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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1911)
THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX. POKTLAXD. JULY !), 1911. " 1 .- t : 1 RAILS UIO ON 22 MILES OF STREETS Big Improvements Made by Portland Railway, Light & Power Company. 10CO MEN ARE EMPLOYED Aork Arrompll-hcd Cltj So Kar Thl Yrir FirwiU Total Done Here In It 10 Mow TroJ- ecu" Are Vndrr Wajr. New heavy ateel tracks have ! 1M by the Portland Rllwmy. Ugr.t & FVwer company on more than 12 miles cf .treet.. la which tlie city li dolnar bard anrface ptIii. alnce the rirat of the year. This work has progressed more rap Idly this year thaji In any prelou sea son on account-of tr.e larger number of men employed and also because the company has greater- facilities In the war of motors and cars, electric der rick car. concrete mlK'rs and other forms of machinery. .... In addition to the work done In I ort land proper, fully three miles of track have been lain - - L ptaces and three miles of new line hare been butll In the extension of the Caa. cero road. Work Soon lo lVe Kxirniletl. In a siiort time track construction will have been extended over all the streets la which the city ha awarded contracts for Improvements. There are but three streets In which the company has tracks that hare been contracted for Improvement and In which work preliminary t Uylog new rails lias not et been started. These are: fcast Water street from Kast Morrison to Kast Iy street In which the contract for the construction of a new sewer has not yet been awarded. Kast Morrison street between Hast Water street and Cnlon avenue, whl.h work Is being delayed on ac count of a casting for the crossing or the Jioulhern Purine tracks, this call in, now belna; on the way from the Kt. A 11-Inch water plue also must be laid In this street before work can proceed. Belmont street from East Sixty-second to Hast Slaty-ninth, the grading for which now Is being done. The company now has over four miles if new tracks la!.J In rarlous parts of t:ie rtty ahead of .the work to be done by the paving contractors. Throughout most of the Spring and Summer the coipanv lias had more than l't' men working on track re construction and paving Improvements. There has been virtually no lack of materia! and the work has proceeded verv rapidly. At the present time track reconstruc tion Is In progress on tlrand avenue be. tween faruthere and Klsworth streets, on East Twenty-eighth street between Sandy Road and Kast Ankeny street, on Vlst avenue between the Ford-street bridge and Tarter street, and on Clin ton street between Kast Twelfth and East Forty-first streets. New ItaIN Are 1-alU. Hast Ankeny street has been Im proved with new rails from firand av enue to Est Twenty-elRhth street and wltri paving from I'nlon avenue to East Twenty-fourth street. The following additional streets will he provided with new tracks prepara tory to paving this Summer: Union av enue between Alberta and Bryant streets. Williams avenue between Mor ris and Alberta streets. Alberta street between I'nlon avenue and Vernon street. Thurman street between Six teenth and Twenty-fifth streets. Jersey street In St. Johns. Kast Fiftieth atreet between Hawthorne avenue and Section Line road. Eleventh street between Jefferson and Montgomery streets, on the lines leading to the new shops south of Powell street by way of East Sixteenth and East Seventeenth streets, as well as on numerous street Intersec tions. In 1st the company laid "O.Ci miles of new track In connection with hard surface Improvements, the work this ear already exceeding that of last year. .More Work Probable. ( Negotiations for the Improvement of several other streets are now pending; before the city authorities and If con tracts for pavement of these are let. so that the work can be done this year, the company will be required to place approximately eight miles of additional tracks before Winter. This wl'.l bring the total far In excess of new work done In anv previous yesr. Considerable new track also has been laid In the development of new additions to the city and fmt In connec . tlon with street Improvements. AH this work has been done under the direction of the city, the ralla belna- laid In a brick and concrete bed be fore the street pavements were put In. thus providing street construction of a most substantial nature. PORTLAND GETS TWO DAYS Jul; CO and 21 Aside by Seattle TV latch Management. Numerous responses ire being re ceived by Secretary Hofmann. of the Portland Commercial Club. In answer lo letters he had mailed to the officers of the rarlous clubs and organizations of the city urctns; a full attendance of Portland people at the Golden rot latch at Seattle. Thursday and Friday of the week's festlrttles. July 10 and 51. he been set aside for the enter tainment of Portland people. Through the various organisations addressed by Secretary Hofmann an effort will be made to send a bis; delegation from this city to Seattle on those dates. For the accommodation of Portland people, two special trains will be run from this city. They will leave at n-.Mntaht Thursday and Friday morn ing, reaching Keattle about 7 A. M. The regu!ar morning train leaving Portland Friday morning will be scheduled to reach Seattle In time for the big parade that afternoon. A large number of sutomoblles will make the trip over land, carrying representatives of the Portland Automobile Club and the Portland Press Club. MOOSE ORGANIZER LOSES supreme Officer AIo In Court In Similar Case. A decision lo favor of the defendant was given yesterday by Judge Kava nauch In the case of Roy Hopkins, who organised the local lodge of the Loyal Order of the Moose last Fall, against TV U Fulmer. ex-secretary of the lodg. ro;.klns alleged that Fulmer owed him $;4i collected as Initiation fees between October 13 and October 2. The case arose as a result of the cele brations which were undertaken while members were being secured. J. J. Davis, of Pittsburg-. Pa., supreme organlxer. or dered Fulmer. who was actinic at that time as secretary pro tern, to hold all money received as Initiation fees from October 13 to October . the date the charter closed, his object belna; In this way to make Hopkins ray all expenses of organization. Judge Kavanaugh held that Fulmer owes Hopkins nothing. A recent audit of the books of the lodge has disclosed that Fulmer Is In the neighborhood of t!W short. Fulmer declares, however, that the money waa lost In bookkeeping-. He has sgreed-to make good the amount. LOS ANGELES. July S.-Jaraes J. Davis, supreme org-anlxer of the l''1 Order of the Moose of the World. Is defendant in a suit filed In the Superior Court here by n. B. Bloom, formerly a deputy organiser under Davis. Bloom - ..... t-k. n nlm exclusive asserts iiibi " - " - - control over the territory meet of the i Mississippi River, but later appointed other deputies to work In the same dls- i trie:. Bloom asserts that X. members were . , ). . nther oreantzers and QDiainru "J " - asks Judgment against Davis for t-M.ouO. He alleges Davis Is coming here to Interfere- with work In this section, and asks that he lie enjoined from so doing. MOflEfiOEIfiPOULTRy KKV. W. L. I PSHAW NETS JI500 YKAKI.Y OS THREE ACRES. f ormer Portland Minister Raja That Younc Men Are Rubber-Tired" . and Neglect Chances on Farms. That six and even three acres are ir located near Portland. 1141 1 " on which to make a competency.- waa the statement made last wee Ilev W I. I'pahaw. who has demon strated that It can be done by his ex perience on a amau tract . -gardvllle. Mr. Cpshaw was pastor of the St. Johns and later the Pllgrlina Congregational churches, but he re tired a few yeara ago aim uvuB..v -six-acre tract near Tlgardvllle. where he raises high-grade poultry and fruit successfully. j gtarted in wnn iv uun n . ....ll. t. and rleaned up t00 the first year." said Mr. Cpshaw. "I use onlv three acre in the business. We hsd 0 half-grown pullets In the yard, when the agent of a Portland firm aaw them and offered II a piece for the lot. and wanted to contract ror an that I could raise. Thai was for the 400 pullets. I have sold the males for as high aa IIS each. Wa could have aold all the eggs at a high vrtce. but prererreu to use mvui Helves. Of course, only the finest . i. ... .-1 1 . 1 ... ill t H -It la a fact that I can make IU0O . of land In the poultry business, and 1 am j not an expert. I have tried to show . . v i W ilnn. T. it I young men now ima . o - , I. V... wnt alwsvs with I some nave trmu 1 aurcess. through want of patience and i.il make sacrifice. TOO many young men are rubber-tired. They do not want to uiwrn i"e . . . n K . n m 1 1 these fin- nana arouou . " ' portunitlea await them on a small tract anywhere near roriianu. .... I . Vs .n vn.in ee men i " ... ------- certainly ought to succeed. Besides my wire ann 1 nave vrt lu' our country home. It Is a never-ending pleasure. - if . . . . . rr i of nAtlence and aood common sense any young man can make .1 f.n A V. 1 1 1 A start on a sman w . they nust be patient. It takes a lit tle tfme for an apple orchard to get started, but It will start. The oppor tunities here are for all." DRUG SALES UNDER EYE ritl SADK AGAINST TRADE WITH BOYS WAXES. Conviction or Sooth Portland I'har niarUI May Bring Xew Evidence. Places Are Watched. Continued campaign against Illicit selling of cocaine and other noxious drugs Is carried on with great eaergy under the direction of Acting Chief of Police Slover. and much information has come Into the hands of the police, though, because, the cases are not com plete, its exact nature Is not yet di vulged. At least four drug stores are under surveillance, not all of them be ing In the slums, and sensational ar rests are likely to occur at any time. .k. Snlnnoi Mil. ler. the South Portland druggist, re cently convicted and sentenced to the rockpue. has orougni nrm iiiu. munlcatlons to the Chief. Some of them are from anxious parents, com mending the work which may mean the saving of their own hoys. A few of the ... ... . I . Im. I.f ,K hshtt iriiria iw n"iu ...... ... who In their sane moments seek to put OUl ni IIUBIIIT-1. im " " " - ' trlbuted to their ruin. A communication of this kind, re ceived yesterdsy. has been made the basis of a thorough Investigation. Pa trolman Ackerman being detailed to confirm. If possible. the state ments In the letter. He wen to the suspected place, and while 1..... An . . - AO 1 11 e pruyi iriin " o - " - ' . " - him. the patrolman kept watch and saw a numoer oi Hiiiiw-wKriru .i.t-m h. i. furttvelv and emerge again betraying sstlsfactlon. Chinese resorts in me nonn mo arc said to be flagrant offenders, though their trade Is confined to adults, as the visits of youths In such places would arouse suspicion Immediately. It Is not certaTn. however, that the drug, once sold In these places, doe not reach the rounder victims, as men addicted to the habit seem to have a mania for spreading the practice among boys. MAN ENGINE DRAGS LIVES Bumps Over Ties for 30 Feet Xot Fatal lo Sleeper. Martin Ullderman went to sleep'Frl day night under a freight car In the yards at the foot of the Steel Bridge, and was awakened yesterday morning by being dragged iO feet by a locomo tive. While Intoxlcajed. Hilderman re clined among the cinders under the car. and when an electric engine hooked onto It yesterday morning he became entangled ln the brake rigging and was pulled along , the ties half-awake. Patrolmen Hennessy and Murphy found the man lying beside the track, and after a hasty Investigation, decided that he was suffering only a few abra sions. PIG'N WHISTLE. The finest chocolates made; try them. Pig Slchel Co, I Third St. and Third and Washington sta SSohwnrtT: of New Trunks, Suitcases, Bags and Reed Luggage We sell Likl- Tninks, the highest grade, you can find. Strong and durable, they give permanent satisfaction. We can please vou in Suitcases and Small Luggage. We show many splendid , lines in good materials, well stitched and with the best quality of .trimmings. Be sure you carry some of our fine luggage on your journey- It; iyes an air ot dis" tinctiou. Are You a Mountain Climber? If vou are, throw over your shoulder one of our fine binoculars and carry in your pocket one of our English Altitude Barometers, and you're ready to start. We sell the highest grade of both these serviceable instruments. They will give you many, many years of pleasure and sen-ice. Watch and pocket compasses in all grades. I AGED MERCHANT DEAD JOHN F. DOXXEKBKHG, 80, Is SUMMONED. resident of Port land for 4" Years ?ac at Et Side Home. Xlne Children" Survive. Death claimed one of Portland s pio neer resident Friday night, when John Ferdinand Donnerberg. aged 80. passed away at his home at 321 Kast Eighth street. North. Members of his family were at the bedside. Mr Donnerberg was a native or Prussia. Germany. He was born Oc tober 15. 1830. and was descended from a long line of ancestors devoted to mer cantile pursuits. For 18 yeara he re mained at home, being given a busi ness education. He then learned the blacksmith trade and followed this vo cation until the Fall of 18t9. when he determined to emigrate to America. Arriving In Baltimore October 6. 1S49. he continued his journey by river and cansl to Cincinnati, where he worked at his trade for a year. He then went to Louisville. Ky.. and It five years learned the plumbing trade In the em ptor of Williams & Roberts. Sn Fran cisco attracted him and via the Panama route he arrived there In 1853. Finding business In his particular line aome- s t J k Ferdlaaad Donaerbera " . ... ib. . i .4 r .. . I aess MSB W ha Died Friday. what dull, he went to the mines of Placer County, where he had fair suc cess In the search for gold. Ixmglng to see his old home lured him In 1&60 to return to Europe, and In February. he was married to Miss Elisabeth Toelker. The following Spring he returned to California, ar riving In San Francisco In August. In 1S64 he came to Portland and resided here continuously alnce. For four years he was engasred at his trade in the employ of C. II. Myers. In 188 Mr. Donnerberg formed a partner ship with John ftarrett. which existed until 112. when Mr. Donnerberg bought Mr. Barrett's Interest and carried on a general plumbing, steam and gasQttlng establishment. In the Fsll ( of 1890 the pioneer plumber sold out his Interests in this business to the firm of Donnerberg & Co.. composed of his son. August and If. Claussenlus. Mrs. Honrerberg died In December. 1875. leaving a family of five children. Mr. IHnnerherg was married a second lime In IK'S, to Miss Theresa Hofues. a native of Prussia, and to them four children were born. For many years Mr. ponnerberg lived at Fourteenth and Morrison streets. Later he accumulated t rooms if panels to Schwartz' Ifw. , much East Side property, disposing of most of his Interests In 105. For the last several yeara he had held many mortgages. Five daughters and four sons sur vive him. They are Miss Theresa Don nerberg. Mrs. J. T. O'Brien. Mrs. J. W. Beakey, Mrs. J. G. Abele, Mrs. M. S. Carter and August. Henry and George Donnerberg. of Portland, and Frank Donnerberg. of Astoria. He was a member of the Roman Catholic Church, of the German Aid Society, Exempt Firemen and for yeara was one of the directors of St. Mary's Orphan Home. Funeral services will be held Mon day morning at o'clock from the Holy Kosary Church at East Third and Clackamas streets, under the direction of the Dominican Fathers. Interment will be at Mount Calvary Cemetery. BAY CITY FETE ' PLANNED Itesldents of Portland Will Cele brate at Oaks Park. To celebrate the choice of San Fran cisco for the Panama Exposition of 1915 former San Francisco residents of Port land and those who have their homes in the Bay City and are at present In Portland plan to hold a monster gath ering at the Oaka Park next Friday evening. A special programme of Interest, al most exclusively to San Franciscans and their friends, will be arranged, among the features being the playing h. Voij-lolc fnnwiv'i band of music of especial Interest to San Francisco and the singing bv Mrs. Joseph Dunfee. the soprano, of "My Heart Goes Back to San Francisco," the new song dedi cated to the fair. Arrangements for the celebration are being made by a committee of San Franciscans who approached Manager Cordray and asked for a spare night at the park. In large measure, the plans for the night will be left in the'lr hands. Both Mr. Cordray and Mrs. Dunfee have placed themselves In the hands of the committee to insure an enjoyable evening. If Rev. C. F. Aked cah be reached In time his services for the evening will be urged. San Franciscans assert there are fully 25.000 persons In Portland who claim San Francisco as their pres ent or original home. VACATION SCHOOL TO OPEN Classes to Welcome Pupils at Two Buildings' Tomorrow. . Portland's vacation school term will begin tomorrow and continue for the remainder of tne Summer. Holding of a apeclal term was decided by the Board of Education to provide an op y.rtvi.iity for pupils who failed at the fas! term to make up their, credits ar.d to be in position to enter their regular grades this Fall. The grammar school will be held In the Ladd School building. Principal Draper, of the Shattuck School, will be in charge. High-school students will receive Instruction at the Lincoln High School under the direction of W. T. Fletcher, principal of the Couch School. The vacation school will be free to all students who may desire to take advantage of the special Instruction. The term will begin at o'clock, to morrow morning. NEW APARTMENT PLANNED A. S. Ellis Will Erect Building to Cost $30,000. Tbe quarter block ' at the southeast corner of Twenty-first and Gllsan streets was bought frem J. M. Acheson vesterday by A. S. Ellis for $30,000. Mr. Ellis announces his Intention of building a four or tlve-story apartment house on the site. He sold recently the quarter block at the southeast coiner of Kins' and Washington streets to Leopold Hirsch for $75,000. Harris Trunk Co's. Removal Sale now on. Prices greatly reduced. m Irjfi a:-- mm m knmt Stock of FisheL York City. Fine -m- Pictures at Less - The most sensational sale of its kind ever taking place in this country Fishel, Adler & SclnvartzTeie by far the largest concern in this country, handling in their Fif th;avenue store fud embraced many subjects which rarely appear oaB ot clxmve y more vou know about pictures, the more you will wonder at the prices m this sale Clubs gofeli and those seeking to furnish the walls ; of any large number of "J? Greatest opportunity that ever occurred. All pictures are framed m the newest styles ot Sies sTsmen and women will be glad to help you select the pictures for any room or you so request. Sizes Ot pictures range iruiu ojuu oua. HaDd-colored Photogravures, framed in three-inch deep o-old mouldings, corner ornaments to match all pictures, colored after the originals, each subject se lected 'and framed to procure desired effect, both in lancxartoa si7.ts rmiffins from 12x2i .1 JUk XiAt-t '.$9.85 20x30. Fishel, Adler price $20.00, now Hand-colored Mezzo Tint, the highest form of repro ductive art, each subject colored in genuine water colors, framed in two-inch ornamented old gold mould ings artistic corner ornaments, sizes from 16x20 to "Ox'M Fishel, Adler & Schwartz' price A $12.00, now. i-iDUttJ Imported Photogravures, printed in Austria, all pic tures being copyrighted and beautifully printed all works after famous artists, 'suitably framed in three inch walnut; sizes up from 24x30. Fishel, A ay A f- Adler & Schwartz'. price $15.00, our price D I Beautiful Hand-colored Heads after the well-known artist Asti, mounted on three-inch pebbled ground mat, 114-inch new design moulding, corner ornaments to ma'tch Glass size 20x2; six different heads to choose from. Fishel, Adler & Schwartz price J0 Cf tRftO now aJJ.4i.eJV w. W slowto to of . dssip j. - r , - tV,ia BVu No matter where you may purcnase your picnue, i bic : ,Z xT' t?ZJLJ slouTd be' lu work done V experts; salesmen and women to wax on yon. who know how. Woodard, Clarke & Company See the Disolay of a Few of These Pictures in Our Washington-Street Windows FLAX GOES TO EUROPE OREGON" GROWERS TO STfIY LIXEX IXDCSTRY. Development League Hopes to Es-tablir-h Manufacturing Plants Here Product Available. Oregon flax will be taken to Europe this Summer and shown to the linen manufacturers of Ireland, Belgium and other Important linen manufacturing countries, to interest them in the indus try In Oregon and to further the .de velopment of flax-raising and manu facturing in the West. At a meeting of the flax committee, recently appoint ed bv the Oregon Development League, Dr E. A. Pierce was commissioned to 1. ,1,1. wnrlr Dr. PleTCe Will leave next Thursday for Rome as a del egate from Oregon to the international conference on tuberculosis and as a di rector from the National Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis. He Is the chairman of the flax committee and as he returns from Rome-wlll visit Belgium and Ireland, furnished with credentials from the Governor and Sec retary of State of Oregon. Carrying samples of flax raised In Oregon and linen manufactured from the Oregon product, he will furnish to OTonufnctiirera information about the possibilities of this state be coming an important iacior in ... Industry of the world, and will study methods of handling the linen business and flax-raising In those countries. The aim of the committee Is to bring about the establishment of linen mills on the Pacific Coast. , During the six months since its ap pointment, the flax committee has con ducted an exhaustive study of f'ax ralslng In Oregon. Its findings are that Oregon flax will take the prize over the known products of the world. Some of the samples exhibited at the meet ing or the committee at the Commer cial Club yesterday were from 42 to 5ft Inches In length, while the average length of the foreign-grown flax Is be tween 18 and 30 Inches. Linen fac tories established on the Pacific Coast would then have every reasonable pros pect of profitable operation. Dr. Pierce's Investigations In Europe are expected to give added interest In the flax Industry to capitalists upon the raclflc Coast. William McMurray. generaJ passen ger agent for the Southern Pacific, was elected chairman of the flax committee to hold office during the absence of Dr. Pierce. Those present at the meet ing yesterday were: Dr. E..A. Pierce, chairman, William McMurray. James Craig of Sllverton: Mrs. W. P. Lord and Eugene Bosse. of Salem; A. A. Morse, H A. Lounsberry. M. G. Montgomery, Dan McAllen, W. P. Andrews and R. W. Raymond. Club Concert Season 'Plan Off. A decision In the negative was reached at a recent meeting of the board of di rectors of the Monday Musical Club. Have you seen our new Invisible Kryptok Bifocal? Only one lens for looking off or when used for reading. N'o visible line like the old kind. They cost from $8.00 tip and can be' made in rimless eyeglass or the firmer kind in spectacles. No extra charge for our scientific examination. Established 1896. DALLAS OPTICAL PARLORS 218-310 FAIMSG BLDG, Cor. Third and Washington Streets. Second Floor. " Take Elevator. - F-r r 1 han SUc on Genuine Etchings, all copyrighted subjects, including the "Welcome Guest" and "Courtship of Miles Stand ish " alkframed in three-inch solid quartered oak tone to 'match; sizes from 20x30 to 30x40. d'7 yf C Fishel, Adler & Schwartz' price $15, now tD X3 Imported Hand-Colored Photogravures, all copyright ed subjects; exclusive pictures, framed in handsome ornamented old gold moulding, corners to match; pic tures after Maud Goodman, Arthur Elsie, Kidgway Knight. Alma-Tadema and others just as well known; assorted sizes from 20x24 to 30x40, completely framed. Fishel, Adler & Schwartz' price $20.00, J?Q QC bur price aOJ Imported Photogravures, framed in two-inch orna mented old gold moulding, fancy corner ornaments and neat top design. This series consists of figure pieces only, being in the panel shapes, which are so mucji in demand at present; frame size about 14x22; six dif ferent subjects to select from. Fishel, dQ Xfi Adler & Schwartz' price $5.00, now niJJ Hand-colored Arto's, variety of subjects and figures, pas toral and marine, mounted on heavy embossed mounts, framed in three-inch gold moulding, with corners and centers to match; glass Adler & Schwartz' price in moulding .nd bona tot .H. when a proposition was talked over that . - . , . - n.n en fl n the club snouiu give, un iu u " " slblllty. a series of high-class concerts throughout the season by Eastern and foreign artists, similar to the plan of previous seasons of Lois Steers-Wynn Coman. The opinion was arrived at that the club membership owes a good deal to the public spirit displayed by Lois Steers-Wynn Coman In giving such con certs as above referred to, and that the present business arrangement of these impresari should not be disturbed. Miss Emllle Frances Bauer, the New Tort musical critic, was present, and advised the club directors to educate public taste in a proposal that a symphony orchestra be established in this city and that a musician of wide experience, an out-of-town man, should direct the orchestra. Rogue River to See More Ball. MEDFORD. Or.. July 8 (Special.) Four clubs, including all the most Im portant towns in the valley, are organ izing a baseball league In the Rogue River Valley and will play a late sea son this year. Medford. Grants Pass. Ashland and Central Point are the towns Included and the league will be called the Rogue River Valley League. Grants Pass won the pennant July 4 from Medford In a two-club league contest, but Ashland and Central Point have been doing nothing in baseball. Plans for big improvements in the . - kntnff mnia anil league nexi ear hib . GREATEST LAND CHANCE in the NORTHWEST That's the claim made for the incomparably fertile REAVER HOMES orchard and garden tracts at Redland, an hour's run down the Columbia River, near Goble. It is a fertile, new logged-oft diet riot, where the great prob lem of clearing and developing is. solved by CHARPITTING, the new economy clearing pro .cess which is bringing a new era to tlie jforthweat. Protected orchard slopes. Matchless garden tracts. Plenty of fine water on every farm. Most splendid view in Oregon. Rail and water transportation. Smallest known freight rate. Good school,, good roads, handy to town. Will shortly supply Portland's markets. Has a great future in store. Just the place to settle. There isn't another such chance for the man of limited means. Think of such land at from $25 tor $G0 an acre. And even if you have only $75 or $100 saved and can spare but $8 to $12 a month you can get in now on a 5, 10, 15, 20, or up to 40-acre tract. The first 1000 acres is settling up fast. Quick movers don't leave these openings lie idle long. See Us Tomorrow. F. B. Holbrook Co. 214 Lumber Exchange. : ' Adler & Framed .t 1 A I I tne ionar size 2UxZ. .Disney $4.95 $iu.uu, now. 't A Genuine Edison "1911 Model" With Handsome Oak Cabinet and 1 Dozen (12) Records, Complete, , $43 A Dollar a Week places this splendid Edison outfit in any home. This is really the most complete outfit we have ever offered on these terms. In addition to the latest 1911 Genuine Edison Machine, exactly like picture shown above, we in clude a handsome record cabinet, either oak or mahogany, as you prefer, as well as 1 dozen Edison records (6 standard and 6 am berol), your own selecting, com plete for only This Edison machine, with nickel-plated and polished mandrel, will play all Edison records. Tbe newly designed motor has im proved start and stop regulating device, runs noiselessly and can be wound while running. It is equipped also with new style model "K" reproducer, whichplays both two and four minute records. Get yours today. It pays to deal at headquarters. Graves Music Co. Ill FOURTH ST. Instantaneous Hollow Wire Gasoline Lamps 1 to 1000 candle power, adapted to any bollow wlre system. Sell at Ight. Write (or special prioeg. If. W. MAJTJflJtG LIGHTING & SUP. CO, 328-331 Oak St, Between SLxtb and serenta. I before loner It is exnected that local I magnates will equip a big ball park in this city. I .35