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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1920)
THE MORXIXG OREGOXIAy, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1920 OF ODESSA IS TDLi Horrors of Scene Described by Eyewitness. H FALL BLAMED ON REVOL Ttter Collapse of Volunteer Armj Allows Bolshevlki Full Reign la Programme of Massacre. I fCopTrisht by the Nw Tnrk orld. Pub- LONDON". Feb. -0. (Special Cable. The story of the recapture an " eack of Odessa Is one of the most " terrible chapters in the history of " bolshevism, says a dispatch from 1 f-nnstintinonle. The correspondent Z declares that apart from the hor- I rors of the massacre of thousands in : the great city, apart, too. from tn ' Hisniav on an enormous scale of th ; utter disorganization and collapse of " the left wing of Lenikine's army, the iirf.nt u one that cannot fail to bring home to all the conviction that an complete and overwhelming riiimnh for bolshevism in its wors - nrf most brutally wanton form ' chanses the whole aspect of the prob i,.m nf thA near cast. ' "It Is no longer merely a, matter of " difficulty and delicacy." he says. It lias become one of the gravest emer . encies. An outline or the story the last seven days, as told to me to day bv an eyewitness who has just re turned from the unhappy city. Is as simple as it is significant. Odessa was taken not as an operation 01 war us the advance of the red army, but by the unprovoked rising of hundreds of the population. Volunteers' Spirit Broken. "These armed looters and murder erg knew with whom they had to deal knew that the spirit of the volun teer forces in the city was entirely broken. The insurrection could have been handled by a resolute action in i few hours. The insurgents knew reso lute action was the last thing of which the military officers of the vol unteer army were capable. "It may seem incredible, but enor mous as have been the losses, chiefly from typhus, among the rank and file of the volunteer army, and so continu ous the stream of unrequired officers Into the one city of luxury behind Denikine's line, that some 20,000 cf the latter were present on Thursday. In all that number not even a handful was found to organize a defense either of the wretched inhabitants or themselves. "General in Command Schilling was among the first to leave the city. The remainder of the officers looked on helplessly as the looting of the de fenseless city went on all day and all night, and the so-called fighting, which was nothing else than cold blooded murder, made the-streets re echo. It is rumored that a large num ber of these officers of the volunteel army paid for their lack of initiative with their lives. Borders to Clowe Affalnst Reds. "A Ukrainian detachment, which was the only force in town that pre sented a semblance of discipline, started to fight its way out toward the Bessarabian frontier, and almost certainly succeeded in doing so, for It is reported that the Roumanian staff has taken steps to close the borders against the imminent menace of bolshevism. "All this time the quays were be coming more and more crowded by the never-ending stream of miserable Inhabitants, pitifully demanding help irom tne lirillsn warships Ceres, Mo ttve and AJax. whose behavior throughout in rescuing refugees was beyond praise. British seamen reaui sitioned at once every ship that was in the harbor and manned an ice breaker, without which it is probable not a man or woman would have escaped. In all about 12,000 were taken on board and this was all that couii! be done. The ships steamed a ay. leaving many times that num ber crowding the auavs and heiner shot down by the machine guns of me DoisneviKS. Boys Try to Save Qoays. "In all this miserable welter of in efficiency and panic one or two in sianees stand out worthy of record. When it was found that not a platoon of professional soldiers would under take the defense of the quays, a num ber of boys from ten and upward did so in spile of continual casualties in their ranks, which were scarce! tall er than the rifles they carried. All these boys were rescued by the British. Another gallant action was the cutting out of the ice and carry ing away of two nearly finished Rus sian torpedo boats. It should be re membered that the arsenal and work shops in which they were made have r.ow failen into bolshevik hands and constitute a permanent menace to allied activity. "Odessa has now fallen into the hands of the red army, of which the cavalry entered the place Monday after a for.cd march from the Perc kop anil Nicolaieff section. This is a mere sketch of events at Odessa dur- urn i.isi seven clavs. Of their niiKuish and suffering no picture can be drawn. Nothing ca undo the t but the wretched affair has at least served some purpose. If thcrebj western Kurope is made to realixe that only by aetion strong action, immediate and steadily continued until the end is achieved can the safety o( the near east be guaranteed." RUMORED NE3.T KING OF HUNGARY AXD WIFE HE IS REPORTED TO BE TRYING TO DIVORCE. nnnnrr r nnnv inimrni r rruni , iiuuui ki i uuiii; St V .a. . , , 1lr) n. -ft , ,i-f , rfn,-n , , ,,-ti i r -SE TVm flFim IP Ml I M Trririir- --i i; tXrLUKtn, b UhAU I, v, - M Worth Pole Discoverer Dies if -Arter 2 e"s Illness. ' t If I . 4 ' i.-tJ- - J M .. t 1 HV pnvV-tJ if ;Ji ' ' ' - M J -1 . 4 Photo Copyright by Underwood. COIST L.ASZLB SZECH1SEY AXD HIS WIFE, FORMERLY MISS GLADYS VA.VDERBILT OK MEW YORK. Count Szechney is being rilentioned as the next ruler of Hungary, but his American wife may not be queen, as the count is reported to be pre paring divorce papers. The American property of the countess, who is at present in this country with their four children, has been seized by the alien property custodian. This photograph was t,aken in New York while the count and countess were visiting oeiore tne war. BBfJN HUT BE DELEGATE HOOVEK'S XAM.E XOT ALLOWED OX GEORGIA BALLOT. Petitions Circulated for Presiden tial Candidacy of Governor Ed wards of Sew Jersey. LINCOLN, Neb., Feb. 20. Friends f William J. Bryan have begun the irculation In Nebraska of petitions to place his name on the democratic ballot of April 20 as a candidate for elegate-at-large to the democratic ational convention at San Francisco. Accompanying the petitions are statements to the effect that Mr. Bryan favors opposition to any ef forts against prohibition. Petitions to olace the name or overnor Kd wards of 'New Jersey on the democratic presidential preference ballot have been circulated. Gov ernor Kdwards was elected on an anti prohibition platform. ATLANTA, Ga., Feb. .0. The name of Herbert Hoover cannot go on Georgia democratic primary presi dential ballots in April unless he is avowed democrat, under a ruling made by a sub-committee of the state xecutive committee. Petitions in his behalf have been received and the committee secretary as instructed to write Jlr. Hoover nd ask if he could qualify under the ruling that only the names of avowed emocrats can appear on tne primary ballots. Mi SHOT HI FENCE ROW ARIZONA RANCHER IS SE RIOI SLY WOIXUED IX CLASH. Xciphbor .surrenders, Saying Threat on Life of His Younger Brother Was Cause of Attack. TOMBSTONE. Ariz.. Feb. 20. n. T. Lewis, one of the first jurymen passed in the Bisbee deportation trials, is in a Douglas hospital, seri ously wounded, and J. B. Seal, a neighboring rancher, of Lewis. Is free on bonds here, after surrendering himself and confessing he shot Lewis. Lewis is a rancher at McNeal. Ao cording to a story told by Seal, he shot Lewis when the latter made movements as though to draw a gun after having threatened to shoot Seal's young brother for wiring a gate closed. After the shooting Seal went to the home of another neighbor and notifted the authorities. The shooting occurred Wednesday near the Pizer mine, about eight niiles north of McNeal. The shoot will remove Lewis from the Wootton case and leave but 1 Jurors ia the box. Court will convene again today after a two days' recesa. ABERDEEN, & D., Feb. 20. Abol- hment of the nlan of appointing commissions to investigate charges of irregularities was strongly urged by Governor Frank O. Lowaen. minority republican candidate for president at the primaries nezt Jtarcn, n an au- dress here this afternoon. We have gotten Into the naott oi late years," Mr. Lowaen declare-, whenever anything went wrong oi -nnnintinir a commission ana men congratulating ourselves that we had posed of that question. Mr. Lowden said that under nis dministration as governor of Illinois new budget system had made pos ble the substitution of nine individ- als as department jieaas tor gencies and commissions. Instead of putting boards or com- issions at the head of various state partments, we have put maiviau- Is," he said. "Tins w as upon me ie ry that it is the individual who does liings. not boards or commissions. Mr. Lowden left here late mis an noon for Huron, where he will de- livor an address tonight. TREASURY NEEDS MONEY Certificate Issue or' $300,000,000 May Be Expected March 15. WASHINGTON. Feb. 30. Another issue of about $300,000,000 of treasury certificates of Indebtedness may be expected about March 15. Secretary Houston announced today. He de clared, however, that he saw "noth ing in the present situation to indi cate that It will be either necessary or desirable to Increase the interest rate on the certificates." The last is sue bore i per cent Interest. The new issue is to be smaller be cause of receipts from income and excess profits taxes. RAIL BILL TO PASS TODAY (Continued From First Paga.) to the re-establishn- ent of separata agencies. It is estimated that it will cost the railroads $100,000,000 to restore their old organizations so necessary for op eration on a competitive basis. Many valuable leases were Invalidated by the scheme which was born of the genius of William Gibbs McAdoo, to throw all of the offices together as a part of his plan to discourage any return to private ownership. Some will be able to regain their old leases, but many will have to continue in the combination offices indefinitely, until other arrangements can be made. The traveling passenger agent and the traveling freight agent, who have been acting as hostlers in roundhouses or flagmen at some suburban switch will return to their old duties. The public will be the first to feel the change, because with competition the clerk in the ticket office again will ruah forward to welcome the traveler, with a smile supplanting that air of indifference which has been hardening his face since some time early in 1918. Mr. McAdoo's army fare on dining cars will give way to appetzing food and "service" will once more be the slogan on every line of transportation. APPLE CONTROL SOUGHT WASHIXGTOX ORCIIAItDISTS OCTLIXE REGCIATIOXS. Scheme Is Built on Plans Submit ted to Session of Skooknm Packers at Seattle. SEATTLE, Wash., Feb. 20. (Spe cial.) Washington apple orchardists will have the Crown storage spaces, which will control the output of 60 per cent of the state's crop and regu late the returns to the growers; ac cording- to preliminary plans made at the second day's session Thursday of the Skookum Packers' association at BLOOD Thirty-Five Trans-fusions Fail to Save Life of Rear-Admiral. Naval Funeral Likely. WASHINGTON", Feb. 20. Rear-Admiral Robert E. Peary, retired, discov erer of the North Pole, died here early today after a two-year illness of per nicious anemia, during which 35 blood transfusions had been of no avail. Sailors and attaches of ths naval hospital, and many ex-service men gave of their life's blood in the vain effort to prolong the life of the coun try's foremost explorer. He will be buried in Arlington na tional cemetery Monday with full naval honors of his rank. It was on the afternoon of Septem ber 6, 1909, that the following few words reported to the civilized world for the first- time this crowning achievement of three centuries of ef fort: 'Indian Harbor, via Cape Bay, N. F., September 6. To the Associated Press, New York: Stars and Stripes nailed to north pole. "PEARY. , Peary's actual attainment of tne pole had been just five months be fore, on April 6, 1909. Controversy Is Recalled. Whenthis dispatch came the world was, quite unknown to Peary, already praising Dr. Frederick A. Cook as the discoverer. Only four days pre vious to the Peary announcement, Cook, who was on his way back to Copenhagen on board a Danish steam er, had telegraphed the claim that he reached the pole on April 21, 1908 nearly a year head of Peary. While Dr. Cook's claim did not go unquestioned from the first, he had for four days at least been widely acclaimed as the discoverer of the pole. With Peary's message there arose one of the greatest controver sies of all ages over the honor of actual first discovery. There can be no one who has forgotten the dispute Peary s assertions were not seriously questioned, but among newspaper readers there came to be two great camps, for and against Cook. Peary with his record of seven successful trips to the Arctic, his official standing in the United States navy and in scientific circles, easily held the commanding position in the controversy. But it was only after the scientific bodies one by one had sifted the evidence and pronounced Cook's claim unfounded that Peary's title as discoverer of the pole was really won. Fame Dearly Bousb. The bitterness of this episode only one item in the price which Peary paid for the Immortal fame that is now acknowledged to be his. He spent practically all he had in money, gave all that was in him for hard work, and suffered all that the human frame could endure from hun ger, cold and disappointment. He made eight journeys into the Arctic, spent upwards of half a million dol lars and several times he barely es caped the death which in various forms had been the fate of more than 700 explorers before him. The first step that led Peary to ward the pole was taken in Wash ington one day when he walked into book store to browse and picked up a fugitive account of Greenland. He became an insatiable reader on the subject of the Arctic, He was then 30 years old. He was born in Cresson, Pa., in 1856. His father died when he was 3 years old. and his mother took him to Portland le where he spent his boyhood roaming about Casco bay. He went to Bowdom college, won fame there as a runner and jumper, and stood n the honor column of scholarship It was a little later that he had gone to Washington to work as a drafts man in the eoast and geodetic sur vey offices. He spent his spare time studying civil engineering and passed in that branch into the naval service. He became Lieutenant Peary, U. S. N". His first assignment was to the tropics. He was a leader of the sur veying for the Nicaragruan canal route. It was when he returned to Washington that he fell upon the book about Greenland, and thereafter virtually consecrated himself to polar exploration.. Green la ad Expedition First. Obtaining leave from the naval service, he led an expedition into the Press Club theater. The executive committee was directed by vote to4 Greenland, to determine the extent of house who had intended to oppose it because of failure to incorporate anti strike legislation. Their principal reason for giving their support, is the bill carries several good features and, at leas, makes matters no worse to the labor situation. To snd the rail roads to private ownership on March 4 without the guarantee provision, it is foreseen, would probably precipi tate a panic such as this country has not experienced in years, much to tha liking of the radical brotherhood leaders who would welcome anything to discredit private ownership. I aarranitilinc la Begun. Already the railroads are getting ready for the return of their prop erties and almost every eity will see signs of the new order of things in a few days. The task of unscrambling a big job, has started. The combina tion ticket offices in all of the cities make an investigation and report. This action grew out of a detailed explanation Wednesday by Attorney Aaron Saphiro, one of the leading au thorities on the Pacific coast in co operative organization, of how the California exchanges and association had developed to business institutions. The discussion of the subject covered a period of a day. Measures contemplated by this in novation will include the building or lease of a central cold-storage plant, from which the fruit will be shipped fiom time to time when the eastern market is favorable, the orchardists believing that they can retain the profits from storage while at the same time taking advantage of rising markets after the cnop has been picked, packed and stored. RICH ORE DISCOVERED 10-Foot Vein Kcvealed on 30 00 Foot Level at Wallace. SPOKANE, Wash., Feb, 20. (Spa cial.) A 10-foot vein of silver-lead ore was uncovered last nig-ht in the east drift on the 2000-foot level of the Hecla mine, according to a report from Wallace today. Three feet of the ore is high grade, and ths re mainder a good- milliner grade, it is said. This ore is on the original Uecla vein and is not involved is the present litigation. The lowest working level of the Hecla at present is the 1600. Sinking on the shaft has been going on con tinuously and last December ore wai struck in the bottom of the shaft at the 200-foot level. Wife of Salem ex-Mayor Dies. SALEM, Or., Feb. 20. (Special.) Mrs. Lydia O. Baker, wiA of Harley O. Baker, e-mayor of Salem, died at McMmnville yesterday, according to word received hers today. She was 53 years of age. Mrs. Baker bad made her home at Goldendale, Wash., for several years and was visiting at McMinnville when stricken with in fluenza. She Is survived by her hus band and one son. Gilbert. The fu neral services will bs couducted in Portland. For ColOs. ifip or Influenza and u a Preventattv. t&ks LAXATrva nun ODlNLNt Tablets. Look for EL W vtll have to give way Is a short time caovfi'S luunm an box, Mc. this mysterious land. He determined its insularity, discovered and named many Arctic points which today are familiar names such as Independence Bay, Melwlle Land and Heilprin Land, and in one of his later voyages lie discovered the famous meteorites which he brought back to civilization. Oneof them-. weighing: f0 tons, is the woil'der of visitors o the Museum of Natural History in New York. Between voyages Peary resorted to the lecture platform to raise funds for further exploration. In one in stance he delivered 168 lectures in -6 days, raising $13,000. On his sixth voyage, with the pole in view, he had to prive up because both of his feet became frozen. Al though he had reached the most northerly land in the world naming it Cape Morris K. Jessup, at the top of Greenland and had also attained latitude 84.17, the northernmost rec ord in the western world, he was still in great despair. He wrote in his diary: "The game is off. My dream of 16 years is ended. I have made the best fight I knew. I believe it was a good one. But I cannot accomplish the im possible." By the time Peary reached civiliza tion, however, he had decided upon still another trip. With the specially designed ship Roosevelt, Peary drove farther into the frozen ocean than navigator had ever been before. On foot he advanced until his record for this seventh trip stood at 86.6, where starvation and cold again checked the party. The explorer was 52 years old when in July, 1908, he set out on his eighth and successful kivasion of the Polar region. Captain Bartlett, the veteran navi gator for Peary, shouted to Colonel Roosevelt as the ship was leaving its wharf at New York: "Its the pole or bust this time. Mr. President." The method of attacking the pole was in five detachments, pushing north in the manner of a telescope. At the 88th parallel Peary parted with Captain Bartlett, in charge of the fourth detachment, and he with one member of his crew and four Eskimos made the final dash. They covered the 135 miles in five days. 30 Honrs Spent at Pole. Thirty hours from April 6 to 7 were spent at and around the pole a great tract of frozen sea none of the land which Dr. Cook reported. The weather was cloudless and law- 1 less. The temperature ranged from 33 below to 12 below. Where open ' places permitted soundings, 9000 feet of wire, which was all that Peary i had, failed to touch the bottom. , When he got back to civilization Peary was surprised to find such a fierce controversy raging over him and his rival. Dr. Cook, but he easily established his claim before scientific bodies throughout the world. In 1913 he was promoted to rank of rear admiral in the navy and given the thanks of congress by a special act. Turning his attention to avia tion. Admiral Peary became a strong advocate of aircraft development by the government and time and again urged adequate coast patrols in this country, especially during the war. A scientific and popular narrative of his success he wove into a book called "The North Pole," while his other expeditions are described in de tail in his, "Northward Over the Great Ice," and "Xearest the Pole." Peary's closing years were spent in well-earned rest, living for a large part of the time with his family of three wife, daughter and son on Eagle island, off the coast from Port land, Me. Mrs. Peary was formerly Josephine Diebitsch of Washington, D. C, marrying the explorer in 1888. She frequently accompanied r her hus band on his northward jourriey, and on one of these trips Marie Ahnighito .feary was bom and bears the dis tinction of having been born farther north than any other white child in the world. She is popularly known as "the snow baby." EXPLORERS PAY TRIBUTE Peary Used Common Sense to Reach Pole, Says Stefansson, NEW YORK, Feb. 20. Rear-Admiral Peary's success in reaching the north pole was due to his introduc tion of common sense methods into Arctic exploration, in the opinion of Vilhjalmur Stefensson, Arctic ex plorer, today. "Admiral Peary's greatest contribu tion to exploration was introduction of common sense," he said. "Pre viously more emphasis had been laid on the heroism and tests of endur ance developed by trips into the north. Peary adopted methods of the "Esqui maux, which were less dramatic, be cause they reduced, hardship and suf fering to a minimum. In that way he traveled in comparative comfort in the winter, the season found hard est by his predecessors. "I think Admiral Peary was easily the foremost explorer who ever ven tured into the north. Personally, he was a charming man and the some what hard and brusque characteris tics attributed to him never were found by those who knew him closely. In his opinions he was decidedly broad-minded and changed his views considerably as time and expedience came." Henry Woodhonse, vice-president of the Aerial League of America, of which Admiral Per.ry had been presi dent since 1917, and one of the board of governors of the Aero Club of America, on which the discoverer of the north pole also had served for the last six years, characterized Peary as the pioneer in aerial navigation and transportation and the originator of the aerial co.ist patrol idea. "In 1914 Admiral Peary farmed the national aerial coast patrol commis sion, which carried the development of this project forward by leaps and bounds," Mr. Woodhouse said. "It resulted in establishment of the first coast patrol unit with a seaplane base at Huntington, L. I., followed by five other units of 12 men. "At the time the United States en tered the war 1200 aviators were trained at private expense through Admiral Peary's enterprise. "In 1915 Admiral Peary proposed an aerial expedition to explore 1,000,000 square miles of unexplored Arctic re gions which the war postponed." A committee representing the Ex plorers' club, of which Peary was president until his illness forced him to resign two years ago, will attend the funeral, it was announced to night. Vilhjalmur Stefansson, Arc tic explorer and now president of the club, will head the committee, which v '11 include Captain Robert A. Bart lett, who was master of Peary's ship Roosevelt,- on which the successful polar expedition started and returned Our Store Opens at 9 A. M, E PLAN DENIED MORGANS PROMOTE EfRO- PEAX PROJECTS, REPORT. II : HI! PI 1 Ilenry P. Davidson Refutes Story in London Paper That Firm Will Enter Combine. LONDON, Feb. 20. The promotion of important financial and commer cial enterprises is the object of the present visit to Europe of Henry P. Davison, of J. P. Morgan & Co., ac- i corning to me xaii man uu-ene yes terday. Two plans are to be promoted by Mr. Davison in EuroDe. the news paper declares. The first is for the establishment of a reat it.oney com bine with the object of financing great national and private enter prises in Europ. while the second is the establishment of a great inter national trading company backed by the resources of the aiorgan nouse and the Guaranty Trust company. Under the proposed plan, says the newspaper, American panks would enter a great money combine for financing enterprises to supply neces sities occasioned by the war. For example, the newspaper explains, if Belgium, France or Austria were in search of means for rehabilitating the concern would be able, purely from a business viewpoint, to am and encourage any sound enterprise this connection. The Gazette adds, it is stated, that Dr. Davison has met with the great est encouragement and welcome both England and France. The newspaper's story, however. has not been confirmed from any source, ana wnen me aucnuua oi Mr. Davison's secretary was called to it this afternoon, he enaracterized it as "wholly unauthorized and in many respects absurd." Mr. Davison said last evening: "Ordinarily I should pay no atten tion to this and like articles, but under conditions existing today, it seems to me that the public would be better served with facts. Happy as I should be to devote myself to any comprehensive plans which would be In the common interest of Europe and America, I am constrained to say that statement No. 1 is entirely without foundation. I have seen no one on any financial plan and do not con template doing so while in Europe, for I have no such plan in mind." Mr. Davison added tba statement No. 2 probably was based on the fact of the organization of the Com merce Corporation of America, owned by the Morgan firm. Alleged Smuggler Held. NEW YORK, Feb. 20. Joseph New man, salesman, charged with attempt, ing to smuggle about 130.000 worth of diamonds into the United States, con cealing in fountain pens and tooth paste was yesterday ordered held in 50O0'bail pending further investiga tion by department of justice officials. Agents for the Buttcrick Patterns and Delineator. All ' styles and sizes now showing. "The Store That Undersells Because It Sells for Cash" iOur Store Closes 5:30 P. M. J Mail orders reeeire t prompt and careful attention the same day as received. Saturday Your Only Opportunity to Profit by A Sensational Underpricing of Fashionable and Reliable Corsets at .98c Pair Stock Models and Samples at Less Than Half -Price ' Here are the good reasons for this extraordinary underpricing of guaranteed Corsets. Practically all are broken lines. Many are numbers discontinued by the manufacturers on account of shortage of available materials. While there are all sizes from 24 to 30 in the assortment, we do not have all sues in each style. Some are corsets slightly soiled from counter display, and last, but not least, we determined to give our patrons values beyond the possibilities of any other store. This is one of our most sensational underpriced offerings and one not to be passed by without a loss to you Included are K. and G Merito, Empire and Lady.Ruth Corsets in more than 14 different styles. Some topless. Elastic waist models, front lace, etc There is a style here to fashionably Qgg fit every figure and those who profit by this sale pay only None exchanged, fitted or sent C. O. D. No phone order. SATURDAY, the Last Day Remaining of Our Half-Price Sale of Women's E High-Grade Hosiery til you have not already generously supplied your needs for both the present and coming season, by all means do so immediately! Such great savings will not again be met with for many months to come Included are all silk stockings, silk lisle and fiber silk and fine quality Cotton Hose Regular Prices Run from I Sale Prices are from 45c up to $4.00 a pair 2.'$? fijb to $2.O0 pair All are first quality stockings in black, white, and many popular plain colors and novelties. 1 Cowhide Bags Specially priced (PrJ HQ at only D I I Genuine heavy split leather Traveling Bags of good size. Made with leatherette lining, brass claw catches and good strong lock. A bargain,$7.79. Basement Section. FREE! One Bar of Creme Oil Toilet Soap Saturday you can secure one bar of Creme Oil Toilet Soap FREE with each pur chase of 3 bars for 25. Notion Department. Especially Low-Priced Offerings in ' Girls' Fine Gingham Dresses Ages 6 to 14 and 13 to 19 At $2.45 to $5.00 An extensive variety of pleasing styles to select from those that girls like best. Smartly designed, well-made Dresses of good, washable plaid materials that will launder well. They come in sizes 6 to 14 years and from 13 to 19. We know them to be unmatchable values at the above low prices. We welcome your critical inspection. Saturday Sale of Drug Sundries 10 bars Van Hoeter's Bleaching Soap for 55S Limit, 10 bars to each customer. None delivered except with ether goods. Sea Foam Washing Powder 25 Tevia Lotion l.'if Santiseptic Lotion 45 Listerine, bottle Ilif, Ittf, I."f Hind's Honey and Almond Cream 43 Squibb's Paraffine Oil, bottle $ 1 or 6 for. ., .$5 Our Store Now Opens at 9 A. M. The Most in Value Th Best in Quality Store Closes at 5:30 P. M. Saturdays at 6 P. M. i i,uiHitiiuiH-iiiim-ntmUii--in-l ylny time ofdat BAKERS COCOA is "welcome Do not make the mistake of think ing that cocoa is only an occasional drink. It is so valuable a food beverage, so rich in the elements of nutrition, so deli cious in flavor, and so wholesome that it should be used regularly and often. Booklet of Choice Recipes sent free. WALTER BAKER & CO-m s&61isfiedi780.1)QRCHESTER?W&S. 7TT ?l f t U f J. I ti? ill !! T T t T T TT f ! "LnizztivQ Broma Quinine Tabids" Try Our 35c Lunch Daily fit S Broadway Bid., 153 Broadway E Up-to-Date Chinese-Amerieaa Reataurant E Dancing and Music. E Special Sunday Dinner, 75 fdlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllS Phone Your Want Ad THE ORE-OMAN Main 7070 A 603 S to N f033