THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY HORNING, MARCH SI, 112. 11 H RULES GOOST PIE IF SALMON DEALERS SAY Closing . of 'Clackamas to Net Fishermen and; New Dead Line in Willamette, Question Anglers Take Issue. : . The high cost of living has bobbed up t In a peculiar way as a factor In a three- j viiihn quarrel oeiween . me uregon state fish commission, prominent fol- lowers of the ancient sport-'Of angling:, ' and wholes&le fish dealers of Portland, ! In which the, time, places and conditions ' under which salmon may be netted for commercial purposes are the basis of contention. . . '. J The high ost of living, flu fish deal-: ers assert with confidence, soon Wil get , In Its deadly work on. those who would , dine on the toothsome red flesh of the ; royal chinook. This by reason of recent . rulings of the fish commission, aided , and abetted by the enthusiastic support t of the anglers, closing the Clackamas river altogether, to set' fishermen and , . extending the dsdllne In the Willamette ; , river within wiilch no gill nets may b ( used to a point about 1500 feet below , the fish ladder. the Oregon City falls, ' Win Boost Priest. V f y 'All this, they saj, wOl have the effect of depleting the early -season supply of fresh salmon in the Portland markets by Just about half, with a corresponding soar In prices. Adding much to the i unhapplnesa of the dealers Is still an p other, ruling of the commission which . has lopped 15 days off the beginning of : the spring season, ;,.v " .' ! .. Thus no salmon may be caught this " year before May 1, where last year the u season opened April 15. The special - seriousness of this ruling, from the viewpoint of the fish dealers, lies In the t fact that these lost 15 days represent 'Just about the best period of the whole s.year for Big catches In the Willamette, j;The run of salmon there generally falls aoff to Very wimair proportions after the I .third week-, In--May.-; -i ;.:, - Now comes the pr rt played In the con- , troversy by the anglers. Representa I live' fish dealers charge with some bit- ternesa that the rulings are dlscrlml i natory against them, and through them ' against, the consumer, and that they have been Inspired by the cannerymen ' and anglers, each of these classes ha v. r lng a representative on the commission, i while the fish dealers alone have none. " Anglers to Rescue. ' ' They have even gone bo far as to pre- pare an Initiative measure to abolish the i present appointive fish commission and i substitute for it an elective fish com j mlssloner, which they 'will subnUt to the voters if. the coming general eleo f tion. ; ' .. vv-'.. ., ; 1 ' The cannerymen have not been heard ' from, but the anglers have taken up the rat ntlet with promptness. , Through the ..Multnomah Anglers' club, an organlsa- I tion scarcely three months ojd, but al ready boasting a lusty membership of !300, the actions of the fish commission are officially approved aa being for the , best interests of the state and the sal mon industry. The anglers deny the .claims of the dealers, commend the course, laid out by the commission in ' every particular, and declare they will ; come to its aid with strong support If ' tight Is made on it through the inltla . .tlve. .; , h j ,.- . ,v : H W. F. Backus, a prominent angler and Assistant secretary of the Anglers' club, yesterday denied flatly the assertions kof the dealer that higher- prices . for almon would rBlt from closing the -Clackamas and - enlarging the enclosed Jaxea in the .Willamette. Said Mr. Backus: " "For 10 or 12 years now, there has t been, a constant fight on the part of the 1 fish dealers to keep the Clackamas river open to commercial fishing. I " . ; -. Protecting the Salmon. "It has been closed at times, but the legislature tins been persuaded to open It again. For the proper protection of the J nalmon and for the sake of the hatchery, . this river should be kept permanently closud to net fishers, and the fish com mission's order Jg absolutely right and unbiased. , . - f, "As a matter of fact, very little oom- ri merclaJU fishing has -been done In the t Clackanjas river, only a few tons of fish coming from there every spring. The a evil feature of permitting commercial fisnlng in It Is that a couple or so of fishermen can set their nets so as prac- ! CHINESE ROOTS, BARKS AND HERBS Cure When Other Medicines Fail Free Treat ment Sent to AIL Simply Send Your Name and Ad dress Today. A Week in Oregon Wilds Along the Upper Humbug Creek In Virgin Timber of Central Clatsop, Wildcats, Bears and Other Forest Denizens Still Hold the Fort but the Dauntless Homesteader Is Gradually Pushing Ills Way to. InnnirnT ta shrill W& III lnblll ICIIIOPOBMID I'lllEII III EFFECT - . ,? ; . 200,000 Acres Rich Land Near Pasco to Be Irrigated and Brought Under Cultivation, Says B. S. Wadsworth. Scenes from the upper Humbug, eh owing the wildcat caught In two traps, and two typical homestead cabins, of which the lower shows A. R. Thompson at the left and the writer at the right- " eat'of a mink will do. can remove the pelt of a civet cat so deftly that no fajpt trace of perfume cling to him, and is In every way woods wis and sffl clent : . .. J riagwrs Canght la Heavy Tta. it waa the writer's province to cook, fish and look after camp, while Thomp son and Waterhouse set out a line of traps properly hidden from the keen eyes of nocturnal marauders. Mink traps, cat traps, coon and skunk traps were scientifically located and 'baited the day after we reached the cabin. The cunning of their location and concealment was exemplified by the neatness In which the writer was caught In a Newhouse No. i trap. Said writer had been angling Just above a giant fir log that Spanned the stream. An en ticing pool lay Just below the log, which looked good to him, ao he de- , elded, to climb over and yank out a few. A bunch of moss lay on the log, at exactly the right place and on this moss the angler placed his hand, when, ilp, and he found his fin gers caught in the Jawa ot a trap that would have held a cougar. . The grip was vise like and painful and the releasing of the Imprisoned digits waa a work of art Thereafter every piece of moss was shunned by that angler. Nothing wouia induce nun to touch anything that looked like moss. On the day after the angler was caught a cat had the misfortune to step into the same trap. In Its strug gles to free Itself It placed the other fore paw on another Innocent looking bunch of moss. Bnap, and two steel Jaws rose and clasped that paw, render ing the brute helpless. , A splendid picture was secured by TVaterhouse. while the defiant animal faced the men, with low angry growls, unafraid. The picture, thrown on the screen at a Seaside theatre, made the hit of the season. It was so lifelike that old timers were startled and wo men and children shuddered as they saw the malevolent glare from the yel low eyes. Mountain Beaver Vnmerons.' Humbug,, Necanlcum and North Ne halem are peculiarly adapted to the predatory animals, especially the wild cat, mountain beaver, which is distantly related to the beaver family, but the Oregon woodchuck, are abundant, and By B. A. Childera. ' Ja:" (SiwUl to The Joonul.t Seaside, Or, March 80 Far away in the mountain fastnesses of the Humbug, five settlers have located claims and are beating back the forests and build ing homes In tha wilderness. Among the settlers is the genial A, R. Thompson, all around good fellow, willing to share the Joys of his moun tain borne with, any adventurous way farer who may stumble onto his domi cile. . It was the writer's privilege to spend a week at Mr. Thompson's ranch by spe cial Invitation. On a gusty March morning, accompanied by James Water- house, whose feaUstlg pictures are al ways a surprise, the trio left Seaside fully Intent on spending a week un trammeled by conventions. , Each In tended to shovel his food Into his mouth with his knife and to smack his lips loudly when things tasted good, away from the arbitrary rules of polite society. He could gnaw a bone if he wished, or do any of the 'thousand nat ural tilings upon Which good form has placed a ban. -It took three hours to reach the point where the trail leaves the North Ne- halem road. Then the trio, bidding adieu to their driver, shouldered their packs and set out for Mr. Thompson's cabin five miles away. ... Twelve Trips Across Humbug. It was an arduous Joutney over giant logs, tangled brush and mud, knee deep. The Humbug was crossed 12 times, and, no foot logs being in evidence, the pe destrians cheerfully waded the rushing torrent whenever they struck it Water to two of them was a novelty, yet whenever they reached it they went in like seasoned veterans, knowing a brisk fire would soon eliminate all dampness from thejx clothing. . But ill spite of the mud, brush and cussing, the cabin was reached at last a roaring fire was made, clothing dried, dinner cooked and at 10 o'clock the tired men sought their couches and Were soon drifting into the land of pleasant dreams. "" ' - James Waterhouae is not only an artist with a camera, he is an artist at trapping. . He knows the ' habits and the habitat of the furry denizens of the forests; can tell just what a wlld- on these the, cats prey. , They are not averse, however, to a dainty zneaf of salmon or qualL On a' 10 mil stretch of trail, leading . from the North Ne halem to the headwaters of the Necanl cum, the writer counted . tha snots I where nine quails had been caught and the morning. The Humbug Is a turbulent mountain stream, wending its way through dense forests, down deep canyons, around and over boulders , and logs. In Its mad flight to the nearby sea. Along Its course grow giant firs and mammoth spruces; in Its silvery pools the speckled beauties lie awaiting the fall of the luckless moths and flies. Here the embryonic Isaac Waltons may angle to their hearts content Here, too, the weary toller, worn by the dust and strife of the office and street jnay lie under the pleasant sum mer sure, close to the great heart of nature, tnankful that there Is one spot free from the strife of the city. To-prov to the people who are sick, at my own exj.enne, 1 will send (free of J.. charjw, lAstage- naid, one of my free treat ii iu - to one.-perwm- in each f am ; Sly- My treatments are different from 't anything you ever took and are the - eame kind of remedies that have been ; us'd in China for over 4000 years. v They are nature's own remedies con i sisting of roots, barks and herbs and ! nothing like the medicines that American doctors prescribe. . If you are sick and ailing, if you f want to be cured, if you have tried i everything else, don't dt-BDalr. an mv treatments helu where other remedies nave laiiea. . I dO not Claim to tierform nilraxln S but I can and do cure cases that others havt Riven up, and I am willing to , lear the expense of Bendin this treat-:-nent to von. I want no mouev fnr it , If it helps you I want you to tell your t. - 1 do not treat incurahlo filnonsoa tint If you suffer from any or the follow ' "K .aumt-niB, pimpiy put a cross (x) m i font or your disease and I will send you the fre treatment. alien mat ism Xumbsgo Edema Scrofula Catarrh Dropsy Hies neuralgia . Diarrhoea Constipation Inolf estloa Headache Sisslness - Cut out this offer. Epilepsy Kidney Trouble Bladder Trouble Heart Siseaae Impure Blood Female Trouble Torpid Liver Partial Paralysis vmome couffh Malaria nervousness Pimples Xriing Trouble.. Asthma murk it as ex plained above, write and tell inj about your cane, and send to me, giving me jour TMine ana ecarftsa. 'lne trcul Tcnrto rotr-mr sarns-d;.?' your loiter 4s received. 1 will even pay ( Tne postage -io not wait until you are Incurable. Write today at one. i Ad iret tit cro hu Chinese Herb Co., "i". ja., iis tiuraoret u, tiaa rajv iiftua. ,. ).... . -., . ..' 7. tlcally to get every fish that comes into the stream, "Neither closing this river nor extend ing the deadline In the Willamette works any real hardship on the fish dealers. After the first three weeks in May there is virtually no fishing in these waters, anyway, and I don't believe the total catch for any season will total, in ap proximate figures, of course, more than (3600 to 15000. So all this talk about the great industry that is destroyed by the commission's ruling is bosh. There are not more than 30 fishermen In the Willamette river. Talk about increasing the cost of liv ing by raising the price of fish to the consumer is foolish. Of course, the wholesalers want commercial fishing In these waters, because since the fisher men have no other market, they can buy the fislr cheaper. : But t he j consumer doesn't profit. He pays a '.much for these fresh fish as for the salmon brought in from Sacramento. ; Just com pare the price of fish at different sea sons of the year and see. After a salmon has run the gauntlet and got into the Clackamas, it Is only right that It should be leit to get up to the hatchery, otherwise the hatchery supply will run short The ruling ex tending the deadline 1009 feet In the Wtllamette as necessary; because In trying to find the fish, ladder In the turgid water at the falls, the salmon Sdt confused and were practlcaly In a natural trap for the gill nettcrs to take. The little fishing done by the ang lers cannot be compared to commercial fishing. An angler is lucky if he gets one fish a day, and the law limits his catch to three, so he gives the fish a real sportsman's chance. Fur from be ing a rich man'B sport, it is the sport of the poor man. The anglers are with the commission In Its efforts to protect the salmon, and will support them to the limit" To4h assertion that only the dealers profit by commercial fishing In the Wil lamette, H. J. Barbey of th Barbey Fish company enters vigorous denial and quotes "gome figures. He says: - 'Huch a statement is not correct ir anyone doubts that the price of fish is affetted, let Mm analyse the figures. Right how wo have to Import salmon from Sacramento. These fish bring 18 cents a' tKund wholesale, which means VI to 5 'cents a pound retail. But as soon as the season opens and fine fresh, fish come in from the Willamette river, the wholesale ttrico drops t to .8 to 9 cents, which brings the retail iprice to i1J?'i fenta, .two rqunde . for a quarter. TSei for yourself where , the public's pocket Is bit "We maintain that the consumer has some rights here. 1 The commission is trying to bar the people, the ordinary oonsumers, from the rl-rht to the salmon caught in their own streams, but no ef fort is made to restrain the canneries, which yearly ship, thousands of pounds outside the state. The ruling that de lays the season from April 15 to May 1 is unjust and unnecessary. ' Fish do not spawn at that period, have no eggs. are at their best for eating; this rule simply hits the consumer again; yet in August,' when salmon should be protect ed, the canners are allowed to catch alj they please. Situation Called Unfair. - "We do not mind the closing of the Clackamas so much, for few fish came from there, but moving the deadline at the falls was unfair and uncalled for. What we object to is having the fish commission stand in like this with the cannerymen and a few anglers, and ig nore the wholesalers, who supply the people. We were not considered when these rules were laid down,, and we should at least have been consulted. We simply have no chance. In the regular season we can't compete with the can neries, and now the commission Is trying to cut off our early season supply be fore the canneries open. The people are the ones who suffer. , ';, 'The. cannerymen and th ander Knth have representatives on the commission. wimo we aione nave none. This is not ""'i we are in aeaq earnest in our mienuon to stop some of the high hand ed ubusa Of power that is trnin an We ire going to have a measure before the people to abolish this commission and substitute a commission elected hv thetpeople, who will at the same time protect the salmon and the Interests of the consumer." Rheumatism Home Care Cliu !j On WK Hi It Jtn the spring of ifi I vm attacked, by Muieular end Influnmttory Kbeamatlnn. I uffortd m oaJy Uioee vba htve It know, for orer three years. I tried remedy after remedy and doctor after doctor, bot such ElleLMAM',!lT,,4 w". BlT temporary. Finally, I found a remedy that cored completely, tod it dm aTr re tuned. I bare given Jt to a number wne were terribly afoloted and erea bedridden with Bbeutia Uim, and U . effected a ears la every cue. I want every sufferer from say form of rseumatle trouble to try tbli marvelous seal ing power. Don t end a ceati simply mall your name and addrea aud i will send U free to try rf . after foe cave uaed it end tl has proves ItaMf to 6 that ions iooled for matS curtn I0U Kneuroatlsm, o may i Maim, a--4l'S)awaea ytMii Bunny nuleaf res ,nCrrr ? wha poxittve Doo-teW Mafk H. Jackson, No. 74 "Alhem. bra Bldg., Syracuse, N. T. " 1 I. ""- The Palouse Irrigation project, near Pasco, by which It Is proposed to water 100,00 acres of land, means much- to Portland, according to B. S. Wads worth, of Cennell, who attended the re cent livestock, show In Portland. ' The Palouse irrigation porject was taken up by the reclamation service about 10 years ago. Preliminary sur veys were made and a large mass of information gathered by engineers Jpho dug test pits, measured the Tlow of rivers- and generally gathered such facts as would give the construction engineer information on which to plan the work of construction and operation. Then ths work was allowed to lapse. The reclamation service got so; many projects under way that some of them had to be finished before new xrork would be taken up. The land which is to bo watered by the proposed scheme lies north" and east of Pasco, and it Is proposed to take water , from the Paloose river, 'near Hooper. - The natural line for a canal was down the Washtucna coulee, and by the way the railroad found that to be most sensible route for a railroad to ConneU. The railroad appropriated the right of way before the government could gt control of the coulee, and aa a result the reclamation service was unable to use the natural route for the supply canal. . That was given as the principal reason, by some, for the dis tinuance of work. -s . ! Organised Effort An organised effort is being made to get the approval of the president and the engineers of tha reclamation serv ice for the Palouse project. A com mittee has been organised, funds have been raised, and the work is being pros ecuted vigorously, Mr. Wadsworth was sent to Washington last fall and spent two months spreading the facta about the country and the possibilities of the project Now he is making visits to towns and cities In which support should be gotten In an effort to enlist men of Influence In the work of promo tion.' - - . Government engineers found that about (10,000 acre feet of water was available in the Palouse river, for the watering of the lands under the project This would give three feet ef water an nually for each acre of the proposed 100, P00. With storare reservoirs on the headwaters of the Talouse much larper supplies could be gotten and an Immense power project could be developed. The I'alouse rises in the mountains of north ern Idaho and flows through a rich farming country to the Snake, below RIparla. Clark Writes Letter. Whtle Mr. Wadsworth waa In Wash ington he Interested the senators and representatives of Oregon and WTashlng ton in the work proposed, and found in Speaker Clark an able, supporter of Ir rigation. Speaker Clark wrote him a short time ago: ' ' "Kver since I have been In congress I have helped along aa best I could with the various Irrigation plans for the western country snd I have no rea son to 'change my mind on the subject I am in favor of Irrigating every piece of land which can be Irrigated at a cost that Is not prohibitive to the settlers, and I am in favor of doing It as rapidly as the situation demands. "V must have homes for our chil dren somewhere and It Is better to keep them In America than to have them wander off "into other countries. "I am willing to co-operate so far as I can In any feasible plan or scheme." An executive committee consisting of C. M. Huachllf f- and A. R. Mets, of El- hcrtcn. Wash., P. W. Cox, of Colfat. J. T. Billups, of Winons, O. X. Ifurph r, of Paloune, Capt W. P. Gray, of I asco, and B. S. Wadsworth, of C'onnll, has In charge the promotion of the Falouso project. The work Is beinu done und'T the auspices of the Washington Devel opment leasnf. an orminiaation consist ing of a largo number of commercial bodies in eastern Washington. INSANE FROM WORRY, PATIENT KILLS SELF ftliittod frei !.eaMl Wire. I.os Angeles, March 30. e Becoming suddenly and violently insane from urwuuiir uver fiia njuvut-iutia from tuberculosis' Robert Syers, 8T, left his bed in the county hospital this afternoon and dafching through long lines of cots, leaped to- his death through a two story window. ; His act Wfcs witnessed by scores of patients and several nurses, but Syers was too quick and they were i;nable to Intercept him. ' He was Instantly killed. A rooking school for 'cookff has been established in the dining car depart ment of the Southern Pad flo Railroad company. . Dentistry DOM AWAY SWTtmBLT WITH A TIAi ytATTS AND OHDXHAHT ;'; BBIXXfBWOBX. . s. ' "What's In a name?" "Alveolar1 is svnonomous with "Dentistry perfect d." Ths term Implies quality, dura bility and beauty. If we nave succeed ed in convincing upwards of eight thousand persons Of the superiority and satisfaction of our work, surely, then, we may lay claim to a reasonable amount of considers tion, and a fair title to more then mythical substantiality, and, furthermore, alaee we hsve done .so. not by anv occult and hidden power of legerdemain, or eoy practice of masrical art, but, purely by a plain, honest talk In the English language, snd a clear demonstration of the principles of our work. It were not reasonabl to suppose that we : hav hynotlred eight thousand human minds. Surely, we owe a greater respect to the Indi vidual Intelligence than to assume that every member of the human family today wearing Alveolar Teeth, has been deftly coerced, artfully compelled to accept our statements and our work, and: to hare done so, against a!1 the, powers of his reason, against all his doubt and skepticism. Had this been the case, and there had been nothing more than the power of magle In our words, there would have been such a back-rush and stampede of riotous, In dignant souls, as to make life for us unbearable. We have encountered, how ever, no wild ravin b. and have pro ceeded tranquilly along the , line of progression. Then, there must be some, thing stronger than words, weightier than argument, and more honest than fallacy and faklry. to have convinced the mind of, we say, st least, eight thousand beings, - thst we fulfill the prophecy of our creed. This thing Is experimental knowledge, and It's sub sequent satisfaction. We are not pub lishing a long list of the patients we have treated, for the purpose of hav ing them denounce us. . Who should know best of the satisfaction of Defl tlstrjv the Dentist across the etreeCN who knows nothing about It and whose i condemnation is ushered forth only be-. cause he hopes to gain your profit or that individual himself who has tried the work snd found it true? Alveolar Teeth Where Brldgework Xs . Xmnoaaifela- If Only your front teeth are left, sar w te wi a Mas eanlana kiiisri vi , v u a v lilVIO, WV WCa4 i ojiiuvu all those that have been lost on both sides clear back, with perfect Alveolsr teeth, whilst bridgework would be Im possible, even If you. had eight or ten front teeth to tie to. If you have only two back teeth on each side, say mo lars, we can supply all the front teeth that are missing with beautiful, serv iceable, lifelike Alveolar teeth. This could not possibly, he 'done by ths Is possible there is no comparison be tween the two. A very large percent age of our Work Is taking out bridge work put In by supposedly blcb-class dentists and replacing It with ths beau tiful and artistic Alveolar teeth. And, unuae ' onageworK in anoiner respect, It Is practically painless. No boring or cutting Into the gums nothing to.be dreaded. Now. then, prices being equal, which would you choose?, MMlia IIaab. a Aim- ease given up by other dentists as In curable, Is another of bur specialties. We cure It absolutely.- It Is a boastful tat -rnaba Kilt wa a m An sia I'd J to ii a, w ausan'o, Lsua, no av j thing that is possible in dentistry, and what. we do is always of the very highest class. Our booklets. Alveolar Dentistry, are free. Write for one If you cannot call, We have samples of our work to show at all times, and the very best of references, an army of them In this cltv and state. - ' AXTZOLAJa BEKTAT, CO- DtflTlSTS. mAvtl.aA AMnartui B1A . Hit Kft ge&ttla-- eigiit Bldjr., id and Pine. TERMS TO RELIABLE PEOPLE, LLT US SUPPLY Your tvery SICK ROOM REQUIREMENT Wicker Suit Cases Of importance to women when traveling is reliable baggage that is also light in weight Our Wicker Suit Cases meet every require ment in addition to being very low priced. V For tomorrow we offer a 24-inch Wicker Suit Case, with leather corners and straps; linen lined, with inside pocket, strong brass lock and bolts. Regular $3.50. Special, $2.34. Pegmoid Suit Case, sole leather corners and straps; brass lock and bolts; linen lined, with shirtf old. Our low price of $4.50 reduced to only $2.98. Parisian Ivory Ivory in all its beauty will be found here. There's a difference in ; so-called Parisian Ivory and our own that you should knowv about. . . ." V; : i -v, For Monday and Tuesday we will sell pretty Ivory Clocks at one-fourth off. They come in a number of odd shapes, are , small, yet good timekeepers. $255 Clocks, extra special $1.59 Parisian Ivory Nail Brushes.. ...,.. 391 PARISIAN IVORY TOILET SETS ..... ... . . . .$7.69 Set consists of handsome long handle Princess style mirror, hair brush with concave back, extra long bristles and cho'ce of two combs. ' Regular price $10. Special. V. . . .... . . . .$7.69 PATRONS OF WOODARD, CLARKE & CO. going abroad this season are invited to visit the famous leather house of "Mark Cross" while in London, where selections may be made and charged through us as their agents. Cus tomers! cards for this purpose issued by us upon application. . Ve Are Now Showing New Additions to Our Stock of Jewelry These are the latest in Parisian styles and .are decidedly attractive. You can secure your Easter Jewelry at this store at removal sale prices. Pearl Dog Collars, genuine lapis, Neck laces, Silver Bracelets and Bar Pins, all selling at one-fourth off. See our Fourth street window display. I Lavender Salts Large, handsomely decorated bottles;' salts, flowers and ribbons in colors to match any room decorations. An appro priate Easter gift. Price $3.00. Fountain Pens 3 ", Fountain Pensfor the business man and woman, the student and traveler ; pens for every hand and every purpose. Waterman's "Idear and Conklin "Self Filling," as well as our own well-known "Wood-Lark" Self-Filling pen. $1.50 "Wood-Lark" Fountain Pens, at 98c - Does your pen need cleaning or fill ing? Bring it in. Our pen doctor will fix it for you without charge. Carry a Light in Your Pocket You can do so with our new Im ported Cigar Lighter. Made in two styles. Each, 35t and 50t?;x Fisliing Time Is Here With the rising of tomorrow's sun ye fisherman will be stealing away to his favorite haunts where he can listen to the music and' swish of the silken cord and the merry click-click of his reel.. Your equipment will be most incom plete without a Camera because it tells the story of your battle with the speckled beauties in a way that will be of interest in the years to come. The Ansco Camera will do this better than is possible with any other instrument. Let us show and explain one to you.-. J NO. 4 ANSCO-3x4, folding style, fitted with very fast shutter and lens, and all modern attachments; fits the pocket and takes daylight loading films. Price only $15. ;',' ';; NO. 9 ANSCO, postcard size, folding style; very light and compact in carrying case. (You can't afford to go fishing without this instrument). Takes daylifht loading films. Made in two styles. Price, $20 and $25. fc Bring Your Exposed Pictures to Us We'll develop and finish them as they should be. Let us enlarge your choice negatives, and with the assistance of our framing department you'll Have pictures of real interest. . It's Time Now to Order Your Easter ." " v'v..'-Ejigraving For three days, beginning Monday, , you can get the finest engraved cards in the city at a reduction of , one-fourth provided you buy them at our store. 8 styles to select from. Price Includes Plate and 100 CarHs Script letter, regular $2 at. ......$1.75 Shaded Old English, reg. $3.50 at S2.G5 Solid Old English, regular $3.25, $2.45 Roman letter,. regular $3.00 at... $2.25 Shaded Roman, regular $3.50 at, .$2.65 31ock letter, regular $2.50 at. . . .$1.90 French script, plain, reg. $3 at. . . $2.25 French script, shaded, reg. $4 at $3.00 Closing Out of Easter Novelties Pretty Easter novelties and favors in large and varied assortment. . Bisque hand-painted . novelties, Papier Mache J novelties in ducks, chicks and storks; also" mechanical and musical rabbits. Handsome satin covered hand-painted Egg Favors, ; to be filled with candies. All to be closed out at to off. Imported French Face Powder " Made by L. Panafreu. We have it la,, all colors. Regular 75c box at 50. Monday Only Special $1.50 Oriental Cream . . .96 25c Cuticura Soap k . '. , , . . . 14 85c Woodbury Soap. , . . .lOtJ ; Roger & Gallet Perfumes Beautiful , flower odors, selling regular at 75c. frhree days' special, oz., 50t. YOUR OPTICAL PRESCRIPTIONS, if en- ' trusted to us, will receive expert attention. 'fWOOD-LARK" ROSE AND FRUIT SPRAY, used in season, protects trees and shrubs against leaf pests Spray now 1 m 0; ,1, I ' . "