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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1915)
.. . - '.S '' ' ' - i.J .i ' THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MOANING, MARCH 21, 1915 , ' ! i : - . ' V---' mm; IN FIERCE 1 r .'... I FIGHT, FORCED BACK, f ENTERING PRUSSIA f--: - -. r. j Kaiser's Troops Made- Bold I Stand, But Russian Forces! ; Too Strong for Them, -'--'--''' ! i JCZAR'S MEN IN M EM EL FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION HOLDS FIRST MEETING ;Autria,na rail to BUt Priemil, Itoulng Haavily; Koaalans T&ka 3000 J - Prlaoncra, 78 Officer. I Cnlted Pr Leaaed Wire.) J . Fetrograd, March 20.-rrTurning back German attacks with frightf dl losses to the kaiser's troops, the Russian - Jforces have spushed the enemy back . ;tr.to Prussia at points along the river iMemen in northern Poland, according J to- an official announcement. The Ger ' Imana attacked fiercely, but were forced back across the river. -; Tonight' official statement for the ;flrat time told of Russians occupying jMemel, a German seaport. - A Russian 'detachment took the town after a ;ahatrp engagement, during which there ywas much street fighting. Inhabitants Sof the town participated, ' J ,-Th .Germans wece forced to evacu- - late , Pilviszkl' after fierce fighting. Il'rom that point down the line to AIynyec, the Germuh offensive is be ing launched in dense columns. The jenemy la being-repulsed,' however, the jwar on ice stated. . ine tniriy-mnin illonved division was seriously tie- . ;feated in Thursday's fighting. : J Counter attaacks against the Aus- jtrtans, near Gorlice, by the Russians .succeeded in eaoturinsr 40,0 prisoners. , .Near Modowlsp the czar's' troops took th fortified heights by storm. Coun- tef attacks by the Russians in East 'Prussia were fruitless, the war office - admitted, as the enemy is strongly 'entrenched. J - Uesperate efforts of the Austrian? Ito relieve Przemysl failed. A large UlVIBion or iue Aueii iiiiis again u icu jFriday to .lrlve back tne Russians and lost with disastrous results. After a rbattle the Austrians were forced back Jinto the forts. The Russians took 3000 Sprisoners, 78 being officers. ibharles F. Adams i. . Had Interests Here s . ; Well Known Kan of Affairs, Who ' Sled Testerday, Once interested in I Irrlngton Addition. :- Washington, March 20. After an !illness of only five . days. Ovaries tFrancis Adams, who was once vioe .president of the Union Pacific rail-, road, died herp today. Bronchitis was 'the cause of death. Mr. Adams, who was well known as a man of letters, was born In Bos ! ton In 1835. He graduated from liar- "vard in' 1856, and served in the Civil war, -finishing as a brevet brigadier ReneraI. He was president of the Un ion Pacific from 1884 -to 1890 and was chairman of several railroad commis sions, overseer of Harvard and chair- ".man of the board that planned Bos- Iton'is park system. He was one of the ;best rknown publicists in the United States. INEXPERT I2CVE-W 0YJ New York, March 20. Defeat of the Anglo-French warships j by the Dar danelles defenses! in the first serious .engagement since the levantine opera tions began caused the present week to register the greatest naval loss In ton nage of the war. I j. .1 - .. ' . "' j Previous efforts by the allies to subdue the Turkish strait have been char acterized by much caution, which in turn has saved, the ; fortifications from serious damage. Three weeks of resultless conservative seamanship appar ently caused the! British and Frencn admiralties to authorize the warshipe to take chances With Turkish gunnery, which never would have been attempt ed against more western land defense. , !- ' i i f The result of "the conflict is to- demonstrate once more that! modern per manent fortifications cannot be subdued from the sea- unless inefficiency is rife ashore and luck prevails afloat. It Is apparent that the allies misjudged 1 Left to right George jRuble, of New Hampshire; William J, Harris, of Georgia ; Joseph E. Dkviea, of Wisconsin; ijdward N. Hurley, of Uliflois, and William H. Parry, of Seattle, Wash. 'Supreme Court of BusinefiiB," which has just been ENGLISH NETS SINK GERMAN UNDERSEA BOATS, SAYS REPORT Passengers .'Arriving From Liverpool Say Two Sub marines Sunk Near Dover. Charles Francis Adams was a fre ;quent visitor to Portland during his ;activel years in the financial world. iiie was last in "Portland live years ;ago. For years he was a heavy, stock holder in the syndicate that first put !the Irvington section of Portland on tthe market. He was also a stock .'holder in development projects at Clarkstdn, Wash., and had other prop erty interests In the northwest. His ; Interests in Portland were handled by ;the late C. H. Prescott, father-in-law -of E. C. Mears, Portland timberman. ;Mr. Adams, with the majority of the coiner early stocknoiders in the Irving- ton projpet, disposed of his holdings nerore the uoomcame for that addi- tion and railed to make the profit ort tne investment that would have otherwise been his. New York, March 20. Passengers arriving by the Red Star liner Lap land froni Liverpool .tonight declare that nineL German submarines have been secreHy sunk or captured by the British within the past two weeks. It is common knowledge In, London, they said, Ithat two German submarines have been! netted iit the entrance to Dover harpor and their crews drowned, though tle admiralty is suppressing of Its successes against the subma rines. Thb huge chains which formed the sunkeji nets stripped the propel- lors and'tjae rudders from both under water boats. One passenger who had been in Edin burgh, saifl that the U-22 was sunk in the moulM of the Firth of Forth two weeks agci and that the crew of -: the English tprpedo boat, which accom plished this feat; came to Edinburgh and related their experiences to news paper, reporters. The newspapers, however, were not allowed to print the The port workmen-It Llverpoc-1-have spread stories of the Blnklng of the German Submarines lit - the waters near Liverpool, They declare they have talked witSi the crews of the boats that sank I the submarines. The latest rumor in London regarding submarine captures was that an English crew had seized a German boat which sup plied oil to the submarines and that when four German submarines came to the sui-ply ship, the English seized their crews, made them prisoners and then seize! the submarines. 'i Despite denials at the Red Star line office in fLondon, the Lapland's pas sengers cdnf irmed a report cabled to New YorkJ ten days ago that the Lap land sighted a German submarine as she was leaving Liverpool and escaped attack by putting to sea at all pos sible speed. These men are the members of the niw Federal I organized. Mr. Davles was made chairman. The were sworn in by Chief Justice Cqvmgton, of the District Supreme Court, who was the author of the b when he was a member of congress from Maryland iLadd & Tilton Lose The Lepper Case which he Justice With Mercy, ExiHusband's Aim Called away from town on businesst ia in. Clark yesterday sent . Jury at Xiewlatoa Beturna Verdict for to CountjH Judge Cleeton a letter nA I ; Defendant in Litigation Orowlmi- out or Caahier Stock Sale. iewiston, Mont.. March 20. Tf-tnnir ,tne jury in tne case of the Ladd & . niion oanK or Portland against B. F. .nc-wwr uui m, nine over an hour to nuree UIiOIl A itnanlmnno .Awiin. - i favor of Mr. Lepper. The suit, which i was on iriai several days, attracted unusual attention, not only because o f the-larcre a.monnt invniv.i i.. v, -rauno -'of .its nature and the fact that ( $150. he pays for M I there are other suits of the same gen-ttenance each month nature penning. ! in tnis case. a. Lenner a i,uk- j known sneepman and landowner in th 'Flatwillow section, was indue..! hv a v.i ling, agent to -purchase stock in the United States Cashier com Dan v of i oruana, yr., to tne amount of i 117,000. He gave his notes for this stock. but later waa not satisfied and his i partner. W. II. darl, went to PortinnH Rnd called at the bank to mak iriHi me notes naa not been purchased s by It. He learned. It seems, that the bank had taken, the notes as collateral but. had found there was some con. j rgai a w pay men t and I turned them. Relying upon this th defendant claimed that the bank had inouce. ine paper was taken; how j ever, as collateral ror between 18000 .and $3000.' Mr, Garl testified to his conference with Mr. Woodworth, credit asksthat if any action Is taken in the case of his divorced wife, Mrs. Marcella Clark, during his ab sence she be kept from a publio asy limi. Mrs. Clark was declared insane recently. Mr. Clark said that he desired that she be ptfovlded with such care and medical attention as she shall need. Mr. Clark; suggested that some well balanced, Competent woman be selected as guardian, who will see that the Irs. Clark's main be devoted to her needs entirely. !. "I am furnishing Mrs, Clark a home. and, in addition, the sum of $150 month,"' hie 'said, "and- if the $150 a month and the use of the home la in sufficient to provide for any extra- some I ordinary or unusual medical attention. suen as care lor her eyes, or for any other purpose, I will make further provision within the reasonable limits of my ability to do so." Officers Permitted 1 To Attack Women Trenchmen Reported to 1 Save Said They Could Behave aa Tney Vleaaed After Croaalng tne BUst. rilerlin, -lia wireless to Bawllle. L jman for the bank, but the latter said I Match 20.t The Nord Deutsche Alleg h had no recollection of i. The claim I ma4fl toay published sworn stated or tne aeiense was that the notes 1 menis rrom several residents of Al vere secured through fraud and rrn I eaca detailing alleged convnrmiHani jmlsrepresentatiotu The case will, it witn Frenich officers during the recent is Deiievea, reacn tne supreme court. I r encn occupation . of portions of AU ''''' I aaca. Ths t,n(ih nffu.M ri - - I t. ii n Kill" f lDIIPr . tliiair nm I davits alleed. thv Ht .. - at a a ana a nm n a a . a -i w - r .-,j iuau ua una mm a i iiiivo ril II L.Clbeh4ve decently while in Alr. hni were given Mrmtmiinn tn. ttmv-. mil . I Wfim t otifl v.;ii i . . . spoaane, w asiu. March 20. Charles I t, kJ-I 'r creasing me . t tr n.ti i-. - i xv nine. -ii : i ; . . .v. rviuouu, vr., won tne individual all event championship of the third annual Northwestern Bowl j.lg congress, whiclii ended here to- night. Hie score for the nine games was 1852. an average of 205 7-9. t f J. W, Blaney, also of Portland," waa fourth in the singles with the score or bJZ ror three games j Jecod Quadruplet Dies. .'Heddlng, Cal., March 20. - Joseph -J Terry McKnight... one 4t the McKnight quadruplets, died at noon today. Only ; two or m cniiaren ootn girl now left. Difley Jurv UiWrnM ' 1 . Tacomal Wash . i Ufa 9n a i j ilidtf Jn 0 bours. the mixed Jury in thei trial f Mrs. Bertha Difley. for the mufder of 3-year-Old Clarence Hall, ro- potltd a! disagreement tonight, and wa discharged by Jud Card. The stale attempted to nmvo tu Dif ey. Itt whose icare the "Hall child had been left, through successive beat ing's, waa responsible for his death i 1" crtain whether Mrs. Difley Will be tried again: bur if h. . t, are I charge against her will likely be re : duced ..to bne of assault. ' Degenerate Kills j Girl, Using Knife Kail Marks of aCarderar round, in Throat of Tiny I.enore Conn, the Victim; riend Eaoapea. lSTew Tork, March Finger and naijl marks embedded n his child vic tim's throat and smeared on a pail carried by her were the gruesome and almost sole clues the police had to night to the identity ol' the degenerate "ripper" who murdered tiny Len'ore Cohn. An autopsy today di sclosed that the child had been criminally assaulted. Then as knife, believe to have been eight inches long, was used, fearfully, to mutilate the child. The police think the j finger prints offer! the best clue. They had little hope as a clue in a few strands of gray hair found in the hallway where the murder occurred. Neighbors of the widowed mother tody professed to have seen the girl last- evening with a "foreign-appearing, elderly" man. New l'astor for! Gaston. Fbrest Grove. Or.. March 20. Rev. Joseph G. Tate, for fHe years a pas tor , of the Congregational church at White Salmon, Wash., has been elected by the trustees of the I Gaston church to fill the pastorate there and has ac cepted the call. The members of the church are highly gratified to get a man, of Mr. Tate's ability. , With his wife he is now a resident of Portland. FRANZ JOSEF WOULD BUY PEACE BY CEDING GALICfA TO RUSSIANS hterstate Trade CommisRihn. th members ojf the new commission 11 which created the commission Efforts of Germany Emperor Give -, Provinces to Italy to Make Maritime Stir Him By Alice Rone, United Jfress Start Correspondent. Rome, March 20. Empsror Fraris Josef is becoming Irritated at Ger many's efforts to induce him to cede territory to Italy, according to Bucha rest dispatches received here tonight. The Austrian emperor has assumed an almost defiant attitude, after weeks of weary negotiations- He has assured the kaiser that rather than submit to Italy's demands he will cede Galicia to Russia and conclude a sepa rate peace with the czar. The majosity of the Ita lan papers took the view that negotiations con ducted by Italy through Prince von Buelow are about to be broken off. They expressed the belief that ther kaiser himself would be unable to sway the aged Austrian monarch and Dining Chairs Cut' $3.r5o Polished Solid Oak Diners, geh. leather seat SI .75 that war with Austria is at vi table. i , The setback suffered by at the Dardanelles aroused tjerest in diplomatic circles here tdday. ItijB Italian newspapers wfre most guarded In their comment, but gener ally seemed Jto believe that ing of the allied battleships a;n important effect upon the in Greece and the Baflkans. dispatches indicated that the rier organs of the new peace already we.rei taking advantage of- the apparent reverse of the Anglo-French fleet to throjw cold water on talk of Greeces' Intervention. i most in- the allies great . in the sink iwiir have war talk Athens newspa- ministry Legislators Take . Hands Off Clock Both Souses' a Mtasonrl Battling Ovar Appropriation Bills, Put Timepiece Out of Business at 6 O'clock. . Jefferson ckty. Mo., March il. With tke hands dff the, clocks in both branches of the legislature and work- tig under "tbje seventy-fourth), legisla tive day, Missouri's forty-eighth gen eral assembly was still in session In tie early hours this morning, battling oyer appropriation bills. ThJ-ee bills, tfte contingent;, deficiency and legisla tive pay, appropriation measiire were npt yet passed at midnight When the house and senate passed tl?e set hour for adjournment sine die af 6 o'clock last night the clocks were pht out of business. ' . ' j the extent of the the bombardment the advisability mentary conflict has been caused patriotic conduct of peace as well cast during the headwater shores The Importanc former and counted too much tm the latter. The failure of will probably hasten the decision of the allies concerning Of dispatching a strong military ., force for laryl operations along the Dardanelles shores, Two hundred thousand men may be needed for this work. -Whether the i forthcoming of fenalve, In France and - FJandera will permit such large expedition to be Bent t the Near East is a strategic problem for Lord Kitchener and General Joffre to solve. ' j- ; - Unions Win Out Over Military Authorities. ' -I British trade tintonism has won an Important victory during the week by establishing its superiority over military rule! The workingmen if the United Kingdom have compelled the i authorities to agree to the. appointment of a government advisory committee of seven' labor leaders. The committee will suggest to the cabinet the best methods for securing a maximum output of war supplies. This is the first time labor has-secured an acknowledgement of its claims to self-government during war time. A precedent haa been estab- be of immense importance-after tne war, in lurtnering tne socialistic tendency of British labor. The: Workingmen of England are en gaged in a strategic campaign of their own, and are lnvitinc a evere -parlia- after, peace ends the battiefieia stnre aiucn resentment among Knglish conservatives ! by what le oaljed the antl of the. workingmen. Thia will find better utterance in the house of commons when the war ends. . vj -v- t v- t- - '.-. - --.' The Roman government, which maintains a permanent censorsnip in times as In war, has permitted correspondents to teiegrapn oroaa week that Italy will, demand- all - Italian -Austria and the of the Adriatic as its price of continued neutrality.- Italy Trying; to' Zttghtea Austria. ' - e given to the diplomatic negotiations which' are in progress suggest that Italy is tryine to frighten Austria by loud talking. I . The most serious obstacle to a successful outcome of the present negotia tions is tha vital necessity to Austria f retaining her Adriatic J?orU. With out them, she will become an inland power, certain, to disappear as an imperial state, me rest ol her Italian provinces, Austria can give away without serious loss to herself: but if she parts with Istrla,) Austria signs her own death war. rant Should Italy get Istrla without fighting for It, the house, of Hapsburg announces Its doom. I - - ' 1 ' The? Russians have began another offensive movement this week by invading the northern- tip of East Prussia, hitherto (immune from ; the horrors of war. The Baltic port oif Memel, the northernmost town of the German empire, has been captured by j the Slavs, who, however, Cannot be prepared for more than a temporary stay.! It is apparent that (the Germans have left this! part of East Prussia unguarded because It bas no possible military value. A party of Rus sians seem to have seized the. opportunity Ito Inflict Isolated damage on the GERMANS REPULSED AND LOSSES HEAVY IN ATTACK AT NIGHT As Enemies Move on La Boi selle, Near Albert, French Troops' Explode Bombs, ROAD STREWN WITH DEAD Qerman XJnes . Broken by Tarrif la Fir rrom KaoMne Onus and Xlght Artillery; Other Defeata. enemy. No other meaning than this. attaches to the Memel campaign. Kills Himself ! Near Girl's Body E. T. Fleming1, Seattle, Beads Bullet Into Sia Own Head, as He Stands By Corps of Suicide. Seattle, Wash.. March 20. Despond ent over the suicide Friday of Mabel Cookman, a girl friend, who attributed her death to him. E. F. yiemlng, ; a Seattle railroad contractor, shortly be fore 6 o'clock tljls evening, i sent n bullet Into his own brain as he stood beside her body at 'the county morgue. Fleming died a few minutes later.' j Deputy Coroner H. E. MacDonald and R. A. uackett were present i at the; time, but neither could interfere. Be fore pressing the (revolver to his tem ple, Fleming, at the point of the weapon, had ordered MacDonald to let him see whether the girl wore any rings. When the! deputy coroner re fused the man turned the weapon On himself. - . I - Miss Cookman early Friday night, in her room In the Seneca hotel, swal lowed a large quantity of (carbolic-acid. After taking the drur the girl came into I Fleming's' room next door and threw herself , at bis feet with the story of what she had dotie, Miss Cookman was 26 years old and Fleming 28. The woman is survived by her parents, who live near Belling bam. . i .. .. . , . Becker's Cscape Rumored. New York, March 21. A rumor was current ou the streets j early . this morning that former Police Lieutenant Charles " Becker Under death sentence for the-murder of Herman Rosenthal, has escaped from Sing Sink. ' While : no confirmation! of the re port could be obtained, . Jt created a stir along Broadway. )" Martin Man ton, Attorney for Becker, stated over the' telephone at 2 a. m. that so far as he knew there was no foundation for the rumor.j A telephone message from Sing Sine at 2:30 a. m. said Becker was asleep in nis ceil at that Hour. By Henry Wood, United Tress Staff, Correspondent. Paris, March 21 (Sunday) A Ger man night attack directed against La Boiselle, three miles northeast of Al bert, was repulsed with heavy losae.i. according to official dispatches : re ceived here at midnight. . Heavy shelling from the GeTrnanTar tljlerx positions gave warning of the attack. As the enemy's Infantry eann charging forward in dense formation the French, troops explodpd lllumhuit Jng bombs in front of .their trenches and played searchlights upon the h'I vanclng columns. Into this mass, French machine guns and light artillery poured a With ering fire that broke the German linen before they reached the barbed wire defenses. The road leading north from I,a Boiselle was strewn with Germans, dead and wounded. Defeated in an attack upon tlie French positions west of. Perthes, in the. Champagne region, the Herman remained In; their trenches today, in the-Argonne and near the'Meuae sev eral, violent i Infantry engagements oc curred. A German infantry camp neyr Bolante suffered heavily from a French artillery attack and-around I parges, a two days''. fight for poxHew sion of a position held by the Cwnun resulted succettsfully for the Kronch. "In the Woevre region French artil lery wrecked a blockhouse occupied by the Germans and destroyed several ammunition wagons and a supply de pot. French troops inade a wllsht prog ress in -le Petro woods near -4'oni-a-Moiissonf The .allies have begun a - vlgorona offensive movement in the I'niit-a-Mousson region, with the -German for tress of Meta as their objective, ac cording to a Geneva dispatch -recelvcl here tonight. The Germaha'are hurrying reinforce--ments to the frontier it waa .'reported. 'They have ordered the evacuation ..if fell frontier towns and Vlllauea wlrliln the military zone Hurroiiuding Aieta, fearing that 1 the French population may give aid to the Invaders. The Big Sale Wifl Soon BtOicr Thta la furniture ibayliig time! Don't wait til: we've mored. We must lighten the load of moTlnc as much aa is poaaibla. We'd aooner aell furniture j at coat than move It. The Droblem of moTln ao many tetia of tbousanda of dol lars in gooda is not!: a tmall one. especially when one I conaidere we muat keep our old atore opea one uax una1 pe moTea ine next. ee the idea, don't Your Credit Tou you i Is Good ' ' - ' i i . - . .1 . ,. . I : ...,.'. i ;, - - - . : - .-, , ( . - . .. .. ' .......... - l .. ' ' .... Anotlfer of Quadruplets lie. Redding. Cal., March -'20.- 'Another of the famous McKnight. inndrupletf. Lorn last week, died this afternoon. He was Joseph Terry McKnight. Only the two girls of the four infant who were born . within a few wlnulea . or each other are left. ; Lace Curtains Half Odd lots of 2 and 3 'pair's,- icc, for cvniclc removal at from 75c to $5. ! Worth twice that. .. . Your Credit Is Good We neer mlna an opfKirtiinlif tn ou thla. So marry nloro rnrlail eredlt or enlln-lr rofnre ii. rlLirioif aalea. NOT THIS KfOICKt Our aame old terma f ttayuient Ik. hi good. M)W la eei-tahily tlia rtaht time o buy. Iw prlera, e-' eaxloned by tlie bla reiociral aale, ntW g hind In Tinnd wltb the nmt liberal of eri)a. Woidilnt SOW be a (ood tluie tu bujr a w outfit? WeWantYouioUselt -Half Price on These Big Comfortable Rockers If -tBe "i r I I i ,1 1 ther Rock- $7.75 $9.75 Rocker An $18 at.. $9.00 seat and $15.50 Auto Seat, golden oak leaj er at only ..... Auto Seat Leather Rocker in fumed oak Loose cjushion back. Regularly sold at iy.5U, now at J . Waxed, Golden Oak with leather seat, regular seller, now Fumed Oak, leathef , back Rocker. A $32.50 seller -now on sale at onljy.. $16.25 $27.50 Funied Oak Rocker With leather automobile eat. Hand some and comfortable $13.75 Fumed Oak. leather seat Rocker that regularly sell at $12.50, noy on sale at ... $6.25 $10.50 Golden Oak Morris Chaif. T"a a . - r a a. -rreny stuitea cushions, now goes at $5.25 4 Choice Irifi n? C . def er Pattern. i uu-r iece dinner oeis $1 1 .y u Your Old Stove Part Pay me nt II 7 I i 1Z7 II on This Range Discard your old kitchen drudge. Get a Jlonarch the only range that is fully guar anteed. We guarantee in writing to replace any part free that break, cracks or warps wjithin 5 years of purchase. Pay the easy Edwards way. .We 11 take your old stove as part pay ment Don't wait. The Monarch Will make its - cost in fuel-saving, back- saving, and in great efficiency. 1 ..1 1 ... Reg Time mere Removal Prices (JJQ Cfl 9x12 Reversible Rug 7C pO. JU. h Beaalifnl Designs, Now ' .".''. ; ' r - 1 . - 1 -- $5 Down, $5 Each Week Buys It) n V .1 11 . A m wt a. rveguiany sens at xa.VU i - w.... a vj w.ci.w, uctiuuiui new DanErns. nannsnm nenm- tions. xnis is Lnnnerware lit to grace any table, and yould be poud v uwu a set. oee wem wnue tne selection is good. , j You Can Buy It the Easy WaV $4.50 Sanit ary Couch Now $2.05 Heavy bir-coil conatrudtlon. Frame Is very heavy. (This couch wili stand up when fused as a davenport or settee Where most codchea soon sac;! and break. A bargain at 14.60. Twide a bargain at 82.95. Child's Crib $3.95 Side lift, .aagleaa, twin link guaranteed apringa. Whit enamel or Vernia Mart In I f inishJ Sise ia 28x64 inches. Thla is the great est offer in a child's crib we have ever had in our i store! I They're going; fast! If Vour ljtt' one needs bed aaa this bargain! , ' I'; - . ' - ! --- . S M Worth af Furaitura 1 6.00 Caab 76 Wwtk af Turnitura S7.50 Oalh i $1.60 Wni $100 Worth of Furniture 110.00 Cask : 92.00 Weak 185 Worth af Fuinitora S1S.60 Cmah - - $2.26 Watk 9150 Worth af Fumitura 916.09 Caah - ' 9S-60 Waak " 9300 Warth ot Furaitare 920.00 Caak 53.00 Waak Mirrors at Removal $3.75 14x24: Inch at. . . $5.00 16x20 Inch at. . .$3.95 S7.00 18x36 Inch at...S5.75 $8.75. French Plate at $5.9S $10.75 French Plate at S7.75! $12.00 French Plate at $8.85' ,. I I A GOOD PLACE TO TRADE t 1 $30.00 Seamless Wilton VelvcU, 9x12, are now $22.50 $25.00 Axminster Rugs in beautiful colorings at $14.75 $25.00 Seamless Velvet Rugs, 9x12, how at $18.75 Axminster 1 1-3x12 Rugs now on sale at only $31.50 Extra Large Sizes 10-6x13-6 Brussels Rugs. . . .$27.00 16-6x13-6 Green Wiltons are now . . . . J . . . . . V. $48.00 10-6x12 Bundhar Wilton Rugs reduced to. . . . .$52.50 $9.50 f0"!" Mattress $5.65 The greatest of ail Mattress bar- . , ':. ! eainvA Pure cotton! felt.' Ihioc- 1 . rial edge. Has a cover of a fine grade of licking, 45 lb . .weight. It 'is built' up of many layers of. i selected cotton; especially treat- eu 10 give permanent resilience. i It is a won derful buy at I its usual price -a whirlwind !l at the remov ial price." , - Pay Edwards Way esfel FIRSTS $13.50 r!Am.i;nA Rii. $27.50 Brass Bed $20.00 Brass Bed $22.50 Brass Bed Bed $6.90 ....$10.00 .816.75 ...S18.00 $45,00 Brass Bed L.....S27.50 $50.00 Brass Bed LV.... 829.50 $60.00 Twin' Brass Beds $35.40 i 1 A. v