Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, October 16, 1918, Page 9, Image 9

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    TIIE 3I0RXIXG OREGOXIAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1918.
9
CITY NEWS IN BRIEF
City Editor Mtn TOTO. A
un1av- Editor Main 7070. A 6O0S
Advrrtl.oinc Department ...Mala TO70, A S09S
Superintendent of Buildinc.-Maia 7070, A 60S
THRIFT STAMPS
and
WAR SAVINGS STAMPS
On hala at
Business Office. Oresonlan.
COLO.VBl, TO COXDCCT TESTS. Colonel
H. C Bowen, commandant of the
Ftudfnt Army Training Corps
r.ngene. win be at the imperial Hotel
r-aturday and Sunday to examine civil
tans for the central officers' traintn.fi;
schools. The examinations -were
schedule4 but later posponed for last
meek. Colonel Bowen will be accom
panied by his adjutant. Captain Klare
Covert, now stationed at the University
of Oregon, after six months' service
with the American forces In Prance.
Civilians examined for the central
officers' camps will be sent to Camp
McArthar, Texas; Camp Zachary
Taylor. Kentucky, and Camp Hancock,
Georgia.
Rots of I Covtess Bntcuiuii.
Jlilo Cereghisino ajid Joe Solari, each
14 years old. were arrested early yes
terday by Patrolman Chase, who found
them in the Davis Cash Grocery. 63
Foster road. Inspectors Colman and
Morale say the boys confessed five
burglaries. They are alleged to have
confessed to robbing the Piedment
Hardware store. East Seventy-second
street and Foster road, on two dif
ferent occasions, a confectionery at 657
roster road, a store at 5S3 roster road
and the Davis Cash Grocery, where
they were arrested. The case was
turned over to the Juvenile Court.
Kmc DesECRaTon to Pat. Persons
who desecrate the American flag by
using it to advertise their wares will
be arrested and fined, according to
decision by Municipal Judge Rossman
yesterday. The court dismissed the
charge against Simon Spass, arrested
Monday for having a flag painted on
the side of his bakery wagon, on the
ground that the law had .not been
rigorously enforced and that Spass did
not. know ha was violating the taw.
Judge Rossman, however, ordered the
police to bring In offenders and prom
ised to Impose fines in the future.
Exmoks Cass) to Ba Retried. After
deliberating for several hours without
arriving at a verdict, the Jury which
this week heard evidence in the $15,000
damage suit of Oma Emmons against
the Southern Pacifio Company was dis
charged by Circuit Judge Kavanaueh,
before wnom the case was tried. The
plaintiff sought damages for injuries
alleged to have been sustained when
' her automobile was struck by a West
Side Southern Pacific train near Beaver
ton. The case will be retried.
Covatissiox or :.ono Sued For. E.
C Uenereaux and R. L. Hanson are
plaintiffs In a suit filed yesterday in
the Circuit Court against the Thorn-dyke-Trenholme
Company in which
they demand $r000 they say Is due
them, as commission for the eale of
the steamer Katia to the Katia Steam
ship Company. The plaintiffs ssy they
furnished the defendants with Informs
tion which resulted In the sale of the
vessel.
Kins Barrels of 'NVixs Found.
Kresto Tento, 748 Raleigh street, wss
arrested yesterday by Sergeant Robson
and - Patrolmen Miller and Wellbrook
and held on a charge of violating the
prohibition law. Nine barrels of wine
and a wine press were found in the
basement. Louie Anderson also was
arrested on a charge of violating the
prohibition law. Patrolman Cameron
seized a trunk containing seven pints
of whisky at the Vnion Station.
T viva. T Ri-vm T rl T J n. mr-m 5
Janitor at the Skidmore Drug Com
pany's store, 151 Third street, sus
tained severe burns in the explosion
of denatured alcohol in the basement
of the store yesterday. Itemmers was
filling a bottle with alcohol from a keg
and lighted a match to see if the bot
tle was full. He was taken to Good
Samaritan Hospital.
Mrs. Gadsbt Gets $1000 a Month.
Mrs. Nellie Gadsby. widow of the late
William Gadsby. was granted a family
allowance of $1000 a month, lis an
order signed yesterday by County
Judge Taawell. The estate is valued
in excess of $-00,000, and the court
decided that the above monthly sum
should be allowed for Mrs. Gadsby's
maintenance. -
Health Vital Matter ffhe Director-General
of Railroads has appointed
a committee on health and medical
relief for the Administration. The
committee will establish an office in
Washington and will conduct a survey
of and submit recommendations In con
nection with, the proper protection of
the health of employes and patrons of
the railroads under Federal control.
The Milk Curb for Anemia. It In
creases quantity. Improves quality and
stimulates circulation of the blood. Be
cause of rapid changes produced In the
blood stream the milk cure as given
at the Moore Sanitarium is the ideal
treatment for those conditions in which
the blood Is deficient. Phones East 47,
Main 6101. Adv.
Swedish Tabernacle to Pat Off
Debt. The Swedish Tabernacle Church
of Portland has launched a campaign
to pay off a $S000 church debt with
liberty bonds. The pastor is urging
his members to buy bonds which will
be taken as payment on the church
debt. The request has met with en
couraging response.
Monaco to F t o h t Conviction.
Giovanni Monaco convicted murderer
of 17-year-old Maria Spina, yesterday
filed a notice of appeal to the Supreme
Court. Monaco was convicted of sec
ond degree murder by a jury in Cir
cuit Judge Morrow's court last week.
He is to be sentenced todty to life
imprisonment.
As A Last resort for your rheumatism,
paralysis, stomach, kidney and chronic
diseases try N'isbeth's Sanitarium. Our
specialty Is reconstruction work. Elec
tricity, hydrotherapy, bake ovens,
massage, gymnastics, etc, etc., also
milk and caloric diet 1$ Lovejoy St.
Broadway 1606. Adv.
Isexseb Case Postponed. Another
postponement was ordered yesterday
in the prosecution of William Isensee,
charged by liberty loan solicitors with
disorderly conduct. The case, which
is in the Circuit Court on appeal by
Isensee from the Municipal Court, will
be heard tomorrow morning.
Ward Is Complainant. Glenn A.
Campbell is resisting removal from
Seattle to Oregon. Campbell was ar
rested at the instance of Assistant
t'ntted States Attorney Goldstein a few
.lays ago for violation of the Mann act
The complainant was a 17-year-old
girl, his ward.
Purse With $38 Lost. Mrs. Winnie
Franrv-co, 86 Vj Union avenue North.1
reported to. the police yesterday that
she had lost her purse, containing $38,
near the Union Station.
Chcrchxs But Liberty Bonds.
Trustees of the Northwest conference
of the Swedish Mission churches have
decided to purchase $500 worth of
liberty bonds from available funds.
Razors Uoned, safety blades sharpened.
Portland Cutlery Co, Sg 6th. near Stark.
Adv.
Milk and Rest Ccrb. To build
health and strength and cure disease.
The Moore Sanitarium. East 47. Adv.
Will witnesses to accident to lady in
LIrman it Wolfe's elevator Monday
afternoon phone Marshall 4991? Adv.
McMahon, Chiropractor, established
1$10. Adv.
Xmas umbrellas. Belding, the jeweler.
Adv.
William Buddek Kept His Word.
William ' Budden kept his promise
with the Federal officers and went to
Jail. When young Budden was con
victed several months ago for sending
objectionable matter -through the mails
he put up a strong plea, promising
that if permitted to go home and
help the folks gather the harvest he
would report on October 15. The Gov
ernment officials decided to take a
chance. Carrying his suitcase, Budden
reported to United States Attorney
Haney yesterday to begin serving a
60-day Jail sentence.
E. D. Burbank at Post. E. D. Bur
bank came on duty yesterday at Van
couver as the first full time secretary
of the War Camp Community, Service
for that place. The Vancouver work
has been under the direct charge of
Burton E. Greening, secretary of the
Portland War Camp Community Serv
ice, and Mr. Burbank will work under
supervision of the Portland office. Mr.
Burbank is a Dartmouth College man
who has been with the War Camp Com
munity Service at Valparaiso, Ind,
Recent Alaska Hires Costlt. Six
million feet of timber was lost in the
recent fires of the Chugach National
forest, Alaska, according to a report
received yesterday by George H. Cecil,
district forester for Oregon, Washing
ton and Alaska. The Cmigach National
forest embraces 5,500,000 acres of public
land in Southern Alaska. Most of the
fires occurred along the route of the
Government railroad, north of Seward,
In a region where the timber has a
high utilization value.
' , Lieutenant Hummel Killed. Lieu
tenant Fred W. Hummel, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank A. Hummel, 6S3 East
Eighteenth street North, as been killed
in action in France, according to a
telegram to his .parents from the War
Department. Howent overseas last
June with the 91st Division. Lieu
tenant Hummel won a commission at
the first officers training camp at the
Presidio, and was assigned to a ma
chine gun battalion at Camp Lewis.
Preference Is Placed. Preference
ill be given by the Government to I
employes owning liberty bonds, other
things being equal, according to a
wire received from Washington yes
terday by C. J. Buck, acting district
forester. The average subscription in
the Portland office is $127 for each
employe.
Pyorrhea Treated. Persons suffer
ing from pyorrhea or excessive decay
fsoft teeth) may secure expert treat
ment and Instruction in the Smith Long
Clinic. Broadway bldg. Adv.
ORTLAND WOMAN SUICIDE
Mrs. Mary Franz, Despondent,
Drinks Carbolic Acid.
Mrs. Mary Franz, 84, wife of Engle-
bert Franz, president of the United
States Bakery, locked herself in her
room at 664 East Irving street, late
yesterday and committed suicide by
drinking carbolic acid. She died before
she arrived at a hospital.
Mr. Frans says that his wife had
been ill for several months, and that
er act was due to melancholia. She
ordered her daughter, aged 11, to go
out and buy the acid at a drugstore
and sent the child on another errand
while she killed .herself.
Mrs. Franz had lived in Portland 18
years. She was born in Bohemia, where
her parents still live. Her maiden name
was Mary Rauch.
Mrs. Frans is survived . by her
widower and two children. The body
was taken to the public morgue and
later to J. P. Finley & Son's parlors.
Funeral services will be heid at Finley '
chapel next Saturday.
DIVORCE IS GIVEN ACTOR
Hazel Carson Charges Husband
With Gambling Money Away.
Happy J. Walker, vaudeville enter
tainer, obtained a divorce from Mazie
Walker. In a decree signed yesterday by
Circuit Judge Gantenbein.
Sophie Perlmutter procured a divorce
from Jake Perlmutter in a decree
signed by Circuit Judge Morrow..,
Hazel Carson, in a suit filed yester
day, says that William Carson spends
his time and money gambling. She has
had to work for a living, ahe says.
Cruelty is charged against Harley
Large, a shipyard worker. In a com
plaint filed by Ethel Large The wife
demands $75 a month In permanent all
mony.
Desertion is the complaint of Evelyn
Parker in her divorce complaint against
Horace D. Parker. She asks that her
maiden name of Evelyn Cams be re
stored to her.
Velma Sommer wants a divorce from
Julius D.'Sommer on a charge of de
sertion. The wife demands $50 a month
and the custody of their two children.
Just in By Express
New O. D. Wool Uniforms
For Non-Commissioned Officers and Privates
Kupperiheimer and Other Makes
To you men in the ranks who have waited long and patiently, we
are glad to announce the arrival of these uniforms,, in all models
and sizes. Lome in and get your uni
form while the range of size is com-
jlete, which might not be possible
ater on.
KUPPENHEIMER
UNIFORMS FOR OFFICERS
in O. D. Serge, O..D. whipcord and other
materials.
SNAPPY TRENCH COATS
that live on hard service. Also Rubberized
Coats and Wool Overcoats.
Complete Outfits
Everything; good and serviceable here Hats,
Caps, Leggins, Puttees, Sweaters, Hat Cords,
Insignias, Rubber Cap Covers, Underwear,
Etc.
PORTLAND. OREGON
The Kupperiheimer House in Portland.
Portland Home of Ralston Army Shoes.
MORRISON AT FOURTH.
al
r OowrllMMW
tka Bam at goppaaaaUaaj
HEAT ORDERED IN HOUSES
APARTMENT RESIDENCE OW.V
ERS NOTIFIED TO STOKE VP.
rent Monday night and he had passed
the night wandering in the street.
When Jackson .first went to the Emer
gency Hospital he showed symptoms of
' influenza and was warned to stay in
his room and avoid danger of complications.
PURCHASING HEAD CHOSEN
Central Advisory Committee to Cen
tralize Work of Body.
Under the division of finances and
purchases of the United States Rail
road Administration the central ad
visory purchasing committee, H. B.
Spencer, chairman, is organising Its re
spective departments to centralize the
procurement of essential materials and
supplies. J. u. stuart nas Deen ap
pointed manager of the procurement
division, Chicago district, which will
have jurisdiction In the Pacific North
west territory.
Announcement is made of the estab
lishment of the forest products sec
tion of the committee. This section is
attending to the procurement of cross
ties, lumber and all claases of lumber
and forest material employed in rail
road construction and maintenance.
M. E. Towner has been placed in charge
of this section, with headquarters in
Southern Railway building, Washington.
ALLEGED THEFT STJRS CITY
Coos County Grand Jury Investigates
Charge of Stealing Old Clothes.
MARSHFIELT, Or., Oct 15. (Spe
cial.) The Coos County grand Jury to
day investigated the alleged theft of
Belgian relief clothing preferred
against V. O. Pratt, of this city, by
Night Officer James Rae. A number
of witnesses were summoned to the
Courthouse at coquiue and the case,
which has excited much comment In
the past two weeks. Is the chief topic
of interest on Coos Bay.
The Jury is not expected to report
its findings until Fridsy, when an out
side judge will arrive to administer
the October session of the Circuit
Court.
Warmth Enough to Provide Com
fort Made Subject ot Demand by
Fuel Administration Office.
Heatless houses must go. Is the com
blned edict of the state fuel administra
tion. the State Board of Health and the
City Health Department.
Numerous complaints reached the
fuel administration yesterday of cold
houses and rooms with not even the
chill taken off. One woman telephoned
from an apartment-house that she was
suffering from a severe cold and fight
ing against Spanish influenza, but the
house was so cold she was obliged to
go to bed to keep warm.
Miss Margaret Burning, executive
secretary of the state fuel administra
tion, took up the matter with Dr. R.
E. Holt, State Health Officer, and Dr.
George Parrlsh, City Health Officer,
both of whom agreed that, in view of
the fight being made against the pres
ent epidemic it is imperative that
houses shall be heated warm enough
for comfort and the provision of proper
ventilation.
Both the state and city health bu
reaus agreed to stand back of the fuel
administration to aid to the fullest ex
tent enforcement of the heat regula
tions, and owners of apartment-houses
from which complaints reached the fuel
administration office were notified that
enough heat must be turned on in the
buildings to insure comfort to tenants.
INDIAN GRADUATE DIES
Pneumonia Kills University Man
After Delirious Wanderings.
Ed Ambrose, 23, an Indian graduate
of Carlisle University, died in the
Emergency Hospital yesterday of pneu
monia. The police found him wander
ing and delirious in the North End.
The body was taken to the morgue by
Deputy Coroner Goetsch.
Ambrose was ill at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. S. H. Harris, 160 East First
street North. Mr. Harris had made ar
rangements to have him taken to a
hospital, when the Indian put his trou
sers on over his pajamas and left. He
Is survived by a sister, who lives at
Toppenish, Wash.
John Jackson, 28. who went to the
Emergency Hospital for treatment Oc
tober 11. showed up again yesterday
with symptoms of pneumonia. He said
the proprietor of the lodgings where he
lived, at Second and Burnslde streets,
had ejected him for Inability to pay his
COMMITTEES ARE NAMED
Directors of Departments of Wat
Work Campaign Appointed.
In announcing his committees yes
terday for the united war work cam
paign, Ira F. Powers, state director of
publicity, made It clear that nothing
will be left undone to acquaint the
people of Oregon with the facts regard
ing the drive scheduled for the week
of November 11.
Mr. Powers' organization is as fol
lows: Associate director, D. C. Freeman;
newspaper news, W. H. Warren and
George M. Trowbridge; display adver
tising, A. H. Devers, C. F. Berg and
W. S. Klrkpatrick; billboards, Thomas
Leonard; window displays, C. W. Eng
lish; motion pictures. slogans and
slides, Frank J. McGettigan.
As soon as possible there will be ap
pointed a member from each of the sev
en organizations united in the drive to
act In an advisory capacity with the
executives of the publicity department.
FILM EXCHANGES ARE OPEN
Moving Picture Houses in State
Towns Continue to Be Supplied.
Although the moving-picture houses
throughout the city are In darkness,
the film exchanges, with the exception
of the Universal exchange, which
closed Saturday, are open and are sup
plying the moving-picture houses in
towns throughout the state that are not
in quarantine.
The Government issued an order stat
ing that no new films were to be re
leased after October 14 until after the
Spanish influenza is over, but this will
not affect the film exchanges here for
some time, as they have films on hand
which will supply the orders they re
ceive from places where the ban has not
been put on theaters. With very few
exceptions, none of the employes has
been dismissed.
quarters in the state exhibit room of
the Oregon building at Fifth and Oak
streets.
Men are needed immediately, as it has
been found imperative that motor
transport in Europe be kept in perfect
repair. Occcupations in which openings
exist in the Motor Transport Corps
ranee from stenographer to general
mechanic, draftsman, electrician, and
many others.
PORTLAND BOY IS KILLED
Charles Wilbur Jensen Falls While
Fighting in France.
Charles Wilbur Jensen, of Portland,
has been killed in action in France. He
was the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Jen
sen, of Carlton, Or. He enlisted in
June. 1917. with the engineers, and
was later transrerred to Company E, of
the 117th Engineers of California. He
arrived in France November 11, 1917
and had been at the front ever since.
Before enlisting he was employed by
the Carman Manufacturing Company
for a number of years: He was 28
years of age.
Besides his parents he is survived by
the following brothers and sisters: Jack
Jensen, on the battleship Ohio; John L
Jensen, in the officers' training camp
at Camp Grant; Mrs. Mary E. Rowland
and Mable C. Jensen, of Newberg; Cecil
Jensen, of this city, and Florence Jen
sen and Lester O. Jensen, of Carlton.
MOTOR CORPSJS REOPENED
Portland and Oregon Asked to Fur
nish Quota of 20,000 Mechanics..
Portland and the state of Oregon are
called upon to furnish their quota of
20,000 mechanics for the Motor Trans
port Corps, for induction into the serv
ice before midnight of October 27.
Young men desiring to enter that
branch are requested to apply at head
Continue Studies, Is Pica,
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene,
Or.. Oct. 15. (Special.) A teles-ram
received by Colonel W. H. C. Bowen.
commanding officer of the S. A. T. C,
from Lieutenant L. A. Roberts, Helena,
Mont., this morning, recommends that
men who have completed one year of
technical training continue their ad
vanced studies until otherwise desired.
Logger Killed by Cable. .
ASTORIA, Or., 'Oct. 15. (Special.)
Hjalmar Swanson, an employe at the
H. E. Noble Lumber Company logging
camp below Seaside, was instantly
killed last evening by being struck in
the head by a hauling cable. He was
a native of Sweden, 40 years of age,
and so far as known left no relatives In
this country.
1 rt by saving wheat
g imaginaoie. b j
ALIEN HEARINGS HELD OVER
Applications for Naturalization De
ferred by Departmental Ruling.
"All proposed final hearings for nat
ur&Iization of alien Germans must beJ
postponed until 90 days after the ed-
eral naturalization Bureau has given
its consent for the hearings. On ac
count of this new departmental ruling
it will be well after the first of the
year before the hearing in regard to
89 Germans here can be held.
Those now seeking to procure final
oltizenship papers are Germans who
filed their second papers before the
beginning of the war. Up until a few
months ago a ruling of the Federal
naturalization' bureau made it impos
sible for Germans to procure American
citizenship until after the close of the
war. but this ruling subsequently was
changed.
: Old England at Your Door
THE EMPRESS HOTEL
VICTORIA. B.C
Perfect service at reas
onable rates glorious
views of the Straits of
Juan de Fuca pic
turesque homes in al
most tropical, foliage.
Splendid roads sea-
side golf, trout and
salmon fishing.
Gateway to Alaska and the
Canadian Pacific
Rockies .
Only 4 hours by steamer from
Vancouver or Seattle.
Get to know Canada better
your nearest ally.
ASK for RESORT TOUR No. w-16
B. K. CHACE, City Ticket
Agent, Canadian Pacific Rail
way. 53 third Bt Portland,
Oregon.
Om of a Serf oflafwrmtatlo A rtidm
a Dental Hygiene A'. 10
Caring
For The
Soldier's Teeth
TMAGINE a soldier
A aiming a great gun
behind the trenches
piloting a swift aero
plane above the clouds
with a badly aching and
decaaiug tooth. Uncle Sam
sees to it that his men take
care of their teeth. He has a
staff of dentists in each camp
who care for the teeth of the
defenders of our country. It's
the man behind the gun who
must be kept in trim, other
wise the gun become useless.
In a short time, in the Boer
war, England had to send
home more than five thousand
soldiers. si.Wr. because of
bad teeth. Bad and neglected
teeth vitally affect the na
tion's health. Yet many go
through life-under the foolish
belief that artificial teeth are
"something they can always
have." Dentists have proved
that artificial teeth, at best,
do only one-tenth of the work
required of natural teeth. -
Many teeth, sound la out
ward appearance, are being
undermined bp deeag. Often
the pulp (nerve) becomes in
fected and dies; pus forms,
which, taken into the blood,
menaces your entire health.
Pnbliehed ba the
Board of Dental Examiner
State of Oregon
save
fen
GIRLS! TRY II!
HAVE THICK
WAVY
BEAM. HAIR
Every Particle of Dandruff Dis
appears and Hair Stops
Coming Out. .
Draw a Moist Cloth Through
Hair and Double Its
Beauty at Once.
Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluffy,
abundant .and appears as soft, lustrous
and beautiful as a young girl's after a
Danderine hair cleanse." Just try this
moisten a cloth with a little Dander
ine and carefully draw it through your
hair, taking one small strand at a time.
This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt
and excessive oil and in Just a few
moments you have doubled the beauty
of your hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at once,
Danderine dissolves every particle of
dandruff, cleanses, purifies and lnvig
orates the scalp, forever stopping itch-
In? and falling hair.
But what will please you most will
be after a few weeks use, when you
will actually see new hair fine and
downy at first yes but really new
hair crowing all over the scalp. If
you care for pretty, soft hair and lots
of it, surely invest a few cents in a
bottle of Jinowlton s Danderine at any
drug store or toilet counter and just
trv it.
Save your hair! Beautify It! 1041
will say this was the best money you
ever spent. Adv..
THB FAMOl'S MKK-MARR
Neo-Plastlque Instantaneous Face
Rejuvenators. Demonstrations daily
at Woodard-Clarke Drug Store.
Address all inquiries to Nikk-Marr
Laboratory, No. 7 Selling - Hirsch
Bldg., Portland, Or. Send 3c stamp
for book or call at office, 1 to 6
P. M. Phone Main 3271. Agents
wanted.
NiaiiiiSli
Iwnrr rh"nFwv-w53Kii
You
Lunch somewhere!
1 t
Yon
Spend 50c for it.
Then
Why not get the best?
Multnomah Hote
PLATE LUNCHEONS
50c
Every Day
QUICK SERVICE
TELEPHONE
OPERATORS
WANTED
Telephone operating offers many
advantages to young women who
are seeking employment at a
good salary with opportunities
for advancement.
GOOD PAY
TO START WITH.
Rapid and frequent increase in
salaries.
PERMANENT
POSITION
Work is steady and permanent.
, Many opportunities for advance
ment. INTERESTING
WORK
Pleasant, Clean, Fascinating.
Associates Carefully Selected.
PLEASANT SUR
ROUNDINGS I..lEht and well-ventilated offices.
Comfortable lunch and recreation
rooms.
SPECIAL
ADVANTAGES
Annual Vacation With Pay.
Sick Benefits, Death Benefits,
Pensions, Without Cost.
Good character and good health
are required. Young women be
tween the ages of IS and 2t are
p r s f erred. Previous experience
is not necessary. Our employ
ment office is located on the
Sixth Floor, Room Ml, in the
Telephone Building, Park and
Oak streets, and Is open from 8:30
A. M. to 6:30 P. M. We invite
you to call at this office and
meet Miss Thomas, who will
gladly discuss the matter person
ally with you. An appointment
may be made by calling Broad
way 12000.
The Pacific Tele
phone & Telegraph
Company
Room 601, Sixth
Floor,
Park and Oak Sts.
J.u-s.r.0f.
"DIRECT NAME"
Vertical Filing System.
File letters numerically,
find them alphabetically.
Used in 60,000 efficiently
managed business of
fices. This system ot
letter filing means the
utmost in speed effi
ciency and economy.
Glass SPrudhommeCo-
65, 67 Broadway.
jw:, s-.
,iat-Mss ffi rt amim n iii ti
r . - :
insanrrancisco
V?hpe HOTEL
STE17ART
Geary Street, lust off Union Square
From SO a Day
Breakfast 60c lunch 60c Dinner 1 1 .00
Sundays: Breakfast 76o Dinner $1.25
Municpal car line direct to door. Motor
Bus meets Drincioal trains and steamer.
teHBaaaaaataMaHaMMHr
'MAKERS OF FINE PRIHTIMI"
"9
.STAKATSECOal Mill 178, A 1781
Phone Your Want Ads to
THE OREGONIAN
Main 7070 A 6093