THE 3IORXIXG OREGOXIAX, MONDAY, AUGUST 18, 1919. S FfHEMEn DEMAND SHARP WAGE RISE Railroaders Ask for 35 to 65 Per Cent Increase. 117,000 MEN REPRESENTED Vllimaluiu to Be Presented to Direc tor-General Smja Engines Must ' Have .Mechanical Stokers. CLEVELAND. Aue. 17. A S to 5 t r rmt Increase In wattes is demanded tor 117.00') firemen and hostlers on rail roads in the United States and Canada In a wace scale adopted before adjourn xnent today by 3u0 general chairmen of the Mrotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Kncinenirn in session here since Tuesday. Another demand to be presented to Ihe director-general of railroads is that all coal-burning locomotives in road service welshing 200.000 pounds and 6ver shall be equipped with mechanical fetnker n.i that two firemen shall be mployed on all such locomotives until thty are so equipped. injmo Knzlara Affeeted. About half of the S0.0O0 engines in the United states will come under this t troDo.al. The more important sections of the Report follow: Hates of dt for firemen and help Ri tn patenter service. IS.50 per day f 100 miles or less, except when Mallet AnrinM are Ufed. when ai.20 shall be taid. overtime In Da.oencer service will te coniDuted on the present basis, at V speed of 20 mi es an hour. In freieht service on engines weigh lng less than 500.000 pounds firemen Shall be paid ts.50 and on engines eighinr over 200.000 pounds $6 80 per 6ay of 100 miles or less, overtime to be computed on present basis, at a fepeed of 12 S miles an hour. Mialsaaaa Mint la Set. Firemen and helpers employed local or way freight service, mixed . trains, mine runs and other service, shall be paid a minimum of SO cents per 100 miles or less in addition to the through freight rates. A demand for time and one-half for overtime in all classes of service is made, to apply when men are used on Sundays or holidays. A demand is made that all coal burning- locomotives less than 200.000 pounds In weiKht shall be equipped ' with me chanical coal passers, a mechanical de vice by steam to keep the coal within the reach of the firemen and that 11 coal burning locomotives shall be equipped with power grate shakers and automatic fire door openers. threat Saa I .ead. It Is estimated that it will cost 1200.- floo.000 to equip the locomotives in the Inited States wlih the different me ehanical devices demanded by the fire men. Uniform deadhead rules for pay for firemen when traveling from one ter tninal to work at another and to be ap plied to all railroads in this country and Canada are demanded. Another working- condition demanded Is that on railroads where firemen are required to clean locomotives they shall be relieved of such work and that fire men shall be relieved of removing tools or supplies, loading coal, filling lubri cators, etc. 30) Per t ent Rlae Sera. "The firemen on locomotives handling .the preponderance of traffic will re ceive under our proposition a wage in crease of about 50 per rent." said Timothy Shea, acting- president of the brot herhood. "If our full demands are granted It will hardly restore pre-war conditions, considering the present purchasing power of the dollar." A copy of the wage draft will be submitted to Director-Weneral of Rail road Hines. ransom by Mexican bandits of two American aviators had been read to htm. said he could make no comment. The secretary did not indicate whether advices as to the plight of the aviators had reached the war departir -nt. The slate department, it was said by of ficials there, had received no informa tion on the affair. f. 9. Policy Caaage Possible. News of the holding of the aviators by Mexican, bandits, coming on the heels of the warning to the Carranxa government that unless protection was afforded American lite and property In Mexico a radical change in the policy of this government toward Mexico would result, intensified Interest in of ficial circles here. It was pointed out that the incident reported from the border tonight was the second of the kind within less than two months. However, in the present case those being held and threatened with death are American military offi cers, and thus it was said there could be no claim of mistaken Identity, as might have been possible in the two previous Instances. Similar C'aaea Recalled. Late last month Philip Thompson, a 14-year-old son of John West Thomp son, an American citizen, was kidnaped 111 TROOPS GET PEACE BY OLD RUINS Strange India Races Celebrate End of World War. FOREIGN SOLDIERS ABOUND AH the Races of Karth Seem to Be Gathered in Bible Land, IV. T. tills Relates. EnlKER TO VISIT POKTLA.VO. roHTLA.va T en- ts;-.; . vstjm 1 nov. it y t ,J i ' t jy -vjp. ); u. -J''y : i if 1 .,f j i - r- CONSIDERS DEMANDS PrTinitr Statement on Firemen's Action Is Not Made. WASHINGTON. Aug. 17. Demands of fhe American railroad firemen and hostlers for increased wages and changed working conditions as out lined In a wage scale adopted today at Cleveland by the general chairman of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Fire men and Kncinemen. probably w:Il be considered along with the demands of fhe other railroad workers, railroad administration officials said toilay. Uiretor-t;e:ieral H : n c s. altnough riever definitely stating whether the demands would be presented to one of fhe railroad administration's boards on wages and working conditions or would be settled by direct negotiations, has aid that a wage advance to one class of railroad workers would force consid- jawition of the claims of all the nation's iZ 'Q uoo railroad employes. The firemen's request for more nay Is the third to be placed before the railroad administration. The request of the shopmen is to be taken up im mediately on return to work of the Shopmen, who have been on strike. The trainmen's brotherhood also has a wage increase pending. The conduct ors have given notice that they would ask for an advance while the engineers bave expressed a desire for a reduction In the cost of living rather than more wages. The pending demands would add many million dollars, officials said, to the payroll of the railroad administra tion which, in Its operation of the rail roads, has met with a steadily growing deficit for several months. Dr. Frederick II. Newell. Dr. Frederick H. Newell, presi dent of the American Association of Engineers, will be in Portland Friday and Saturday, August 22 and 23. His visit is of peculiar Interest to the people of this city and of the entire state on account of his familiarity with problems of reclamation and hydro-electric development. Dr. Newell Is head of the civil engineering department of the University of Illinois and is widely known as a public-spirited engineer. He has been called "father of the United States reclamation service." of which he was first chief engineer from 1902 to 1907 and director there after until 1914. While in Portland Dr. Newell will make his headquarters at the Benson hotel. Friday after noon he will be in executive con ference with representatives of the Oregon chapter of the Amer ican Association of Engineers. At a o'clock In the evening Dr. Newell will speak at Turn Hall, Thirteenth and Madison streets, on questions of Interest to all engineers and to the public. The meeting Is open to everyone in terested In water-power legisla tion, irrigation, reclamation and other broad public questions. from his father's ranch. 30 miles from Mexico City, and -held for ransom. Act ing on the advice of the Mexican gov ernment, and with the acquiescence of the American state department, the boy's father paid the ransom. The Mexican foreign office agreed to re fund the amount of the ransom, but no Information has been recived here as to whether this agreement was car ried out. Several days later Lawrence L. Ship ley, an American citizen, was captured by Mexican bandits near Fresnillo. A ransom was demanded in this case also, and the state department recommended that It be paid. It being set forth that failure to make th.; payment would endanger Shipley's life. Ten days ago the department was Informed that Shipley had been released, but the dis patches did not state whether the ran som had been paid. SAN ANTONIO. Tex.. Aug. 17. Major General Joseph T. Dickman. commander of the southern department, and staff officers were in conference late tonight over reports from Candelaria, Tex., that Lieutenants Davis and Peterson, army aviators, are being held by Mexican bandits for a $15,000 ransom, which army authorities have been advised, must be paid Monday to Dawkins Kil patrick, a storekeeper at Candelaria, under penalty of death for the aviators if the money is not forthcoming. General liickman said reports indi cated that the two airmen came down at the little town of I) I lures. He de clined to state what steps had been taken to rescue the men or whether he had been in communication with Colo nel George T. Langhorne. commander of the Big Bend district. He also said a report of the incident had been tele graphed to "Washington. BY "WILLIAM T. ELLIS. (Copyright by the New York Herald Com pany. Published b arrangement.) BAALBECK, Syria, July 12. Mark Twain, when traveling in these parts. called his horse "Baalbeck. because he Is such a magnificent ruin." With the peerless pillars of the Tern pie of Jupiter rising gracefully above the green orchards a few steps away from me the columns more than 60 feet high and all the mystery and wonder of this famous Acropolis, the name of which perpetuates the worship of Baal, and the architectural glories of which recall the skill of Greece in her glory and Home at her height, alluring my pen, I writs instead of the Baalbeck of the living present. A hundred travel books and every encyclopaedia rehearse the wonders of the peerless ruin; but only I am per mitted to chronicle last night's cele bration of the signing of the peace by a battalion of dusky soldiers from re gions that are still little known to the Western world. Even the local antic! pation over the arrival of the American commission from the peace conterence, which causes the natives to eye curi ously and auestioningly every stranger, interested me less than last night's weird Droceedings out on the hillside bevond the famous spring, where large and beautiful stream gushes forth from the earth on the hillside. Foreign Soldiers Plentiful. Throughout Syria one meets so many kinds of foreign soldiers that none of them find their way into note books. Australians stroll along Jerusalem's via Dolorosa. Kilted Scotties stand guard by Davids' tower. Blase Tommies drink Jewish wine and talk about Blighty in the Zionist shops along the Jaffa road. Hejas soldiers "Hedgehogs." the Brit ish call them in head cloth and neaa roll, over-decorated with bandoliers of cartridges, stride about as the real pos sessors of the land. American Ked cross and near eastern relief uniforms are seen behind whirring Fords, per haps on the road to beautifl Ain Kalrlm, the village where John the Baptist was born and Mary visited Elizabeth. Stately Sikhs from north India find bartering in the Jerusalem bazars con genial. American Jews in the British Jewish legion accost passing Americans with inquiries about "Lil- or IVYork,' which is fairer to them than Zion. Further north in Syria French poilus loll about, longing for home; French blacks from Algeria and Tunisia, true cotton field negroes in type, remind the American that Rastus spoke other languages than English. Squat An namese unintentionally deceive the un sophisticated into the belief that they are Japanese. Of the same size,1 and not dissimilar In appearance, but bet ter fighters, are the little Ghurkas, with their American campaign hats turned up cockfly- on one side. Punjabis and Mahrattas also uphold, the traditions of polyglot India In a land that is not to them of any especial sanctity. All like soldiering in Syria better than in France, because of the climate. There are still abundant signs that the ends of the earth assembled and fought in the land that holds the field of Armageddon and. by the way, the en tire Plain of Esdraelon is a smiling ag ricultural .prospect today, with the wheat being harvested by Arabs whose black tents are so numerous as to seem like villages. It is a pity that man kind's engrossment in France at the time crowded out the great story of General Allenby's conquering campaign, which swept up through the land in such a whirlwind victory. The part that the Indian and Australian troops bore in this campaign should be known to the world. REGAINS THE 28 POUNDS SHE LOST Mrs. Hastings' Improvement Is Most Wonderful Thing She Ever Saw or Heard Of. "Tanlac has not only been the means of my getting back the twenty-eight pounds I lost in weight, but has so completely overcome my troubles that I am enjoying as good health now as I ever did in my life," said Mrs. W. L. Hastings, who lives at Elma. Washing ton, while in Tacoma a few days ago. "I have been taking medicine and treatments ever since I was a young girl," continued Mrs. Hastings, "but Tanlac is the first and only medicine that has ever given me any real relief. My stomach was in such bad condition that what I ate would give me indiges tion. Then, too, everything I ate would sour and cause gas to form and this would bring on terrible cramping spells. This trouble kept up so long, and I got so weak and rundown that I was almost a nervous wreck, and I never knew what a good night's sleep was. I suffered a great deal with pains in my back, too, and when I tried to walk around a little my legs would pain me so that I would just have to stop and sit down. I was in very bad condition, and I just kept going down hill until I lost in weight from one hundred and forty down to one hundred and twelve pounds. "After reading so many statements about the -good Tanlac was doing peo ple, I finally made up my mind to give It a trial. Well, I have taken three bottles of Tanlac so far, and the im provement it has made in my condition is the aiost wonderful thing I ever saw or heard of. Why, sometimes I meet some of my friends who haven't seen me since I commenced taking Tanlac and they hardly know me. I have gained so much in weight and strength that I can do all my housework an then get out and go just anywhere want to. I have a fine appetite an eat three hearty meals every day, and never have a sign of stomach trouble, or suffer the least bit afterwards. My nerves seem to be In perfect condition, and I sleep Just like a baby every night. I don t have those pains in my back an more, and, in fact, I am a perfectly healthy woman in every way. I am so thankful for what Tanlac has don for me that I just want to talk about it to everybody I meet." Tanlac is sold in Portland by the Owl Drug Co. Adv. cial.) Yesterday was the hottest day experienced here this year. Thermom eters in various parts of the city reg istered 78 to 80 degrees in the shade and 92 to 98 degrees in the sun. As the maximum summer temperature here rarely exceeds 65 degrees, residents of this section sweltered. PHELAN DENOUNCES BILL IMMIGRATION MEASURE PRO-JAPANESE. HELD Gulick Proposal Introduced In Sen ate Declared to Be Grossly Un just to State of California. SALVAGERS DEFY DEATH WORK OF RAISING SHIPS AFTER WAR IS DANGEROUS. FLIERS HELD FOR RANSOM ( V:iTtHii-1 Krom Flrr Tare.) fives t" urge the payment of the ran som. The consents of the replies were also withheld, but a courier who is familiar with the district opposite the Big Bend was obtained and an effort made to get the replies to the aviators tonight. While no official announcement was rnade here tonight. It was believed that the ransom would be paid to an agent of the bandits tomorrow morning and it Is believed the courier carrying the telegrams to the aviators also wai authorised to Inform trie bandit leader of this fact. HUTCHINSON, Aug. 17. Lieutenant !. G. Peterson, who, with Lieutenant J'aul Davis, Is reported held for ran som by Mexican bandits. Is the son of pvamuel G. Peterson, a clothing mer chant of this city. Petersen Darias; Alrsnan. Lieutenant Teterson enlisted In the aviation corps at the entry of the United States Into the war. Most of )ils work has been done at Ellington field. Texas. His stunts were so dar lntf that upon one occasion he was put under- restraint for almost three tnonths, a member of his family said. WASHINGTON. Aug. 17. Secretary Jtaker tonight, after Associated Press itl spat che tslllcg of the holding for. New Submersible Lifting Devices Are Being Used tn Facilitate Work of Recovery. LONDON. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) Salvage crews face death In many was trying to save the vessels sunk in the war by German sub marines. One of the most perilous in cidents of this service was that of a navy commander who cut away the nose of a live torpedo that had become jammed in the deck of a "estroyer." So dangerous was the task that the naval authorities towed the destroyer three miles out to sea before they would per mit the attempt. This salvage work has advanced very rapidly and become very profitable. Submersible lifting devices never be fore thought of have been devised and put into successful operation. Dangers from gases due to decaying grain car goes have been eliminated by scien tific research. Diving appliances have been greatly improved. The cutting of steel plates under water is now onl ya detail and the con struction of the standard patch to cover holes) in hulls has reached the point where it is now merely a part of the day's work of the salvage men. 1 Lord Massereene and Ferrard has de cided to sell the Oriel temple demesne, which is one of the show placs of north Ireland, between Dublin and Belfast, near Drogheda. The estate comprises 1000 acres, and the rights of sporting over an adjoining 4000 acres. GERMANS SEEK NEW HOME Naturalization in Luxemburg Switzerland Is Attempted. and PARIS. (Correspondence of the As sociated Press.) A warning voice on the dangers of German infiltration by devious ways comes from Luxemburg. According to the Journal of Esch, of 42 petitions now before the Luxemburg chamber for naturalization, 38 come from Prussian subjects, . several of whom have been identified as having been connected, more or less, with acts of f rightfulness during the war. None of them, the Esch paper affirms, would have dreamt of changing his national ity had the Germans won. Reports from Switzerland indicate that Germans will try to pacifically re enter France under the guise of Swiss WASHINGTON, Aug. 17. Senator Phelan of California, in a statement tonight, declared that the immigration bill recently introduced by Senator Dillingham, Vermont, under which im migration would be fixed at 5 per cent of the number of "any nationals now present in the United States," was sponsored by Dr. Sidney L. Gulick, who Senator Phelan charged, "is simply Japanese agent." With his statement Senator Phelan maae public a copy of a letter ad dressed to Dr. Gulick by K. K. Kawa- kami, a Japanese newspaper corres. pondent and author, or San Francisco, which he declared proved that the Gulick bill had been prepared in col laboration with Kawakaml. The bill. Senator Phelan denounced as "grossly unjust to the state of Call fornia, which is seeking every means possible of ridding itself of the Japan ese. Referring to his recent request that Governor Stephens call an extra ses sion of the legislature to strengthen the alien laws. Senator Phelan sug gested that the laws might be proposed by initiative. The letter which Senator Phelan de clares in his statement proves that "Dr. Gulick, although he has denied it, is simply a Japanese agent and that the bill is the result of collaboration une 23 and addressed to Gulick at headquar ters of the federal council of churches In New York City. Allenby Fools Knemy. America has never had a hint of the wholesale camouflage practiced by Gen eral Allenby. W hen the advance north ward was decided upon the British were holding Jerusalem and the regions south and fighting in the Jordan valley Hejaz troops under Emir Icisal and the brll- liani uiunci ijuwrencc were cmuarmsi- ,i.w T w t- , , ing the eastern flank of the Turks and ' " V , j " j . playing havoc with their communica tlons. One hears thrilling tales of raids -upon the railways and of the difficul ties of destroying sufficient rails and metal ties to cripple seriously the transportation. At length Colonel Law rence and Captain Scott-Higgins hit upon a simple method of disabling those all-metal roadbeds that I should like to describe, save that the league of na tions is not yet sufficiently assured to make it wise to tell military secrets of the sort. Because the British activity was greatest to the east, the enemy natur ally, assumed that this would be the line upon which an advance would be made. When the decisive hour struck. General Allenby set about encouraging the belief. He erected large encamp ments of tents with no troops in them. German airplanes were allowed to cross the lines freely. Empty lorries were sent whirring to and fro over the roads to raise a dust, as of large bodies of troops in motion. The staff headquar ters were ostentatiously moved east ward, across the Jordan, for the benefit of spies and then, by night, the staff slipped away to the west-. Along the Mediterranean coast, where the advance was really made, the troops were concentrated with greatest sec recy. Movement was only by night; during the daytime the army camped in olive groves. Secretly, swiftly, the blow was prepared and delivered; the conquering army swept northward at an incredible pace, effecting a complete surprise. Von Sanders, the German gen eral, for Instance, fled out of Nazareth In a powerful motor car just as the British entered it. The British, forces then circled around to the east and crumpled up Johnny Turk with terrific slaughter. For romantic and human interest there is no phase of the great war more appealing than the conquest of Syria. KENNEWICK MAN ELECTED x A. R. Gardner N'ew President of Washington Press Association. SEATTLE, Wash., Aug. 17. Officers elected for the year by the Washing ton State Press association here last night were A. R. Gardner. Kennewick, reporter, president; Clarence Ellington, Chehalis Bee-Nugget, first vice-president; E. L. Wheeler, Waitsburg Times, second vice-president: N. Russell Hill, Davenport Times-Tribune, secretary treasurer. The association deferred selection of a 1920 meeting place and may join with Oregon and Idaho editors in an excur sion to Alaska. VESSELS NEAR SAN DIEGO Huge Fuel Ship and Cruiser of Xew Coast Fleet to Arrive Today. SAN DIEGO. Cal., Aug. 17. Two ves sels of the new Pacific fleet will arrive here tomorrow, according to word re ceived today. They are the Vulcan, huge fuel ship. bringing several thousand tons of Poco- hontas coal to be discharged at the coaling station in this port, and the cruiser Machias, which for three months has been stationed in Central American waters with base at Amapala, Honduras. PORTLAND OARSMEN WIN Team of Four Takes Main Event in Regatta at Vancouver, B. C. VANCOUVER. B. C Aug. 17. The four-oared race, main event of an inter-club regatta, held here Saturday over a mile and a hall course, was won by E. A. Stevens, L. H. Mills, E. Holmes and J. H. McDonald of Portland, Or. The time was 9:10. Vancouver's en- -1 This is Certain-teed Week August 18 to 23 This is a "big" week the country over a week especially set apart by Certain-teed dealers to assist you in pYoperly starting your new '. home and in setting your present h6use in order for the fall and winter. Every home and building needs Certain-teed extra quality roofing or paint; possibly the interior wood work needs touching upTt-trit.-or the floors need a coat of wax or varnish. . You will find it to your advantage to visit your Certain-teed dealer this week and learn from him how you can carry out your plans at the least expense and with the best results. Your Certain-teed dealer will advise you in making the selection which will best fit your need, And whenever you have painting or roofing work done, make sure to specify Certain-teed. You will then be assured of the best and most' lasting results. Certain-teed Products Corporation Offices and Warehouses ia Principal Cities tpggyjs H ii r ml- 3 1T7 11 Tfc omitns wan raper oouse Everything in Wall Paper at Moderate Prices Agents for Certain-teed Paints and Deadening Felt Phone: Marshall 454 108-110 Second Street J. C. BAYER Roofing and Sheet Metal Works, Skylights, Metal Windows, Kalamein Doors, Brick Ties, Pipeless Furnaces, Certain-teed Products handled. Agents for Meurer's Roofing Specialties, Gladding, McBean & Company's Architectural Terra Cotta. Established 1879 FACTORY: FRONT AND MARKET Phones: Main 461; Home A 4461 RAILWAY EQUIPMENT CO. RAILS, RAILROAD SUPPLIES, LOCOMOTIVES CERTAIN-TEED ROOFING. CORNER SECOND AND STARK STREETS Mcdonald & wynkoop SHEET METAL WORKERS CERTAIN-TEED ROOFING, ALL KINDS OF SHEET METAL WORK, ROOFING AND REPAIRING, WATERPROOFING, SKYLIGHT AND CORNICES, VENTILATING. ; SECOND AND MADISON STS. PHONE MAIN 2618. F. R. Chown Hardware Co. SARGENT HARDWARE CERTAIN-TEED ROOFING. 223 MORRISON ST NEAR FIRST ST. ' tries in the regatta- captured the dou bles and singles. Victoria rowers also competed. 13 7,118 In Mexican Army. MEXICO CITY. The strength of the Mexican army is placed at 17.725 offi cers and 119,393 men in an article re cently published by Captain Francisco Lazcano, who is referred to by the HORLICK'S . THE CRSGINAL MALTED M B LK JtroCd im:ia;ioa; or. 3 Substfiatsa lUmmmlmr HU-RMY-R TEA CUwt A Omars - PrHi COZY DAIRY LUNCH & CAFETERIA 323 Washington St. (Near 6th) Choice Roasts, Steaks, Chops, Chicken, Fish, Eggs, etc. 15C, 20f?, 250 RICH HOTCAKES CRISP WAFFLES and all short orders, any time of day or night Excellent Chicken Dinner Sunday newspapers here as being in a position to speak with accuracy. According to his figures, which are based on reports for the month of April, there are two generals of division, 11 generals of brigade, 48 brigadiers and 843 jefes (chiefs) whose ranks have been rec ognized by the government as perma nent. There are. however, 16,461 gen- ROBERT FISHER FOOT SPECIALIST, 353 Washington Street, Near Third. DANCING Guaranteed in eight lessons ladles $2.50, gentlemen $5.00 at DeHoney's Beautiful Academy, 23d and Wash ington. New summer c 1 a s s es start Monday, Tuesday and Thursday evenings 8 to 11:30. Plenty of desirable part ners and practice. No embarrassment. Private lessons all hours. Learn from professional dancers. Secure your tickets at these low summer rates before prices advance. Tickets are good until used. FALL OPEXIXG DAJICIKG PARTY Saturday evening, August 30. Dancing parties every Wednesday and Saturday evenings. Best music. Popular prices. Mr. DeHoney will give exhibitions in beautiful Spanish and classical dances. Don't miss this opening party. Phone Main 7656. Tell your friends. erals, chiefs and subordinate officers who are serving temporarily. The highest steam navigated body of water in the world is Lake Titlcaca, which lies at an altitude of 12.545 feet, partly in Peru and partly in Bolivia. AtWOCNCEMBNT THB ORIENTAL CAFE . The larSMt and fui Fotnilar-irici Ik Opea 11 A. M. to t A. iL srit. aliN-LAX ma a. yleued to aa fieuuea hu'i will lilar from It to 1:1W. to 7:1(11, ud :X0 to Ut.l. tony not pca tout dooq hour uro aaa enjoy our cxcolUo; rvlro and eul inr If you dos t car to danco, yoa may eat your noon day moat mld.t pleasant surround. msn and onjoy our I 1 uncxcollod Cbicjceai or soy luua Te. Uonra 11 A. M. to w r. Al. American aad Chinos Uiabes Any Tim !ay or i-ht. All Kind oi L 1 1 lirinjca. bl'tClAL KAIL I 11 A.M. to S P.M. Sue. Xoe. 4ue and n Including aoup, vol uble, drlnlta, da, crt with any moat order. (OK. BROADWAY and WASH. (C. lira. EitraDK Mat Waahlnaton.