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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 5, 1920)
J '4. THE MORNING OIIEGONIAN, SATURDAY, JUNE 5, 1920 'i LOWDEN WINS 28 VOTES FROM WOOD "Steam Roller" Tactics in Rulings Charged. POWER HELD EXCEEDED occUion9 on Scat Contests De clared Made on Personal, Xot Judicial, Basis. (Continued From Flrat Page.) conventions held throughout the union substantially one-third of the mem bers of the present national commit tee have failed to get in the con fidences of their constituents and they w ill go out of office the day the convention adjourns. Yet these re pudiated committeemen in defiance of the popular judgment already ren dered are seeking to Impose their! reevish purpose upon the convention, I the party and the country. I "Certain facts are outstanding in the compilation of preconventlon events. Chief among these is the demonstrated fact that three have shown themselves . to possess wide spread and well-founded support among: republicans. These men. in the order of their remonstrated strength, are General Wood, Senator Johnson and Mr. hoover. "Except in his own state. Governor Lowden has never succeeded in run ning better than a poor third In any primary. This is not said in any derogation of any of Governor Low den's many good qualities. It is a plain statement of political fact to which the country i3 not impervious even though the national committee is. Equalization Is Held Aim. "There seems to be no secrecy about the national committee's plans. They think by their high-handed methods to remove from the Wood column a sufficient number of votes to the Lowden column to equalize the ap parent strength of these two rivals on the first ballot. One hesitates to revive the harsh language of 1912, but there is only one word which can fitly characterize such procedure, and I refer inquisitive persons to the vocabulary of eight years ago to learn What that word is. a "Twice before in republican history have similar tactics been employed. In 1892 at Minneapolis, no attention Was paid to the merits of any con test and delegates were seated solely upon the basis of the common pref erence which they had with a national committeeman who awarded them, their seats. Twenty years later sim ilar tactics were pursued In Chicago and a student of political history may find something worthy of reflection if he will scan the election returns in those two years, so fatal to repub lican hopes. Interest in Wood Asserted. "It is true that the committee Bits In the open with the paid, agents of George W. Perkins and others freely circulating through the committee room and whispering their darken iftg counsels into the ears of un sophisticated committeemen. With this exception, the parallel is per fect. I strongly hope it will not b carried to the election ae it was eight and 28 years ago. "I am saying this, of course, chiefly because of my ardent Interest in Uen eral Wood's candidacy. But it all applies equally to Senator" Johnson and Mr. Hoover, who, with General Wood, have demonstrated the posses sion of popular political support. I cannot tell how either Senator John- eon or Mr. Hoover would comment upon the astounding arrogance of what is now taking place In the Coliseum anteroom, but I know them well enough to know that they would not for a minute countenance in their own behalf the high-handed usurpa tion which the national committee is setting up and they would ba as quick as I to denounee it when prac ticcd upon another. Convention Control View. "To this I can only sad that the Wood strength plus the Johnson strength easily control the conven tion and while the national commit tee may be too short-sighted to know that what they are doing Is making a coalition or these two forces lnev liable, there are other people dis cerning enough to see it." After reading the statement issued by Senator Moses, Will H. Hays, chairman of the republican national committee, paid: l nave nothing to say. Not a word. The action of the committee. taken ia open session, speaks for itself." Senator Moses' statement was I rtued on his own responsibility and -witnout either the knowledge or ap proval of other Wood managers. It was predicted by some of the Wood partisans that repudiations mignt develop and possibly entail i readjustment of the Wood manage xnent. Colonel Procter and others In Wood headquarters called a conference to night after hearing of Senator Moses1 statement and it was indicated that a statement from the Wood head quarters was under consideration. Rlvab Welcome Statement. Lowden and Johnson managers tioth hailed the Moses statement with satisfaction. The Lowden supporters professed to believe that the state Aient would not injure but might aid the governors campaign. They pointed out that Senator Moses' attack was made upon the na tional committee with its influential membership and not upon the gov Sfnor or nis managers. From the Johnson camp came the declaration that Senator Moses' po S'.tion indicated that both th Woo and Johnson forces-could be expected to oppose nominations of any man named by the "old guard." The friends of Senator Johnson, however, Kfinuted the nresent oossibllitv of Coalition with the Wood strength in the convention in behalf of either Wood or Johnson. After considering Senator Mose statement the other Wood managers apparently decided to withhold com tnent upon it. It was indicated that no announcement Would be made un til later. When General Wood learned of Senator Moses' announcement he is sued a statement saying he was , "loath to believe" that "any selfish or personal interest would be per mitted to 6utweigh those of the public good" in the decisions handed down by the national committee, and added his belief that "Chairman Hays Is absolutely fair la his han dling of the situation. ' . .. ' He indicated that appeals would be taken from any decisions of the rational committee finally decided by the Wood forces to be unjustified. - SENATE "ECONOMY" HIT Debate Halts as Records of Both Parites la Called Shameful. WASHINGTON. June 4. Senator Overman, democrat. North Carolina precipitated an economic political dls-' cusslon in the senate today, when he i presented statistics to support a dharge that the republicans ,had ap propriated in ordinary supply bills more than twice the amount expended by the democratic congress of 1916. Senator Smoot. republican, Utah, promptly defended the present con gress, asserting that the war was re sponsible for much of the incraese. Senator Overman said 13 supply bills passed in 1916 totaled 6978.000, 000 as against t2.181.000.000 appropri ated by the present congress. He Insisted that he had not Included war items In his summary. Senator Thomas, Colorado, stopped the debate when he remarked that "the record of each party on the subject of economy Is a record of shame." LOWDEN FOR PROHIBITION KIRST PKOXOt-VCEMEXT MADE OX IilQCOR QUESTION. Presidential Aspirant Has Two Planks in Mind for Repub lican Platform. CHICAGO, June 4. Preservation of the Volstead prohibition enforcement ct with whatever laws are necessary give it full effect was advocated by Governor Frank O. Lowden today in his first pronouncement on the llq- our question. In an Interview with newspaper men. Governor Lowden announced that he was "not in favor of any vading" of the prohibition amend ment. Governor Lowden stated that -he ad two possible planks for the re- ubllcan platform in mind, but had ot decided definitely whether they would be offered to the convention. Reiterating his statement refusing to accept the votes of Delegates Gold- teln and Moore. St. Louis, who each eceived $2500 from Louis Emmerson, he Lowden campaign manager, ac cording to testimony before the sen- te Investigating committee, the gov- rnor declared the national commit tee or the convention credential com mittee should unseat the pair. In touching on the league of na- 10ns, the governor took issue with he programme announced by Hiram W. Johnson and declared he favored he peace treaty and league of na- Ons covenant with "substantially the Lodge reservations." I don't think." said Governor Low- en, that we can repudiate the en- ire treaty. I favor the treaty with some reservations, and thofe drafted by Senator Lodge substantially meet my desires." WIT HOLES AT ORPHEUM BILL- TO OPKN TOMORROW HAS PMSXTX" OP FUX. Xellid V. Xlcbols Is Headline? Comedienne Playlet Has Comedy Plot. Wit and humor hold forth in the Orpheum show to open at the Helllg omorrow afternoon, almost every act upplying an abundance of fun and he show having a resplendent head- mer in the pereon of iSellie v. Nichols. This shew will be in Port land for only three nights and four matinees, closing with the afternoon performance next Wednesday. Three features shine in th new Orpheum show. Miss Nichols is the headllner, and the other big-type acts are "Last Night," a musical comedy; ahd Bert Hanldn, the modern philoso pher.' Miss Nichols, comedienne, is repeat- ng her old triumphs. She sings of the dear, inexpensive days of yore before high cost of living and Im personates ROsie. the modeUof Wash- ngton square. Specialty dancing ana comedy plot surrounding a young husband who says he married for money and earned It figure In "Last Night." the mualcal comedy feature, which the stars are ;ari naugh. Anna Francis and Karl Miller. Bert Hanlon, the third feature, has a comedy- monologue that teems with eccentricities. Other acts are Oliver smith and company in A Touch in Time, a comedy playlet; Jack Baxley and Lillian Porter, who sing old-time and modern songs; Werner and Amoros trio, - In "Love's Follies," and Emil and Willie, in an entertaining nov elty. 'In this show, said a faeattle re viewer, "there Is more fun than one usually encounters in a month of vaudeville." JAMES W. McANULTY DIES Oregon City Business Man Sue enmbs to Heart Failure.. ORBGOJf ClTf, 6r., June 4. (Spe cial.) James . Walter McAnulty, a prominent business man of this city died suddenly Thursday evening at his home from an attack of heart trouble. ' The deceased had resided in Oregon Citv for the pafet 80 years and en gaged in the real estate, grocery and cigar business. He is survived by seven Children, a married daughter at The Dalles, Mrs. Charles Livesay of Clackamas Heights, Eva, Frank and Arthur Of Oregon City, Viola of Mount Angel and James McAnulty of Molalla. NURSE, 50, DROPS DEAD Collaps . Comes as Eon Is Born to Vancouver Couple. VANCOUVER, Wash., June 5. (Special.) - Mrs. Minnie Hobertson about 60 years old, a hufse, dropped dead as a son was born to Mr, and Mrs. G. H. Wilde of this city last night. She had been attending Mrs. Wilde and was Apparently in the beet of health. Just as the baby arrived, Mrs. Robertson collapsed, dying in stantly. Mrs, Robertson lived with her hus band and children at 140 East Web Star street. Portland. The body will be sent to Newherg, Or., tonight for interment.. "FATTY MILLOVICH" NEX Weighty Restaurant Man Plans to Figure In Movies. EUREKA. Cal.. June 4. Bart Mil lovlch, restaurant owner here, who weighs 450 pounds when "traine down," closed hie business plaoe to day. ' Mtllowich announced that he had contracted to enter motion pictures. Bolshevlkl Sot la Teheran. LONDON, June 4. Persian officials in London announced today that there was no truth in the reports that the bolshevik! had occupied Teheran, tne Persian capital. 8. H. green Kelman Fuel Co. AdT. ........ t. .. imn for cash. Mats iSJ, StO-SL NEGRO DELEGATES WIN SEAT CONTEST Race and Color Issues In jected Into Hearings. YELLS GREET DECISION Plea for Overruling Made by Geor gia National Committeeman Is Denied. CHICAGO, June 4. The race Issue and color line arguments were in jected into the contests for the seat ing of delegates today, when decisions of the republican national committee added 18 delegates to the Lowden list and subtracted an equal number from the Wood column. In deciding the Georgia, contests the Wood forces succeeded in having the committee accept only one dele gate pledged to the general wnen work was stopped for the nisnt. - .7fp :r..;iT- tn j iiq icatiii ft, I sixth Georsria district were tonigni seated bv unanimous vote. The com mtttee decided there wa no evidence a legal convention had been held by the Henry Lincoln Johnson "regular" faction of negro delegates. Some Contests Left Over. The committee adjourned, leaving th contests In the seventh, ninth and tenth Georgia districts to be de cided tomorrow. In the contest de cided the Johnson faction Hated as favorable to Governor Lowden got the four deiegates-at-largs and the delegates from five districts. . The Pickett faction, reported fa voreble to General Wood, was seated I in the sixth. Johnson and bis crowd of negroes let un a veil that raised the roof when news 'Of the decision reached the anteroom. They hopped, danced and screamed and created so mucn uproar the noise, penetrating to the committee room, delayed considera tlon of the district contests. Lowden forces started off on a win ning streak by winning the contests In the eight congressional districts of Mississippi. They claim all those del egates. They won two votes in the second congressional district of Ok lahoma, where the Wood forces won a half vote also by the seating of Dr. Hugh Scott of Holdenville and Albert Ketly of BrlstoW. Then the Lowden chiefs claimed another addition when the committee voted to seat the regularly reported delegates from South Carolina, led by National Committeeman Tolbert. The tenth district of Tennessee went to the regularly reported delegate, R. II. Church, a negro of Memphis, but that was claimed by none of the various managers. Race Issue Is Involved. South Carolina and Georgia con tests brought the race issue and the olor line into the deliberations of 11 efforts to eep them out. The contest over the Tolbert dele gate from South Carolina brought up the much-discussed question of nether the republican party in the outhern states would do better with- Ut association with the negro. The ontesting delegates in the South Carolina case stirred up a row in hich the lie was frequently passed harges of machine rule to perpetu te "an officeholders trust, and fur her charges that conditions were uch that the republican Vote had een reduced by the alleged methods to a minimum were iriaae. The hearing furnished fireworks nd Vaudeville. Gales ef laughter. roars of cheers and waves of applause wept tho committee room. National Committeeman Telbert became so en thusiastic itt his description of his republicanism that he actually did a ozen steps of a jig and pranced up and down the aisle. Negroes Charge Death Threat. Negro witnesses supporting the Claims or tne contesting delegation, I estnying to tneir inaDinty to take I part in the- Tolbeft faction conven- lions, declared they had been threat-1 ned with death if they attempted to I ttertd them. Stacks of affidavits pre-I sented in support of the claims Of the regularity of the Tolbert delegates, they declared, had been cooked up ince the convention and there were broad intimations of how the signa tures might have been obtained. The committee decided, however, that so far as the evidence before it went, Tolbert had the evidence Of egularity in the South Carolina con vention proceedings and seated Tol bert s delegates. Renewed pleas for a spilt decision came with the calling of the Georgia case. Cottmlrteeinia Gets Rebuff. National Committeeman Jacksoft Of Georgia, who is retiring from the committee and withdrawing from the state, made a special plea that the national committee establish har mony among the factions there and preclude contests at the next national convention by seating all the dele gates and giving each a half vote. The committee, however, bowled the suggestion over with a quick Vote and stood tight on the principle. Johnson and his small army Of r.egro cohorts waited in the ante rooms for the decision and when the rews of the decision favorable to him reached them scenes which ar familiar to any cne who has at tended an old-fashioned southern camp meeting were re-enacted. Ad miring negroes aanced about tuelf leaders in a wild delirium and raised such a din that the committee in the next room had difficulty in pro ceedtng to the consideration of the district contest3. At its night session, the committee continued seating the Henry Lincoln Johnson district delegates from aeorgia. Those from the third and fourth districts were seated on the first vote. PRETTY LANDLADY BEATEN REVOIATER USED AS CLUB OX WOMAN, SPOUSE THREATENED. Manager Struck on Head When She Refuses to Enter Room Whidi Intruder Asks to Rent. Mrs. Frank Phelps, pretty landlady of a lodging house at 83 Park street. reported to the police last night that She had been struck on the head with a revolver by a man who attacked her while she was renting him a room. She was only partly stunned, she says, and the assailant fled when She screamed for her husband. The intruder met Mr. Phelps on the stairway, threatened to shoot Mr. Phelps 'f he interfered and ran out the door and got away. The police had found no trace of him at a late hour. I Mrs. Phelps described the man as 2S . or 30 years old, five feet 10 inches tall. and of medium weight. He wu dressed in a dark suit which evident- i ly had been used as working clothes, ' and wore about a week's beard. Mrs. Phelps says the assailant said i he wanted to rent a room, and af'er i looking at the room, invited her in side. When she refused, she says he threatened her, and drew the revolver when she screamed. She turned to. flee, and saya the assailant struck her a violent blow on the head. The man seized her. she says, but let her go when he heard Mr. Phelps running up the stairway. Mr. Phelps had been in the base ment of the house. The assailant met him as he ran up the stairs, and cov ered him with the revolver. Mr. Phelps stood aside and allowed the intruder free passage. He says the man threatened to shoot him if he gave chase, and went out, carefully closing the front door behind him. YAQUINA PEOPLE ROUSED INTEREST IX BIO DEALS PEXD- IXO KEEX. Sale of Timber Tract, Saw-mill and Railroad Counted Certainty ot Xcar Future. NEWPORT. Or.. June 4. (Special.) The prospect for sale of a -portion of the United States spruce corpora .a . , m . tion's property In Lincoln county, in cluding the Blodgett tract of 750,000,- 000 feet of tlmbar, mostly spruce; the million dollar sawmill at Toledo, and the Alsea-Southern. a 26-mile rail road, has aroused much interest about Taqulna By. Not only would the sale relieve the newsprint paper shortage, but it would promote in dustry locally. The sale of the Taqulna Northern railroad of 11 miles to tho Newport pert commission is expected momen tarily, as B. F. Jones, secretary of the Newport 'commission, said today that when the United States spruce cor- floration sales board met in the cast. both deals would undoubtedly be put through. The deal in which W. S. Kuhn, for mer Pittsburg, Pa., banker, is Inter ested, Is believed to involve $2,000. 000. while the Vaqulna Northern deal calls for $400,000. This is regarded as a high price for these properties, as It is understood that the sales board of the Spruce Corporation set tled with the government on the basis' Of 10 cents on the dollar of the cost of the property to the govern ment. The argument was made that as Great Britain, France and Italy had settled on this basis, the United States government would not want to appear in the light Of a speculator. SO the property was turned over to the sales board on a similar basis. LADDER TRUCKS ARE FEW OXE CRIPPLED, AXOTHER IX PA1XT SHOP FOR A WHILE. only One Aerial Truck Is In Com- mission on West Side in Caso Ct Large Downtown Fire. Sudden disablement of an aerial fire truck by motor disorders which will force ."the truck into the repair shop for a week or more, has placed Portland lr a precarious condition from a fire protection standpoint at a time when, because of expected dry Weather, fire ia most naturally antici pated. A check on the fire comoanics shows that, but one large aerial truck is in servc?n the west side of the river, another truck being in the paint shop. On the east side a small truck of the type used In small cities is the only apparatus carrying ladders in com mission. The truck which is in the paint shop can be operated, if need be. after today, it was explained by Commis sioner Blgelow, although if no large conflagration occurs it will remain in the shop until some time next week. At the time the budget for municipal expenses was prepared last fall, an item of $14,000 was set aside for the purchase of a modern aerial truck. Commissioner Bigclow has not Ordered such a truck as yet. explaining that the lack' of city finances made him believe It better policy to wait Until the fall before the order was placed. MENTAL PATIENT SUICIDE Ex-Soldier, Wounded in Franc, Resents Other Patients' Actions. SALEM, Or., June 4. (Bpeoial.) Because other patients at the state hospital complained of his snoring, Robert B. Riggle, age 33 years, walked out Of the institution unno ticed this morning and Went to the loft of a nearby barn, where he com knitted suicide by shooting himself in the head with a rifle. Early in the day Riggle had com plained to official at the hospital that several patients had awakened him during the night because ot his snoring. An hour later Higgle was missed. Riggle served overseas in the war with Germany, and it IS believed that injuries sustained While in the service were responsible for his mental re lapse. He was born in Kansas and was committed to the hospital from Sutherlin. Douglas county, on March 6. During the war he was gassed at Chateau Thierry and in the Argonni forest, besides Sustaining shell Id Juries of tbe knee. His father resides at Dallas and he has a sister living at Sutherlin POER RATE IS LIFTED Increase by Idaho Company Scrv- I . ,, ... . SALEM, Or., June 4. (Special.) The publle service commission In an order issued today increased from 10 to 25 per cent the rates of the Idaho Power company for electric service in Oregon. The increases follow: Commercial lighting, 10 per cent; street lighting, 10 per cent; commercial power, eaceot cooking and domestic water heating, to per cent; sales to other public Utili ties except street railways and inter urban railways,. 10 per cent; air heat ing service, 10 per cent; irrigation pumping service, class A customers, to the extent of their 1919 demand, 10 per cent; new demand, 10 per cent irrigation pumping service, class customers, to the extent of their 11 demand, 10 per cent; new demand 20 per cent; irrigation pumping service, class C customers, to the extent o their 1919 demand, id per cent; new demand, 20 per cent. The order is effective as of June 1. Freighter to JSe Launched, VANCOUVER, Wash., June 4. (Spe cial.) A 9600-ton freighter will be launched by the G. M. gtandlfer Con struction corporation at 12 o'clock tomorrow. This chip will be the third "Whadda ya mean, light? With me? Huh! You're only a girl, alone. This is a he-man's country. Get out or" But she doesn't. And he? Starting They seek her life, her good name and bar her way to love but she fights alone, and wins her battle with man's weapons, but not in man's way. And on launched this year for the Green i Star line of New York. The first two, the Aruturus and the Aquarius, have been completed and turned over to be company. t BILL NOT PAID BY STATE Convention Delegates to Get $200 for Expenses. SALEM. Or., June 4. (Speolal.) Candidates elected to the national party convention who file by the payment of a fee with the secretary of state are not entitled to remunera tion from the state, covering their ex penee in going to the conventions, to he extent of iznn, according to a U-BOAT PRISONER TELLS EXPERIENCE Chief Petty Officer Richard Cannon, of IU-FaUd U. S. S. Neptune, Gives Story of His Perilous Adventure and Re markable Restoration. Richard Cannon, Chief Petty Offi cer of the u. fc. . in ep lime, wnose dramatic capture at sea by a German U-boat and subsequent experiences aboard the submarine and in a Ger man prison hospital, thrilled the en tire country is still another world war hero to test the remarkable re constructive powers of Teniae and give it his strong indorsement. Mr. Cannon's adventures were so harrow ing that his constitution was com pletely shattered but after months of suffering he has now regained the wonderful health that enabled him to pull, through his adventures alive and is today the same strapping two-hundred-pound fighter that embarked on the Ill-fated ooilier. But let him tell his own story: "When the Neptune was torpedoed off the Irish coast," said Mr. Cannon, who now lives at 707 E. Lafayette, Tampa. Fie., "I had my right leg ahd five ribs broken by the explosion, and when I came to my senses I found myself on board a submarine bound for Germany. . I was kept in a Ger man prison hospital for five months. and you can imagine what I must Today Another ANITA STEWART As .Kate Prentice in Caroline Lockhart's gripping story of the open range "OO-OO, SKIN-NAY, LOOKIT!" Ya 'member tha movin' pitshures they took of all us kids and our pets at tha library about three weeks ago fer some Humane Society? WELL, HERE THEY ARE LET'S GO! Portland's Favorite, JOE ROBERTS, the King of the Banjo ssaIM "LJBERXY CORNEJ" legal opinion given today by Attorney-General Brown. The opinion was requested by John H. Stevenson of Portland. Mr. iStevenson was suc cessful In the primary campaign and was elected a delegate to the democratic- national convention. In his letter he quoted Judge Wallace Mc Camant as Baying that delegates who filed by fee would be entitled to re muneration up to $200. The attorney-general ruled that un der an act passed by the legislature in 1915 this would be true, but that this law was repealed. Auto Driver Injured. M. K. Luts, while driving his auto mobile south on KecOnd street, hit a North Portland street car at SerOnd have suffered when I tell, you that fell off in weight from two hundred and twenty-five to a hundred and thirty-one pounds. When I was re patrlated and finally got my dls charge in February, ltlt, I was little better than a living skeleton. I had no appetite and my digestive system was so upset that what little I did eat always gave me severe pains in the pit Of my stomach. - Before joined the service I never knew what nerves were, but after what I went through my nerves were so shattered that I couldn t keep still a minute, and the slightest thing upset me. For six months I continued in this con dition, unable to plok up strength, and so weak that any attempt at work tired me Out completely. I be gan to think I should never be a well and strong man again. -But the way Teniae overcame my troubles and built me up was noth ing short of marvelous. It gave me such an appetite that I wanted to eat all the while, and I sure did make up for lost time. I had no more bother with indigestion and from then on I picked up strength and put on weight until now I tip the beam at two hundred and four pounds and am as well and strong as I ever was be fore I joined the service. My nerves are as steady as a die" and I'm like my old self again. Teniae Is certain ly a grand medicine and I think every suffering person ought te try It." Tantao is sold In Portland by the Owl Drug Co. Adv. First National Attraction FHE FIGHTING SHEPHERDESS" end Grant stream at 8 o'clock ist evening. He wis rushed to the Emergency hospital at the police station, where his Injuries were found to bo several cuts and Bruises and a shaking up. Hie machine was badly wrecked. He lives on the Boone ferry road, just Outside the city limits. Victor Records From the June List RED SRAI. gill I Love Me or Not by Knrico Caruso 74616 Nocturne in K Flat........... by Jascha Helfets 74550 Good-bye by fcvan Williams 8730 Star of Love by Gereldlne rarrar 64S73 Forsaken by Frits Kreisler 4590 Cradle Sony. ...by .Mma Gluctt S4&74 Di-lnk to Mi Only With Thine Bye. ...by Flonzaley Quartet 87309 Oh, Boys, carry Me 'Lons.... by Louise Homer DANCE 1S659 Rose of Washington Square fox trot by All Star Trio You Ain't Heard Nothing Yet fox trot by All Star Trio 15669 Wild Flower waits by Ferera and Franchlni Alabama Moon waltz ......by Hawaiian Trio 33695 Ching-a-Ling's Jazz Bazaar fox trot..bv Smith's Orchestra Irene fox trot by Smith's Orchestra 1S667 Desert Dreams fox trot... by Green Brothers' Novelty Band La Vede -Castlllian fox trot.by Green Brothers' Novelty Band POPt'LAR SONGS 116660111 By Jingo! ..........by Margaret Toung Profiteering B.ues , by Billy Murray 18668 When the Harvest Moon is 1 Shining . . . '. by Hart and James Mother's Hands. by Henry Burr 18670 My Sahara Rose by Victor Roberts Oh! How I Laugh When 1 Think I Cried About You .....by Victor Roberts Mall Order Olvea Prompt Attenttoa j , SIXTH STB.EKT 1 Between Morrison and Alder Do you sometimes "Get out of the wrong side of the bed" feel somehow that things aren't just right? A cup of coffee really good coffee brings you back where you want to be, and 6tarts you off for your day's work. Think what it means, first thing in the morning, to enjoy the delicious fra grance, the rich full taste of a really good cup of coffee 1 Think of the set up it gives vou for the day's work! There are two or three such coffees and Schilling's is one of them. They are all packed in vacuum-sealed tins, because that is the only way to get the full original flavor to you.' Your grocer pays your money back if you don't like Schilling's. A Schilling & Company San Francisco . - " V. !.. i,:. i r. I 4 i f V 11 ' . -