TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1919. ALL CITY FIREMEN ORDERED ON DUTY Department Answers 36 Alarms in 24-Hour Period. ENGINES STICK IN SNOW HUMOROUS SIDE OF BEING SNOWBOUND IS SEEN BY RESIDENTS OF ROSE CITY Automobile and Street-Car Traffic Bit Uncertain, but Passengers Take Delays Philosophically, Saying W aiting Is Better Than Walking; Enforced Vacations Are Taken by Employes of Many Establishments. u I i;ire Chief Tells Citizens Chimney " Blazes Do Not Warrant Calls; -; Apparatus Long Out. . So that the fire department might be ready to combat fires which break out during, the present storm and very effort might be made to respond to all alarms sent In. both shifts of firemen were ordered on duty yester day and will remain on . duty until the emergency ends. . It was announced late yesterday that the department had responded to X6 fire alarms in 24 hours, most of them- being chimney fires caused by -unusually hot fires in stoves and furnaces. Nearly every call required the fire apparatus to be out two or three hours working through the mow to the fire and back to the fire station. Fire Ena-lnes Stall. - "Warning for householders to take all precautions against fires during the present storm was issued yes terday by Chief Grentell. fire mar shal, who declares it extremely diffi cult for the fire apparatus to aid in extinguishing fires, especially when quick responses are necessary-. . The responses to fire alarms yester day and the preceding night caused a number of pieces of fire apparatus to stall for hours in the snow. Others broke drive chains. Both shifts of firemen were called out to - make greater speed through the snow. A fire at the foundry of the Colum bia shipyards caused from an over heated cupola Tuesday night resulted in. engines 4 and 5 being stalled in the snow from 11:35 until 5 o'clock yesterday morning, when they were finally extricated. The fire did some damage to the roof of the building. Chimney Fires Not Dangerous. All the fire; apparatus in south Portland was held up for ' several hours Tuesday night as a result of two chimney fires. Chief Grentell urged that fire alarms be not sent in for chimney fires, as .he said there is no danger with the roofs covered with snaw. -.A smudge pot set on the' floor to keep some sand warm at a stove foundry. Hood and Caruthers treets, resulted in a fire which damaged the floor. The flames spread to the base ment and for a time . threatened the whole building. Numerous chminey fires were re ported yesterday. The principal fea ture was the difficulty experienced by apparatus in responding. A call to Seventy-second street and Foster road caused engines 31, truck 4 and engine 9 to stall in the snow for several hours. Engine 21 suf fered a broken drive chain as a re sult of responding to a fire call at Second and Ankeny streets.. Engine 4 and 6 also suffered broken drive chains. Fire Chief Grenfell appealed to householders ifot to thaw pipes with torches or burning paper. Several fire calls yesterday were to extin guish fires set in this way. He urged that hot water be used In thawing nipee. ' MILK DELIVERIES HALTED DAIRYMEN UNABLE' TO BRING MIODICT TO CITY. Hospitals s and Baby Homes Are Supplied, and Plans Are ,Made to Establish Depots. NEVER laughed .so much in my life," chuckled Arthur" C. Dayton, district judge, ' as he recounted his experiences in treat ing to the courthouse from 625 East Fifty-fifth street North. His' good humor was due chiefly to the fact that he had not walked the entire distance, having made part of the journey in the storm-bucking autor mobile of a good Samaritan.' ' "Every block we ran into aban doned bread wagons, grocery trucks and private automobiles.! -he- - de clared. "One nandsome limousine was drawn up to a curb after - futile fight with the snow drifts without chains. The owner had deseVted it for -the more sure method-o-f hikings- "Near . Fiftieth street was a" big package. of Morning Oreg'onians that the delivery boy had despaired of distributing. Every passer-by, and there .were many, of. them, grabbed a paper from the top of the pile and plowed on', rea'ding the' headlines. ' "One heavily laden automobile plunged down the street at about 20 miles ah" hour; almost entirely out of control,: skidding .from side to side of the street and many times all but upsetting. We were forced to follow the wild ruts,. as the going was easier that along fresh paths." ' . ''-': "Oh,, brother, have a heart," called out a girl who ran from, a Twenty third "street car. yesterday at noon. Just as she said that she. fell into a, snow drift 'that covered her with fine white, snow. . But as she floundered to rise conductor 427. good natured and ;" beaming, replied "come ' here, sister,- and I'll : pick you. up." . He. waited' for the stranded passenger and then helped shake the' snow from her when she reached the platform. .... Flying snow and heaped-up drifts were evidently too rriuch of a formid able combination for- Reed day- dodgers Tuesday and classes were uniformly small. Several unsuspect ing dormitory 'dwelers awoke to find his or her room swarmed with the snow which a driving wind had sifted through the windows. Breakfast was a sensation ; of arrival after arrival of winter bedecked Reedites. Several of the more southern mem bers of the student body were treated to their first -glimpse of -snow and incidentally, when the fact became known, to their first immersion- with vigorously applied "free-washings." The- Reed campus was wind-swept all day and drifts were' piled high in entries to buildings. Reed oldtimers have been recall ing the days of the silver thaw in 1916, when dormitory people were cut off from the city fdr several days without fuel and a: fast diminishing supply of -food. -Furniture was used to build fires and rationing- became the commissary order. - Everyman's club,: at 234 Couch street, is hsioiner to solve the hnun ing problem; The clubrooms are -warm and cozy and there's a phonograph and many comforts, but best of all Joe Hanley has arranged that there shall be sleeping accommodations and yesterday installed 100 cots- in the clubrooms. And, so, any man who can't find a bed may be able to get a comfortable shelter in the club on l-Gouch street.- Joe Little says service men will have the first chance. He is in charge of the room and couldn't get home night before last, so sat up all night. It was this that in spired him to get cots. He submitted the plan to Joe Hanley and the cots were obtained. Two hundred men who came in on a train at midnight last night enjoyed the shelter, of .the clubrooms. e ' - The- sudden storm and the big drifts of snow on W'estover Terraces proved too much for the immense oil truck from the Standard Oil' plant that was en" route to the Central Heating plant. The driver tried to get to the heating plant but couldn't make it and abandoned the oil on the terrace about four blocks from the head of Lovejoy street.- This meant that scores of families of the terrace and Nob hill district would be freez ing within a short time. But 100 cadets of Hill Military position. Whether the . mechanism 1 was frozen up or whether it merely decided that this was no time for a fan was not determined. At any rate, chilled pedestrians who trudged up Washington street found . some con solation in the fact that the cold wind was not being augmented by any vis ual suggestions. academy organized a rescue brigade and started out double-quick time over the hill, plowing their way through the. snow til they located the truck; then a - score went ahead dig ging out a path while the others shoved . with all their strength and finally. succeeded in getting the truck of oil to the. heating plant. We'll do. It again and save the residents of this district from freez ing, provided 'the oil company can get the' oil somewhere near," said cadet Tom Pollard of Montana. Many of the . boys come ' from snowy dis tricts .and to' them this weather is a lark. . New boilers were .being placed in tne --enirai eaig p.anj. wnen.tne the front ch ,nto the wllIamette storm struck Portland and several ! , workmen are busy now making every "When it comes to hardships no one In. Portland has anything on the hap less houseboat inhabitant," declared a Willamette moorageite yesterday, after he had pioneered his way to the city. The delights of summer days: when one can refresh himself, after a hard day's work by a plunge from FAMOUS STAGE FAVORITE TO API-UAH AT HKILIU TOXICHT. , - Inability of farmers to bring milk through heavy snow drifts to rail way stations, added to the badly dis arranged railway and steamboat serv ice yesterday, resulted in a serious milk shortage. Because of the heavy snow drifts, many milk dealers-made no attempt to deliver the small amount of milk that reached the city to individual consumers. Nor is -lt likely that deliveries can be resumed today, according to of ficials of the leading dealers. An at tempt will be made to furnish stores on the main arteries with milk, and all persons calling at the depots and dairies will be supplied, it was an nounced. : Deliveries of bulk milk were made to the hospitaCs and baby homes and some milk was delivered to a few homes. Unless the present storm abates quickly, the situation promises to be critical, according to A. M. Work, president of the Portland Da mascus milk company, who said last night that he had telephoned to the forge condensery in Salem, where but one can of milk nad been delivered by milk producers throughout the day. This condensery will ship all n.ilk delivered to them directly to i'prtland. " Mr. Work . also telephoned to of ficials of the Carnation company at Seattle and obtained permission to uoe all the milk delivered to the con- j denseries of thiis company located at Forest Grove and Hillsboro. Arrange ments were made with officials of the Condensing plant at McMlnnville for U.-e of its supply during the present crisis. "The milk situation is already crit-i IcaU" said Mr. Work. "The dealers are doing all possible to supply milk to retail stores, but under present conditions it is impossible to make the house-to-house deliveries. If we f:tn obtain milk frqm the producers we will be able to give some service, but with the supply virtually shut off. us at present, the situation is ex tremely serious." STREET CAR HITS SLEIGH Two Telephone Employes Slightly Injured In Accident. Two persons were injured yester- 1 . . j ( Uay afternoon when a Sellwood street car struck and demolished a sleigh Ckiamnj Olcott, ij "Macusala.' Chauncey Olcott, in an Erlanger production, "Macushla," will be the attraction at the Heilig theater to night and for the remainder of the week, with matinee Saturday after noon. Those who love Irish comedy and" plays in-which smiles and tears may be mingled and interspersed with songs that are filled with heartthrobs will find "Macushla" . an ideal offer ing. . .. . Mr.' Olcott will appear as Sir Brian Fitzgerald, the hero of x the storv of in which employes of the i'acific Tel-. lrtsh mei0dv and mirth, with 1u'st -epuone company were onng irn-on m enough intrigue and pathos to hold the Sellwood exchange, the accident the interest and touch the heart occurring at the corner of Milwaukie j gtrins.-s Tiie play Js staged by. A. L. avenue at.d Haig street. Erlanger and the settings and cos R. H. Masterson, switchboard line- lum--s are in keeping. In support with man. 504 Kast Clay street, received a -u on the temple and bruises. He was taken to St.. Vincent's hospi tal for treatment by the arrow Am bulance company. Miss D. F. Oiler. 621 East Thir teenth street, received a sprained effort to keep the heat up. Every thing now depends on the delivery of oil.- A Mount Tabor car with a full passenger-r list ran of the track at East Twentieth and Morrison streets late Tuesday- night. Many of the passengers decided to remain with the car, rather than attempt the hike through the deep snow to their distant homes. John Blied of 104 East - Nineteenth - street, recognizing the plight of the freezing passengers, played good Samaritan and served hot coffee at 3 A. M. - ' - Men of the delivery department of Olds, Wortman & King's .department store, determined to "deliver: the goods" yesterday, got saws, hammers, nails-and boards-and made sleds with box tops, and on these were piled the packages marked "must," and with the aid of a rope the husky, good- tempered dellverymen went merrily on their way distributing the bundles. Articles needed for the sick were given first attention. - . . A certain young man who writes feature stories for the Sunday paper has temporarily switched from fea ture writing to feature talking on account of this cold spelL This young man-, returned .recently with a bride from Minneapolis. In addition to the customary arguments . on behalf of wedding bells, It seems that ho made some very optimistic statements as to winter weather conditions here among others, that snow is' so rare that generations will go by without a single snow flake. - The very day he and his bride arrived in' Portland an east wind struck town and stayed around for a week. The bride de clared she had never been so cold in her life. Then came this snow storm, which slve insisted could give, a few lessons to Minneapolis blizzards. Now this feature writer is putting in sev eral hourB a day going over old weather bureau records and quoting statistics to -his bride to prove that such things happen here only once in 25 -years or so. ' ' .''.- Pedestrians from the east side were gratified .to find that the walks on Hawthorne bridge had been cleared of snow- yesterday. Notable among public places whose sidewalk had not been cleared was-the uptown post office. Pedestrians along its four sides were forced to wallow through. This kind of weatner makes an automobile yuff like a steam-engine. The similie .isn't so far-fetched at that. All over town yesterday, where they could run at all, one could see trucks and cars with clouds of steam Issuing from radiator vents. The ex. planatlon, of course, was" that so much second and low gear work in bucking snow drifts heated the en gines and made the water boil. . Through it all the -B. V. D. boys went calmly and smilingly on their way. The B. V; D. boys, as every body surely knows, are those fresh air -youths who take a pride in re marking: "Cold! Did you say this was cold?- Why.'say, I'm still wear ing B. V. D's." . - It's an ill wind that doesn't blow someone some good, remarked As sistant District Forester Kavanagh, head of the grazing department, yes terday afternoon. "We re going - to have plenty of green grass on the range next season. The snow cer tainly looks good to me and I'll bet the folks in. the irrigated land coun try are cheering, too." There goes the fellow who brought this storm," facetiously remarked an ex-soldier as he Indicated a conspic uous figure crossing Broadway. The object of his scrutiny was a tall man clad in an Eskimo blouse and hood and high buckskin boots, who was telling a policeman how much at home he felt.. This weather is all-right if one only knows what to do about it. according to D. Protopapas, "the owner of min ing properties In the vicinity of Nome, Alaska, who came to Portland on bus iness yesterday and is staying at the Imperial hotel. ' - In the first place, according to this Alaskan, if you have no sled and dog team the next best thing , is to tie pieces of rope around the rear wheels of your auto,- if you have one, in the place of chains. The metal links, he says, will skid on the hard-packed snow, while the manila rope will give the wheels a firm grip. The stage, he says, that' runs be tween Fairbanks and Chitina, a dis tance of 304 mileB across the snow, has its front wheels mounted on skis and the real wheels wrapped with rope.- And it arrives on schedule car rying passengers and mail. - ' Employes 'of the Multnomah hotel were housed and fed at the hotel last night and will.- be until the snow is cleared from the car tracks. The Multnomah hotel maintains over 200 employes. Several employes from the Ladd & Tilton bank and the Western Union company also were accommodated at the Multnomah , School youngsters acquainted with City Superintendent Grout are having a quiet -chuckle all to themselves dur ing the storm. Although Mr. Grout is the .'personage who decreed that classes .would be conducted as usual yeBterday and that the children were better off in -school, he was unable to get to- work himself. Mr. Grout lives far out beyond Sixtieth street and a walk into town looked like too much wasted effort to him. " He coaxed his automobile .through -two blocks of snow, then gave up and coaxed : it back over the difficult territory. The school board offices were not overcrowded -with employes yester day, stenographers having better luck in reaching the courthouse than heads of the departments. ' School Clerk R. H. Thomas" left his house just in time to rescue Assistant Superintendent Rice, one of his neighbors..-.' Mr. Rice hadn't, been put wise to. methods of keeping his- lower ex tremities dry shod and it was up to Mr. Thomas to supply a heavy pair of golf -stockings for him before he could be-persuaded to hike any further. . river- were but hazy memories indeed, he declared, . alongside the present snowbound condition. - - Inhabitants along the popular moor ages above the city were working nearly all day yesterday shoveling snow from the sidewalks into the river and cleaning their roofs. The houses in many instances were down in the water nearly to the floors on account of the added weight, and it was necessary to shovel snow from the roofs frequently during the heavy fall to offset the danger of sinking house and worldly goods together, into the icy depths. At the Willam ette moorage the gas was off and the water was frozen in many of the houses. Many faced the necessity of taking their hot-vater plumbing out entirely, as . the hot-water systems were connected with the' heating stoves and rVn. the pipes frozen an explosion of the tank was threatened " " ure was maintained in the stove.) places on in still water Detween the houses a thin crust of ice formed which was sufficient to hold, up the snow, and to the difficulty of such winter life on the moorage was added the danger of a miscalculation or mis step that would send one into . the' water. ----- - w. m $ "Lets Be $ More Careful" $ t Outside of the business dis- 4 trict, both drivers and pedes- A 2 2 trians are disposed to be less A 5 U careful. ' With . vigilance re- A Z laxed, danger steps in and ac- Z C cident results. Children should not be per- S T. mitted to play in the street; T. 4 w. but they do. Drivers, should T. A 9. not exceed the . speed limit in i w the outlying-districts; but they w. A s i do. People should not cross fg A (T the street downtown or in the pr A m suburDs except at street inter- 9 y , sections nor without first care- A I fully looking- in both direc- - 5 A lions; but they do. . Accidents f ,A f serious ones in the outly- A j J A ing districts are the result. A 2 MEIER & FRANK COMPANY 4 44 J Why. not eliminate these bad J J practices inings mat are a . rj jj menace to life and limb. It J ' 4. S can be done if each individual K - 4 J will remember that the street, J K at best, -is a dangerous place V. 4. Q and that observance of certain R j 4 j rules is the only way to avoid K ! 4 getting hurt. 4 j 4 j No person wants to hurt you A i 5 A any more than you want to get fA V M T" Anil Tl-Vl s o,iii1aTito , A . A Do Your Shopping By Telephone If you find it inconvenient to come down town, remember that MEIER & FRANK'S is still most admirably prepared to serve you. Patients In St. Vincent' hospital were forced to wait several hours after the accustomed breakfast hour berore they were 'served with the morning repast. The delay was caused by the late delivery of milk and bread, two essentials in the diet. Sufficient milk, bread and other supplies were delivered to the hospital late yester day, however, to insure the serving of ' A breakfast promptly at 7 o'clock this i K morning. City - Commissioner Pier was the first to appear at the city ball yes terday morning. The hour .was just 9 o clock. Second honors j 'went toH Commissioner Bigelow. Commission er Barbur did not appear at the hall until noon, but he had a perfectly good alibi if one was needed on such a day as yesterday. Commissioner Barbur began journeying to the city early in the morning from his home in the Woodstock district. The trai! was unbroken and he turned back to his home. Shortly after his return he received -vvord from Mayor Baker that a sleigh from the police depart ment would soon call for him. He waited, but the promised vehicle, did not appear. At 10:30 o'clock Com missioner Barbur began for the sec ond time to walk to the city and he finished- his journey without further incident. Mayor Baker also waited for the promised sleigh which did not appear, and finally he began to "mush" his way to the city hall, ar riving there at 1- o'clock. About. the same time Commissioner Mann ap peared, explaining that he had de layed starting from home believing that street cars might begin operat ing at noon. The members of the city commission were taken home in the police sleigh late in the afternoon. hurt. And when accidents oc cur it' is always a case of some one being- thoughtless or in too much of a hurry. In order to help in the cam paign to make Portland streets safe, especially during the hol iday rush, we are joining in the campaign against "thought lessness and too much haste" while on or crossing the street. Will you join with us with all observing- the slogan Our Store Is As Near to . v As -'Your Telephone You v 5 it rA K. "Let's Be More Carefur A 'K I Tub QuALfrY StoAb Of POPrjiAMt I a 5 t 2 Whatever is ordered by telephone or mail from MEIER & FRANK'S is almost invariably f ound to be as satisfactory as if personally selected. Call Marshall 4600 or A-6101 " Plenty of expert operators and order takers insure that your wants will be ministered to intelligently, courteously and with dispatch. ; Mail Orders Carefully Filled No one need do without any of their personal requirements nor defer gift selec tions to their inconvenience, with an organization like this at their elbow. according to the report and the com mittees in that locality are still work ing hard to secure additional pledges. The Lane organization is headed by M. "Vernon Parsons, recently a lieu tenant in the marine corps, and much of the success is attributed to his ef forts. "From information available at this time Lane countv will ho va nnh. scribed the largest amount for war! savings securities of any couniy in Oregon outside of Multnomah, Allen states in his message. Mr. tjlcott will be Madge West, noted for her portrayal of the Irish -coHeen; Grace Cantieid. Neilie S;rong, Josie Claflln, Leo riturk. an Austrl.-in actor of note; John Todd. John Hamilton-. J Arthur O'Brien, James ..Murr. and others. nnck and bruises. She was taken to I -Mr. -Olcott -will sing some .of . his I ant refused to play yesterday. Al- her home. Others in the party were i new sonss that are popular in the i though the lights were all on, the fan bruised but not seriously hurt. least, and some of the old cues, too.' I remained -motionless Uf a.-ualf-oueued I About 2 A. M. yesterday the engi neer of train No. 664, Oregon-Washington passenger train for 8eattle, found after having battled his way through the Portland and Vancouver terminal yards that his engine was about out of breath. He stopped Just east of Felicia to blow up steam and soon had plenty of pressure, as shown by the gauge. Then he sounded the whistle to call in the flagman and the' blamed thine stuck open and his engine was killed again. Finally, with the aid of another locomotive, the train was placed on a siding at Ridgefield. . . . ... : MURDER CASE BAFFLES POLICE TTXABLE TO GET CLUE OX WHICH TO WORK. - VA Headquarters for ALL Gold Weather Needs NOTE -Deliveries will be made at our earliest convenience. Mi LANE IS STRONG IN DRIVE COCXTT SHOWS BIG TOTAL IX ELKS DRIVE. ' Campaign for War Savings Securi ties Nets Over 950,000, With More in Sight. Lane county is making a wonderful record in the purchase of war savings securities and will come next to Mult nomah cbunty in its' totals in this re gard, according toa message received at local headquarters of the Hike lodge from Harry G. Allen, state president, who Is making a tour' of the state in the interests of the war savings securities drive which, the lodge is now carrying on. Over $50,000 of war savings, securi ties have been sold 'in Lane county. Lack . of Co-operation by Milltary Aulnorities Said to Interfere With Civilians' Efforts. Efforts to unravel the mystery sur rounding the death of Private Mark A. Matthews of the camp hospital at Camp Lewis, who was shot at the in tersection of Eleventh and . Main streets Monday night, were unsuc cessful yesterday, although the de tectives and police continued their search. for a clue. A lack of co-operation on the part of the army authorities in the work of running down the mystery great ly handicapped the local police. De tective Captain Circle again yester day took the matter up with- the army authorities at Vancouver bar racks In the attempt to have the non commissioned officers returned to this city to assist in clearing up the mystery. ""We are especially handicapped in not knowing anything about the man who was shot,' declared "Detective Captain Circle yeBterday. "We have nothing consequently on which to base our theories except what little information we have been able . to 'dig up." Efforts to determine the identity of the two men who made their es cape after assisting C. M. Locke, 235 Eleventh etreet. in carrying the dead man Into the house were also unsuccessful. PL'- iF'"WA$fi The Quality Store or Portland 5.(3wcfe RILEY SEATTLE SPEAKER Lecturer Addresses Meeting: of West Coast Lumbermen. PYank Branch Riley, Portland at torney and lecturer, is the attraction on the convention programme of the West Coast Lumbermen's association in Seattle today. On Friday, by invi tation of the Seattle chamber of com merce, he will be the speaker at a luncheon of business and professional men. On Monday night Mr. Riley, at Eu gene, lectured to an audience of sev eral thousand. The school teachers of Eugene had a block of seats, as did a representative group of road builders from all sections of Lane county. M- Pi'ev's engagements in Oregon and in other sections of the northwest .i occupy his time tuny berore nis departure for the east on his next tour. Phone your want ads to the Orego nlan. Main 7070. A 6095. WHEN wets DSNTFHT "Pape's Dia pepsin." is he quickest Indigestion and Stomach Relief When meals hit back and - your stomach is sour, acid, gassy, or you feel full and bloated. When you have heavy lumps of pain or headache from indigestion. Here is instant relief! Just as soon as you eat a tablet or two of Pape's IMapepsin all the dys pepsia, indigestion and -stomach dis tress caused by acidity ends. These pleasant, harmless tablets of Pape's Dlapepsln never fail to neutralize the harmful stomach acids and make. you feel fine at once, and they cost so little at drug stores. Adv. For -almost the only time since it was -installed, months ago. the big eiectric fan on Washington street in front of the upper Haselwood restaur. Milk Delivery Discontinued Auto truck bringing in large supply of milk from sur rounding territory, unable to get through. Boat service delayed and "one boat annulled. . Train service very badly delayed and many trains annulled- Delivery of milk will be made as far as possible to stores. People should go to stores for their milk and be sure to take bottle with them. Brandes Creamery Cloverland Creamery Crumpled Horn Dairy! City Dairy Fernwood Dairy Home Creamery Independent Creamery Co. Modern Dairy Oregon Creamery Oregon Milk Producers' Ass'n Portland Damascus Milk Co. Riverview Dairy' Vine Lodge Dairy Willamette Dairy 53 If. For the Reed v c:- These days, holiday joys are not confined to candles, wreaths, bells, or even trees. The cele bration that is without music lacks real Christma spirit. On The Brunswick music isreproduced in tones that are exquisite. Music that thrills the very souL ' And why is Brunswick music different? Be cause it has a distinctly exclusive Method of Reproduction. The Method of Reproduction The new Brunswick Method of Reproduction is the most advanced and finest yet devised. In perfecting it all old standards were discarded. Heretofore the instrument you bought determined your range of choice nf records. The Brunswick has lifted the ban on the Bnamrici selections of other makers. With it you play all rec6rd " f whatever make. Moreover, it plays all records at their best. And all this by means of the Ultona and the Tone Amplifier. . The Ultona The Ultona a scientific creation is an all-in-one reproducer. It supplies, at a turn of the hand, the right . needle, diaphragm and weight for playing any make record. The Tone Amplifier The Tone Amplifier is the all-wood, vibrant throat of The Brunswick. It is oval shaped moulded to . -meet musical and acoustical laws. Truer, richer, sweeter tones those that were hitherto lost in phonographic reproduction are restored by this great invention. A Brunswick Recital Especially for You Come here today. Tell us what records you Eke most and we will be glad to arrange a Brunswick con cert for you. No obligation whatever. The pleasure is all ours. If you live out of town or can not get in. to our store, phone us. Main 6723. or sign and mail this ad tor catalog and full information. The Win Xmnn Shopper will homr baforo baying. j PLAYERS I emu Name AMrm .MORRISON ST. AT BROADWAY MASON AND MAnLiN PIANOS AH PHAMCItCO. OAKLAND. PHUNtt, SAM 1 4