrlct Contention Iproarlous. POrl-AR BLVFF. Mo, March 1 After an uproar. Taft aupportera with drew from the fourteenth Congreeslon- I Pistrlet ronrentlon her today. tearing the Rooaevelt adncrents in possession. : faction named dele gatea to the National convention. Roosevelt men were In a majority and could hare controlled the situation by force of number. At the after noon esslon the Cape Girardeau dele gation cast 21 votea for the Taft dele gates. They then withdrew. Resolution commending Colonel Roosevelt aa the greatest living tate man. the tatmanhlp of President Taft and the administration of Oov ernor Hadley were passed. The morning session w-a a continual uproar, with two seta of officer try ing to transact the business of the two factions. The Roosevelt faction claimed 111 delegate to the CongTesslsonal con vention and the Taft follower i. Western Steel Sofd. for $710,000. SEATTLK. Wash- March !. 11 tho assets of the Weotern oteel Corpora tion were sold today to tha highest bidder the Metropolitan Trust Com pany, 'of Saw York, which bid 7I0.000, Maine- the amount of the company' claim agaTnst the corporation for money loaned. Today' confirmation of the ale by the referee In bankruptcy mark the final chapter in the history or the Weetern .Pteel Company, which was capitalised at l.'O.OOO.OOO. asserted than ft poasessed assess worth I37.S25. 00 and promised holders of common tock dividend of 10 per cent per an num. The aset of the company were a steel plant at Irondale. Wash, and lands In Washington and British Co lumbia said to contain timber. Iron and coal. U. A. H. o ta)bHh Scholarship. SPOKANE, March 1. Miss Matti Wetherlll. of Spokane. Wash., we elected regent of the Washington chap ter. Daughters of the American Revo lution, yesterday. It wa announced that the chapter would establish a scholarship at Whitman College next September- NORTH V i KROU AJ- Churchill's Talk on British Naval Plans Resented. KAISER'S MOVE MYSTIFIES .nuounccmcnt That Emperor' Trip Is Postponed. Promptly ' AVlth drnwn. Taken lo Bear on In ternational Situation. BKRLIS. March 19. Germany waa considerably excited today by the re ports of the speech on the British na val programme by Winston Spencer Churchill. In which he maintained that England should only build war ships on the same scale a Germany, and when It was announced today that Emperor William had unexpectedly postponed Ms departure for Vienna, Venice and Corfu, scheduled for March il. misgivings at onee were apparent among diplomats. Prompt announce ment, following the first, that the pro gramme would finally be adhered to and that the Kaiser would depart, did much to allay tha tense feeling. The reason for a postponement of ficially asolgned In tha first announce ment was "difficulties in the fcphere of Internal politic. Kxsdaaatloa 1 ladeflalte. This explanation was to Indefinite .that It might have referred either to the coal strike, or, as seemed mora probable, to the conflict over the pro vision of finance to cover the increase In the army and navy, recently decided upon, and which caused the resignation of Adolph Wermuth, formerly Secre tary of the Imperial Treasury. There was a strong disposition here, however, to connect the Emperor' ac tion, later recalled, with the speech de livered yesterday by Winston Spencer Churchill. First Lord of the Admiralty, In the British House of Commons. This view waa strengthened by the fact'tht the Emperor in the course of the morn Ing paid a long visit to Admiral Albert P. Von Tlrplt. Secretary of tho Im perlal Navy, immediately after which leading officer of the Admiralty staff assembled in conference, the object ot which was not disclosed. f baage Wawld Ksabarraaa. Any reason for the Emperor chang ing the plana of hla foreign trip would have to be quit Important, a It would Involve the embarrassment ot Emperor Francis Joseph, of Austria, and K(ng Victor Emmanuel, of Italy, whose arrangements tor the meeting have bean made. In replying today to the speech made yesterday by Churchill, tha ddogno Oa xett adopts an unusually sharp tone. It says, in substance, that Great Britain must decide from the standpoint of her own Interests what Increase of her flet la necessary, and that Germany must do the aame thing. It continues: ".Germany will hardly ever have a navy equal to that of Ureat Britain, but if Germany'a navy Is to be destroyed the victory must cost th enemy so heavily that England will hardly have' any resources left to defend Its great International interests." KefereseM Theagat pportwa. Public ' opinion on the speech of Churchill ha not crystallised, but hla references to Oermany are regarded In many quarters as highly Inopportune, In view of the attempts being made to reach an understanding between the two countries. The negotiations which followed the trip to Berlin of Viscount llaldane. British Secretary of State for War, are being continued, but any big hopes of their success which may have been entertained are falling gradually. The negotiators would now be satis fled in all probability If they could achieve no more than a simple removal of the source of misunderstanding which hitherto have existed. The Bourse was weak today, oper ators regarding Churchill's speech aa to a certain extent unfriendly to Ger many, and the first announcement of he postponement of the Corfu visit of tho Emperor giving birth to many ru mor In regard to the Internal and for eign situation. Government stocks were generally lower. t Precedential Primary Plan lilt. ST. PAUL. - Minn.. March lS.Tho movement for the Presidential pref erence primary was lost today In the meeting of the Democratic State Cen tral Committee. Duluth was selected for the Stale Demuwraxitt Convention June i. GERMANY IS STIRRED MEXICANS' ESCAPE ANGERS GERMANY Minister to Madero's Capital, Thoroughly Aroused, Mak ing Investigation. SUSPICIONS NOT DENIED Kaiser's- Representative Tells For eign Office Belief Government Connived at Break of Men Who Slew Teuton. urvicn pttv March 1. The Ger man government Is thoroughly aroused by the escape five days ago oi w u in the oenltentlary at Puebla for the murder of four Germane at the Covadonga factory in ruuu... Tho German Minister. Baron -von Hint, will go to Puebla tomorrow to Investigate the affair and if hi ua . I , ! Biilil on icood p CIO ii s are uu"i - w authority. harp representation on tne part or Germany wm '""" Tha ausnejets escaped through a tun nel dug under the. walls. The German Minister is said to n the Mexican foreign office his belie that It waa the purpose of the state authorities to facilitate the escape of the men. . , . The German lived in quartern " J in a riarnr dciwvcu rurale of the Dia reg-imo and Mader- Istas. in tne ruins bodies of Alfred Boer and hi w ie. W llhelm Kuniman ,smi ' " ' LEWIS' CASHIER TELLS MORE NOTES SOLD THAX MORT GAGE CALLED XJR. About $1,100,000 Iteeolvctl From Sale and Only $80,000 Spent for Purchase of Heal Estate. oe ICCia Marrh 19. F V. Putnam, ex-treaurer of the Lewis enterprise, on the wltnes stand In the E. G. Lewis fraud trial today, testified that order sent In for first mortgage nura Cnlversity City property were filled by notes secured by a trust agreement and by other note unsccureu. He said the university ntignu. Realty Development Company ad vertised it would receive applications ..niiMit hv first mortgage on University Heights up to S537.O00. Or ders came In for Bomexning n .- 000 of these notes, ne tmio. When order were tilled up to the amount of the mortgage, he said, notes i.-.... aofiircri hv a. trust agree ment between the realty company and the People c-aving uumijniij. Putnam testified that while the total Issue of the realty companies 6 per cent notes was il.4BX.oou, tne amuum j o - i inn (inn. An advertise ment which was' read to the Jury stated that the proceeas or me nu " - desired for the purchase of land. "How much was actually so spent. District Attorney Houts asked Putnam. "Eighty thousand dollars," was the repl'. LA FOLLETTE WINS DAKOTA Continued From First Page.' Dakota demonstrated this fact by the overwhelming majority they gave the T.-i ...i The nroe resslves of -.-. -.in fnllnvr in tha footsteps of the North Dakota people, as the re port which I have from all over the state indicate that La Follette la growing in strength all the time. Af h, h arrived In Oretton and de livered a number of addresses, so that the voters can see and understand ex actly what he stands for. think tho i iii he even creator than was that In North Dakota. tv,.. result in North Dakota was fullv what I expected, as W. L. Houser, 1- f the nroa-resslve Republican i .nmrnlrt . when here a week WHUXAU " assured me that a canvas of the j intubated their DOSitlve flllc cess In North Dakota. Correspondence I have had with Senator La Follette predicted the ame result, not only in North Dakota, hut In other states hav ing the Presidential primaries." HADLEY AND STCBBS NAMED Petitions for Names on Primary Ballot for Vice-President Out. LINCOLN. Neb.. March 19. Petitions that the names of Governor Hadley. of Missouri, and Governor Stubbs. of Kan sas, be placed on the primary ballot as candidate for the. Republican nomina tion for Vice-President in this state were filed today with the Secretary of States The petitions came from Omaha, were on the same letter paper and appa rently written on the same typewriter. Kx-Senator Bovertdge. of Indiana, and John O. Yciser, of Omaha, already are candidate. SPEAKING ROUTE IS GKOWIXG Many Cities Ask That tolonrl In clude Thcin In Itinerary. WASHINGTON. March 19. Colonel Roosevelt trip to the Central State next week promises to develop Into a more comprehensive speaking tour than either he or his manager con templated. Since the announcement was made that he would speak In Chicago. St Paul or Minneapolis and St. Louis, the "National Roosevelt headquarters have received scores of telegrams from cltle along the way asking to be put on the schedule of the tour. TAFT ASKS SQUARE DEAL (Continued From First ) to decide whether the court decided right or not. I am in favor of the people, but I do not think the people ara possessed of the knowledge of the law as are the courts of New Hampshire, or as the Su preme Court of the United States. I believe - in popular government, but I believe in popular government ordered by legislation and by law. "You give up an independent Judici ary and you might as well give up your Constitution. I know enough about the common sense of the Ameri can popl t" know that they will never give up the Constitution and that they .re nut e-nins- to be honey-fuggled out of it by"being told that they are fit to interpret nice questions of Constitu tional law, just as well as or Deiier than judges. Aaaerfeaa People Great. "The American people are a great people because they can stand having the truth told to them about them selves without getting mad about it. and without turning on the man who tells the truth." Returning to' Boston in the early evening. President Taft made a brief call at the dinner of the New England Street Railway Club. The President left at S P. ML for Washington, where he will arrive to morrow morning. V V'irRinians Are for Taft." HARRISONBURG, Va., March 19. Seventh District delegates to Republi can National convention, John Paul and R. J. Walker, are instructed for Taft. EXCISE BILL-IS PASSED HOUSE VOTES 250 TO 40 OX IX- COME TAX MEASURE. Eighty Kepublican Votes Added to Solid Democratic Strength. Senate Result Dubioo. WASHINGTON", March 19. The Dem ocratic excise bill, virtually to tax .rchH'a income, when It. is 15000 or more a year, passed the House today. lav to su. i ne uemocniiB vuie uuu ly for the bill, and carried 80 Republi can votes with them. Forty regular Republicans voted against the bill. The bill goes to the Senate, where IIS Idle IB A MttJ ..'7110. .'- a said today that If they found the House measure would tax all classes of people alike they would support It. Demo cratic Senators, with a few exceptions, are expected to vote for it. and the same is expected from "progressive" Republicans. Republican leaders are depending upon the President's veto to check revenue revision ,bllls from the House. The excise bill, though primarily in tended to nroduce an v where from $20.- OoO.OOO to $60,000,000 a year to make up for the losses on tree sugar also is expected to bo one of the offsets to general pension legislation which seems sure to be enacted. I n n . 1 l.aaii rnit.r.'An held his majority Intact through the pass- ago OI tne Dill. UI one lciuuui ant vote was cast' against It and the measure was passed exactly as framed. SEGAL'S MOVES ABE EYED Sugar Men Say He Built Refineries Merely to Sell Them to Trust. NEW YORK. March 19. When the trial of John E. Parsons. Washington B. Thomas and other directors of the American Sugar Refining Company, charged with conspiracy to violate the criminal clause of the Sherman anti trust law, was resumed today In the United States District Court, Delaneey Aicoll. counsel for the defense, recalled George M. Newhall, president of the Newhall Engineering company. Air. Nicoll tried to show by the witness that Adolph Segal had made a practice of building refineries for the mere pur pose of selling out to the "sugar trust." Judge Hand told District Attorney Wise that he did not think letters writ- . v... T ... . i jA I.' Cl.lvd, tn hla nliuin Washington B. Thomas. Introduced yes- . . . ,1 I . . i 1 . 1 it n the statutes, and ruled them out. GUN PLAY ROILS WIFE Vancouver Woman Says Husband Shot Her linger Off. VANCOUVER. Wash., March 19. (Special.) Alleging, among other fhariro that her husband. George Hutchinson, shot one of her fingers off with a ,31-caliber revolver February 21, nr..i that he married her after he owed her 10 months" wages as bookkeeper, amounting to J.IOU. Mrs. Adeline jtuicn Inson has filed suit for divorce in the Superior court. vi. a Uninhlnann allncfm she was mar rled to Hutchinson in Oregon City, Or., . j , ft , A 1 June j i, ' ;' 1 DISEASED HORSES SHOT International Question Arise When American "Owners Object. WEYBURN. Sask.. March 19. Many horses brought Into Canada by Ameri can settlers have been shot by gov ernment orders on suspicion of having glanders, and an international question has developed. Iast week scores of horses belong- i .a lfi--o u h . I ViTin.NAlii f u rm nr. 1 1 1 pi iv ...... -" Tvere killed at Weyburn by government inKpectnrs Htni it is said hv the own- Advertising OR proof of There, you 401 Wilcox Building Telephone Main 3808 REGARDING YOUR SAVINGS . The money you are waiting for aa opportunity to invest will only have to remain with us one calendar month to draw interest. Open an Account Before April 1st - -if you find an investment in May you will receive one month's interest. SECURITY SAVINGS &TRUST COMPANY FIFTH and MORRISON STS. . Capital ami Surplus $ 1,400,000 i II These Are Real Piano Bargains There is no more economical purchase tt'.an A EE ALLY GOOD USED PIANO. This week our annual clean-up of pianos that have come to us in exchange for Mason & Ham lin and Player Pianos is on. There is here everv make, every description or 1 pnuht and Grand Pianos HARD MAN, KNABE, FISCHER, PACKARD, KRAKAUER and many others, and they are bargains such as you have never seen offered before. No matter what your preference., no matter what your price, we have the piano-you want, and at terms that will wm your entnusiasne approval. TODAY you should see them, opportunity face to face, it is NOW. then come in. Sherman & Hyde Swick & Co Koehler Hinze Antisell Vogel & Co Sherwood & Sons Haines Bros Raymond Milton J. & C. Fischer, like new F. Muelf ield & Co ..... . Price & Teeple Heller & Co Crown, fanciest style . . . Peek & Son E. Gabler & Bro ... Hensel Fer'd Koehler Emerson Harrington '. Price & Teeple Price & Teeple Milton, Colonial style.. Rembrandt Hobart M. Cable Uuai " Shaw Knabe, best style, like new.. Upright $48o Colby Upright $270 Wegman Upright $2S0 Packard Small Grand $5ho Hardman Small Grand $625 Autopiano, Mission style .... Player Piano $395 Autotone Playex Piano $490 IViilton Plac er Piano $535 VERY EASY TERMS, IF DESIRED Victor Talking Machines and Records MORRISON STREET AT SEVENTH era that they were affected only with tin r,vr n1 not with Blanders. The, owners here appealed to Washington. The Canadian government also Is in vestigating. SHOEMAKERS. DENY, GUILT orricials of Aliened Trust Plead to Criminal Indictments. BOSTON", March 19. Sidney W. Wins low, president: William Barbour. George W. Brown, KUwara i: and Klmer P. Howe, aireciuia United Shoe Machinery Company, un der indictment on the charge of main taining a monopoly on '""'ae "I1,? machinery business, pleaded '"J today when arraigned in the United States T.-istrict Court. They were held in $10,000 each for trial at a date not yeTheXdefendants. in view of the recent decision of the United State supreme Court, sustaining unrestricted patent monopoly, relucted .to be given an other hearing before the time of the trial should be fixed. The request as granted by Judge Dodge. CAVALRYMEN ARE CHARGED Cliaufreur Says United States Troop ers Beat and Robbed Him. nnira as Ari.. March IS. K. t. " . . - -t.'nff.nr renorted to tne hero today that he had been . . ,rtKhd last nicht by two United States cavalrymen who s 'that when they had Proceeded several milps on the road, the troop Is Vital this look through the daily papers. will find advertised all kin-la of businesses. Newspapers are used because news- t y s AdVertisingdervice If ever you meet Look over the list Upright. $ 60 Upright $ 75 ....... .Upright 115 ...... .Upright $135 Upright $150 . . . i . . . Upright $1 65 Upright $145 Upright $218 .Upright $210 . ; Upright $225 Upright $265 Upright $200 Upright $260 Upright $235 Upright $250 Upright $225 Upright $285 ...Upright $265 ...Upright $165 Upright $195 ...Upright $235 .......Upright $196 .......Upright $285 Upright $265 Upright $195 ....... TInricrht S275 -i r. Upright $J4o ers struck him three times on the hr with a revolver, each time cutting ' scalp, bound and gagged him anil 1 him hv the roadside, while they pi ceeded with the machine, after robbi him of $16. . .Lucas managed to free himself a walked back to Douglas.' He nan as his assailants Trooper Jmvenp. and l'rivate Forester, both ot iri F, Fourth United States Cavalry. u soldiers were arrested today at Her ford. Great Karlh Block to Be l'linipi SAN FKAN'CISCO, March IS. The . nosltion officials awarded the contr today for the flllinc in of a submerp part of the world's fair site. Work to be begun at once. One million cu yards of earth is to he pumper fr th bottom of tho hay ly suit riro1troi tho nrpa to bo filled covcil several blocks. $500 Is Sent to Cliina. WASHINGTON. March 1!. n American Red Cross Society sent J-V to China today for the relief of i famine sufferers in the new repub This makes u total of JoS.OOd s since January 1 Your Liver is Clogged up That' Why YouVa Tired Oat o Sort Hare no Appccn CARTER'S U LIVER PILLS wil put you r io few dajT TKev da their duly. Care Coana en Mim, Wlgrta, Sick Hctdaca. SUAll HU. SMALL DOSE, SKAU. MICK Genuine ourtir Signature The Dangers of Blood Poison i r. ninny, anil off I mo result ftll. kept in the hwi! t ll timet nJ ppli-d to all ruti. bnii-j and abra aiona will iww' all daer of la TYREE'S Antiseptic j PsSesHe3 Powder EE-s rTi"3 is tn pw k I Mat known. Hvl tb iwrst dl.r trra brDc without inlorine thf teid flsn tiMue. For ll olceroua condit'ODS. i n tqualrd preTentaiiTp. TspJ b." doc tors for . last l!l yrtirs. T1po1t In stantly In tvatr. Ideal for 'ucb- JJJ mt prkc makes two galoot stand ard solution. 5oId bv dmpjriBU Terrwn'rrv Ak your doctor or send for brtkw. T TYBrr.rhmMf.WUacTta,D.C PPTWTTNt Rutin. Binding and Blank U,k Makia PhnnaaMaln I --'ft 1 A Portland Printing Huse Co i. U Wriirht. Frrfc and G- "". Tenth and Zajlor St.. Porl1"'i, Orecoa. 14 II