The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, September 13, 1907, Page 2, Image 2

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:.'; -THE . . OREGON. . DAILY . JOURNAX PORTtAND', FRIDAY ' EVENINO.' 'SEPTEMBER 13. ;.I0(ff.
FIREMEN POWERLESS
NOW TO FIGHT FLAMES li
TRAINS CONTINUE "
.: TO ARRIVE LATE
"department Lacking Adequate Jleans of Protecting
Portland's Oificc BuildingsLast Two Fires Show
Jfeeii of Water Tower to Check Future Fires.
J, J . ' -. . ' ,
, J', Portland, A dty of MS. 000 people,
.', 'S.wlUt splendid skyscrapers that would
1 . f Ji 4o credit to any mstropolls anrwhsra,
i , Js completely lacking In any means to
.' protect -herself should a tire break out
:' la One of her large building
, .Insurance men and others who make
'. .specialty of studying- Are risks aay
that should a sood-sised Ore secure
-V start In any of the larger buildings of
' the city It would be Impossible, to
extinguish it without the aid ff a
, , water tower. The recent burning of the
new Hasalwood building is pointed to
.as an example of what might happen
..- ' in any structure tn the wholesale or
. office building district.
Although there is money enough and
' plenty to buy what the city needs, the
' members of the executive board claim
that because Portland has no water
tower now and never had one the ooun
,'cll shirs from the proposition of order-
; .in r one,
':" . Afraid o Try ABytbiar Yew.
.". "It is because they are- a little bit
' afraid of anything new and untried in
.' the city," said Max Fleischnor this
- rooming. There isn't another city In
the country of over 60,000 people that
hasn't a water tower, and the absence
1 :.; of ' ons here forms a menace to the
safety -of property holders."
'. 4 -There are a score or more buildings
'. in the city that if a fire should start In
one of the upper stories it would be
ably short t..ne X think but they oould
have done more In both fires had they
been able to have directed a stream
from abov onto the flames."
Department Below the Average. ,
J. C Btoner, manager of the Board of
inre underwriters Tor the facirio ooast,
said that while he could not promise a
reduotlon - in -the fire Insurance -rates
upon the purchase of the water
tower, such action would certainly be
taken into consideration, In the question)
01 towering tne rates ror - Portland.
"We have been very fortunate In the
way of being free from serious fires
hers." said Mr. Btnne. "and that has re-I
suicea in giving roruana a lower nrs
Insurance rata than most cities of her
ciaaa But the lire department In this ,
city Is considered to be below the aver-
Northern Paclflo No. 1. due at
oioca. arrived at i.io. w
Southern Pacific No. IS, due
O'olook. arrived in two
sections on time and at 8:16. -
a 'H. N. No. J. due it I
o'clock, arrived at .
, O. R. VN. No. S. due at 1:41.
arrived at 1:10 this afternoon.
Astoria A Columbia No. II, due
at 11:11, arrived on time,
! With the exception of the first
t seotlon of the train from Ban ,
Francisco, every overland train
due la Portland this morning 4
was lata from one to six hours.
The train delayed most was the ,
O. R. A N. train from the east.
which- was marked up nearly
six hours lata
linn iniiTii inn
L J 1 1 J Y 1 1 1 1 1 H II I J 1 1 . ;
mi iuuiii nnu ;
DLL HIS nOllEY
i ; ... r; ..I.
Holy Jumpers Overlooked
No Opportunity to Land
on Boston Boy.
COFFIN FILLED
I
age Just beeause such Important pieces
oi apparatus as a water tower are not
Included In Its equipment. ' Every city
Willi
11
a ill a - - . , , . .aw . r miiuui
i-:.i'il.,"3"ri"""r'ul,'u'"rw trouble and that is uncer
-danger to life and property.
Handicapped as the department
now, the city's firemen have to do one
or two things make tneir way into
burning buildln.ao matter what dan
.'gerous chemicals or explosives may be
stored within, or s tana on the outside
: and -watch it, burn.
. Too Knch Xoaabackism.
- Several months ago a resolution was
introduced into the oouncu appropnat
uu
which has bulldinas of even five or six
wa?dnes3sVinn?hi2a3tte0rUand'" back Surprise at a Wake When
feoold Oet Long- Oae.
lUtm V lT1silsmKne evVa Wsisi 1a VvAvail t am as
aaB leiBviiiuvi w u usmas) lauui eu iwugi I
JSJUwft? -..v T'.lir.il is Made.
luuiae a ilea e vuv vil bviivuiu I uiisaates
one capable of being extended so as to
reach at least 14 stories high.
it snpuia te pomid e to get aooye rhiblln. Sept II. An extraordinary
' aaaw aaa iiibj UUI. Bsaau gam. sjiiu liKiia I - . v . . .
It on top. Now supposing a fire started "l"r' Qommm 'EP "ugnai. county uora.
on the roof of the Welfs-Farao build- A young man named O Donnell. who
lng. . Wt would have to depend on the had been aa inmate la a charitable in-
Ml i"t uhiiuuim w " ,fltl thm AmJt
tain m k.,1 I ,
1th which to purchase
and four Ufa nets. The
' lnr 18.60
" water-tdwer an
resolotion has remained in a pigeon
hole aver since then. In the meanwhile
- a fire might break out tn any of the
Portland hotels, for Instance, and the
'A-oniy means or saving uves mat tne ae
t 'pertinent, has at its command is i
. .solitary net old and patched and said
.to be of no 'value as a life-saver.
' "It la a crying sbame that we have no
. water-tower- in Portland," said i?ire
liarahall Vf." R. .Roberta "Every day
mat we a- witnout one increases .tne
danger from a disastrous conflagration
, In one of our big buildings. Ana let a
' Xlre once get a start In Portland and it
"'. would do an enormous amount of dam-
ae, There la a great deal of wooden
construction hare, especially among the
older buildings and they would burn
.like paper.
- Water Towea a Veoesslty.
-, T can't think -of another place of
. any sise m the. country mat is witnout
a water-tower, They are everywhere
i recognised as necessities Just aa any
. other piece of apparatus in a fire do
parttnent might be so regarded, we
''don't think or doing without hose
; wagons or steamers or trucks and why
, anouia we rati at a waier-ioweri
there, died a few days ago.
"The purohase of a water tower would ns arrangements war mads for his in-
, unnwi mi rorrypoint, county water
escapes and platforms on the fronts of ' . Zam
our handsome bulldinga. During a re- rord' A oofl,? WM ordered and for
cent trip through the east I noticed
that on none of the finer buildings are
fire esoapes erected on the street side
they are all placed In the rear or the
oourta.
Coat Oompartively Utlla
Thlsa n ea Hat 4Ana Kvsk ..lit. Iks
use of thTwaur tower Uneasslt fo? M : " WM included that he
firemen to climb up the walls of the b 2 w5fc v...
skyscrapers nas been ooviatso. A truck
to answsr our purpose fitted with a 14-
story sxtenslon could be seoured. I
should say, for between $7,000 and $7,-
io.
At the time the original resolution au-
"It would be Impracticable to compel
tne ouiiaers or au new structures
place fire escapes and stand
their buildings -while they ere In p
cess of consi.ruo.Uoiv. And. yet without
to
pipes on
ro-
lnto the upper
mere
' them ss was shown at the Haselwood
fire the firemen can do nothing. The
'. only other method of solving that dif
ficulty la to have a water tower, whloh
can direct a stream into the
"floors snd extinguish any firs
may be there.
i '"Again at the Linseed Oil company's
t fire the other day a water tower oould
: have been used to great advantage.
The firemen haf to stand back and
- fight the flames from a distance. They
did very well stopped It in a remark-
warded to the Inatltutlon.
Next momlnar tha relatives removed
It to the young man's former residence.
carrying It all the war on their shoul
ders. Remarks were freauent from the
pallbearers about the lightness of the
coffin but. as tha young man's Illness
Denver, Colo.; Sept. 1 When William
Dunbar, a IT-y ear-old box, Is released
from his father's home In Boston, where
ha is hold prisoner In tha hops of win
ning htm from the ranks Of the Boly
Jumpers, ha will coma right to Denver,
where he will enlist tn the causa of the
Pillar of Firs under the guidance of
pretty Gertrude Metlln, tha organist of
the Jumpers at Boston, to whom he
owes bis conversion. In tha Pillar of
Fire sh, has already told tha story of
the young man's conversion and ha is
anxious to eoma here and halo edit that
publication. ,
The Dunbars are well-to-do people In
Boston, but tha boy by soma mysterious i
Influence hss been drawn from v bis
home to tha oamn where their manifest
ations ocour nightly. Not svsn when
his sister lay dead In tha house would
he return to tha naternal roof. Blnne
then his father has found him and is
holding htm until he oan dissuade him
rrom returning to tne camp.
In tha official orean of tha Jiimntn
Miss iletlln speaks of young Dunbar
In these words:
"One young man. while praying for
tne messing, reit tne rire strike mm
and ran like a wild deer around tha
bouse."
Mr. Dunbar asserts that the religion
was all a graft to raise money. He says
nis son s nana account was appropriated
by the Jumpers the first night he went
to them, and ha contemplated legal ac
Da
O
morning the purohase or the new appa-
ed a i
ratue was Introduced there remain
sufficient .amount in the firs fund
to
Some houra after the coffin hai hMn
deposited at hla house a relative, who
had not seen him for several years, ex-
Sressed a deal re to see his face. The
eslra was opposed, but. In face of a
persistent request, the lid of the coffin
was allowed to be unscrewed,
AU attendln tha "wake'' had mm,.
red round to take a last view of the
body, but to their astonishment a quan-
t. hi v- nui luum.iil B UUI
iklZ .h-JL rll- I luy oi shavings was all that was to be
h'wm tt w v wi ustj usaTsa aswu iiisaai 3 i gcgagen
little drains on tha surplus and a trans- As soon as tha parties recovered from
fer of funds may be necessarv to se-1 .! r .hk ih J- AwJ"
cure the tower. Members of the com- back to Toughal. and in the institution
mittee say that ons could be ordered and from which it had been taken the corpse
delivered hera within two months. still lay.
tlon to recover It on the ground that
tne dot was a minor.
Proof of tha money rraft waa In
Mr. Dunbar's mind, evident from the
articles written by Mrs. Alma White of
uenver ana ner Brother, u w. BridWell,
an or wnion." aa aaya -ena witn an
exhortation to give up all one's money
iv jumpers.
"I hava n
study of the methods Of the reorla be
hind this 'Pillar of Fire' movement, as
It Is called, and I am willing to take an
oath that it is simply a 'hold-up game.'
As. soon as you say you want to join,
they say you must give up all your
worldly goods, which they then take
possession of and use as they please."
r aaaperty to the Hoi!
He further said: "I RaVB mde - a
The fnneral partr returned with tha
rly hours of the following
body In the ear
morning, ana encountered on Us way
revuier returning zrom uueenstown
Chief Approves of It.
Chief Campbell of the fire denart-
ment will leave tonight for the east
to inspect tha various kinds of water
in Li. ' " lull.. r I The spectacle rave the aunerstlttnna
win uuuii uis idiuiii ill sua n m iiiuniusiri . . -v .
report to tha council upon tha result rhrVn.iiin.ir.a,-t,,e flM from
ofHils Investigations. 1 the road to the nearest farmhouse.
There Is no doubt but that Portland
regatta.
Is badly In need of a water tower." said
ne. "we couia nave used it to ad
vantage twice during the paat week.
A water tower is especially lmror-
tant in a city where there are aa many
large buildings without fireproof parti
tions as in roruna.f ..v
a vo-ioot tower wouia reacn to'tne
ton of these buildings easily, and would
of coarse throw a stream of water much
farthr into the air. It Is not so useful
in the case of offlos bulldinas in the
first Dart of a fire, but as soon aa the
partitions have burned away a clear
sweep for the stream can be secured.
and It ouabt to make short work of
most fires. Of course I don't mean to
say that because we have a water
tower we will never have a bis fire
again, but I do aay that there will be
less danger rrora rire than there is
now."
OREGON
FARMER
II
II
110
f 1110
PRIZE lf; CALIFORNIA
Tule Lake Kancher Present
ed Thoroughbred Bull
by Irrigators.
TuriTDinM riAnun
IIILHIMUHL
TO
IIIMUIIHICO
TO BUILD RACE TRACK
. Sullivan & Considine Back
ing New Course to Be
; Made at Venice.
v ' (Ftdfle Coast Press Leased Wire.)
, . XjOs Angeles. Bept. 18. A well de
fined movement Is on foot to build a
race track at Venice, regardless of what
may or may not be done In relation to
Ascot Park or Baldwin's Arcadia. Such
Is the claim of H. D. Brown of New
Orleans, who built the City Park track
: there and has made a fortune in the
: racing game.
Brown says a splendid new course
fashioned after the Washington Park
v" track in Chicago will be opened to the
puoiic in JJeceniDer.
' Associated tn the venture with him
STRIKE SYMPATHIZERS
REFUSE TO USE CARS
(Ptdfle Coast Press Leased Wire.)
San Francisco, Sept II. One of. the
finest prises offered at tha national Irri
gation congress recently held at Sacra
mento has gone to the farm of J. F
Adams of Tule Lake, Oregon, and will
carrv California's fame to tha farmers
of that country.
When the authorities of the congress
announced that the California promo
tion committee offered a prise for the
beat display of products from a single
irrigated farm, and when it told that
Despite Calling Off of Boy- s!A TOM! SSSSS& ?mZi
cott in San Francisco
People Still Walk.
(Pacific Coast Press Leased Wire.)
rise was the registered thbrough-
on
Tlov. Adams dntermlnArf tn art that hull
and he got together his products and"
made a SDlendld lsplav. There were
many others who wanted the bulL but
none could equal the display of Adams.
and they had to content themselves with
lesser mention.
IN VANC0UVEB
GOOD BREAKFASTS
Start the Say Bight.
n
Breakfast Is perhaps the most lm
' portant meal of the day. Europeans
', usually eat a very light breakfast
Many Americans have stomach
y trouble because they eat too much or
food of not the right sort for the morn
ing meal. An Ideal breakfast is a baked
apple or some other fruit, a dish of
Grape-Nuts food with little cream, soft
! , boiled egg. slice of hard crisp toast and
a cup of Postum Food Coffee.
Leave off all meat, hot biscuits, etc.
Grape-Nuts ' anrt l'ostum both furnish
i the phosphate of potash together with
.other food elements that go to make up
' brain and nerve centers as well as mus
'cle and tissue, and both can be digested
, by the stomach of an Infant
It is the part of wisdom nowadays to
:.. use food especially selected for nourish-
San Francisco. Sept II. Despite STRIKE THREATENED
the calling on or me boycott on the
United Railroads there was no appre
ciable Increase In the number of pas
sengers carried this morning. This, It
is claimed, was due to the fact that the
action of the strike committee was not
generally known, but the striker say It
snows mat puduo sentiment is still
(Special Dlipatch to The Journal,)
Vancouver, B. C, Sept 13. The pro
posal of the white cooks and waiters
In Vancouver to strike for a white Van
couver has been unanimously indorsed'
BRAVE SACRIFICE BY
MAN IN LEAKY BOAT
Bridgeport, Conn., Sept 11. A trsgedy
of the sound, involving the life of one
of two rich young men who made a
heroic sacrifice for each other, waa re
vealed today by the finding of the un
conscious rorm or I'.alph Benedict In a
launch anchored off Walnut beach and
by the bringing to the surfaoe by a
fisherman of the body of George Far-
num.
Famum and Benedict belong to two
of the best families of Waterburv.
They were to have entered college in
the fall. Both went to Walnut beach
last night to attend a hop. After tho
ball, It being a beautiful moonlight
nignt, they took a small canoe and went
for a paddle The wind stirred up a
choppy sea and the canoe began to ship
water. They looked In vain for a pass
ing vessel.
TThe canoe will soon be under water."
said Farnum. "It can't support us
both. Shall I swim sshore and get
help? I'm not much of a swimmer,
but"
"No. George," said Benedict; "I am
a good swimmer; I'll go."
With a "good luck to us both," the1
two parted. Farnum stuck to the
canoe and Benedict set out for the dls
tant lights. Benedict was barely able
to reach an anchored launch, into which
he fell exhausted. Searchers found
Farnum s body In 20 feet of water.
V-
- , . sV -,J- ' .. . '
.1.1 '
H I
R f V
17
.eoenee
CREW MISS CARROWO IIAIH
AND WB CAN
PROVE IT
Beautiful Hair At Small Coot
WITHIN tha last decade trreat and rapid atride hart beta mad lq
Materia Medic. Many diseases that were considered incurable
fifteen jean ago are now cored in a fewdya,and in many caaea prevented
altogether The scientists of lata year bare been delving for the cause,
the foundation, the reason and the itartinr point of disease, folly realizlnf
that the actual and true cause most be ascertained before the remedy can
be located. Hair troubles, like many other diseases, have been wrongly
diatrnosed and altogether misunderstood. The hair itself ia not the thing
to be treated, for tha reason that it ia simply a product of tha scalp, and
wholly dependent upon its action. Tha ecalp ia the very toil in which
the hair is produced, nurtured and grown, and it alone should receive the
attention if results are to be expected. It would do no earthly good to
treat the stem of a plant with a view of making it grow and become mora
beautiful the soil in which the plant grow must be attended to. There
fore, the scalp in which the balr grows most receive tha attention if you
are to expect it to grow and become more beantifut
loss of hair is caused by the scalp drying up, or losing
it supply of moisture or nutriment, and when baldness
occurs the scalp has simply lost all of it nourishment,
leaving nothing for tha hair to feed upon (a plant or even
a tree would die under similar conditions).
The natural and logical thing to do in either case ia,
feed and replenish the soli or scalp as the ease may be,
and your crop will grow and multiply aa nature intended
it should.
Dr. Knowlton's DANDERINE
is tha only remedy for the hair ever discovered that is identical
with the nataral hair food or liaulds of the ecalp. It feeds and
nourishes the hair and doea all the work originally carried on by
the natural nutrients or life-giving Juice generated by the scalp
tself. It penetrates the pores of the ecalp quickly and the hair
soon shows the effects of its wonderfully exhilarating and life-
producing qualities.
One twenty-five-cent bottle la enough to convince yon of its great
worth aa a hair growing and hair beautifying-gwnedy try It and a
for yourself. Now on sale at every drug and toilet store in the land.
Three sizes, ajc, gocandfl.oo.
FIIEE To.lhoZ w nalekly OandeHM arts we wfflaead a large sesle fees by return man to aay oaa who sends this sdvettlsesaeat
sT IlkE. to the Knowltaa Uaaderlae C, Calea, with their same and address and 10 cents la surer or stamps to pay poetscaT
MISS J. CARROLL
aOT Irwljesf Ave., Clatcwsj
Does It Pay to Be a Heroine?
"Does It pay to be a heroine?" That
Is the questlon-JTrlxle Jennery, the lit
tle toe dancer who prevented the escape
of the Armenian that murdered Million
aire Tavshanjlan In Union Square, New
York, is asking herself. Here are some
of the things that happened to her after
her bravery had been published abroad:
An alleged expressman arrived with
packase marked "From Mrs. Trnv-
shanjtan. Collect $1.10." Bhe paid. "Re
ward," said her friends; "probably a
new rug. "Oh. Joy!" said Trlale. The
contents of the package were four
newspapers and a hard-boiled brick.
An alleged dramatist called four
times with an offer to star In a melo
drama (yet unwritten) entitled "Held
by the Hunchaklst: or, The Armenian
Assassins" Miss Jennery to provide
the fands for staging purposes.
A woman in Peterson wrote: "I'm
sure, from your photograph tn the
American, you are my long-lost school
chum, erho went on the stage in 1884
Please call on me." The fair Trixle
had doubts; she was exactly one year
oid in ibvh. ana never even piayea
one-night stand in Paterson. When she
told the woman so. the latter compro
mised by demanding two box seats for
tne aancer s performance next week.
Miscellaneous correspondence came to
her letters offerlnar charms to ruard
against Black Hand and Hunchaklst
wiles, pronosltlona to sell rare old fam
ily jewels and, heirloom furniture, an
nouncement mat a nun pup naa oeen
named Trme in ner honor, and six ad'
vertlsements from life and accident In
surance companies.
"Do you wonder that I ask, Does It
pay r sne says.
Cane Whittled by Lincoln.
From the Kansas City Times.
Ira H Haworth. who was a friend of
Abraham Lincoln, celebrated his eight
ieth birthday anniversary yesterday.
Mr. Haworth has a cane and a gavel
given to him by President Lincoln in
i860. They are made from the wood of
a black wnlnut tree which was cut down
by Lincoln and around the top of It Is i
band of German silver, which Is en
by Lincoln and around the top of it is a
raved: "To Ira Haworth from A bra.
lam LInooIn, I860.'
"Yes, Abe gave them to me," said
SCHOOL
SHOES
Best Makes Properly Fitted
Moderate Prices
AT
7th and DAC FAITH A PC 7th and
llVJLIM 1 11iL J
Wash. Sts.
Wash. Sts.
Mr. Haworth yesterday, "when I was
chairman of the township committee In
his home county. I used them In the
campaign of 1S60. When he gave them
to me he said:
This gavel Is to keen order. The
cane la to use when you get old. I
be
know you will live to be old
gooa aie young,
tcause the
Slogans!
From tho .Washington Post
Ths Mobile. Alabama, Herald says:
"Watterson's slogan is 'Back to the
constitution;' Bryan's, 'Back to tho
farm and La Follette's, 'Back to na
ture" To the average observer it
looks ss If Roosevelt and Taft's la
"Back to back."
with them and that their sympathisers b-r the union and unless nronrletora nd.
will not ride on the cars until the strike here to the requests of the union there
Is settled.
will be a general strike this week.
are "Big Tim" Sullivan of turf and
theatrical fame, who is a partner, of
John Considine and Andy McNally, both
of whom are said 'to have subscribed for
large blocks or stock of the association.
Papers of incorporation will probably
be filed in a few. days.
Brown says tha new track cannot bs
considered an opposition track to the
Los Angeles Jockey club or any of the
racing organizations.
' rnent and that can be easily digested.
'ien. aays iriai ot
n you will feel' as
trial ot this breakfast and
though vou had
''cleaned house."
The exhilaration of bounding health
. Is worth a hundred times the small out
. -. lay of time and care In arranging such
.-. breakfast.
, A New Jersey woman says she form
erly breakfasted on chops, hot biscuits
' and coffee. "After such a meal I would
i ; have severe pains and they would last
sometimes far Into the night" She
finally determined on a change in her
t Olew and had for breakfast only Grape-
' Nuts food - with cream, and Postum
- Food Coffoa, -ifihe aays: "In a very
few days the Intestinal trouble all dis
appeared. I have regained my old-time
weight lost tne irritaDimv ana nerv-
ousness. and life takes on a new aspect
"When I feel a little exhausted In
the day.. 2 simply drop everything and
stir a spoonful of Grape-Nuts In a little
. ri'arn or hot milk, ana in; 10 minutes I
. have regained my Vigor and freabnesa"
f !i apirNttta 4s-at-wha-aarwad
JtiNt as it comes from tha package
without any cooking wnatever. i xne
food has already been cooked IS -or II
. hours la the process of manufacturing
t it ben made up Into puddings, pies
and other desserts It does not hurt It to
be cooked strain. . but When served
,' simply as a breakfast food it should
never be cooked. On the contrary. Pos
liiin sltt'lutiy must be-boiled IS to
tttiuutr bt-fore the food value and
f.avnr can be brought out. - "Ihere's a
. Keasun. ....:...... -; '.
C0PPEE EIVEE VALLEY
E0UTE ABANDONED
(Soedl Dlipatch to Tba Joornal.)
Vancouver. B. C, Bept. 18. The route
across tne northern interior or British
Columbia .through the Copper river
valley country has been abandoned by
the surveyors of the Grand Trunk Pa
cific railway. To cross the Copper river
valley country la impossible, aay the
engineers, and the idea has been abaii'
aonea.
Old Hatch Was Sensitive.
Arthur O'Connell, room clerk at the
Hotel Belmont New York, was starting
tor home a few nights ago when he was
hailed by a group In the lobby, and he
tarried long enough to tell a good story
on "Oid Hutch," tha celebrated Chloago
plunger.
Hutch was somewhat deaf, and was
very sensitive about it Mr. O'Connell
said he was a mere boy when tha Inci
dent occurred, but It always atruck him
as being fair to middling.
"I waa standing on the steps of the
Grand Paclflo hotel one day,- talking
with a Chicago broker, when Old Hutch
appeared, coming along the other side
Of the street
. 'yfZ11 J10 m mk him madr
asked the broker. ,
"Bure thing, I told him.
"'All riahf nth L
broker.
"In a moment Old Hutch glanced
our way and he broker placed his
hand to his mouth as though ha was
about to hallo at some one, opened his
swut ..wideband feegan-io-work his
Jaws although he were yelling; at the
top of his voles.
"Hutch soowled and started across the
street, pounding his can angrily at
!JfJri."teS" ..Lo 1ri young fellow,'
said ha,rdont get sodoggonad smart
la not deaf and yoa don't need to yell
at ma that way. t heard every word
you said, and could have heard 'am if
you had said 'em half as loud.'
' . "And as he walked nn rrfrw . th.
street ha nearly punched halaa in the
WARNING !
Many Rtin Coats are sold at
"Cravenettet" which are not there
fore bear, in mind when purchasing
It it NOT a
uniesi thi cijculsr registered
AO
fsr
trade-mark is stsmped on the cloth
snd this silk label
RAIN PROOF
is at the collar or elsewhere.
CSTLook for both and insist upon
aaaing them, j,
come In a large variety of cloths for
wear bjrmeB, yeomen snd children,
and are for sale by the leading Cloth
Jng, Haberdashery, Dry Goods and
Department? Stores throughout the
world. ;
W wifl erid booklet if yon write us.
Manufacturers af "Crmveaette Clothe,
Waoteaa, Mohsin, JJrees ttoods, etc
100 Fifth Ave, Cor. 16th St New York
First Grand Player Piano
to Make Its Appearance
In the City of Portland and
throughout the world was the
MELVILLE-CLARKE APOLLO'
88-Note Player Piano
EXCLUSIVE FEATURES
The only "Transposing" device' made in the world today,
representing 95 per cent of player value. This is indispensable
for the rendition of any vocal selections. Furthermore, it allows ,
one to play in any key. J
The storage power of the motor produces an even tempo
and an automatic rewind.
The "governor," being constructed from a scentific stand
point, insures a perfect tempo.
It possesses a cog-gear, dispensing with chains, therefore
there is no lost motion. -
It possesses an automatic winding clutch, automatic
safety clutch, ball-bearing chuck, and automatic brake.
The prieumantic fingers are jointed like the human wrist.
It possesses a "telescoping" spool adjustable to all music
and telescoping and interchangeable roll shaft, adjustable to
all music
The pneumatics operate on the keys, instead of the piano
actionWhy?
"Pneumatic" treble pedal action. NO CHOKER USED.
' The only uncut lower panel insures safety from rodents
and the pedals are not exposed to view.
and many other minor points that we will be glad to explain to visitor! at our talesrooms. Both Grand and Upright "Apollo"
Players on exhibition in our salesrooms;
HOViNDEN-SOULE PIANO
GbmefeWest
t.',-.-r,K-(.
pavement with his cane." ! -