TIIE 3I0RNING OREGOXIAN. TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1019. U PTIII Ui 01 ILL ETO Number of Webfoot Soldiers on Santa Paula and Charleston. 91ST WILL GO TO PRESIDIO Possibility of Being Sent to Portland . Before Demobilization Thought to lie Small. " BY PEGGY CURTIS NEW YORK. April Jl. (Special.) Ordera have bi Uaued by the division staff or the 91t. Including; General Jobnaton and minjr of tne officers who ara Oregon men to fro to. the Presidio, San Francisco, to be demobilized there. There la a possibility yet o( their, be- In- aent to Portland before then but only a possibility, by the time such a maneuver could -be effected many .of the 91st men would be back in Oregon and could not be (fathered together. All who came with the Santa Paula went to camp Wpton, with the rest of. the Slat arrivals of yesterday. They are the 376th aero suusdrore, 636th aero sup, ply squadron and the remainder of the Slat division with the 316th supply train dispatched from St. Xaaalre Oregon men are John Munro, Salem: timer Halverson. Silvevton; Hobert Kurnett. Baker: Waiver . wetaier. -Mil waukee. J7ta aero squadron, and Carl Haaenbacher. I'ortland, 646th aero sup ply equadron. Hotn nero squaarous were aent to Camp Mills. The medlcaJ detachment of the 31th supply train contained Lieutenant Kay Y. Cole, who wa transferred to the service of supply Just before Balling. Company A. Darrell M. Uuyer. Pau line: company C. Dan M. Carmony. I-ortland: company D, John "Wellpott. Powell Butte; Marion Duncan. Wamlc; company E. Arthur Vloff. Burnt Ranch; company F. Guy Heater. HlUsboro. The Charleston, arriving today after a 11-day trip from Brest, brought the following: Corporal Unton Carrlgan, Ontario, in the I-e Mans casual com pany No. l!tt. now to Camp Merrltt; air service company No. f contained Lieutenant Wilbur Hosteller of The Ialles and Georare K. W. Roberta of Hillsdale, who were sent to Camp Mills. Captain Fred Guliette of Portland re turned In field hospital No. 41 and la at l 'a mo Mills. In headausrtera detachment of the 411th telegraph battalion are Captain Alton B. t'oal'i of Albany and Ray mond Maynard of Portland. Company D Lieutenant John Patter son. Kugene: Carl Rol-ih. Portland; Georare Vochater. Merrill: Charles Mtradley. Portland. Company K DIs charge Balrd. Yamhill; Albert Camp bell. Eusrene; Charlea Gould. Albany; Chester Madeira. Portland: Glenn Kl klns. Kua-ene: Lytton Tennant. Hal R. Borne. Klton Conway. George Priscoll. William Gaskell. Ralph Jones. William Johnson. Charles Larson. Christopher Nicholson, and Harold Sherrett all of I'ortland; Clark Hutn. Albany: Ralph Lindsay. Salem: William Hoffer, and A. Hunter. Eugene. The Hth engineer, headquarters company. medical detachment and Companies A to P. Inclusive, are on the seaa aboard the Texan and will arrive bere about April 24. ond field army and the 6th army corp Other units assigned to early convoy today included the eOatn. engineers service battalion: 301st field signal bat tallon and evacuation ambulance com pany No, 68. NO P.1IUDE OF EIGHTEENTH Companies Will Be Separated Before Reaching Pprtland. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington. D. C. April SI. Companies I and 18th engineers, will not be per mitted to parade at Portland,- Or.. th war dcoartment told Senator Chamber- Iain today, because these companies will be separated before reaching Port land, one detachment going to San Francisco and the other to Camp Lewis. The Dolicv of the department. It was explained, ie to permit no parades ex cept of complete units or organizations. In other words, detachments cannot pa rade. ION SOVIET BENCH BUDAPEST EXPERIMENT IS DE CLARED SUCCESS. Feminine Jurist Complimented by Dean of Law Faculty for 11c r Efficient Work. BY J. C. SEGRCE. - (New York World rvlce. Published by Arrangement.) BUDAPEST. April !. (Special cable.) A distinguished Hungarian lawver attended the .Budapest law courts yesterday to watch at work the first woman Judge appointed by the soviet government. The woman judge, who waa a milliner's assistant. presided on the judge's bench, her two colleagues being a tailor ana a ci nenter. reaneetlvely. . The presiding- Judge. 23 years old, conducted the business of the court so efficiently that the ancient dean of the faculty of law. Professor Von bery Cohen, tendered her warm con gratulations. The accused In this trial waa a ser vant girl charged with stealing two nairs of boots from ber mistress. A sentence of five years' Imprisonment was imposed. "You aeem to have failed to realize,' aid the milliner-Judge In Imposing sen tence, "that the old social system has gene and that only worker and no capitalists and thieves have any place In our new social system. CHARLESTON BRINGS 1349 MEN Troop in Command of Captain A. B. Coats of Albany, Or. NEW TORK. April II. With 1349 troops the cruiser Charleston arrived here today from Brest. Units Included the 411th telegraph battalion complete, 11 officers and 213 men: 41st field hos pital, four officer and 74 men; and 33th field hospital, four officers, and 78 men. The others were mostly Infan try, marine and air service casuals. The troops on the Charleston came home In command of Captain A. B Coats. Albany. Or. The 411th telegraph battalion men were welcomed on behalf of the Pacific States Telephone company by officials of the New York Telephone company. WASHINGTON, Apri! II. About 7000 officers and men of the 42d (Rainbow) division sailed from Brest April Is on the transport Leviathan, due at New York. April 2.1. Among the officers on board are Major-General George W. Read, commanding the division, and Brigadier-General Douglas MacArthur. commanding the 84th Infantry brigade. Units on board the Leviathan Include the 14th and 150th field artillery. 84th infantry brigade headquarters, 166th Infantry. 117th train headquarters 4 Sd division military police, 4-'d division headuuarters troop. 117th sanitary train ls ambulance companies 165, 166 and 17 (already sailed). IS casual com panies and 4ft casual officers. The transport (jultania. due at New York April 24. has on board the 303th infantry complete of the 77th divi sion, four casual companies, evacua tion ambulance company No. 64, 3t.tth and 306th machine-lull battalions (77th division). 0 casual officers. Tha Kroonland sailed from Pt. Na taire for Newport News April IS with. the headquart.rs medical detachment and companies A to L, inclusive, of the 109th machine-gun battalion; de tachment of headquarters, 28th divi sion; field and staff headquarters. 1st and 3d battalions: companies K. G. 14. I. K. L and M of the It 1th infantry machine-gun company of 13th Infan try. 2th division military police, three convalescent detachments. The orlxaba, due at Mew York April 17, is bringing 12H0 officer and men of the 308th ammunition train, trans portation corps companies Nos. 20. 92, 1. l. . 103 and 1 35 : lolth and Mth aero squadrons: Flights A and B of the lOiiia an repair squadron; nine convalescent detachments. The ISiboiiey. du.- at New York April 37. has on board the headquarters com pany, supply s.'-:lon. companies A. B and C of the I0th field signal bat talion, headquarters compan). medical detachment, and Companies A. B and C. 10th field signal battalion: 44th engineer pontoon train: evaruatinn am mulance company No. 34 and 241 con valescent detachments. The rturlname. dnc at New York May 3: Knawha, due at New York May S: Alloway. due at New York May 3: the Western Hero, due at Newport News May X, are bringing a few casuals each. La Tearalae Dae April 27, Tha transport 1-a Touraine. due at New York April 2. has on board 13 casual vompaniea fur various slates and 43- casual officers. The transport Konigcn der Neder land4n. due at Newport News May 2. la bringing the 117th ammunition train complete of the Rainbow division; headquarters 114th engineers: evacua tion hospital No. IS: antbulanca service sections Nos. HI, 6n, 171, Si. vl and 6il. six casual conipanlea of colored troops and nine while casual companies and at detachment of the 141st field battery artillery. All units of the 79th division (Penn sylvania. Maryland and District of Co lumbia) have been assigned to yearly convoy. Also assigned ara beadquar taxa and headquarters troop of the ate EXCURSION RATES FIXED Season Tickets Will Be 80 Per Cent and Weck-End lares Two-Thirds. Special excursion rates authorised for local territory In the Pacific north west were announced yeaterday by A. r. Charlton, chairman of the North Paclfio roast passenger committee and assistant general passenger agent of the Northern Pacific lines'. Season tickets will be sold for 80 per cent of double local rates and week-end fares will be two-thirds of double local fares. The rates will apply to all beach resorts from Portland. Including North Beach, both seasonal and week-end. and also to many other popular resorts to which the summer resort patrons have been accustomed to go during the summer months. The- effective dates will be either from June 1 or 15 to September 13 or 30. according to weather conditions that control the opening or closing of the season. - Seaside from the beach resorts, the seuiponal rates will be available for travel to Rainier and Crater Lake na tional parka, the Josephine county caves, rihaata resort, alcCredle hot nrings. Week-end rates will be sold Saturday and Sunday, good for retur trip on Monday, and will be applicable also for the trip up the Columbi river to Grand Dalles on the Spokane. ortland Ac Seattle or to The Dalles on the Oregon-Washington lines. FiRST REAL BATTLE F0R31STDESCRIBED Epinonville Losses Largely From Distant Shellfire. HOW BOYS MET DEATH TOLD Red Cross Searcher Thrilllngly Re lates Stories of Bravery of Men Who Made Supreme Sacrifice the LEGION MEETING CALLED All Son Ice Men Eligible for Mem bership In Organization. Every man in Portland who was in any branch of Uncle Sam's service dur ing the war Just concluded is eligible for membership In the American Le- Klon. The first meeting In Oregon will be held next Saturday night In the mory and Captain Dow Vernon Walker, superintendent of the Multnomah Ama teur Athletic club, will preside. He was appointed temporary chairman by Lieutenant-Colonel Roosevelt, acting president of the organisation. The plan is to hold meetings simul taneously throughout the state, in each county, so that the organization can be perfected as soon as possible. The first annunl convention Is to be held In St. Louis next Month and ten delegates are allowed I'ortland. - The organization Is for officers, as well as enlisted men, and all who have seen service either in this country or abroad are asked to be present Satur day night. The league will be .non-sec tarian and non-partisan and will be similar to the Grand Army of the Re public and the United Confederate Vet- erana. Mr. llauley to Speak in Albany. ALBANY. Or., April 21. (Special.) . C. Hawley, representative In con gross from the first Oregon district. gave the Easter address yesterday at the eervlce of the Knox Butte Union Sunday school, four miles east of Al bany. Mr. Hawley is visiting In that vicinity with relatives of his wife, who is a daughter of John Geiaendorfer, pioneer resident of that section of Linn county. He htmself owns a farm on the eastern slope of Knox Butte. Mr. Haw ley will speak In Albany In the Interest of the victory loan next Friday even tng. Marine Sergeant Kills Self. BREMERTON. Wash.. April 21. Ser geant David 8. Bahr. United States ma rine corps, aged 32. ahot and killed himself at the marine barracks at the navy yard here. He enlisted at Charles ton. S. C. and had been In 111 health for some time. 4VOID COUGHiT and COUGHERiT! Cou china Spread Diseo. m, 1 TO -cr IE HILOH 30 DROPS-SIOPS COUGHS HALF TMIJ- FOR CHILDREN A Welcome for Sickness Indication, clogged stomach and bowels. Is more than an Invitation to illness: It Is a cordial welcome. A mass of undigested food, fermenting in the stomach or bowels, sends Its polsona throughout the system, disturbing the natural function of every organ, caus ing congestion, disturbing circulation and weakening the discase-resieting powers of the body. Foley's Cathartic Tabletare wholesome, quick in action, and have no bad after-effects. Sold everywhere. Adv, ST COLIN V. DYMENT. American Red Cross Searcher in 91st Division. FOIRTEENTH ARTICLE. In considering the battle of Epinon ville tha reader should remember that it waa the first real engagement which the men of the 91st took part- The' fighting of September Is, the' day before, had been against Isolated machine-gun nests with plenty of country at each side for flanking, -me lew bodies of Germans encountered, except some of those in the nests, nao. Deen glad to surrender. The first day's losses were largely from distant aneimre. Manv a soldier- had not even seen German all day. In spite ot the nve miles of progress. Ths first hard test or mat camp Lewis and Haute Marne training came accordingly, on the second day; for the 181st brigade In the battle of Epinon ville, or the battle Of the orchard; for tha 182d. In what may be called tn battle of' Ecltsfontaine. With the lat ter. the serial will later deal. In th former, the brigade was called upon on the 37th to exercise all ingenuity, and while the losses seem heavy, as on reads these Installments, neverthe less tha village was taken on the fore noon of the following day with a total n dead and fatally wounded of less nan 100. When the figures of the two Sommea. of the Champagne, of Belgium, of Verdun and others of the dozens of battles in which the other allies took part, perhaps the figure should seem mall for so stoutly defended a post as Epinonville. for Frits knew when he gave it up that the 91st would sweep n to Exmorleux farm ana into tne Bols de Clerges. Feather la Cap of Slat. It may be that a feather should stick n tha can of the 91st for having taken Epinonville and Ecllsfontaine without ither brigade's having been shattered. They were good men and good officers. with few exceptions, who went on the second morning up the westerly slope of Very-Eplnonvllle canyon. Plnce the human interest ot the whole pisode centers about those who fell. especially in the country that sent them to war. the deaths of more men in the first battalion of the I6lst Infantry will ow be described. In preceding install ments companies A and B and head- uarters company were covered. Com pany C Is next, C lost nine men In ths battle of Epinonville. It had started off the previous morning as a support and had had no casualties all the first day. It lept In the trenches across the Canyon from Epinonville, and the second morn ing took the front line with cornpany A at its left and began to maneuver to outdo the machine guns and snipers that infested the tough old orchard. Private Harry Johnson and Lieuten ant Robert C. Howard, a Washington officer, were lying behind the bank of road that ran at the edge of the orchard. A Hun sniper had been shoot ing all morning. A short time before ha had killed an A company man. The lieutenant borrowed Johnson's rifle and fired three or four shots. Johnson was looking over the edge of the bank. Suddenly Howard cried "Down!" and dropped. Johnson hesitated an Instant and was shot in the head. He was un conscious thereafter, but lay faintly breathing until mid-afternoon. The lieutenant is said to have shot the sniper soon after. Johnson left a wife in Aspen, Colo. Idaho Man Next to Go. A northern Idaho man was next to go Corporal Clarence Sylvester of Rathdum. The company waa becom ing disorganized by the frontal fire and was advancing too slowly to suit Cap tain Ira Goodpasture of Oregon (now Major Goodpasture, ranking major of the 261st infantry), so Goodpasture rose and started forward at the edge of the orchard, followed by Corporal Sylvester and part of his squad. About 150 feet beyond where Johnson was lying, Sylvester was shot in the head by machine gun or sniper. He was standing when shot and died Instantly. His mother la Mrs. C. E Sylvester of Rathdum. A Washington man died Instantly at this time William Hess, private in company C, brother of Frederick Hess of Riverside, Wash. A Hun sniper killed him as he ran for a hole. He died with out sptakingr. He was seen to fall by another Wash ington man. Private Henry A. Jacob- son of company C, son of Jacob Jacob- I i I son of Alnha Tniti Tnriflpntnllv. th following morning Jacobson himself was wounded at the orchard. The com pany retired once about 9:30 A- M. un der the fire and again at 6:30, sleepin on the night of the 27th on the opposite ridge in the trenches where it had slept the night of the 26. the morning, with other 181st units. It came down into the canyon again, up the reverse slope, into the orchard and this time clear through it, sweeping the Hun ahead. Jacobson was shot in the pelvis. Th writer talked with him afterward and. little thinking he was doomed to die. was told how Hess and Sylvester and Johnson had gone and was told accu rately. Jacobson then started back through the hospitals, and on October Z6 died at base 54 at 11:40 A. M-. septl cemia having; set in. Barrage Laid Dovrm In Orchard? When Company C was told to retire after the first vain attack on the or chard, the 27th, the order preceded barrage that waa to be laid down In the orchard. The men began to run back from their cover. Paul Ludke of Rich field. Wash., on - tha Columbia river near Pasco, was one o them. He be gan to run down the road that led into the canyon, alongside which was hedge. He had to pass a gap In the hedge, and aa hs did so, a -nachine sun opened through it He must have been hit in the side. He fell forward, said Oh, God, I'm hit." crawled a few feet from the impetus of his running, and presumably died almost at once. Cor poral L L. Goin, a Los Angeles man, who was a few feet behind, reported Ludke killed a few moments later, Goin and others having taken refuge In two brick houses just below the brow of the slope. Goin passed him again after the artillery fire when Company C was returning and lifted up his face, but apparently he had long been dead. Carl Ludke of Richfield is this private' father. John Wltbeck of Vernal, Utah, pri vate in Company C, was in the second platoon, which had been lying at the edge ot the bank of the orchard road. firing at Frits. A "cease firing" order waa given, and Wltbeck climbed onto the bank to clean out his rifle. The platoon sergeant and others advised him to get down, but he didn't. A bullet struck him In the breast. He fell off the bf nk, rolled down It over Sergeant L Grande. Stewart of Black foot, Idaho, who was right beneath under cover, and lay dead in the road. Corporal Ralph W. Feit of Colorado and Private Wilbur Smith of Montana were also lying under cover of the bank,, and he rolled by them. Salper gaoa-ts Goodpasture. It was shortly after noon when Cap tain Goodpasture was shot In the leg by a sniper at the edge of the orchard. An Oregon man and a Wash ington man carried him over the brow of the hill, through one side of Epinon ville, to a place on the reverse slope of the canyon, where they dug him a pit as protection from shell fire, aided by Private Thomas O'Reilly of Los An geles and a fourth man. Having been told to stay where the captain was in case anything happened Bird, O'Reilly and the fourth man dug hole for themselves nearby, while Eckley was standing eight or ten feet in front of the hole. The other three sat down in their hole with their backs up the hill, waiting orders. A shell fell about 20 feet back of the hole. A piece hit Eckley in the face. ntered his head and killed him in tantly. A piece as large as a walnut struck Bird In the back of the head and went in. He lived five hours, lying un conscious In the hole until death. One medio. In fact, tagged him as dead soon after the shell fell, but another came along later and found him still breath ing; yet he was so nearly gone that the tag was not changed. He was a power ful man to have lived as much as five ours. His mother lives in Seattle. Eckley's home was in Enterprise. Or. Bleep Bank Protects Men. Private Gordon V. Knechtel and ten ther C men had been assigned to the machine-gun company of the 361st as n ammunition detail. They had been with it from daybreak of the 26th. On the forenoon of the 27th they came up and entered the orchard, but were chased back to the road by artillery fire, and lay down behind the bank. The bank was sufficiently steep to protect from all sorts of fire except shells that might fan in tne road. Finally one ten ; the edge of the road, about noon,' nd hit a rock, which broke into many fragments, and some of these frag- ents hit Knechtel in many places. Major Frank Doherty of Los Angeles, commanding the first battalion of the 61st, saw Knechtel soon after; and he ed while the major was near. Knech- tef s father lives In Kitchener, Ont., for- erly known as Berlin until an out raged Canadian populace in 1915 in- iBterl on changing the flame. Epinonville, of course, was a wreck. Not a building in it was whole. After Frits had abandoned the place, brigade adquarters were established In a dug- ut In the town, and a church that still had four walls and a roof was used. as dressing station. But for days the Hun pounded the town incessantly, and nally drove out the headquarters, after avlng killed or maimed several run ers, blown up the car of a colonel and made debris of most of the place. PLIES TO FLY OVER CITY AT ROSE FETE Machines Ordered to Portland From Sacramento, Cat. WARSHIPS ALSO WILL VISIT Acting Secretary of Navr Rooserelt Says -What Fighting" Craft Will Be Assigned Not Yet Known. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. "Wash' ington, April 2L Orders have been sent by Colonel Milton Davit of the military air service to the commandant of Mather Field Sacramento, CaL, directing him to send four or five air planes of the S. J. N. dash -h. to the Rose Festival at Portland in Jane, ac cording to Information communicated to Senators Chamberlain and McNary today. The order also calls for two airplanes of the De Havlland- types, so that those attending-the Rose Festival may see the Liberty engine and the type of plans which fought for the United States In France. Colonel Davis further has Instructed tha commandant of Mather field that it would be wis to send two airplanes to Portland soma days ahead of the big flight for the purpose, he says, of "blazing the trail." Acting Secretary of the Navy Roose velt told Senator McNary today to as sure tha Rose Festival managers that some kind of fighting craft will be de tailed to Portland harbor for the big event. "I cannot eay what it will ha, whether battleships, cruisers or sub marines," said the acting secretary, but it will be the best we are able to give." There are several good harbors north of San Francisco, among them notably Coos Bay, the Columbia river and Puget Sound," Senator McNary re minded the treasury department today. A few days ago the treasury department announced that the old battleship Ore gon had been selected as the victory ship to make the voyage through the Panama canal, starting from Bremerton, today and reaching New York the day that the victory loan goes over. Imme diately following the announcement large sign boards were hoisted in con spicuous places about Washington on whioh were large and colorful maps of the United States giving the route of the victory ship as from San Francisco to New York. 'The fact that we have some note worthy sea ports north of San Fran cisco will be demonstrated in the re ports that will come In on the loan subscriptions from Oregon and Wash ington in a few days," Senator McNary told, the department. a The case of the southern Oregon company against the United States, in volving the Coos bay wagon road land grant in Douglas and Coos counties. Oregon, was remanded to the United States district court of Oregon by the upreme court today for a modifica tion of its final decree. This action is to permit an adjustment of the matter under the act of congress of February t which provides the means of dis posing of the lands In question. Probability of an extra session being called for May 12 as indicated by Paris ispatches today, caused Senator Borah to abandon plans under consideration ither to go to the Paclfio coast to speak against the league of nations r to accept the invitation of a British labor organisation to make such a campaign in England. Several of Sena tor Borah s speeches against the league have been published In full in England recently and resolutions were adopted by British labor demanding that they submit the question to a vote of the people as proposed in Senator Borah' early speeches. ' ',aa,M "UBKJgTY CONH siffTi' TWO DAYS LONGER ' POSITIVELY. STOPS WEDNESDAY MIDNIGHT .JHl. jS MAY tn "The Sheriff's Son Did you ever hear of a "timid" Nerr York lawyer? Well, that's Charles Ray in "The Sheriffs Son." The poor fellow was just born scared, so he has to fight him self as well as other and husky gun quick enemies. Some fights! See them! 99 l ! i MURTAGH AND THE $50,000 ORGAN A , 1 5-i 1 THE WAY THIS "WONDER UP IN THIS IS i - f 1 w SHORT OF MARVELOUS f Iff In the next Installment the-fortunes the other battalions of the 361st in battle of Epinonville will be de- scrlbeil. BARRACKS WILL BE RAZED Reed College Gets Financial Settle tnent for 8. A. T. C. Work. The barracks used by the Reed col lege-unit of the S. A. T. C. are to be dis mantled and that part of the Reed campus cleaned up, according to ar rangements made between the govern ment and the college. The war depart ment has concluded Its examination of the S. A. t. C. accounts and provided a satisfactory settlement with the col lege authorities as to the payment of tuitions of all inducted men, the ex penses of the mess and the removal the buildings. The flagpole is the only portion of the equipment that the college will pay for and retain. Kelso Fishermen Ready for Season KELSO, Wash.. April Jl. (Special.) Kelso's fishermen are getting their r- '.M lit aaJUTW,w . 4J.W"W5J - ( I The Most vivid f Production in rto FY " Many Years ; Brlna; rour anna M tilt II f they may profit by the ' ' 1 Z ckBowIedge imparted. I 4 O i i V 'fcM ... . .aataUa-Uh.. Wt. XauJ. f The Most Daring Photoplay Ever Produced MOTHKR! ten your growa-ap daugh ter aa are ifels powerful aaaral eauaae. auaaat gear in shape for the opening of the season May 1 anduring the coming week most or' them will move their floats out of tha Cowlitz river to their locations along the Columbia river. Many of the fishermen residing in Kelso fish in the Cowlitz during the fall and in amelt season, but during the spring have drifts along the Colum bia. Many of them locate between Car rolls and the mouth of the Cowlita and other groups fish at Vancouver, St. Helens and Mayger and other drifts. The traps in this vicinity are being put in shape and fishermen look for a prof itable season. Yakima Hands Out Jobs. YAKIMA, Wash., April 21. (Special.) One hundred and sixty persons were called for at the office of the federal employment bureau in this city last week and '146 were sent to Jobs. One hundred anci seventeen men were sent out and the calls for men workers to taled 120. effle too& oxeamMiao Held in the h ands of men who thwk. andranitishelping greatly to solve the reconstruction problems of the world TSeadyto write instantly anywhere, L.E. Waterman. Co. i9t Broadway NewYork Chicago Boston San Francisco e lfl t if Watns Km FountKPen 7g 25 7 S-h3 III DeaJeis f ' I All Makes All Styles Fountain Pens At the Fountain Pen Center GOP THE J. K. GILL CO, Third and Alder, Booksellers, Stationers, ' Office Outfitters. 4