THE , SUNDAY OREGON'.IAX, TORTLAXD, MARCH 21, 1920 ices the bodv Evan Williams. the great Welsh tenor. Luiz and Casilda love each other. A nurse is sent for, to find the missing king, and a most amus ing mix-up takes place. Jefferson De Angelis made the biff funny hit qf the show and his gro- parlors ot J. P. FInley & Son and will he tent to The Dalles for interment Monday. Services will also be held at The Dalles -Monday with interment in the Catholic cemetery there. Rev. P. J. O'Rourke will officiate. Congressman Sinnott is expected to be there for the services. - Mr. Sinnott died of heart failure last Tuesday. He was) a member of the law firm of Sinnott & Adams. The- train which will take the re mains to The Jlalles will leave Mon day morning at 7:30 o'clock. J. P O'Brien, general manager of the O. W. R. & X. company, has provided his private car for the-use of the family and close frjends in going to The Dalles. X. J. Sinnott, representative : 1 if Pin FOR TURKS t tesque two-two-dance and yes. 'yes,'" with laugh, tickled the entire audience. Miss Elton made a sweet, romantic Casilda. Mr. Duffey sang one pratty song, "Your Sparkling Eyes," and It just suited his pleasant tenor voice with his artistic voice placing. Mr. Duffey is one of the : Allies Have Meted Out Jus-v- tice, Says Lloyd George. Elaborate Ensemble Used Alleged Peculations. in best tenors that Portland haB heard for a long time. The chorus sang with "Tine spirit and they and the orchestra were ably led by that star of musicians, Max Behdix. "The Gondoliers" is a light opera that grows on better acquaint- MOHAMMED ALI LISTENS BUSINESS MEN BILKED nnce. 20 PREMIER WITHHOLDS "IRIETiVIP" ' NIPPED (ill BLOOM Leader of Indian Caliphate Dele gations Listens to Discussion of Territorial Question. ' ' George yesterday discussed the Turk- ' ibh question with the Indian caliphate delegation headed by Mohammed All. . ' ' who declared that Turkey should have " 11 tin nra-w u f- topritnrv r(tctnrl TIlP premier replied: 'S "I do not understand Mr. Mohammed All to claim indulgence for Turkey; ; she claims Justice, and justice she . will fret; Austria has had Justice; Ger- many has had justice pretty terrible '' - justice. Why should Turkey escape? '. Turkey thought she had a feud with us. Why did she come in and ; try to stab us and destroy liberty throughout the world while we were engaged in this life and death strug- Religions HeaMon I)ist-lnimrd. "Is there any reason why we should ;. than we have meted out to the Chris .. tian communities or uermany ami Austria? . ". "I want the Mohammedans in In dia to get it well into their minrts that we are not treating Turkey se- - veroly because she is Mohammedan '. We are applying equally the same is the greatest Christian community . Referring to the temporal power of t H a ralinhato th ?,riYiir sairt he '. could not interfere in a religious .- question in which Mohammedans - themselves differed. MnKNac-r Probe Aftked. , The delegation requested that the .. bv an international commission on which the Moslems were represented. Regarding the Armenian massacres. iiif iiTint;i emu uic .111x0 - t v iivuou ' in the interests of civilization to exer ' cise control of some sort since the Turkish government was incapable of 1 protecting its own subject.". r "I want to give t his -feeling to the Mussulmans of India, who stood loy i any Dy tne tnrone ami ine empire. said the premier. - . 1UKK.ISH CH.VUI'r.l' AIMUl t(.S Move Apparently -Made to .voiu uissoiution; Aamonaiisis jieMirien. CONSTANT INOPLK. March 20. ( By .' the Associated Press.) The chamber 1 ' adjourned today for two months, ap ' parently for the purpose of avoiding dissolution. It defeated the sugges- , ' foreign troops, and adopted a reSO- iULlUII vuliueiii II I II K I'jru.ii i.uuiutr. chairman of the bar association, and Arif Bey. president of the chamber .' of deputies, for cowardice. They left Constantinople before the occupation, in order to escape arrest. Only about 30 Turkish nationalists . were deported bythe British, who . transferred them to the battleship Benbow, to be transported to Malta. The senate has been unabje to get a quorum. "Few traces are left of Turkey's constitutional government. Th arrested nationalists will be tried at Malta by a British court-martial. DAHiHTKR OK PIOM-iliRS OF IMS IS UEAU. 4 XV''' 'T'';iW-V SUGAR GOES UP NOTCH PRICES RAISKD ALL ALONG PA CIFIC COAST. j - 'a ; - r .lira. Fmrnii Alice Reed. Funeral services for Mrs. Kmma Alice Reed, widow of the late Fred W. Kecd and daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Cham bers, Oregon pioneers of 1845, were held Friday at the crema torium. Mrs. Heed was born in Polk county and reured and ed ucated at Salom. She moved with her husband to Portland in 1SS." and had since resided here. Surviving Mrs. Heed are three sisters, Mrs. Stephen Coffin and Mrs. C. E. 'Hovrlett of Portland and Mrs. Charles Allen of The Dalles. Or., and two brothers, I.eander Chambers of Aurora. Or., and Robert Chambers of Portland. Career of Fascinating Adventuress Said to Extend Over a Dozen Cities in Eastern States. in congress, will arrive in Portland from Washington tonight. POISON mm If! BEANS P.K lll.OlUDi: OF Mliltd'KY IS POI HF.D IX WHILE COOKIXt.. Leslie Kcllngg Watched by Doctor and Wondering Wlictlicr Dinner Will Have Any III Effects. Wholesale Figure Now S16 and Consumer Must Pa- 18 Cents a Pound for Product. Sugar prices have been increased all ? along the coast and Portland people hereafter must pay a dollar more for ;J each 100 pounds purchased. This makes the wholesale figure $16 and the retail price 18 cents a pound, i Early in the year, when the govern ment relinquished control, the price went up until it reached $15. SO, but gradually dropped again. Further ad vances are expected. Jobbers are anticipating no early reductions. SAX FRANCISCO. March 20 The price pf sugar from the refiners to the wholesalers was advanced $1 a i hundred pounds today by the Western j Sugar refinery and the Honolulu Plantation company. The previous figure was $14 a hundred, and the new price of $15 was the highest on rec ord, it was stated. The advance was in response to a change in the raw sugar market at Xew York, it was stated in commercial circles. ORECOX CITY. Or., March 20. Lester Keliugg, a young man of this city, may have been poisoned Friday night by eating beans into which bichloride of mercury had been put by Mrs. MeAnulty while cooking. Mrs. MeAnulty has been suffering from a nervous breakdown and was being cared for by Mrs. Kellogg at her home on 4lonroe street. She lias been rational until Friday and gave no trouble. Friday afternoon shf found the poison in a chest upstairs and while no one was looking she poured it into the beans. Leslie Kellogg ate some of the beans for dinner and went to town. When his mother started to-eat 'Mrs. MeAnulty warned her to let tnem alone as they were poisoned. Mrs. Kellogg immediately called a doctor and asked him tb find her son as soon as possible. The physicia'n inquired the nature or the poison and Mrs. MeAnulty vol unteered to show Mrs. Kellogg. The two wemen went upstairs and while there Mrs. MeAnulty grabbed Mrs. Kellogg, by the throat. The latter broke away and rushed to the phone. While phoning she was struck on the .arm with an .iron rod in the hands of Mrs. MeAnulty. She ran out of the house, followed by Mrs. MeAnulty. A neighbor, R. W. Kirk, succeeded in quieting Mrs. MeAnulty down. Leslie Kellogg, up to a late hour Friday night, had not suffered from the poison, but the drug is slow act ing and the physicians are taking every precaution. PHILADELPHIA. March 20. (Spe cial.) The spectacular career of Marie de Saldi, alias "Mrs? J. J. Widener of Philadelphia." known to the police of a dozen cities as "Marie fhe Vamp." has ended. The police of New York, acting for Major Samuel Wynne, head of the district attorney's office force of detectives in this city, arrested her In Xew York today on a warrant charging bad check pass ing. , "Marie the Vamp" will be held until requisition papers can be made -out to bring her to this city, where a dozen hotels, Chinese curio merchants (and others are anxious to appear against her. . . . ' "Political" Limousine Tacd In Act. The methods employed by Marie de Saldi were peculiar, but were almost always successful, as many persons in this city, Baltimore, Washington and New York will testify. A political limousine with a negro chauffeur usually figured in Marie's escapades and, backed up with checks printed for Philadelphia business men. but which Marie somehow obtained, the combination proved irresistible. The police of this city first heard of "Marie the Vamp" in July, when she drove down to a fashionable Chestnut street store with a hired limousine and a hired negro chauffeur. She purchased $435 worth of goods and gave as payment a check that had been printed for a prominent Phila delphia business man who is engaged in tne real estate business. To further impress the store with her Seeming wealth, the liveried chauffeur stood by her side and carried the pur chases to the car. As the check bore the name of the prominent business man printed on the upper border it was not questioned and the woman departed. Klnboralc Meala Ordered. Several hours later the woman drove to the Bellevue Stratford, ar ranged for a dinner party for 20 per sons and tendered a check for $200. She also insisted that flowers be pro vided and received $60 change from the check, which is said to have been a forgery. On the same afternoon she went to the Adelphia and ar ranged for another banquet, giving a chock for $225. but when she asked the management for the change they told her to come back again the next day. This check was a forgery. Marie, according to Major Wynne, was in Baltimore on July 8, where she engaged a suite of rooms in the fashionable Southern hotel. Here for a week she lavished monev. She pre sented a $1000 check for the $400 bill. Again a prominent Philadelphian whose name was' not given out came to the rescue and swore that he knew the woman and indorsed the $1000 check. The woman received $600 change, it is said, and departed. In cidentally, the check was a forgery, according to Major Wynne, and the man who indorsed it had to "make good." "Marie the Vamp" worked the same game at several other hotels in Bal timore until the town became too hot for her. December 3 was the last ap oearance of "Marie the Vnmn" in hia city, according to Major Wynne. J.B.TRDEH IS AGAIN HIGH FIFTY SHOTS OUT FOR FIRST DAI' S REGISTERED TOURNEY. Charles Spencer, World Expert, Is but One Tavgct Deliind Leader - Willi Anoiher Cliance Today Fifty trapshootersl the biggest turn out of the year, were on hand yester day for the first day's shoot of the two-day registered tournament which is being staged at the Portland Gun club. The shoot is for 400 registered targets, 200 being shot at yesterday and the remainder will be thrown today. . J. B. Troeh topped the field of scat ter gun artistsfin the first day's shoot yesterday by powdering 195 of the 200 targets. Troch's score was the hiehest made by both amateur and professional. Charles G. Spencer of St. Louis, who is recognized as the world's greatest professional shooter, was second with a string of 14. Troeh carried off the long run honors also with an unfinished run of 120. Spencer brought down 68 tar gets without a miss, while Herm B Xewland ranked third among the long runners with 66. J. W. Seavey and Frank Van Atta tied for second honors among the amateur shooters, with scores of 193 while Frank M. Troeh finished third among the "slmon purcs" by bagging 192 of the clay pigeons. F. C. Riehl and Pete Holohan ranked second and third among the profes sionals. with scores of 1S4 and 179 respectively. The last half of the registered tournament will be run off today, when the second etring of J00 targets will be thrown. The scores follow: C. L. Templeton. .1S2 E. B. Morris lfW! C. B. Mc-Kelvey. .17'JIC. B. Preston lhl n. .W. Klnzer IKtll.1. A. Troeh IS (. B. Baker 1H7I.1. W. Seavey 1. c. Lewis 1S1 B. H. Keller 1st K. C. Hawman. . .I71!Krank Kavnor 171 P. K. Doriele 17!liW. S. Short 17 Charles I.elth 177IH. C. Watkins lb- Charles Fillers. . .l3iiieoree Miller. ...1st J. C. Herran Itai K. Kein 1,1 H. R. KverdlllE. .174IH. H. Veatch 1HIS A. W. Ktrnwaer. .liS;C. G. Dodele 1 P. B. Butler HiiiR. i. Lacy lxii V. C. Bristol 1XMIS. Miller II R Fricdlander. . . l:tl R. K. Muriel IKS R C. Riehl l'.HIW. O. Ballack !.". F. Templeton llHICharl-a Wagner.. 17J J. B. Troeh S. Crane JWi A. A. Schwarz..11IJ. C. Morrle 1S4 R Van Atta 1!UiA. A. Hoover . . Charles Spencer. 104 R Peterson 130 P. J. Holohan ... 1 Titj Will Block !S R M. Troeh ltlJI'H. W. Seus- Jit A. Blair 1K1I-B. L. Deaton 13U H. B. Newland. . .170:P. V. Rexford 1 Professional. LOCAL WRESTLERS 11 GARRISON, HAMLIN AND HAN SON TAKE TITLE BOUTS. Only Hamlin Opposed in Finals Multnomah Protest in Three Classes Is Overruled. SPOKANE. March 20. The retail price ot sugar .was increased from 17 to 18 cents a pound here today. FORUM TO SEE VAN DUZER Chamber Members to Hear Report on Shipping Development. H. B. Van Duzer. president of the Chamber of Commerce, will be a speaker at the members' forum to morrow at noon. He will tell what the chamber has been doing, dealing especially with the shipping develop ment that has come recently, with a glimpse at some of the things that are being worked out for greater use of the Water routes to markets of the world. Norman F.. Coleman, of the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen, will speak on "The Human Factor in Industry." Candidates for the positions of di rectors to fill the seven vacancies on the board of the chamber will proba bly be named at the meeting of .the nominating committee, which has been called- for 4 P. M. Tuesday. It is understood that there has been con siderable interest aroused in the nom inations and that in all probability there will be mre desirable- material considered than there are places to be filled. ALLEGED THIEVES TAKEN Theft of Motorey-le November 20 Traced by Police. John Collins, fireman on the steamer Undine, was arrested morning by In spectors Horack, Hill and Cahill in connection with the alleged larceny of a motorcycle belonging to Oscar Milligan, 792 East Seventh street north. Inspectors Horack, Russel and Van Deusen also arrested . Jesse Glascow, 7519 Fifty-third avenue southeast, in connection with the same case. According to the arresting officers Glascow confessed to having taken the motorcycle on November 20 from the Benson Polytechnic school. He said that the machine was kept in the basement of the residence of Collins at 290 Benton street and that he and Collin used it. according to the re port of the officers. The two were released on their own recognizance and will be given a hearing in municipal court tomorrow. CHARGE BY GIRL FAILS Glen Perry at Vancouver Is Exon erated of Attack. VANCOUVER, Wash., March 20. (Special.) Glen Perry, charged with attacking Edna Pender, was arraigned before Cedric Miller, justice of the peace, here today. After hearing the evidence the case was dismissed. According to evidence of Peiry, Edna Pender and Gladys Pender were fighting each other, pulling hair and otherwise attempting to mar the ap pearance of the other. Gladys Pender called for help and Perry, thinking that she was being brutally injured, went to her assistance. Edna slapped him and t"hen had him arrested for as sault. Lack of evidence against him freed him. FUNERAL SERVICES HELD Body of Roger B. Sinnott to Be Taken to The Dalles for Burial. The funeral of Roger B. Sinnott, Portland attorney and brother of Congressman N. J. Sinnott. was held yesterday morning at 10:30 at St. Mary's cathedral. Following the serv- HENNESSEY FILES APPEAL Syndicalism Sentence at Vancouver Is Contested. VANCOUVER. Wash., March 20 (Special.) In the case of the state of Washington against Mike Hennes sey, found guilty and sentenced to the state penitentiary for criminal syn dicalism, a notice of appeal to the supreme court and transcript were tiled today. The notice was signed by George F. Vanderveer, Pierce & Emigh, L W. W. attorneys. The cases of Leo Brookshier and Robert McAdams will not be appealed as they have no funds. Both of these have started serving their sentences at Monroe. Wash. 'Gondoliers' Marks Close of Comic Opera Series. inllo Company Attracts Large Au dience at Both Performances on Lant Day at Hrlllg Theater. w. Grain Testimony Refused. Upon his return yesterday from Seattle United States Attorney Hum phreys declined to disclose the nature of trie testimony offered there in the grain inquiry involving Max 1 H. Houser. Mr. Humphreys will leave tonight for Spokane with William Bryon, special agent for Jie depart ment of Justice, who is handling the investigation here. It is predicted that the inquiry will cover at least anoiher week. ITH presentations of "Pinafore" the afternoon and "The Gon doliers" last night two light comic operas composed "by William S. Gil bert, libretto, and Sir Albert Sullivan, music the engagement of the Gallo English Opera company came to a successfdl finish last night at the Heilig. There were large audiences at each performance. Late last night the company left for San Francisco as the next stop on its tour. "Pinafore" just suits a matinee au dience. The airs of this delightful light opera are well known, almost to the extent to be household words. Jeffer son De Angelis made a most amusing hit as the dignified, absurd' Sir Joseph Porter, first lord of the British ad miralty, and silvery-voiced J. Hum bird Duffey. lately a young tenor star with the famous Metropolitan Grand Opera company, New York, was the romantic Ralph Rackstraw. Harry A. Collignon made a sufficiently sar donic Dick Deadeye. b)e seaman. Ethel Tamminga was a delightful Josephine and sang with grace, while the make-up and singing of Mildred Rogers, as Buttercup, pleased. "Gondoliers" is an opera of the Gilbert-Sullivan type that is not so well known as the others. It rather has a suggestion of grand opera with buffo features. Its scenes are laid in Venice, Italy, during'the reign of the Inquisi tion. Merry gondoliers and their girl friends interpret the amusing, gay story. Some 20 years before the opening of the opera, the baby king of Barataria was married to Casilda. the infant daughter of the duke and duchess of Plazo-Toro, penniless but, aristocratic Spanish grandees. The "inquisition ab ducts the"infant king and the opera. opens as he comes to manhood. He is supposed to be a gondolier In Venice and rumor says that he is either An tonio or Gulseppe, parts played re spectively . y Edward Quinn and Louis FlavaWle: Accompanied by his aristocratic wile, and daughter, the duke arrives In .Venice, and is preceded by a drummer, Luis, played by Hugh A. Williams, tenor, a nephew of the late SEATTLE. Wash.. March 20. Three Portland (Or.) wrestlers, represent ing the Multnomah Amateur Athletic club, won northwest wrestling titles at the annual tournament here to night of the Pacific Northwest asso ciation of the Amateur Athletic union. University of Washington wrestlers placed first in two classes. The new northwest amateur title holders follow: llo-pound class L. E. Garrison, Mult nomah Amateur Athletic club. 12.-1 pounds Foster Jones, Port Gamble, Wash. 1:15 pounds W. C. Hamlin. Multnomah Amateur Athletic club. 14." pounds K. J. Drum, Husum, Wash., American Legion post. 15S pound; Otto Barnardson, University of Washington. 17r pounds Joe Crumb, University of Washington. Heavyweight George Hanson, Multno nomah Amateur Athletic club. Neither Garrison, 115 pounds, nor Hansen, heavyweight, were opposed. Multnomah club protested results in- the 145, 158 and li5-pound classes on the ground that their competitors had not weighed prior to the semi-finals last night, but the protest was over ruled. "AGGIES" MAKE CLE A N S W EEP Five Bouts Taken From Washing ton Stale by Oregon Grapplers. PULLMAN. Wash., March 20. Ore gon Agricultural college wrestlers made a clean sweep on the mat here tonight against Washington State col lege grapplers, winning four bouts on decisions and one by a fall. Captain Logan of Washington State college was thrown in 12 minutes by A. Palmer of O. A. C withia half Nelson, for the only fall of the even ing. The men weighed 125 pounds. Other results were: Glossop. O. A. C, won decision over W. Ewing. W. S. C, at 13S pounds. Hondell, O. A. C, won decision over Bokbs. W. S. C, at MS pounds. Armstrong, O. A. C, won decision over Pearson. W. S. C. at 15S pounds. . Mclain, O. A. C, won decision over Tromanhauser, V . S. C. at 170 pounds. Sacramento Beats College Team. SACRAMENTO. Cal.. March 20. The Sacramento coast league team hit heavily today and beat Santa Clara college, 6 to 2. The score: i R.H.E.I R.H.E. Santa Clara 2 3 2,3acramento. 6 14 1 Batteries Pecarovith and Garcia; Mails, Kuntz and Cady. Cook. 'Zest in the Long Run m MANY A MAN who would not buy a tire because itwas cheap will buy an inner tube simply because it costs a dollar or two less. Yet the performance of the tire is of ten dependent upon the service rendered by the tube.. V ; It is a wise economy to" equip with Goodrich Red InnerTubes in the first place. Gb(dW(dhi 1 0(1 " J. " JwJL TUBES The B. 'F. Goodrich ilher Company, Akron. Ohio CMakers of the Silvertown Cord Tire iMSS TURLEY PRESIDENT HOME ECONOMICS ASSOCIA TION HOLDS ELECTION. Annual .Meetings at Girls' .Poly technic School Attended by Seventy-five Women. Two Toes Are Amputated. While attempting to get on- a street car at Killingsworth and Mississippi avenues yesterday morning Clifford Cullen. 17, of 1236 Minnesota avenue slipped and fell, with the result that one of the wheels of the car ran over his left foot. He was taken to the St. Vincent's hospital,' where it was found necessary to amputate -'two tees. Cullen is employed as a laborer af the Peninsula sawmill. Ovcrturf Out for Legislature. . BEND, Or., March 20: (Special.) H. J. Overturf of Bend will be a can didate at the coming primaries for the republican nomination for state representative. Earlier in the year Mr. Overturf had declared his inten tion of, going out for the legislature but until yesterday had not made public whether-he would seek a seat in the house or senate. Miss Anna Mae Turley, instructor in household science at Oregon Agri cultural college, was elected president of the Oregon Home Economics asso ciation at the annual meeting of that organization here yesterday. The meeting, attended by 75 women inter ested in home economics education, was held in the Girls' Polytechnic school. Beginning with talks by sev eral speakers the meeting ended with business session in the afternoon. Miss A. Grace Johnson, professor of household administration at the col lege, was in charge of the convention. Mrs. C. W. Hayhurst. president of the Oregon Parent-Teacher associ ation, spoke on 'The Relation of the Parent-Teacher Association to Home Economics." Her talk dealt with the effort to improve the welfare of chil dren and the training of prospective home-makers. Dr. C. U. Moore, child specialist with chijdren of France and Belgium, told of "Ten Years of Progress in Chil dren's Diet Lunches." Miss Marie Williams told of the girls' schools. The vice-presidency of the Home Economics association was filled by the election of Miss Marilla Dunning, graduate of Oregon Agricultural col lege in 1919. and at present instructor in the McMinnville high school. Miss Lucile Hayes, teacher in the Portland grammar schools, was chosen secre tary of the association. Miss Alberta Cavender. also a teacher in the Port land public schools, was elected treas urer. She was a home economics graduate in 1916. Miss Cornelia Mar vin, recently in Japan, was expected to deliver the principal address yes terday, but was unable to be present In our estimation some better plan than the old haphazard personal method should he adopted." The new system brings In the per sonal equation element and the rec ords and personul equation, based on the point scheme. Physician Charges Physician. Dr. J. J. Rosenberg. Portland physician, was served with a war rant yesterday charging him with as sault and battery. The charge was preferred by Dr. Daniel Meyer. Dr Rosenberg was allowed to go on his own recognizance. He will be given a hearing in the municipal court Monday. NEW. SYSTEM ADVOCATED School Superintendent Outlines Plan of Promoting Principals. Promotion, of school principals by the new rating system authorized by the board of education, upon recom mendation of Superintendent Grout, was outlined yesterday by him at the meeting of the principals' association. "Unless there are in the minds of the administrators some definite and well thought out points for considera tion," the superintendent said, "there danger of being influenced by prejudice or favoritism or taking snap judgment or overlooking Important elements of personal characteristics. The place to go for genuine, New Tim ken, Hyatt and New Departure bearings is the local Branch of the Bearings Service Company. Portlaad Branch t Si NORTH 'BROADWAY. ' rjtooe Broadway 1T8 A 2444. BEARINGS SERVICE COMPANY Central Offices: The Detroit, Michigan 1 ACTiCILD B.nuy a u- ii says I use tffANiS It gets them out cleaner l'roff ssional blasters Vnow explosives. They have tried all the different makes. Many of them sav "Giant geH the stumps out cleaner." John Zurr of Santa, Rosa, Cal., writes: "From the beginning of the time I have been using powder for stump blasting and other agricultural work, 1 have found the powder made by The Giant Powder Co. to be the most satisfactory. Each certain percentage of Giant Powder is exactly what it is represented to be." . Tell your dealer you want the genuine Giant Farm Powders Giant Stumping or Eureka Stumping. The Giant trademark on every box is your sure protection against imitations. It win pay yom to write todiy for our book. "Better Firming- with Cunt Firm Powders.' It tell icoret of moner-Mvinf wsjri pi doing farm lotit iaad clearing, ditching, tree planting, etc. THE GIANT POWDER CO., CON. "Everything for Blasting" J40 FirM National Bank Bldg.. Sa Francncs Branch Office: Dcavcr, fortiud, bait Lake City, bcauk, Spokaaa STUMPING fe?5fei EUREKA mil