THE MORNING OKEG ONIAN, SATURDAY, XOVEFBER 17, 1917. 11 CITY NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON IAN TELEPHONES. Managing Emtor Main 7n"l),'A nms City Ediiar S!aln 77i). A b'W.i Sunday Kditor ilaiii 7070. A BO'.io Advertising Department .. .Main TUTU. A ") fcupericiendtut of RulMln. . Main u0. A Wj5 AMldtMEXti UEILrTG (Broadway at Taylor) Max Fig rnan in farce, "Xothlni but the Truth." This afternoon at J:1j and tonight at b:15 o'cloi-k. BAKER l Broadway or Sixth, between Alder and Morrison) Alcazar Stock Company In "Too M:iny Conks." This afternoon t -:lo and tonight at S:li o'clock. PAXTAGES (Broadway at Alder) Vaude ville. Three shows dally. 2:30, 7 and U:05. IIlr'I'OIJROMIS (Broadway and Yamhill) "Vaudeville :ind muvii.g pictures. 2 to 5; 6:43 to 11 P. II Saturdays, Sundays, holi days, continuous, 1:13 to li P. M. ETIIANT) (Washington street between Park and West Park) Vaudeville and moving pictures: continuous. LYRIC (Fourth and Stark) Musical com edy, dally, afternoon and night. Advertisements Intended lor City News In Brier columns in Sunday's issue must be i1,1?. . 1 ne 0r"Kooian business office by :du o clock Saturday evening Hootleoger Fined $50. Tom Shea pleaded guilty m a hootlesfginpr chaise before District Judge Jones yesterday and was fined $r.ti. He was arrested by Special Agents Kcott and Jeffries, to whom he sold several drinks of whisky. George Hedu;in, Bill O llara and Benny Cioldtaerp: are in the County Jail in default of '$1500 bail each as the result of a raid yesterday by Spe cial Agents Scott and Jeffries which resulted in the discovery of 24 quart bottles of (jin at the quarters of the defendants. They will bo tried later in the District Court. Suspect s Keleased. Harry Sterlv, 49, who was arrested last night by Deputy Sheriffs Kay and Sommers on the Steel bridge, and held for investiga tion by the Federal authorities, after lie had been seen taking notes on his cuffs, was released yesterday, after the (lovernhient men investigated and found that he is a former United States soldier, although of German birth. There was nothing to connect Pterly with any activities being car lied on against the Government. Wok Demands Hei-ease. Minnie Brooks yesterday filed in the Circuit Court a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to secure her release from the City Jail, where, she alleges, she is lield unlawfully. She was one of the women recently arrested bv the police find compelled to submit to the Wasser man test. She was found to be diseased and was re-arrested several days later and held in jail in default of J2000 bail. She charges thisbail to be ex cessive and unconstitutional. "Woman Shoots After Intruder Get away from there or I'll shoot " called Mrs. Anna Schultz early yester day morning to a man whom she heard trying to open a basement window of I.er house at 2511 Sixty-fourth street southeast. The intruder took to his heels and Mrs. Schultz fired two shots from a revolver in his general direc tion. Neither bullet took effect. Patrol men Russell. Crane and GouMstone, who investigated, found nothing- but footprints. IT. s. Smith Freed. Herbert S. Fmith was found not guilty of an in dictment charging non-support yester day after a jury in Circuit J udge Little field's court had deliberated five minutes. lie was arrested and in dicted on complaint of his wife. Mrs. Smith narrowly escaped being fined for contempt of court when she com plained that Judge Littlefield was eliminating from the record any testi mony favorable to the prosecution. Benson Alumni Meet. The Benson Polytechnic Alumni will hold a basket Focial tonight at the home of Miss Lois Humphreys, tiJ.'JO Kast l''orty-third street. . Miss Humphreys' home is reached by taking- the "Woodstock streetcar, leaving it at Forty-third street and Sixtieth avenue Southeast and walking- three blocks Southward. All former students of Benson Poly technic are invited. New Views Received. Dr. TV. T. Foster's lecture tonight in the Reed College Red Cross free course at the Lincoln High School at 8 o'clock will deal with "Modern Methods of War fare." The lecture will be Illustrated with 80 stereopticon views including 60 received yesterday from "Washing ton, D. C, where they have just passed the censorship. To Settle an Estate. The residence property, lli-raora house, contents and the real property at the southwest cor ner of Williams and Killingsworth ave nues, will be sold at executor's sale at public auction at the Courthouse at 3 0:30 A. M. on November 19. For in formation phone L V. "Wynkoop ilain 261 S. Adv. Grange to Hear Y. M. C. A. Appeal. In the interests of the Y. M. C. A. drive for funds a meeting will be held at 8 o'clock this evening at the Rus Bellville Grange Hall, on the Base Line road east of Montavilla. A number of good speakers will present the aims and needs of the Army Y. M. C. A. The Bkitish Red Cross Society. fleeting Saturday evening. Knights of Pythias Hall, Kleventh and Alder. Ad dress by Canadian soldier. Music by Misses Bennett, Cook, Paterson, Schroe der, Mrs. MeNary and Mr. DeSouchet. Readtng by Miss Stro wlrridge. All in terested invited to attend. Adv. Bishop ro Speak. Bishop "Washinger, of the United ' Brethren .Church in the Northwest, will speak at the Tremont United Brethren Church, Sunday even ing at 7:30 o'clock. The pastor, Mrs. C. P. Blanchard, assisted by Rev. E. L. (Shepherd is conducting a two weeks' fetjries of meetings. Forester to Lecture. A. G. Jack son, who is in charge of educational work in the district forester's office, will give an illustrated lecture on "Government Forest "Work in Oregon" fit the Laurelwood Congregational Church in Arleta at 5 o'clock Sunday. Minister Is Transferred. P. C. Hayward, minister of the Central Seventh-Day Adventist Church, has been transferred to the Tabernacle Church, of which meetings are held in Knights of Pythias Hall. L. K. Dickson is in charge of Central Church. Wage Workers, Attention! Lena Morrow Lewis, editor of the Peattle Daily Call, will "speak in Turn Hall, Fourth and Yamhill, Sunday. Nov. IS. at S P. M., subject, "Capitalism's Contribution to Civilization." Admis sion fre- Adv. President Foster Speaks Sundat F.veninq. "From Behind the German Lines" will be Dr. Foster's subject this Sunday, 7:45 P. M., open forum. Church of Our Father (Unitarian), Broadway at Yamhill. Seats free. All welcome. Adv. "Will, the "World Get Well?" will be Dr. Luther R. Dyott's theme in the First Congregational Church. Sunday at 10:30 A. M. "The Other Man" will be the theme for the service held at 7:45 P. M. Strangers welcome. Adv. Taylor-Street Church. The usual morning service will be conducted in t?ie hall at 126 Fourth street, tomorrow at 10:30 o'clock, followed by Sunday school at 12 o'clock noon, with Samuel Connell as superintendent. Adv. Concert at Men's Resort. Mrs. Harry McQuade will make her first appearance at the Men's Resort, in a concert Saturday night at 8 o'clock. Mrs. McQuade has a splendid pro gramme arranged. Dr. F. M. Buechel, optician, formerly with Feldenheimer, now located in suite 1207-1208 Selling bldg. Adv. Dr. Schwartz returned; Journal bldg-. Adv- MRS. MAX FIGMAN WILL BE LOST TO STAGE WHEN BABIES GROW UP Interview With Star in Heilig Show, "Nothing but the Truth," Develops Into Laudatory Comment on Bright-eyed, Happy Youngsters. BY LEONE CASS BAER. ACCORDING to all the laws laid down in the book of rules and regulations for famous actors be ing interviewed, Max Figman should have talked at length and with more or less illumination on the decadence of the drama or the uplift movement of the stage or why the great Ameri can playwright isn't on the" Job. There's a dozen more thing he could have talked about for this story and possi bly he would have done so if I'd grabbed him for a story in his dressing-room or on th.e street or in the hotel lobby. But the Interview happened In the nursery which the Figmans carry along with them on tour, and if you know Maximilian Bernard Figman, Junior, aged 1 year, a lovable little imp, and his big sister, Lolita Maxine, aged 5-goin'-on-6, and if you've ever tried to talk about the uplift of the drama with a round eyed, smiling baby astride your stom ach and poking his moist fingers into your best eyes and bestowing sundry affectionate kisses wherever they may light well, you'll let the drama go hang. We did. It hung itself forever, so far as I'm concerned while small Maxine, with the eternal motherhood look in her baby eyes, told me that the entire wardrobe of her eldest child, Alice-Forget-You-Not, was at that mo ment at the laundry. Apparently Alice scorns conventions, for she was riding blissfully in a paste board box, which Maxine said was a carriage, en route to the park for her daily constitutional, attired modestly in a pair of bootees and a picture hat. Her small mother, Maxine, a quaint, lovely child, with the rare brunette coloring of her young mother, sat be side the pasteboard carriage in which Alice-Forget-You-Not was being whirled rapidly away, and industrious ly plied a pair pf amber needles through a dangling thing of yarn. I touched it reverently and she beamed happily. "It's a scarf for Alice, and if I make it good I'm going to knit a lot of sweaters for the soldiers," she confided. "Daddy gives big shows for the sol diers, and mother knits things and brother and I have a 'liberty bond for every j ear we -are old, but little girls can't do much. Mother taught me to knit, and I'm practicing on Alice-For-get-You-Not's scarf. If I drop stitches 1 ravel 'em out and begin again." They are the happiest, healthiest, Funniest sort of children, these little Figmans, and they are particularly blessed in having a sane, sensible mother, who regards them as lovely little animals, adores them and has one fixed rule, that they shall be kept happy. They carry along a darling nurse, a sunshiny girl who loves her charges, and there's collapsible doll carts and a trunk for Maxine's dolls and her crayons and drawing material, for she is following in Daddy's footsteps and is an artistic litbfe creature with a passion for drawing and painting. German-Russian-American Suspected. Nels Swingle, a barber at 229 Second street, was arrested yesterday by Deputy United States Marshal Tichenor and will be held for investigation as to his citizenship and whether or not he has evaded the draft law. Swingle claims ha is 31 years of age and ad mits that he was born at Odessa, Rus sia, of (ierman parentage. The Fed eral authorities think he has misrep resented his age for the purpose of avoiding registration under the con scription law. Fred A. Robinson III. Fred A. Robinson, formerly County Jailer, but now a member of Battery B, Field Artillery, 147th Regiment, Camp Mills, Mineola, Long Island, N. Y., has been very ill with pneumonia, but is re ported as now well on the road to re covery and would be glad to hear from his friends. English Class to Meet. Professor Mable Holmes Parsons, of the Univer sity of Oregon, will meet the class in English at 9:30 this morning in room H of the Library. The short story class will meet at 7:45 o'clock this evening at the same-place. "Yisitors are welcome to these classes. Sentence la Five Years. J1000. Frank I'ellissier was yesterday sen tenced by United States Judge Wolver ton to serve five years at McNeil's Island and pay a fine of $1000 for his participation in the burglary of the Hermiston postoffice last Spring. Pel lissier was found guilty by a jury In the Federal Court last week. Calvary Presbyterian CIiurch. Rev. Thomas S. Anderson will preach to morrow. Topics, morning, "Attention"; evening, "The Religion of the Good Samaritan." Adv. ACTRESS KNITS FOR SOLDIERS WHILE HURRYING TO PORTLAND Ruth Gates Cancels Vaudeville Engagement in East to Return Here to Finish Out Baker Season. BY LEONE CASS BAER. RUTH GATES Is not a native daughter of Oregon. Texas claims this charming young lead ing woman with the Mrs. Leslie Carter hair and happy moods. But no native daughter of Oregon, with dyed-in-the- l.ide preferences for its rain and its mountains, could be more glad to re turn to the same rain ana mountains than is Ruth Gates. She is a loyal soul, and, like Pollyanna, is going about with a paean of rejoicing on her lips, a sort of litany beginning, "I am glad." "The first thing I am glad for," she told me yesterday at rehearsal, "is to be a working factor in this lovely company. I'd heard, through the chan nels of theatrical gossip that drifted back to me, that the Alcazar company was a good one this season, but seeing a company act and being one of its number when it hasn't on its company manners is quite another story. Players Happy Family, "You know the leading man in a play fsn't always the pet aversion of the character woman simply because she fl ies to poison his tea in the third act. Neither does it necessarily follow that stage lovers who hang on each other's eyebrows at the final curtain continue so to hang when the curtain is down. Just as in every other walk of life, we folk of the stage have our own little business to attend to. and when we come together in the name of a rehearsal it is a mighty nice thing to have things go smoothly and like a big happy family. That's the way I've found conditions on my returning, and 1 tell you it's lovely. "Best of all, the players are so In earnest about their work that it is inspirational to me, and I sailed Into rehearsing for my opening in 'The Littre Minister' with a real zest. In this acting game more than any other. so much depends on the other fellow, as well as he depends on you. that when you find folk who will play it fitty-fifty, as my co-workers do this season, there's joy all around. " Knits Sox for Soldiers. Miss Gates cancelled a season s booking in a brilliant new vaudeville A s. ; : ' i I 1 Max Figman, Star at the HelltK Today in "Nothing but the Truth." Daddy, you know, was an artist long before he let the stage claim him as a comedian. A collapsible bed for Max Junior, and wardrobe trunks full of clothes for each kiddie are just a part of the par aphernalia the Figmans tote around. But they love it. Their babies and their home life is their existence and is separate and distinct from their work. The children are never at the theater and are being reared, excepting for the traveling, just as any other wholesome normal youngsters. "When it's time for Maxine to go to school in a year or so," said their mother, "then a young and ambitious actress is going to be lost for a while to the American stage, for the young and ambitious actress is going to stay close to home and rear her babies there. "Also I shall change Maxine's name to Lolita when the school days at rive. I should have changed it as soon as Junior arrived, for every time I call 'Max' all three of them. Daddy and the two babies, come rushing." She is so bonny and level-headed, that pretty mother, and all her ideas on baby-rearing she got by profiting by the mistakes she sees other -mothers making. Maxine has a silver cup that was bestowed upon her for beini? 100 per cent perfect in the Oregon e'igenic contest, and todayt before matinee time in "Nothing but the Truth" at the Heilig, Mother Lolita Figman is going to have a special hearing, or measure ment or Judgment, or whatever'they do In an eugenic test. I don't know a continental thing about eugenics, but I hefted Max Junior and he hugged me, and he winked a laughing blue eye at me and waved an engaging bye-bye at my departure, and I'd mark him 150 perfect any old time. Rainier s"aid to Refuse Payment. Attorneys for Charles Masters yester day obtained an alternative writ of mandamus from United States Judge Wolverton directing the appearance in ffourt Monday, November 2G, of Willia Seymour, City Recorder of Rainier, to show cause why .as such official he should not issue a warrant to Masters for the sum of 19295.40. In his applica tion for the writ, Mr. Masters repre sents that in a suit against the city of Rainier he was awarded judgment for that sum on May 2:1, and that the municipal authorities refuse to Issue a warrant In payment thereof. P. H. Douolas to Talk. "Is there anything to be gained by a statement of their war alms by the Allies?" is to be the subject of ap address by Professor P. H. Douglas at the lunch eon of the Civic League in the Hotel Multnomah , at noon today. He has made a special study of the questions involved and will give his views in de tail. JEFFERSON BOY SENSELESS Son of George Vanborcn, Found on Albany Street, Taken to Hospital. ALBANY, Or., Nov. 16. (Special.) A young man giving the name of Vanburen was found lying on Lyon street this evening in a senseless con dition unable to talk. Later he said he had come to Albany to see a show. Investigation disclosed that he is the son of George Vanburen, station agent for the Southern Pacific at Jefferson He was taken to the hospital and is resting easy tonisJit. if a Ruth Gates, Who Returns aa Leading Lady at the Baker The- ater. act on Eastern big time to return here, on telegraphic notice, to finish out the Raker season. She knit clear across tne country and has a pair of wrist lets and a terrible-looking pair of gray woolen sox for some soldier, which she made on her dash across the continent. She is especially interested in Red Cross work and was one of a big unit of workers even In the midst of her Summer at Atlantic City. "The only time I wasn't making bandages." she said, "was when I was swimming, or aslee'p. I want to be come identified with some local' ac tivity in Red Cross work, and intend to do every bit of my bit that my few hours of leisure will admit." Letter la Amusing. Miss Gates is in, receipt of an amaz- ing- letter, which speaks for Itself, and which la giving- her and her close friends a lot of amusement. It runs like this: "Dear Miss Gates: Last Spring-, after you had gon to New York. I told my fiancee that I knew you very well and had taken you to dinner. She la a great admirer of our and has told her crirl friends Ctiat , I know you real well. I didn't uppose you d be coming back is one reason 1 told her this. Dear Miss Gates, will you please help me to make good with my girl by sending me your autographed picture? Please write on it 'To from Ruth,' and I will be eternally grateful." Ruth Gates has topaz-colored eyes. She crinkled them adorably at the cor ners as she showed me the note. "Poor lancee," she laughed. "I m afraid she'll have to go on all her life unconvinced that' her dear one ever met me." P. S. If any fiancee who notices a familiar ring to this stefc-y will send a self-addressed envelope to me I will rcladly give her the young man's name.) NEVVCOURSESPROPQSED BED CROSS AUXILIARIES IX GRAM MAR GRADES S1T.GESTEU Modern Language Teaching From the Sixth Grade Up Urged Opea Air School la Asked. Establishment of a course in modern languages in the grades, starting with he sixth B, and also installation of Red Cross junior auxiliaries to teacn the traditions and history of the work are' innovations proposed as features n the Portland public schools at a session of the Hoard of Education Thursday afternoon. Both were re ferred to committee. Upon recommendation of Superin tendent Alderman, Red Cross seals will be sold only in the high schools this year, and not In the grades. Mr. Alderman told the members of the board that there is much objection to the collecting of money by the pupils of the grammar buildings. A. L. Mills, president of the open- air school committee, asked the, board to include in its budget for the com ng year a fund for the, erection. equipment and maintenance of an open-air school, with a Beating capaci ty for 3a pupils. With the request waa submitted a list of children who are said to require sucn a acnooi. This will be Investigated by a com mittee and a report submitted later. The evening school was ordered changed from the Sellwood -to the Brooklyn building, as Superintendent Alderman said there are more people in Brooklyn district wishing to attend. TON OF CANDY ORDERED Boys of Captain Mauser's Company Remembered by K. V. Mauser. "What Is thought to be the biggest consignment of candy that has yet been sent to one Individual on the French fighting front will leave Portland Monday morning. It goes to Captain K. L. Hauser of the 18th Regiment of railway engineers. The shipment weighs one ton and consists of 2000 1-pound tins of hard mixed candies. Eric V. Hauser, owner of the Mult nomah Hotel, purchased the candy yes terday from the Pacific Coast uiscuit Cojnpany at a cost of 0. The candy is going by express to New York city and will be In the trenches for Christ mas. There will be something like seven boxes for each Company V man. The "trench boxes" prepared by the Pa cific Coast Biscuit Oompany are five inches square. If placed side by side on the pavement the Hauser shipment would reach around the four 8io.es ot a buainess block in the downtown sec tion of Portland. Some days ago Mr. Hauser received letter from his son. who said that the men badly needed candy "a ton of it wo.ild not be too much, said Cap tain Hauser, and the Captain of Com pany F was taken at his word. McNARY VISITS UMATILLA Seriousness of Grain Situation Im pressed ITpon Senator. PENDLETON, Or.. Nov. 16. (Spe cial.) Senator Charles L. MeNary was a visitor here today, spending the morning here after an Inspection last night of the site at Hermiston offered to the .Government as an Army camp. He was much pleased with the loca tion and Its advantages. . Farmers here took up with him the necessity for cars to move wheat with which the warehouses are packed, in order to make room for thousands ot bushels which are stiH In the fields. Twenty-five thousand sacks are watt ing for warehouse room in the Pilot Rock country, and about 15,000 at Yoakum. y LABORER MEETS DEATH Elevator Counter- Welglit Crushes Mead of John McCormlck. John McCormlck. a laborer employed in the Failing building at Fifth and Alder streets, which is being remod eled, was Instantly killed yesterday morning when his head was crushed by a counter-weight in the elevator shaft. McCormlck was working on the third Strength Begets Confidence New World Life has the third largest paid-in cap ital of any life company in the United States. Where could YOUR policy- be better placed? NEW WORLD LIFE Stevens Bldg., Portland Good Morning! The mackinaws for - boys are siill in the running. Never was a garment made that is more pop ular with boys becom , ing, too, , and practical. Good variety here in the recent style. Prices ' $4.85 to $8.50. Sweaters from $1.85 to $4.85. And our overcoat as sortment never was more interesting. It adds manliness to the boy if his apparel comes from a man's specialty store like this. Our salesmen know how boys feel and like to be treated. Morrlaoa at Fourth. Gus Kuhn, Pres. 3. & H. Stamps Given. Plan to Go to the Livestock Show Next Week. Send your f riends,MTHE COLUMBIA" A most beautiful book, a truly inspiring Oregon menage. KILHAM'S, 5th and Oak. floor, attempting to remove a bolt from steel plate on the wall of the shaft. Ha waited until tne elevator, ascend- ng, had passed him, and then thrust his head Into tha snaft just in time to be hit by the descending counter weight. .Deputy Coroner Smith took charare of the body and removed it to the pub lic morgue, lie declares the contract. r.g company was negligent in not nro- vidlng proper safeguards. The time of the inquest has not been set. GIRL KNITTERS STOP? NIT Vancouver Club Elects; Constitution to Be Drafted. VANCOUVER. "Wash.. Nov. 16. (Spe- clal.) The Girls' Club at the Hostess House. Twelfth and B streets, held an election and chose Haiel Hill, president; SIM afc7HAZELW00D t( rJ HAZELWOOD Conservation Candy contains less than one-fourth the amount of Cane Sugar that the average Candy contains. HAZELWOOD CONSERVATION CANDir Contains the following assortment $1.00 to $2.00 Per Box Mexican Chewa Mexican Penoche Honey Taf fiea Molasses Candies Cocoanut Caramels Chewing Nougate Assorted Chews HAZELWOOD H0ME3IADE SPECIALS 60c and $1.20 Per Box Ayerage very low in cane sugar, as the principal ingredients are Nuts, Maple Sugar, Mexican. Penoche Sugar, Dates and Liquor Chocolate. THE HAZELWOOD 338 Washington Street THE BROADWAY HAZELWOOD XZ7 Broadway We are obeying the President's Proclamation regarding the use of sugar. EDWARD H. PENCE, D. D. Sunday Sermons: 10:30 A. M, "The Man Who Owned a River" 7:30 P. M. "Savonarola, the Florentine Reformer" " at Westminster Irvington's Community Church East Seventeenth and Schuyler Come and hear Dr. Pence in his own pulpit. Telephones: Marshall 1; Home, A 6?S1 The Market of Cleanliness and Sanitary Surroundings OUR LEADING SATURDAY SPECIAL Jones' Quality Lamb Genuine 1917 Spring Lambs Quality Unsurpassed Leg or Loin Roasts, lb 2S Shoulder Roasts, lb." 124 C Breasts, lb. 18d Lamb Stew, lb... 15 Selected Steer Prime Rib Roasts, lb Rump Pot Roasts, lb Rolled Roasts, boneless, lb Shoulder Pot Roasts, lb Plate Boil Beef, lb Rolled Corned Beef, boneless, Plate or Brisket Corned Beef, Choicest Milk-Fed Loin or Rump Roasts, lb . . . Leg Roasts, 5 lbs. up, lb Shoulders or Breasts, lb . Rib or Loin Veal Chops, lb. . Veal Loaf, lb 20 JONES' PURE PIG PORK SAUSAGE, packed in sanitary cartons, is sure to please. Try a carton at. 35c Each SMOKED MEATS JONES "PRIDE OF OREGON" BRAND Still another opportunity to lay in a supply at these excep tional prices ; - Hams, half or whole, lb 30b Choice Bacon, half or whole, lb 40-42b Tenderloin Backs, half or whole, lb 3(b Cottages, lb. . . 30b Picnics, lb 22b Special Bacon, lb 28b Remember to Shop Early. We close every Saturday promptly at 7 P.M. Thelma Shafer, vice-president; Tlllie Beatty, aecretary, and Mary Williams, treasurer. The president will draft a constitution and bylaws and present for approval at the nest regular meet ins:. The ft'rls have not heeded tha rebuke piven knitters by Mr. Baker and Mr. Daniels, and tonight, despite what these Cabinet officials said, held a meeting of the Knitting; Club. CARD OF TIIAK5. T wish to express my thanks to my friends and the Gresham (3. A. R- Post for their kindness and help In the sick ness and death of mv beloved hunband. David Wolfe. MRS. EMMA WOLFE. Adv. Borlnsr. Or. Chocolate Chocolate Chocolate Chocolate Chocolate Chocolate Chocolate Dipped Nuts Dipped Dates Dipped Raisins Dipped Jellies Dipped Fruits Dipped Caramels Dipped Nougate 2."C 18-120d 120 1G-18 ISr? lb. lb. 20b 15d VEAL. 20 22b 20C Veal Sausage, lb. First Presbyterian Church 12th and Alder Streets Rev. John H. Boyd, D. D. 10:38 A. M. "Living at the Center of Calm in Stormy Times" 7:15 P. sr. Organ Recital by Edgar E. Coursen The sermon will be a restatement of what Dr. Huyd said recently to the Methodist Jliniaters. "The Church in a World at War" FREE Public Lecture By A. A. l'ERRX, Lecturer for the Associated Bible Students. "The Stone of Stumbling and Rock of Offense to Both the Houses of Israel' A Scriptural explanation of why the Jewish Church failed to receive Christ and why the various churches of today are falling to receive and teach hint. Sunday, Nov. 18, 3 P. M. W. o. W. Hall E. Sixth and E. Alder Sts. ALL ARK WELCOME. Y.H.C.A..School BookkeeplBK Mechanical Dnw. Accountaaey Ins; Mrnoaraphle Mathtmitlrt Colleice l'rc,ara- Vd saipbnlld- torjr Us Pharmacy ffl Shipbuilding Klertrlral Ei(l. Wlrelm Teles;- arerlas; rasthy Enarlneerlna; Automoblle Engineerings For detailed Information call at or write to Dept. f Edneatlna. Division C, Fertlaad Y. M. C. A. VANCOUVER, B. C. HOTEL BARRON FIRST CLASH, 200 luxuriously fur. ft t shed room. On a block from C P. R. Hotel. In tha heart of tha up town business sect too. Room rata; Sl.OO and $1.30 only. The WOODS HOTEL Undar lima manayemant as BAR RON. Vancouvtr'i oiliest and beat, known hotel In tha heart of dowi town builneat section next B. G Electric Depot), feinfi rooms. $1.00. Pouble. 91.50. W. U. WoodU Mgr. Writs for ressrvsj liana. Wanted Chairs to Cane, by School for Blind FOR. PARTICULARS CALL Mr. J. F. Myers M"