Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1915)
ASTORIA RATE GASE ' UPBEFQRECHAMBER Realty. Board Committee Ap peals to Traffic Bureau for ' Favorable Action. i U. N. TEAL ADVISES "NO" i Ilesolntion Is Withdrawn for Amentl- $. ment to Conform to Request It' jj Now Being Considered ly Interstate Commission. jl S A committe from the Portland Realty Board appealed to the directors of the f traffic and transportation bureau of iC the Chamber of Commerce yesterday " afternoon for favorable action on fhe t. Astoria rate resolution now pending 1 before the Chamber officials. The committee was composed of t George McLeod, Walter F. Burrell, 2 O. W. Taylor, Joseph Healy, C, Lewis T: Mead. John F. Daly and H. L. Corbett K Mr. Mead was the principal spokes ' man for the committee. p J. N. Teal, attorney for the Chamber, ''. vho outlined his views on the Astoria J rate situation at a public meeting last -week, advised the Chamber directors t not to indorse the resolution, declar- i. ing that Portland would, by such in- r dorsement, surrender its natural ad- vantages as- the only Northwestern j,. seaport draining the interior on a water grade. j It was pointed out that the resolu g tlon now before the Chamber asks for t Pniy or rates for all Columbia TJiver ports, while the case before the Interstate Commerce Commission askes for parity of rates between Astoria and Puget Sound. Amended Resolution Prnhahln ! The Realty Board representatives ex .pressed an intention of amending the ,; resolution to make it applicable to the $ case now before the commission. They .jj retired following their conference with the Chamber officials, and held a cau i cus. It is probable that the amended A resolution will be submitted to the reg J ular meeting of the Realty Board to ff day. ; The full membership of the traffic and transportation bureau's directors was present, as follows: L. Allen Lewis. C. 3t J- Woodruff. H. W. Mitchell. T. I. Honeyman. George Lawrence. Jr., A T Muggins. A. H. Devers. Henry Hahn. - - M" JIears. W. G. McPherson and Mr. S Teal. Other prominent shippers present f were J. R. Bowles. Oscar Heintz. Jai- Smith and Edward Ehrman. George 13. Hardy, executive secretary of the f Chamber: W. D. B. Dodson, secretary j of the trades and commerce bureau, p and J. H. Lothrop, secretary of the s traffic and transportation bureau also 4 attended. "i Mr- Heintz and Mr. Bowles protest- ed against the action of the transcon g tinental railroads in publishing a : fabrication-in-transit rate on iron and . steel, effective November 18 and the f l.ureau directors authorized a protest 5 before the Interstate Commerce Com mission. A Middle West Itcnrnta. ." Both Mr. Heintz and Mr. Bowles are in the steel business in Portland. They s pointed out that the fabrication-in- ji transit rate will permit fabrication in f Orrmha, Kansas City, Minneapolis. St. Paul and other Middle Western points to compete with the local steel indus tries for Northwestern trade. The rate ; applies to those Middle Western cities as well as to those of the Northwest and becomes effective there several wesks earlier than here. Obviously under this rate, the Middle Western ?i steel plants would be able to secure the structural steel from Pittsburg and other manufacturing districts, fab ricate it to order, and ship it to the Northwest at precisely the same rate s enjoyed by their Northwestern com. 111 petltors. The railroads granted the rates a few weeks ago for the ostensible pur- ' K pose of benefiting the Northwestern . steel men, but the Northwestern steel men declare it would be a detriment instead of a benefit. $50,000,000 COMPANY BUSY New Kngland Concern Reported to Have Contracts Worth Millions. BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Nov. 7. That a gigantic manufacturing corporation, with a financial backing of $50,000 000 representing some of the biggest steel interests of the country, is being or ganized for the purpose of erectin" ' plants to manufacture shrapnel and ; other munitions of war for the allies was the announcement made in Bridere port. William R. Brown. ex-State Senator Rnd for some years a prominest of ficial of the Remington Union Metallic : Cartridge Company, mentioned as one of the men in the new concern, said that it was too early to give out de tails. It is asserted that agents of the new corporation have returned from Europe with signed contracts for millions of dollars' worth of munitions to be shipped to the front as fast as they can be manufactured. Four plants are to bo erected, according to the plans as announced to date, one of them to be built at Bridgeport, two in Providence, - It.. I., and one in either Waterbury or Hartford. MRS. VV. E. NELSON IS DEAD AVife of Goldcndale Newspaperman -t Succumbs Here After Operation. Mrs. Wilma E. Nelson, for 16 years a resident of Goldendale. Wash., and wife of Oscar C. Nelson, a newspaper , M man of that city, died at the Good Samaritan hospital yesterday, follow ing an operation lor cancer. The body 'Will be taken to Goldendale this morn-i.-ing and the funeral will be held there Mrs. -Nelson, who was 39 years old. " leaves a mother, Mrs. M. E. Teasrue. of Goldendale: her husband. Oscar Nelson, of Goldendale: two sisters. Mrs. H. D. Hoberts. of Goldendale. and Mrs. Fred Williams, of Boyd. Or.: and three broth- eis. Robert Teague. of The Dalles, Or.: Thomas Teague. of Cape Horn. Wash ; and Henry Teague. of Washougal, Wash. She was a sister-in-law of G H. Fisher, of the Fisher-Thorsen Com pany, of Portland. WILSON UNLIKELY TO ACT 'f, o Further Requests In Behalf of Man Doomed to Die Xot Expected. - r s SALT LAKE CITT, Nov. 11. Gov ernor Spry said today he doubled whether President Wilson would take further action in the Hillstrom case, as requested by J. Sergeant Cram and Elizabeth Gurley Glynn, of New York. The Governor said he would not ex press an opinion as to his action until he heard from the President, and said he believed when-the Presidest de clined the Swedish Ministr's scond rer quest for intervention he made evident his intention to let the case take its legal course here. The two local divisions of the In ternational Brotherhood of Locomotive bngmeers have adopted resolutions on the Hillstrom case, in which they pledge their support to the Governor and the other state officers "in the full discharge of their lawful duties." and condemn "all forms of lawlesness. whether by threats or acts of violence or Intimidation. KITCHENER IS NOT OUT RESIGNATION OFFICIALLY DG.X1ED BY ASfttlTH. Government Defends Seizure ot Globe for Printing Falsehood, and Dis claims Unfairness. LONDON, Nov. 11. In the course of a discussion in the House of Commons today on the suspension of the Globe newspaper, James Myles Hogge, mem ber for East Edinburgh, declared his belier that the statement that Lord Kitchener had resigned was true, and that the seizure of the paper because of the publication of the statement was not justified. Premier Asquith replied that Mr. Hogge accused him of a "deliberate and inexcusable falsehood," and to make the matter quite clear he de clared: "Earl iKtchener never tendered his resignation, either to the King or my self, the only two persons to whom he could have tendered it. Earl Kitchener never breathed a word of resignation to either." The decision to send Lord Kitchener to the Near East, the Premier added, was taken by the Cabinet on Thursday, November i. Serious information which led the government to take the deci sion was brought to their knowledge for the first time on Wednesday. He repudiated the charge that the Globe had been singled out for special treat ment. Mr. Hogge and William M. R. Pringle, members for Northwest Lan arkshire, however, insisted that other papers, which were equally guilty, had not been proceeded against. Sir John Simon, Home Secretary, pointed out that the Globe was in an entirely different position from the other papers in that it had ignored the warning of the press bureau on Thursday night in the form of a re quest made to all the papers that no reference should be made to Earl Kitchener's movements .until further notice. The next day the Globe, and the Globe alone, published the statement that Earl itchener had resigned be cause he had quarreled with his col leagues. When a denial was issued, the Globe repeated the statement, thus saying in effect that the government was lying. Undr the circumstances it was the duty of the government to prevent further circulation of the lie in the most summary and direct way. 8 DEAD FHOM CYCLONE ZYBA, KAN., HAS NO UNDAMAGED HOUSE LEFT. Farmers Suffer Heavily and. Great Bend Will nave No Water In Mains for Several Weeks. KANSAS CITY, Nov. 11. The number of dead in the wind storms which swept over Central Kansas early last night and wrecked hundreds of homes in its course through several towns, remained at S tonight. Communication with all but a few outlying sections of the stricken district was re-established late today. Although the damage was greatest in Great Bend, where a path three blocks wide through the industrial and resi dential sections was cut by a- toronado, reports tonight show that Zyba, Kan., a town of 200 population, was the most thoroughly wrecked of the towns and villages in front of the storm. Every building in Zyba is said to have suf fered damage and many of them were demolished. Three persons were killed there and svral injurd. In a blow lasting only a few minutes the entire town was thrown into a mass of strug gling humanity, wrecked homes, trees and fallen wires. JReports of the damage to buildings, death to livestock and iniurv to the inhabitants on isolated farms were re ceived late today. In Great Bend the lighting plant was destroyed and the wires over the great er part of the city were blown into a hopeless mass. It was believed not an electric light would be available for more than a week. Hersington. Kan., was also supplied with the light power from the Great Bend plant. Great Bend was without water in the city mains tonight and will be in that condition several weeks, according to the cty officials. The stand niDe was blown down and the pumDing plant destroyed. t WEAK HEADLIGHT CHARGED Commission Asks Prosecution of Southern Pacific Company. As an echo of the Southern" Pacific wreck of August 20, when a freight conductor and brakeman were killea in a rear-end crash near Oswego, the Public Service Commission veste'rday asked District Attorney Evans to file a complaint against the Southern Pa cific Company, charging that an engine is being operated with a headlight that is lacking in power. A 1913 statute provides that engines must have headlights that will -make objects 800 feet away visible at night. On Octoger 11 and October 23, says the Commission, an inspector found engine 2130 of the Southern Pacific with a weak headlight. This is the same en gine which was involved in the wreck wherein two men lost their lives. Al though the Coroner's jury held the train crew responsible, the grand jury exonerated it. YOUTH'S MOTHER OBJECTS Mrs. E. Husbands Asks Auditor to Kefuse Marriage License. VANCOUVER, Wash.. Nov. 11. (Spe cial.) Samuel C. Husbands is a good young man and is 19 years old, but his mother. Mrs. E. Husbands, thinks that he is much too 5-oung to be married on a montluy saLary of J40. The mother suspects her son plans on being mar ried, so she has written a note to the County Auditor asking her to issue no license to him and bis sweetheart. Miss Frieda Barker, who is said to be only 16 years old. In the note Mrs. Husbands said that she had no doubt thta the girl's mother would, give her consent to the mar riage. but she, as mother of the boy, certainly will object. THE 3IORXIXG OREGOXIAy, FRIDAY. OYEMBER GLU3 IS RENOUNCED Mrs. M. L. Stevens Resigns as Political Science President. ALL CHARGES ARE REFUTED Federation Is Reported in Support of Stand Taken by Retiring Chief a . Regard to Resignation. Credential Blame Lifted. As far as Mrs. Mary L. Stevens is concerned. the Woman's rolitcal Science Club is a thing of the past. Mrs. Steven?, yesterday, announced her determination to resign not only as president, but as a member of the or ganization. She stated that "there was in trying to deal with unreason a women" and she decided to quit. "No matter what I mght do, I could not satisfy them." said Mrs. Stevens. A few of her friends suggested that she remain in her post and fight for her rights, but she declared that it wasn't worth while, and that fight ing ill becomes women In club work who are supposed to be banded together for the good of themselves and others. Testimony Rejected, Is Declaration. Mrs. Stevens' satement announcing her resignation follows: As president of the Political Science Club I consider this af ter-meetins last Tuesday absolutely Illegal wherein my resignation was asked. I was sustained by the past presldentof the federation in her interpre tation of the law governing the case My testimony was rejected and only the accusers had a voice. As a clubwoman I re- IUSH frnm thl. t . . r. iu mi lunger witn euch g-roas injustice, and resign from my " "'u1. as a. member of the Political Scienoa Club. ' It was said by one of the most prominent members of the federation yesterday jhat the federation would stand back of Mrs. Sarah A. Evans' Interpretaton of the constitution and this plan If adhered to will practically exonerate Mrs. Stevens from any in tention of wrong-doing in not giving credentials to Mrs. M. L. T. Hidden from the Political Science Club. Credential Responsibility Lifted. As for the credentials from the State Woman s Press Club that Mrs. Stevens was originally charged with with holding, the state credentianls com mittee in itS WritteYl filaUmn. . .. . . 1 . all the responsibility from Mrs. Stevens im, wrote tne lonowing, dated Salem, November 6: morniSWr t0 ""r JnJry by phone this morning. I append hereto a statement of wLStLUS U MC- H'dden's credentials on Wednesday, October i'7. The committee on credentials reported every morning. Includ ing in its report all credentials tiled with Mmw,HeI l 5hat date- The credentials ?.i ; "ldden " the Woman's Press f rfBn Were brought to the table ot the credentials committee after the ne port had been read Wednesday morning. They were accepted by the committee, and Pl t y '"ed and Included in the report of Thursday morning. The above report was signed by Mrs. J. H. Albert, of Salem, chairman of the credentials committee. RICH NEW YORKER JILTED r Nephew of Mrs. Vanderbilt Forgot ten on Engagement Eve. BEACON. N. T., Nov. 7. Miss Ruth Natalie Parkinson, of this city, a hand, some-girl of 20. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Parkinson, surprised her friends by announcing her mar riage to Frank Van Houten. Jr., son of Fraiik Van Houten, president of Dutchess Tool Company, of this city. It was understood that Miss Parkinson was about to announce her engagement to Daniel Leroy Dresser, of New York. Mr. Van Houten invited Miss Parkin son for an automobile ride the other night. It was then that she broke the news to Van Houten that she Intended to announce her engagement to Dres ser in the local newspapers. To. him this came as depressing news and he at once suggested that they elope. Miss Parkinson consented and they were soon at Poughquag, a country settlement in Dutchess County, 25 miles from here. There the Town Clerk was aroused and a license procured. The Methodist minister of the place was awakened and asked to tie the knot after midnight. The pair re turned to Stormville, where they were met by friends, and to them they broke the news. Returning home parental forgiveness was asked and freely given. This evening Mr. and Mrs. Van Houten started on a honeymoon trip south. Mr. Dresser is a nephew of Mrs. George Vanderbilt. The Van Houten family is one of the oldest and best known in this section. When Miss Parkinson started on the ride with her friend she had not the least idea of marrying Van Houten. However, he pressed his suit so hard that she decided to take him instead of her New York admirer. LETTER SCORES MR. DIECK Commission Accused of TTnTair cta Under Efficiency Code. A scathing- denunciation of Commis sioner1 Dieck is contained in .a. letter presented yesterday to the Municipal Civil Service Board by W. S. Chapman, an engineer in Air. Dieck's department. He says he has been reduced in salary and position by unfair methods and asks that his old position and salary be restored. "The maladministration of the so called efficiency code," says Mr. Chap man in his letter, "and the actual con tempt shown for the laws, .rules and orders of- the Municipal Civil Service Board have been the means of stultify ing those who have essayed to claim their rights,under those laws and rules and have enabled their superiors to employ or promote those not entitled to such employment or promotion." PASTORS AID DEFENSE PLAN Chicago Ministers Take Up Chal lenge of Opponents to Move. CHICAGO, Nov. 7. Ministers in Chi cago will take up the challenge of the clergymen who have protested to v ashington against expenditures for National defense, and will carry the fight to the National capital if neces sary. Bishop Samuel Fallows and other well-known ministers will speak for National defense under the auspices of the National Security League next Tuesday. "The terrible waste of life in th Civil War was due- to unpreparedness,' tsisnop r auows asserts. DRUGGISTS WOULD CLOSE Physicians' Stocks declared Large Enongh for Sunday Needs. .MuuiciiiciiL vji tne weeKiy rest-day feature of the proposed Sunday clos ing law WAS ?lvpn Kv fhn T.- 1 .3 T" tail Druggists' Association at the monihlv meottno- a- . V. . . 1 i . vuttllllKr Dl Commerce. Different opinions were ex pressed on Sunday closing, but a motion indorsing the plan was carried by a rising vote. The proposed law was explained by Dr. G. L. Tufts, superintendent of the Weekly Rest Day League of Oregon. W. F. Woodward and several others declared that it probably would work no hardship if all drug stores were closed on Sunday Physicians. . they said, usually have sufficient medicines to meet actual needs on that day. Other druggists declared .that Sunday was their best business day, although a large proportion of the receipts are for cigars and other sido lines. BRIDGE SPAN BUILDING FLOATING TO PLACE WILL BE COM. MEJiCED NOVEMBER 20. Worlt Belli Done From . Washington Side of Columbia and Fonr Bara-ea Will Carry Out Structure. VANCOUVER, Wash.. Nov. 11. (Spe cial.) Work on the first steel span, .6o feet long, to be built in place of false work, in the Columbia River In terstate bridge, has been started by McCreary & Willard, contractors. Pil ing has been driven and the false work will be rushed as rapidly as possible. This firm has assembled four spans on the docks on this side of the river and the fourth span is complete with' the exception of two floor beams, which will be delivered November 17. The task of floating out the 265-foot steel spans to their places will begin November 20, according to present plans. The first span will be taken on four barges, so that the draft will not interfere in shallow water. A dredge is now digging out a place for the span to be floated in. The span to be built on false work is from Abutment B, on Hayden Island to pier 14, the first pier seen from Hayden Island. The other spans will be floated to points between piers 1.. 12 and 11, and dropped into place. It will require about one month to bnild the span on false work, and the steel will be towed across the river from the bridge, span assembling yards on this side of the river. All of the spans must be built and in place by Septem ber 1. but it is believed that this time will be beaten if the piers are com pleted and there is no trouble with high water. OREGON GOATS STILL WIN Monmouth and Day Creek Exhib itors Win. Many Prizes. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 11. (Spe cial.) Angora goats were the only animals in the prize ring today at the Exposition sheep, goat and swine show. The judging is to be resumed tomor row. William Riddell & Sons, Monmouth. Or., carried onT prizes in every section in which awards were made today, in cluding 12 firsts, seven seconds, six thirds, three fourths and one fifth. F. A. Pierce, Day Creek, Or., won one first two seconds, two thirds, one fourth', one fifth and one seventh prize. Florence Kite, of Redding, Cal., took one third, two fourths, three fifths and one sixth. PHI DELTA THETAS TO DINE Election of Officers to Be Held at Banquet. Tomorrow. The annual informal banquet of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity will be held at 6:30 o'clock tomorrow night in the Tyrolean room of the Benson Hotel, at whioh time the officers for fhe en suing year will be elected. Reserva tions have been made for 100 delegates. Wallace McCamant, a prominent Portland Alumnus, will be the toast master. The local fraternity. Kappa Sigma Nu, of Corvallis, Or., has made application to become affiliated. R. H. Crozier, president; A. R. Howell, vice-president; Harry Fetch, secretary, and Leonard Hurst, treasurer, are the present officers. E. W. Worsham is the province president. FRENCH OFFER LOAN BILL Five Per Cent Interest Provided by Government Measure. PARIS, Nov. 11. The bill providing for the new French loan was intro duced in the Chamber of Deputies today by Finance Minister Ribot. The rate of Interest is fixed at 5 per cent, but the price of issue and the price of sub scription are left to be fixed by govern mental decree. All the privileges and Immunities at tached to the 3 per cent bonds are ex tended to the new & per cent issue, which is exempt from all taxes. The government renounces the right of pay ment until after January 1, 1931. . K. E. Brown Honored by Club. SOUTH BEND. Wash.. Nov. 11. GIRLS! BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR AND - STOP DANDRUFF Hair Becomes Charming, Wavy, Lustrous and Thick in a Few Moments. . ' Every Bit of Dandruff Disap pears and Hair Stops . Coming Out. For 23 cents you can save your hair In less than ten minutes you cap dou ble its beauty. Your hair ' becomes light wavy, fluffy, abundant and ap pears as soft, lustrous and charming as a young girls after applying some Danderlne. Also try this moisten a cloth with a little Danderlne and care fully draw it through your hair, tak ing one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt or excessive oil. and in Just a. few mo ments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. A delightful surprise awaits those whose hair has been neglected or is scraggy, faded, dry. brittle or thin. Besides beautifying the hair. Danderlne dissolves every particle of dandruff cleanses, purifies and invigorates the scalp, forever stonninc- rhi. j falling hair, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use. when you see new hair fine and downy at first yes but really new nair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair, and lots or It. surely get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderlne from any drug store or toilet counter and Just try it. Adv. 1915. Oh! bee Sell Silverware! For everyone in Aronson's Jewelry Store has been pressed into service so brisk is the huvlnr, hr, The Janitor A RONSON'S JEWELRY STORE proves this fact that when prices are low enough experts are no , longer required. Sheldon's . School of Scientific Salesmanship might as well "fold its tent like the Arab and as silently steal away!" Just as an inex perienced girl can sell, so an inexperienced buyer can buy. There is nothing to hide. There is nothing to tell that a little child couldn't telL and as one big fellow said today "Gee whiz! A kid could bt.y in this sale. I never saw anything like it!" You. see we've marked everything down. The . original price tags remain on every article. The sale prices are in red ink or pencil, on the same original tags. Nobody can go wrong. Nobody can charge too much or pay too little. Everything is as "plain as a pikestaff." OOK at the cut glass. All of it, half price. A $15.00 vase is $7.50; a $12.50 Tankard is $6.25; a Wine Set, six glasses and a bottle, is $11.75, instead of $22.50. Sugar and Cream Sets in exquisite designs are $4.00 instead of $8.00. A tall $15.00 Vase is $7.50. A big $12.00 Bowl is $6.00. An Ice Cream Plate is $10.00 instead of. $20.00. and Table Tumblers S1U.U0 a dozen, and so on. M ANY half plain fact not subject to any discount, because it's printed in an advertisement. Here's a trayful of Ladies' Watches up to Snfl.Oft ' fnr si ; nn - $10.00 and $15.00 gold - filled Men's W An ' ' ' sanies sju.uu wrist Watches are $14.75. Yesterday Aronson said: "Believe we'll cut those Rockford Watches again! We want to sell 'em !" But when he saw that they were already cut to a point where a loss was already taken He changed his mind! ' Thirty dollar Rockford Watches, $21.50; $25.00 Rockford Watches, $17.50, and so on. The original prices are fixed by the makers. Howard Watches are $29.50 instead of $40.00; $59.50 instead of $85.00, and $119.50 instead of $150.00. Prices on Howard Watches are also set by the manufacturers. So you can see the "whole play" for yourself. i-jiAMUIND SJiT JEWELRY is reduced most of all. For the diamond stock has tied up a lot of cash. And just now the business needs the cash and not the dia monds. Here's a perfect Blue White Diamond. Was One Thousand and One Hundred Dollars. It's on sale at $875.00.. And some one of the folks who have been looking at it is going to buy it. Here's another one. A four-karat stone worth a cool thousand dollars now it's $657.50. Aronson's (Special.) Thirty of the business men of this city, members of the Commercial Club, tendered former Secretary E. E. Brown, of the Sooth Bend Commercial Club, a farewell testimonial banquet at the Hotel Albee tonight and pre sented him with a cash purse of ?75. Mr. Brown has been secretary for the past two years and has been forced to resign on account of ill health. He will leave this week for California, At torney F. D. Couden presided as toast master. .,e,B,,lsn are reported to have erected a SI30.000 laundry at the rear of their lines In Flanders. The building la said to be substantial, and is taken aa one of many Indications of a long struggle with little probability of the Germans breaking through Made Clean Sold Clean Delivered Clean TERE. Baked by Log Cabin Baking Co. the Stenoo-rr-K - - V W tvS J Man Is Wrapping Bundles! rt-KlAIN lines of Plated Table Ware (patterns that are not to be reordered), are to be closed out at half. A chest of 26 pieces of Silver Tableware Vi dozen Dessert Spoons, Knives, Forks, Teas and Sugar Shell and Butter Knife all in a handsome chest for $9.25 in stead of $18.50. A loss, to be sure, but there are not many, so it villi not be serious. Wallace's famous 1835 Knives and Forks that were S5.00 a ut ,-. n are $5.00 instead of Watches are almost Drice and that's a $2 75 not quite K.,o, Watches " are $7.35; ' V - A1C 91(1.(9; i,OCn8 fcSitt eo iM 5,7 RfL "ot iSSSafi Broadway and Washington St. SHIP CAPITAL IS INCREASED China Mail Steamship Company Names General Officers. SAX FRANCISCO. Nov. 11. The China Mail Steamship Company, re cently organized here toengage in the trans-Pacific trade and purchaser of the eteamr China of the Pacific Mall fleet, announced today that its capital stock would be increased immediately from $2,100,000 to $5,000,000. The appointment of A. M. Garland, ex-freight traffic manager of the Pa cific Mail, as general manager of the MADAM Jo ri- d , aaaal . viwoui JJlcau E I distinctive name to iHrnrifV i Qnri you when you buy it made in a bakery as clean and sanitary as your own kitchen, with indiscriminate human hand ling eliminated by the latest automatic machinery, and protected against contamination between our bakery and your table by the airt-proof, odor-proof HOIiSUK wrapper. That's what HOtSUjJ &Z'wb7 YOU shou,d hwouS5 iaVat I IL? Wh0le "yful of Diamond Rings. They were $200.00 to $250.00. Now you can choose any one for $147.50. Another trayful of perfect soli taires, every one worth a hundred dollars, yet they re jnarked $67.50 for choice. And smaller stones, $o0.00 solitaire rings, are offered at $29 50 Diamond Bracelets, Diamond Set Scarf Pins. Lock ets, Cuff Buttons, Watches, etc., are all reduced about a third. Some cases more. Some cases less. The extreme styles, and the novelties, are cut the most as good judgment approves. A VALLIERES of solid gold can be bought now "as cheaply as most jewelry stores buv 'em. $lo.00 and $20.00 solid gold La Vallieres are $9.75; $2o.00 ones are $16.65; a whole trayful worth up to $o.00 apiece is arranged for tomorrow's sale at $1.75. All the Mesh Bags in the store are half price All the Umbrellas are half price. All the Cut Glass as stated is half price. All the fine Note Paper is half price. IB half, you see. Many lots of Sterling uiM, clc., are a third off. NUMBER of small desk and dressing table Clorka urn I. 1- : - for 2.50; $10.00 Clocks for $5.00; , t xraveung Clocks are ; Set,h Thoma Chime Clocks, which $U 75 ?25'0' Ca" nW bC houht TLr?rS? !I tllis Price Phl has been frankly stated Aronson's Jewelry Store has too tTats anfTctrndiSe "0t enUSh y an" Like Tom Miller, of Duluth, when he got home at around and talked for a while." "Tom," said the wife, "you're lvinir m t Forbes and Mrs. Forbes came tois house at" SfiZPlZZF - tHiS -itingon8 noTfferencThTt'' with re eity, "it makes no difference. That s my story and it's got to stick'" dayetStmeid0 t0day 9 V,Ck- P Satur Reservations mabe madfor Christmas, etc. GEORGE FRANCIS ROWE. China Mail, and H. T N Thom general n . t nomas as waTshLnifedMby !tegaupiPofC?:rany capitalists, headed bf So Tin'"-8 K." th CantnVo-f & vk'S""? h.?,vl Sennined that a bea- oannroTructn'a'tSbk' ness that ha, already decaved i" tli certainly to daw back to 17B5. demsni0n" J9:3, had 17 fataI street accT- Large Double Loaf 10c ROMOft Jr. Size 5c W1U1 a SI Copyria-ht 1S14 ; 4