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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1911)
Mm. German Ship Mimi Will Leave Down This Morning DOCK HUB SM FAR ABOVE JAPAN Transpacific Steamers Cannot , Yet Afford to Have Repairs Done Here; Some Compari sons With Kobe. That trans-Paclfle steamers should come hero to drydock for cleaning and painting since the out In rates by the Port of Portland commission, Instead of having the work done n the orient, lk out. of the question, according to Cap tain E. H. Svendsen, fbrmerly. roaster of the Portland & Asiatic Steamer Rygja, Who says that in spite of the slash here, rates are still lower In some Asia tic ports.. - Rates in Japan, says Captain Svend- ten, are about 72 per cent lower than the present rates on the Pdrt of Port land dock and it would hardly be to the advantage of the owners of steam ers which make those ports to dock here when they are, in need of cleaning and painting. The difference In rates is attributable to several causes, one of which is tho difference tn American and International tonnage, which on a Vessel of the Kygja's site amounts to fczs tons in favor of the International. Another reason Is that docking for that purpose Includes dock hire for 48 hours, two coats of different paints to the deepest load line, all kinds of labor and gear, free towage one way and free as sistance of towboats from the dock. As ' an Instance, Captain Svendsen cites the last docking of the Rygja while she was under his command; He says that on June II, 1910, the steamer, was docked at the Mltsu Blshl Dockyard & Engineering works, which are located tn Kobe, Japan, where she was cleaned and painted, the cost' amounting to 1663.85. The steamer was docked on the basis of 3826 gross tons (Norwegian) at 840 yen or $420, which included all the labor, cleaning and painting, dock log, shoring, undocklng, dock hire for 14 i I lUIIIM 5 4 J ; ill "-Ml 1 I Municipal Councilman Charges Police Protection in French Capital Not;' Sufficient. 1-he Geruan ahlp Miml. 2246 tons net register, Captain Westphal, which com pleted her cargo of wheat for the Unit 3d Kingdom Friday morning at Moat- The German Ship Ml Ml. gomery dock No. 2, Is under charter to C42 bushels cf wheat, valued at $117,800. Balfour. Guthrie & Co. and will leave She went to the stream Friday after down the river on the first leg of her noon and her crew was shipped yester voyage this morning, laden with 139,- day. of Russel & Co.. Glasgow, last year. Rhe is 40 feet long. 67 feet beam and 48 hours, townira ant vh. mmlilnnp nf ihsi rionth nf hold of 28.6 feet. She a tug from the Sock and charcoal and I sailed trim New York December 1 for rwood for the drying of the bottom of, Hongkong, Shanghai and Puget souna. the ship, as the weather Was damp. The vessel supplied the paint, which was bought here after being Imported from Norway, at a dost of 467.70 yen or 8238.85, making a total opst of 8653.85 for cleaning and painting the steamer. On the Port of Portland dock the Rygja would be figured at 46S2 tons, about the middle of March. wnicti is the Amerjcnn equivalent of the and at last reports had sauea rom Port Said on the Sue canal, uecemuei 21. Between the Suverlc. which Is sched uled to arrive hero about the middle of February, and the Lucerlo will be the Kumerlc, which should reach this port gross tonnage of the vessel, he says, at 7 cents for 24 hours, which would be 8325.64 and for the second day 5 cents, which would amount to $232.60, or a total of $668.24 cents for dock hire alone. For 160 gallons of paint, as used at KObe, the cost would be 8295. the first coat costing $16 per 10 gallons, t.ie second $30 and the third $15. Labor In cleaning and painting would amount to $200, towage one way $25. and the total cost $1128.24. According to Cap tain Svendsen's figures the same Job taken on the basis of Norwegian, or International tonnage, would amount to $1029.18 on the Port of Portland dry dock. ;.- Portland Is 6794 Der cent hls:her than Kobe because the American tonnage is H per cent higher than the Interna tional, which is not reeojrnized bv the United States;" says Captain fivendsen. LIGHTSHIP TO MOVE "No. 50' MARINE NOTES r Astoria, Jan. 28. Arrived at 8:10 and left up at 9:50 a. m. Steamer Bear, rmm Kan Pedro and San Francisco. Sailed at 8:80 a. m. Steamer Beaver, for San Francisco and Sfcn Pedro. Ar rived at :30 and left up at 10:45 a..m. Steamer Johan Poulsen, from Sun FranciFco Arrived at 10 a. m Schooner Virginia, from San Francisco Sailed at 12;30 p. m. Steamer J, A. Chanslor, for San Francisco. Sailed at 2 p. m. Steamer BUmore, for Tillamook. San Francisco. Jan 28. Arrivedat 7 a. rn. steamer Shasta, from San Pedro; steamer Northland, from Portland. Sailed at 11 a, m. Schooner Alvena. for Columbia river. Valparaiso, Jan. 28. Arrived prev iously Norwegian steamer Solvelg, from Portland for St Vincent. Tides at Astoria Sunday: High water, 1:04 a. m., 7.2 feet; -12:07 p. ra., 8.3 feet; low water, 6:40 a. m., 3.9 feet; 7:07 p.-,m., 0.9 foot. BALLOONISTS HAVE DANGEROUS TRIP German Gentlemefi Take Great Chances 'Of Losing Their Lives. MARINE INTELLIGENCE. Will Be UtMHl . Range Light at Bar. Commander J. M. Ellicott. lighthouse Inspector for the Seventeenth district, announced yesterday that he would rec-1 1 ommend to the lighthouse board that Due to Arrive. light vessel No. 50 be placed as a range Breakwater, Coos Bay...... Jan. 29 light off No. 8 buoy at the mouth of Alliance, Eureka Jan. 30 the Columbia river. Sue H. fcimore. imamuim For some time past the inspector has i i?1."?1; Lut?i5 IVh 5 been at a loss as to what to do with i f.,V11 p', . ! ! ' ! '. ! J Peb. 7 the light vessel, which is of tho old Ball , Bear San Pedro Feb. 12 power type and which has lain at the I Due to Dewurt. supply depot at Tongue Point for the ! cjoUlen Gate. Tillamook Jan. 81 last two years. Reoently, however, Sue H. Elmore, Tillamook Jan. 31 the Chamber of Commerce suggested Alliance! Eureka Feb. 1 that the light vessel be placed inside Hreak vat w, Coos Bay reo. l the bar as a range light and after aim SanPedre ' '. '. '. 'rib. 6 thorough investigation of the matter , iWer&n Pedro ... !. .Fob. 11 Commander Ellicott has decided that ' Teasels In Port. No. 60 will be of the most service at ! Cg,Uc Glen Br sh T.lnnton the point which he will recommend. i Bossuet Fr. bk Llnnton The point which will be recommended St. Nicholas. Am. ch Astoria it at the second turn In the channel be-' Levi G. Burgess, Am. bk ,.Ootle tween the mouth of the river and As- K'f eda, Ger. bk aimwokH tori, and Is abreast of No. 8 buoy and &A?uhVrV"t the middle of Sand Island. It has been ti a s Will. Iron A Steel heretofore Impossible to keep an or- Miml. Ger. sh .Stiwm ainary range light there because oft Bayard, t. dk winDn adverse currents and the rough condi-' hna Yak. Am ss, . . .Eastern & Western .. .... ... - vu n nnsnpu iiPi. im. a . . . liiiiiivvu lion or tne Dar at that point. No dif-' nVriin Im ach Goble ficulty Is expected, however. In keeping TnhP Howes. Am. sch mo iigni vessel on ner station there, INSPECT LIGHT VESSEL Commander Ellicott to Examine "No. 67" at Astoria Mondaj. Inspection of light vessel No. 67 will be mad by Commander J M. Ellicott today at Astoria. She Is expected to leave for her station .oft Umatilla reef Monday. Although the light vessel will go u? to -her station under her own team, she will be convoyed by the ten der Columbine. As soon as No. 67 reaches her station Relief No. 92 will leave Umatilla reef for Swiftsure bank, where she will relieve No. 93. whioh will proceed to Seattle for an overhauling. una has been on her station for the last two years, and will probably need some minor repairs. CAMPION STILL ON JOB New Towage Superintendent Only a Girl Up at His House. Some surprise was expressed on the waterfront shortly after noon yesterday when it was rumored that there' was a new superintendent of towage and pilot age. The rumor, was soon dispelled, however, by Superintendent H. F. Cam pion, who announced that he was glad It was a girl and that he was still secure in his position. ."Papa" Cam plon is the. proudest man on the front and he says that both mother and daughter are getting along finely. ' " - LUCERIC COMING Astoria Rt. Francis. Am. sh Astoria ! En Route With Cement and aenexal. ' Admiral Cornuller. Fr. bk Antwerp Claus, Ger. sh Hamburg 'David d' Anglers, tfr. bk Hamburg Marechai ae Castries, r. dk iyn Wilhelmine, Ger. sh Antwerp Luion, Am. sch...: .Redondo Sa moute With OoaL Col. de Vlllebois Mareull. Fr. bk . , Newcastle, N. S. W. Alliance. Eureka Jan. 21 Rose City, San Pedro Jan. 22 OBJECTS OF. HISTORICAL INTEREST UNEARTHED IB ths Intwnatlmiil Niwn Rentlee.1 Calcutta. Jan. 28. A discovery of much historical interest has been made at a village near Nalhatl, not far from Calcutta, where, In the course of dig ging operations, several valuable gold and sliver articles many centuries old were found. Among them la a gold plate weighing 28 pounds, bearing the figures of two Hindu deities and a Sanscrit inscription showing that a certain Nat Raja had laid, the foundation of his palace there. There Is no record when Nal Raja lived. . , " ; The palace is' still undiscovered. Ex cavations are' to be undertaken by the archaeological department. (Publisher' Press Ted Wlrr.) Kirkwall. Scotland, Jan. 28. "Are we In England? We have come In a bal loon." These were the words, uttered in a strong German accent, which startled the inmates of Park Cottage, near Kirkwall about 10 o'clock one night recently. We thought we were In Swed en," added the spokesman, "till we saw the word 'push' on your doorbell." On being asked to . enter, two men covered with blood and mud, 'staggered into the house. The story told by the balloonlsts was thrilling. It appeared that three gentlemen Herr Dlstler, managing director of the Deutcher Tour ing club; Captain Joerdens, a retired German army officer, and Herr Metsger, manager of a rubber factory for automo bilesall belonging to Munich, left that town In the Deutscher Touring club's balloon for a 24 hour ascent. "About 7:30 next morning," Herr Dlst ler states, "the balloonlsts' greatest dread appeared. We heard the roaring of the sea. The wind was blowing strongly from the southeast. We came down to locate our position. So great was our speed that the basket dashed against the sea. The three were im mersed, and, Herr Dlstler pathetically added, "when we rose clear again we were two." Herr Metzger was not seen any more. Relieved' of the weight of one passenger., the balloon rose out of danger, and all day the balloonlsts drift ed they knew not whither except that the German ocean was beneath them, A dense feg hung over the- seo to a height of about 100 yards. Twice during the darkness the bal loonlsts descended, but each time struck the waves. At last everything, even the anchor, had to be cast overboard, and the emergency rope was pulled to release the remainder of the gas as soon as the balloonlsts knew they were over )and. Still so great was the im petus that wire fences and dykes were torn down as the balloon whirled along, while Herr Dlstler and Captain Joer dens lay crouched in the bottom of the basket, expecting each minute to be their last. When they stopped they were a mile Inland. SOCIALISTS ARE TO BE ATTACKED German Conservatives Con vinced Time Is at Hand to Check Socialists. By Paul Villiers. - y (Publishers' Press Leased Wire.) Paris, Jan. 28. Monsieur Achilla of the municipal council has urged the au thorltles to increase the police force of this city, which, he says, Is not large enough to cope with crime. In. a budget report on the subject M. Achilla, says: "It is humiliating to admit that In the ' twentieth century the security of our people here is scarcely bejtter as sured than it was in the days when the watch was given a drubbing every night. Respectable citizens shut them selves Up In their houses, leaving the purse matchers and brigands masters of the streets. : I hope I will not be ac cased of , exaggerating Rather read over the columns In the paper devoted to the numerous robberies committed dally In the heart of this city, to the burglaries of unheard of audacity, and to the frequent murders many of them unpunished -as well as to the innumer able strikes, the mysterious sabetages, everywhere." frenchmen Tight, Hone Hurt. One of the most amusing and Inter esting duels in the history grew out of a letter which M. de Jouvena received from Marcel Hutln. It took place right In the heart Of the city In the presence of 2000 men, women and beys, with re porters, a moving picture operator and luncheon on the side, and also an offi cial photographer. An announcement that nobody would be allowed to see -the duel, naturally made everybody anxious to be present, and when the encounter began there was a crowd of the ordinary publlo, photographers, and even an operator present. The principals were not expert swordsmen. What advantage In skill there was rested with Jouvenal, who touched M. Hutln on the chest, and for a moment everybody was afraid that he had really been hurt The seconds tore open his shirt, and found that he was not scratched. M. de Jouvinal apolo gized. v ' At the fourth go Jouvenal succeeded in scratching, M. Hutln's forearm, and the battle was over. The two men were reconciled. They Bhook hands, embraced each other, showered compliments on the sec onds and thanked the spectators for their presence. Then they rod in an automobile to a cafe, where they and their seconds dined together. On the way to the restaurant the party was met by policemen who an nounced that they had been sent out to inquire Into the facts. They were as sured, however, that no one had been injured. The policemen hurried .back to tho Station and reported accordingly. Touaf Woman Attempts Border. : Onoof the government offices was the scene of an excited I attempt on the part of a young woman to shoot her father, an attendant at the foreign min istry. Tho eldest or his four children is a daughter, 28 years of age, who ap pears to have given him a good deal of trouble. - The young woman has suoh a. temper that she could not obtain work anywhere. She was consequently a burden on her father and constantly Importuned him for money. . ; : The father had paid for a room for her apart, but as 'his Income diminished he could no longer afford it, and he gave notice that he would cease to pay for the room. The daughter thereupon rushed to tho of flee where he was em ployed and made a scene. The father had to put her out. The young woman went to a gunsmith and purchased a re volver, with which she returned to the office. Making her way to her father, she asked him again if he refused to support her. On his reply that he did, she aimed at him with her revolver and attempted to fire, but the weapon did not go off and she was setzod by other employes. The father probably owes his life to the' prudence of the gun smith, who, seeing the young woman In such a state of excitement, so ar ranged the revolver that it could not go off. The woman was arrested and ex amined by the police commissioner, who sent her to the police depot on the charge of attempted patricide, which in French law is punishable with death. BARNARD COEDS PRAY FOR TIMELY THOUGHTS (United Press Leased Wlie) New york, Jan. 28.r-Pra,yerk have been substituted for the time honored crib" and 'Tony as an aid in exam inations by certain of the girls of Bar nard college. And Judging from the fact that an unusually small numDer oi students flunked In the mid year tests, the prayers were answered and will be repeated whenever the specter of "ex- ami" stalKS tnrougn uarnaru uiu. The Idea of prayer as an aid in an swering the knotty questions propound ed by unfeeling professors originated with the Church Women's club, an or ganization of ctrla among the Barnard students. When tne recent exmin-j tlons approacnea, many ui mo nn were greatly perturbed, for they hadn't been burning the midnight oil or utl llzine the electric current, to be correct as assiduously as they might have done. At the height of their perturba tion, the believers in prayer stepped in. "Why not have a prayer servicer1 was The Idea "took" at once. So in tho main hall of the college a public prayer srvlce was held for all those who feared themselves delinquent. Many a fair head bowed reverently in a peti tion to the Almighty to put the right answer in such head on the morrow. And as proof that prayer is potent only a small percentage of the girls failed to pass. Only two Democrats have represent ed the state of Pennsylvania In the United States senate since the Civil war. They were Charles R. Buckalaw, who served from 1863 to 1869, and William A. Wallace, whose term ended In 1881, PREMATURE BURIAL IS CHARGE LIE Marseilles Physician Makes Allegations Concerning Hospital Attaches. (Br the Internstteosl News Servtrs.) ' Paris, Jan. 28. Allegations of prema ture burial, and even of dissection be- . fore death, are made by Dr. Icard of Marseilles in a report on certification of death which had w.on him a prize from the Academy of Sciences Dr, Icard asserts that tn French hospitals the doctors never Insist on satisfying themselves of the actual death of a patient; the -word of a nurse is enough for a patient to be declared dead and handed over for autopsy, dissection' and burial. He cites forty cases of patients com- , lng to life again In the mortuary or oo the dissecting table. The last Instance occurred at Marseilles last September, when a man brought In as dead from the night refuge came to life tn his coffin. dying that night, this time in reality from the shock. . In one hospital In a large town, Dr. Icard states, the nurses to save time have been known to begin laying out a patient while still In the death agony. Mortuaries Criticised. The mortuaries are also subjected to the doctor's censure. The bodies, he says, are taken from the warm wards to the glacial atmosphere of a kind of cel lar where autopsy and dissection art carried out Students have seen the heart of a child beating under dissec tion two hours after the child had been declared dead. As a remedy against these abuses anl against premature burial In general. Dr. Icard proposes that tho reality of death should be tested by various sim ple chemical processes for Instance, by ad 'injection to prove definite stop page of the circulation. It is for the merit of these proposals and not for allegations that he has been awarded the Durgate prize of the Academy jof Scien ces, which ranks with the French Acad emy. Questioned with regard- to Dr. Icard's allegations, M. Mesureur, head of the Poor Law department declares that not one such case has ever come before him. Such a thing would be bound to be re ported. He thought that Dr. Icard had been misled. Hood River Defeats White Salmon. (Sperlsl Dispatch to Thm Journal.! Hood River, Or., Jan. 28. The Hood River high school basketball team de feated the White' Salmon team last night at Hood River by a score of 15 to 8. Hood River will have tho pennant cinched if they win another game. Journal Want Ads bring results. "N'v Hank Line Stamer to Reach This Port In April. When sho arriws on this coast on her maiden yoyage, the new Weir steam er Luceric.. which has been added to the Bank lino, will come to Portland, according to advices received by Statter & Cc... local agents for the Frank Water. house company. SlieuWin be due to sr. "Tive-hwnl)ont-th(r,mida7i "or 'April, lii piece or ma Aymeric,- wnicn will go on .the Australian Mall lino. .('.. The Lucerlo Is of 4100 tons net-register, and ' Is in command of Captain Mathle. She was launched at the yaMs ENNOBLED FAMILIES v INTERESTING STUDY (By the Intemstlonal News rVrrlre.) Berlin, Jan. 28.rhe condition cf many of the ancient ennobled families 6f Germany forms an Interesting study for. Professor Kekule von Stradnolts, From facts culled from thS records of tho Central Society for the Assistance of German Nobles, the professor dls covers that in some cases, the de scendants of families, whose nobility is apparent are earning a livelihood, sucn as it Is. as clerks, shopmen and minor 1 offlclalaMauyJiava-osmlgrated ,. to America, and there are- among these scions of houses Justly distinguished in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries A goodly number are passing their days In the ranks, having put in their term oi military service. BLACK SNOW FALLS - IN ALPINE, DISTRICT By the International Nt SerTicct Geneva, Jan. 28. A strange phenom enon recently occurred In the Bmmen thal valley and the surrounding mount ains when "black" snow fell to a deoth of 15 inches, giving the whole country, which was white with snow before, a funereal and most depressing aspect The first few Inches of snow was gray ish of color, as if mixed with ashes, but the gray became darker and darker in' hue until It was almost black. 'Such a phenomenon has been wit nessed in the Alps in former years aft er volcanlo eruptions In different parts or tne world, ana, on this occasion the Swiss scientists are of the opinion that tne black snow is due to ashes blown over the sea and Alps after the ' re cent eruption of Mount Etna. The cold' In the Alps on the Swiss- Italian frontier is Intense, the ther mometer registering 12 degrees below zero cenugraae on tne simpion. in a hut between the Slmplon and Domodos sala three persons have been found frozen to death, Practical Uplift. From au Exchange. "Look out, HI!" Rhouted the farmer's wife as the bit balloon soared over the farm with . the trailing anchor. "Them thar arynaughts will hook yeou up like a nsn ir yecji aon't watch out." "Gosh, Mandyi" gasped the old far mer as he dropped his rake. TeOU don't think they'd try to do such a thing pur posely, do yeout" ' chaj Rooking down here with the spy glass Is one of them thar Indiana writer folks, and he's working on a book called I "The Uplifting of the Farmer. v Reckon yeou netter gecp yoour fcye on that an chor.", " r- - - (Publishers' Press Leased Wire.) j Berlin, Jan., 28. The conservatives' are openly declaring their Intention to resort to oppressive 1 measures to sup press Socialism. One said recently n was not proposed to wait for socialistic violence, but rather It was intended to open the attack on Socialism. Herr Von Heydebrand told the chan cellor kindly that he would not dictate to him what form those measures should take, but it is clear that what Is wanted is something ,llke the Socialists laws of the eighties. Which enabled the government to suppress the Socialist propaganda wherever It ventured to show itself. It is expected that the Socialists will at least double their numbers In the next Reichstag. In the present house they have fifty. If they come back from next campaign with 100 to 120 represen tatives, and If their radical allies, whose present strength Is also fifty, do pro portionately well, the government major ity which has a total membership of 397, will have dwindled to perilously near vanishing point. Tho millions of Germans who vote for Socialist candidates, do so because they are discontented with the present condition of things, and the most ef fective way of expressing their discon tent is to vote "red." There Is talk of an Imperial house of lords as a check to the Reichstag; also taiK or uiBPegaraing tne tieicnsiag al together. And there is a growing de mand that it shall be made clear to the Socialists that they will not be allowed to upset an order of things under which the nation has grown to greatness and the prices of agricultural produce have reached . satisfactory figures, majority or n majority. The Reichstag debate on the Emperor's driveling "divine right" speech showed which way the wind is blowing ani equally plainly which way it is not blowing. It is not blowing against the ihrone. The emperor came out of the debate unscathed. The Socialists made most of the opportunity, but failed to i carry the non-Socialists left with them. The Liberals of all shades do 'not rellBh the Koenigsberg speech. They would far rather the sovereign would leave such things unsaid; but they have no quarrei with him at this juncture. , Allowance Is made for everything lie says or does. It Is not regarded tdo seriously even by conservatives. Bomb Thrower Polished. A kalserlantern has been sentenced to imprisonment for life for complicity tn the bomb outrage at Frledberg. A violent explosion took place in the town hall, wrecking the building, and Immediately afterwards two men rushed Into the Imperial bank and endeavored to rob the manager, who was shoj: in the struggle. One, man got away un percetved, and the other made off on a bicycle. He shot a schoolboy and two peasants who ran after him, and cycled on, hotly pursued by the police, until near Bad Nauhelm, when, finding es cape shtrVoff committed suicide.. We ner, his. accomplice, was arrested In Hamburg. He was tried at Glessen, Hesse Darmstadt. The emperor recently remarked, In conversation. "I am convinced that be fore long the French will be gravely disappointed in their engines of aerial locomotion. Personally I have quite made up my mlhd as to their worth, and If I am adopting them for the German ar my, it is merely to satisfy public opin ion and not because I believe in their efficacy In practical warfare." Elbing Is lq mourning as a result of a terrible accident which occurred re cently at " that place, Some hundreds of persons,; mostly young people, were skating when the ice broke, almost with out warning, and scores were precipl- tatit iniA u,p mun ... a panitt oasuod, and despite desperate attempts at res cue, thirteen lives were lost, five of tin victims being girls, and tho others 1 youtha and boys. . " . . . i"iiissi Hiiisyimia.iinsMlns pi, wlm mm I iWsa jmssmmsss, Journal Want Ads bring results. Last Ca Genuine Reductions CASH OR LITTLE PAYMENTS VI U VI r i Talking Machine f Headquarters Eilers Clearance Sale 3 :A Genuine Sale of Talking Machines and Cabinets! Eilers Music Hoiise Demonstrates Its f I liCabi- I V f I L -l I I ueis ( at '-' j Cost . 'sir f m I .1 1,11 I I Week. fA K Mi Selling Power Here in No Unmistakable Manner During This Clearance Sale. I 353 Washington Street We have taken ever the Talking Machine stock of several dealers who discontinued business. We have also quite a number of Talking Ma chines that will not be catalogued this year. These machines are offered at less than what stealers rerularlr nav when they bur te sell an n. si Each machine Is accompanied with ten, your se- lection, of records, free. 111 machines now til. and seme tor 11.75. 125 machines now IK.Se, and some for 116.60. 30 machines now I10.S1. 132.60 machines now $1171. ; 140 machines now 125. 89. 46 machines now f 34.60. 60 machines now $46.60. 75 machines now 141. 100 machines now S6B.80. until f 167.60, and still others $75. 200 machines now for $117.50 and, others $160. Also the following machines without records: $12.60 machines new $6. SB. $25.00 machines now $12.60. $36.00 machtties now $1176, $66.0 machines now $32.50, $12a.00 machines now $100. KXBB AJtB OTttO fllimTi Also nearly a carload of Car blnets, most of them the latest styles, received too late for the holiday trade, to be closed! out as follows: $10.00 Cabinets for $4 75. $12.60 Cabinets for $116. sift.ou t atunets ror J.30.P0 Cabinets for 126 00 Cablnnta fnr $30.00 Cabinets for $17.80, I4U.0U usblnets for $22.75. $50.00 Cabinets for $27.60. $66.00 Cabinets for $32.50, $75,00 Cabinets for $$6.60. tVT OW A WOODS MOMS. Wood Horns produce mellowest tones, we snau close them as follows. $10.00 Horns for $.7. $15 00 Horns for $10 On. IM.irnrnrTor $14.15, $50.00 Horns for $31.15, Opp. Grand Then SB.IO. ! 35. 12.71. H.50. i ! i i i i i trcf ess, - shut ass ir sss ii ss saa itt sss r tssi it m ir sail an