The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 29, 1919, Page 15

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i A MURDER ASE IS CALLED, Kienstra Admits Killing at} Preliminary Hearing Edward F Kienstra, Seattle at- ey, charged with the killing of n Cicoria, Italian political pioneer cafe man, on October appeared before Police Judge in B. Gordon Wednesday morning | @ preliminary hearing, * CLEVELAND, 0,, Oct. Seizure of the government of Cleveland thru a reign of terror by wholesale dynamitings murders was the principal aim of the six men and one woman un- der arrest here in connection with a plot to blow up the Cen », © Witmon Tucker and Walter Fulton come ——— ee k; nted Kienstra, Fred Brown.) 4 widespread roundup of foreign: | uting attorney, handled the! horn persons and others known to me's case. have affiliation with radical elements & Kienstra is charged with shooting | was ordered by Chiet of Police Smith " Clooria following a quarrel in the/ myo “seventh of the prisoners was cafe over an Italian divorce] taken early today, following the cap hich Kienstra handied. Cicoria, | ture of the other six last night | Bécording to Kienstra, followed him |p, 46 his office in the Pioneer building, | niosive: Where Kienstra says he shot only | ine prisoners to blow up a dozen Bfter Cicoria had slapped him and) iarge puildings. In addition, re & move as if to draw a revolver | voivers, knives and other weapons bia hip pocket. ‘ Arresting Officer Called G. W. Humphreys, the arresting | wr, Was the first witness called the state. He told of the arrest Kienstra in the Seaboard bank | ling. following the shooting. | Did Kienstra say anything to you | Bt the time about the shooting?” In a d Prosecuting Attorney Brown. ‘es; he asked me if he hit the boss said they found enough ex concealed in the homes of were found, they say the Coast? BY WILLIAM L. HOLT, M.D. Vital Statistician of the Los Angeles County Health Department is that allt le asked me if I was going to him down to the police station. also told me about going to eat Mecea and about the arrival of He said Cicoria struck him y the cafe and about 20 minutes) Appeared at the office. He ask hhim to go out into the hall, He that the Itallan struck him and said, ‘I'm going to kill Tt was then, according to . that he pulled the gun and fornia without war and without im- | migration? | This seems an absurdity, Yet I gan prove by mathematics that if the white and the Japanese population in California continue to increase at their present rates, the Japanese will outnumber the whites {n about*a | century. To be exact, in the year . a population of over 5,000,000 and | would equal one-half the white popu: Gerdon, special agent of the | !ation, and in 2024 they would num Ing attorney, was called to| der 12,000,000, and would just equal stand next and produced the gun | the white population. Now, every one of the 12,000,000 Mttle brown men of Nippon would be &@ native-born American citizen, en- titled by the American constitution to vote and to hold property. In the year 20: they would exceed the testimony that Clcoria died| White population by a million, and ‘A gunshot wound. if they all voted together would . Fulton said he would ad.| clearly control California politics. that Cicoria died from a bullet! Then the peaceful biologteal con ‘caused from a shot fired by | Quest of the Golden State would ap: held in Kienstra’s hand. parently begin. In 14 short years) the Japanese population, if atill un checked, would exceed 27,000,000; the brown race would outnumber the Caucasian two to one; the conquest would be complete. Is It Old Bogey? I can see our “practica cians* and “hard-headed Sonal men” pooh-poohing these startling statements and saying, with a smile of superior wisdom, something like this: “Oh, well should worry! A statistician can lie worse than a lawyer. You can make figures prove anything. Some such calam- Fatal Gun Produced eutor Brown called for Coroner Corson, but the la: ‘was not in court. Brown told the that he would show by Cor. Curnna, 1: wi of the deceased, and P. Seattle attorney, testified to | ™*' white immigration were and the Japanese much Increased. But we shan't allow any more Japa- nese to come into California, if the | federal government will agree, This is the old imaginary bogey of ‘the seliow peril’ in a new dress, which the prodiermans are always trying to frighten us with. We don't get scared so easily.” How He Bases Forecast I wish most heartily that there were some truth In these quieting objections, or that I were mistaken in my original research and compu- tations, which I have been making in this matter for many weeks os vital pee toe of St toe. | statiaticlan Of the county health de- : | partment. Unfortunately, I know . = | that the figures on which my eati- “Se mates were made were published by a ‘ the United States census bureau and the state board of health, and are re- Mabie. . 2% Please notice that I do not state unqualifiedly that the Japanese pop- TRUSS TORTURE | ulation will reach 12,000,000 in 2024. ee. oe users & {Be | I say that it will be if the present | birth rate of that race in California fe trial to prove fa superior |econtinues during the coming cen- A. LUNDBERG Co, | pnei Let us hope that it will much ‘Third Ave. Seattte, | diminish, as, indeed, the birth rates Ee REE. nn i nesenns eaten Me Relea REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS Shields amendment to the peace. Cppecite Preser-Patersen On SUNDAY NIGHT For the Week, With Matinees Wednesday and Saturday THE SELWYNS SERVE A REFRESHING Com by ROL COOPER ME: NORMAN HACKETT AND AN EXCELLENT CAST PRICES MAT, WED. (BEST SEATS) $1 NIGHTS 50¢ TO §2.00 MAT. SAT. 50¢ to $1.50 MAIL ORDERS NOW METROPOLITAN (Plus 4 War (Tax Can Japanese babies conquer Call: | | 2007 A. D. the Japanese would have | BOMBERS PLOTTED FOR PLANS - CAPTURE OF CLEVELAND The identity of only two of the privoners was mi known, ‘Theo- ly a Leover, i, yard worker ing Nigh explosives and [in his posseasion without a permit Steve Ma ka, 40, a machinist, is der a similar charge hip with hav weapons dore form smith made to here Chicago Informed |that an attempt was to be blow up the police men police station had been ever since Davis of Cleve: June 2 Hin own he tracking the pris |the home of Mayor land was blown up, one waa injured Smith said his men took from the prisoners one completed bomb, several uncompleted bombs, three hotties of nitro glycerine and other articles used in the manufacture of infernal machines, sald on Can Jap Babies Conquer Los Angeles Health Officer Says “Yes” jot other foreign peoples have alwayr done in the United States in later | generations, Please remember, howe lide Geenetes’ popuation has hen computed quite without allowance |for immigration, whereas white tm migration has been allowed for at the same rate that has obtained dur. ing the last decade. Indeed, most of the great increase that I expect in| the white population, from under | 3,000,000,000 in 1917 to over 12,000. 000 | in 2024, will come, not from white | babies born in the Golden State, but |from white Americans immigrating lin large numbers yearly from the Eastern states. The white birth rate is, unfortun- ately, so very low, only about 16 per | thousand during the last decade, that without any white immigration the only 4 per thousand annually, or only 4 per cent in a decade, In the| century ending with 2017 it would not | have increased even 60 per cent with out immigration, and would be only | 4,200,000, or about half the Japa- nese population at that date INEW GLAND MAN IS FULL OF ‘PEP’ Feels “Youth Re Returning Al- ready,” Says Prisoner SAN QUENTIN, Cal, Oct. (United Pross.)—Having seven pounds during his 29.— gained 12-day terstitial glands ¢f Tom Bellon, was released by the doctor of San Quentin prison today “I” felt so good he wanted to go back to work «=a cell tender fms mediately, but the doctors told him to walt until tomorrow | “J” was given the glands after Bol- jon was hanged, The glands, ac- cording to prisonern who have Previously undergone the operation, will give renewed youth and “jazz.” The old prisoner, who has yet to serve nearly 60 years tn prison for murder, repeated today that he felt like a new man “My youth is returning already,” said “J.” The doctors at the prison refuse to say the operation will profong life, but they belleve that it will, since it rebuilds the body. Chap Without Clothing Shy as Trial Nears Ludwig Mosher, arrested Monday by the police charged with uniaw- | cuny wearing the unifgrin of a U. 8. sailor, is a worried man. He doran't know what he is to wear when he is arraigned before Comminsioner R. McClelland Wednesday after- noon. According to Ludwig's story, he was rooming with an unknown sailor, who proposed in the morning that they exchange clothing. Dressed in the gob's “blues,” Lud- wig hit the street and wandered up |the main boulevard. His arrest fol- lowed. The sailor, “civies,” has disappeared. The problem confronting Ludwig is that it is illegal for him to con tinue wearing the low-necked sailor suit of a U. 8. jackie and he has lost his other clothes. And he doesn't know how the com- missioner will take it, if he appears at the hearing in a sere White Boy Shot _ by Negro Youth DANVILLE, Va., Oct. 29.—Claude Parker, 10, died here today as the result of being shot thru tho stom ach last Friday by Vernell Carring- ton, a negrd boy, Details of the shooting disclosed that the boys had quarreled over a kite, and the negro went home, se cured a pistol and shot Parker. Parker identified the boy before he died. attired in Ludwig's Driver of Whisky Car Is Bound Over Charged with “carrying smuggled) | goods in an automobile,” W. W. Pow-! ers, arrested October 23, after it is jalleged four quarts of whisky were found in his machine, was bound | by U. 8. Commissioner R. W. Me- Clelland. He is held on $500 bond. Powers said he got the whisky from a longshoreman on the Kast Water- way. PROFITEERS SCARED OUT Sugar profiteers are becoming searce in Seattle, according to Miss Ethel Dean, secretary of the King county fair price committee Wed- nesday, The committee has had no com- plaints against sugar exploiters in the last two days ° white population would increase by | over to the grand jury Wednesday | AN SMOKER ARMISTICE DAY Veterans to Parade Streets on November 11 Every army the man navy or world who served In the rps during a resident of ttle, will be the guest of th Veterans of Foreign Wars at a ble jamoker to be staged at the Crystal | Pool the evening of Armistice |Day, Tuesday, November 11 Under the supervision of County | Trea: surer William A. Gaines, hair a) f the entertainment commit tee for the veterans’ organization, an lelaborate program, consisting of | vaudeville acts from every theatre jin elty, several boxing bouts Jand patriotic speeches will be given The celebration of the first anni versary ¢ Armintion Day will be observed by ex-service men with a big parade the night of Novem- ber 11, which will start from the veterans’ headquarters, 1616 Third ave, and end at the Crystal Pool, Co! Willlam M. Ingtis wilt }lead the parade as grand marshal |The band of the Veterans of For- letgn Wars and porsibly the marine band from the Puget Sound navy lyard will be in line Seats at the Crystal Pool wit be |held vacant until the paraders enter the hall Chairman Gaines wishes sugges- |tions regarding elaboration of his program, marine ¢ war, ne on the ‘ALLEGED SLAYER TRACED BY WIRE Sam Pulaski Is Is Reported in Net for Murder Here | Betleved to be the man who shot jand killed Peter Butchenski and wounded his wife, Machartina, at 217 Findlay st, January 18, Sam Pulaski has been arrested in Nanticoke, Pa. according to word received here to day Pulaski answers the description of the murderer, according to Deputy Sheriff Ralph Hammer, who has traced Pulaski by telegraph across the continent to Pennsylvania. The murderer escaped with $2.700. Pu |laski was charged with first degree murder by Prosecuting Attorney Fred C, Brown, following the com mission of the deed. The story told by the wife of the murdered man is that Pulaski, his} sister, Polly Rodak, and her alleged paramour, Hede Horka, planned to kill Butchenski and take his money | After the shooting, she says, she naw | the face of Polly Rodak staring thru the window, The three fled East, | she said. | Pulaski was first located in Chica £0, last Easter Sunday. getaway to Pennsylvania and trav ity might conceivably happen if the |stay In the hospital, “J,” the prisoner | sled under an alias, Hammer rays. Bes checked | who was given the reproductive in-| The chief of police picked him up renga ata per there Rutchensk!'s widow haa remarried jsince the murder, and is now Mre Waldziumas } An uproar in the house on Pindtay at. drew the attention of neighbors the night of the murder. A man an awering Pulaski’s description was seen sneaking away from the house The wife of the dead man ran out of the house and spread the alarm, al tho wounded hernelf. lo | A child of the dead man afterward declared | “My uncle Pulaski shoot my papa and mamma.” Extradition papers for Pulaski are le | being prepared by the prosecuting a! torney and will be forwarded to Olympia for sanction Thursday. Male Vampires Shock Visitor, He Tells Mayor If George FE. Brownell is to be be leved, Seattle's main thorofare is cluttered up with bold, bad mashers. Brownell is a visitor in our midst from the effete Mast, meaning New York City. In a letter to Mayor Fitzgerald, Brownell wants to know ‘whether there is a law in this city which may be invoked to crush the male vamp "If there is such @ law," writes Brownell, “why is it not enforced? I live in the East and never tn my life have I seen so many women tn- sulted. Never have I seen so many men attempt to force their attentions upon women as on the streets of Se- attie, in hotels and in apartment }houses. I asked one woman who oglers why she did not complain to} do any good. I wish you would do something about this evil.” Seven Drowned on Coal Steamer OBWEGO, N Oct. 29.—The steamer Homer W, Warren, Captain 8. W. Stalker, from Toronto to Oswego, with 500 tons of coal, of here, in the 60-mile gale that swept the lake Tuesday afternoon and night, All hand»—seven—were lost Burglars Visit Burglars robbed George Cowan's department store at 5631 Duwamish ave, early Wednesday morning of $16| lin cash. ‘The money was obtained from the cash register, The thieves left no clues. Olaf Hanson, 201% Second ave, 8., reported the theft of a suit of clothes and a watch from his room, Wednes: day morning. Burglar Comes But Charles Cares Not Charles Friedman, 3004 Yesler way, lay In his bed late, Tuesday night, he reported to the Wednesday, and watched a burglar go thru his clothes. “1 didn’t care,” reported man, “because I was broke. Fried- According to Uity Sealer Morris Elder, the people of Chicago pay $2,000,000 yearly for wrapping paper weighed with their food purchases. He made his | & the police and she said it would not| foundered off Sodas, 40 miles west) Duwamish Store|”: police | POTATO PRICES TO BE BOOSTED Eastern Washington Frosts Reason for Advance Further advances in the onion and local produce wholesalers, leged by them that the onion crop | this year is far below normal. large quantities of potatoes have | been frozen in the recent frowts Kant | of the mountains, may the dealers. ‘The exact amount of the loss will not be known until the ground thaws and digging recommences. The potatoes were left in ground because of the shortage of cars for shipping purposes and of storage facilities, The lows of the wpuds, therefore, ts blamed directly on the absence of these facilities. Tho Kastern demand ington potatoes is heavy but few shipments can be made owing to the lack of cars, Unieas immediate re- lief in given the growers, this part of the state is bound to be over sup: plied with the spuds and prices ought to drop. dull Tuesday of rain apparently kept most of the Krowers under the shelter of their own roofs. A |is on band and is selling at 16 per pound. The quality is good, Tho most people are not aware of |it, & banana shortage exists in Be- attle. Present prices of 10 cents per pound are the highest ever recorded in the history of Western ave. The scarcity is attributed to deal- Jers to an undersized crop in Central | America coupled with the atrike of |ntevedores in New Orleans, the port lof entry into this country. The de- 10 cents per pound. Prices will probably go no higher this winter, lmay the dealers. * * Nerts—Loeal, per sack ... Cabbage—Danish ball, heed Carrote—-New, per sack . Cotery—-Lovat ° Cocumbers Per @oa— Hot hove . Fan Piant—Per cra... Gartie— Por % . | Chinese, per ™. . Green Onions Per dow bunches 'Green Peppers Bell, Cal, Noreseradish Root — (Hubbard Squash 1562.00 20 .0r% “i 20 eery Tery Pe | 2TH ne "| Lettuce |Ontone—Orexon, per M. Parenipe-Ver sack .. re ® ta eh Local Rweet Potatoes le ” per ber Maney Mall wl. per wack rrurre ia rar ok | E Wash, Dettet | 2 bh Jonathane Apitaenberas Guatamal er Crabapples—Tronacendent, bow 2 ranberrice— Per box a6 ton phere Emperors, per lug Tokay» Valencias Peare— K. Wash. Winter Nettie, box. — Almonds—Ter T. | Brasil Nate—Per % Filberte—Per tT . Walnate—Soft ahell, per %. Binck Weinute—Per . Virginie Keystone, T; uantry, dremeed . olee ight, per ‘Seaium, per To Veal—Fancy | Salted ides, cowe,and steers, No, 1.. | do No. 2 Green hides, | do No. 3 | salted bul No. had been insulted by one of these ho-| ber: hides, Ne. 1 os do No. 2 Dry bulls or stage» aah “tail srown, . or eréen kip sxina, No 1... No, 2. heep pelts, long woo do medium wool, ea short wool, each Barley Ground Clipped $3.00@46.00 57.00 ute 0072.00 +68.00@ 70,00 70.004972.00 00 Cocoanut Meal Chop . \Corn—Whole | eracked ... Ground Bone . Bette [Milo Maize’. } OMI ru) Trmothy Tim 5 4 rove ares «26,00 @ 38.00 77.00 79.01 \Straw . 16,00 @ 18.0 Wheat . +78,00@ 80,00 Quotations at Stockyards Hoge— Primes Medium to choice Ro Keratch Food +14,50@16.00 +18,60@ 14.50 12.0067 13.00 | Bee a secees +19,00@ 14.60 | cattie~ Host stoors .... Medium to cholce . Common to good Kittens are selling for $1 each in catloss Belgium, spud markets are being presaged by | It ts al-| for Wash ‘Trading on Wostern ave. was very | The heavy downpour | Mberal supply of ackiemerrieay Beard of Trade today mand for bananas is good even at| _ Local Markets |" LTITA190 + 2,440,270,00 81,532.00 . 8,002,946.67 Balances 2,676,000.88 \e——__—__—___—_-# Status of the New York _ Stock ck Exchange New TORK, Oct. 29.-Laeding issues were again strong at the stock market opening today, with General Motors fen-| the 3 jor During the fret half hour Republic | Steel made & new high for the year at |124%. Corn Products reached Worthington Pump sold above & clone at 101% ‘Texas Company made @ new record [high at 216, up 7. AN of the off shares followed Texas Company and loyal Dutch was as high ao 1 York bankers are pi Germany and the belief that such « loan would result in big purchases of grain to- gether with continued wnssttied weather, | drove futures prices up on the Chicago Provisions followed the Decanber corn opened ‘at $1.30%, up| “ec, and later rose to $1.27 May corn wp Ke om opening, at §123%, subse quently advanced & December oats after opening unchanged at 70%6¢, ister gained 4c; opened unchanged at T3Ke, wamed Ke. a Portland Market Status | 3 ied PORTLAND, Oct. 29.—Cattlo—Recetpta, head: market steady. Good to eholee re, 19G9.00; te common to fair steers, food to choles cows and ium to goed, bulls, $6@ aod later Home steady Receipt calves, $7611.50, Hoge—Kecelpta, 200 head; market ts steady to strong. Top, $14 salen, $120 12.50 Bheep— Receipts, sendy. Lamba, $12 OTe: ft CUSTOMER FAINTS AT SALE OF ARMY GOODS Patience and a strong physique are necessary requirements of bargain hunters attending the surplus army goods sale at 63 University st. Ow- ing to lack of clerks, the handling of customers is slow One woman stood in line from 7 a. m. until 2 p. m. Tuesday before she was waited on, A man who had been | tanding in the rain fainted and had to be carried home. Wearing apparel is in greatest do- mand. Exceptional value’ are of. fered. When the store reopened at 9 a. m. Wednesday there was already a long line of waiting customers. Major L. B. Douglas ts supervising the sale. Vessels in Port at Seattle Today Str Foshimt Marv Gora, bge J. D. Pe- at Northern pler Pier 1i—Bk Gay © tere, str Syagway Smith Cov —Str Eldridge. Pier }U, A Nanshan, otr Purton, Pier §—Str Conewago, Pier 7—Str Bergen. Pier 6—Str Koyel Mare. Pier (Power bktn Nanbo Maru, str Phyllis, str Multnomah, Hell st. terminal-—U. 8. 1. H. T. Heather. Pier A—Str Admiral Farragut. Pier R—Str Benator, str Admiral Bchtey, Pier D—Str Governor, Skinner @ Eddy yarde—Str Effiagham, atr Effna, str Eglantine Stacy wt. terminal—U. 8. C. Burnalde. fipokane st. terminal—Mtr Catherine D. Hanford st. terminal—Str Dahlia, atr Paicatta. Duthie yards—Str Devel. Todd's drydock—Str Gaffney, str West- ern Knight Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging yards Str Brookwood Ames yards—Str Cathie r Weatern G Pacific ineering work Brookdale. Heffernan’s drydock—Str H. BR, Lovejoy. Eliott Bay yarde—Motor schr Kirketin schr Bianct, atr Binatind Patterson & McDonald—Motor schr Boo- . atr Roone- r Went Ivis, Lae a] on North Pacific yards—Str Chica- mico, Went Seattle elevator—Sstr Ortettele. Lake Union—Hulls Snoqualm Leota, Endymion, Anthon, Fort Harrison, Bort ‘Stanwix, imufka, Kiten, Loot, Dione, Cozian, Cineyras, Cai Henry Wilson, Salvator, Alice, bge Corus, motor schr D bk Oriental, str San Wan, whaling @tr Tanginak, whaling str Kodiak. Rallard Marine railway-—Dge Elwell. Commercial Boller worke—Str Admiral Dewey Albers Bros, mill—Str Rainier. Meacham & Babcock yards—-Str Clneas, str Chalets, hull Charnia, Stimson mill—Str Wistoria, “Mooney Defense Money Wasted” The Mooney Defense committee, discharged by the Central Labor council recently, is severely censured and condemned by the Washington State Federation of Labor in a cir. cular letter to Central Labor and Metal Trades Councils. to the committee to release Mooney was spent for that purpose, the let- ter states. “This flagrant commercialization of Mooney's misfortune should arouse disgust and contempt in every unionist in the state,” says the letter, which is signed by. Presi- dent William M. Short and Secretary , ie W. Buck, | B8e; Not a cent of the $9,673.07 donated) ‘FRESH EGGS AT | HIGHEST LEVEL Dealers Getting 83 Cents) Per Dozen Wednesday With fresh ranch eges advancing another cent on Tuesday, present quotations of 83 cents per dozen are the highest ever recoriied in the his tory of the city That the quotations will remain high until the moulting period is over lin about one to three weeks in the consensus of opinion of Western ave. dealers, The receipts will increase rapidly then and prices will gradually com down, promise the wholesalers. There are practically no fresh eggs coming | in at the present time, they say Jotwithstanding that the fresh eges are 16 to 20 cents per dozen| | higher than either pullet or Eastern | eens, the public #till insists on pay ing the price for the best stock, ac cording to the dealers. | The following are today’s whole ale quotations on egg»: Fresh ranch, | pullets, 67c; Wastern, 67c: storage, 66c to bic, and pewees, | bbe. Butter market remains firm with | quotations steady. Large butter ship ments are under way, admit the| cfeamery men. | [= ate " | te Shippers wountry eren ! Been lent Perse cream- ore .¢1| o@ .12 14@ 76 Storage—Bricks Local, strictiy” treat” ‘ Cheese— New Wihconain tripieta. . . Or. and Wash. triplets Badger brick Fancy wheet Swiss Ducke—Live ... Mene—Live, heavy - KORESAPA INTO BAHIA WITH DISABLED ENGINE NEW YORK, Oct. 29—The| American freighter Koresapa, re- ported in a Rio Janeiro dispatch to- day to be several days overdue there, wis forced to put into Bahai because of engine trouble, her own- ere stated. of 4,637 25 corporation steamer, tons, left New York September for Rio Janeiro with a general cargg, COMPANY TO EXPAND The Northwest Trading Co. will enlarge its activities by opening of- fices at Shanghai and Singapore, local officers of the company say. The company will soon undertake construction of an electric railway in China. x —- ——----_- —_—_ 8 | Public Markets || WESTLAKE corned beef, 2%¢ Tb.: cured bacon, 2 Toa focal appiee, $180 Stalls 16-17, 2 cans corn or| : 2 email cans milk, 16e; bet | y broom, $1.00; large pkg. Albers 330; catsup, 22e bottle. Stall | flapjack flour, 30¢ pkg.; washing powder, Stalls 10-11, PIKE PLACE _itall 19, gpre fresh milk. 1 can Carnation milk, ites, 49-1, sack fine flour, sack yellow corn meal, 5 vinegar, 39¢ gal. Stal 12e qt. Stall 13%c. Stall $2.05; 2 bulk cider al potatoes, herring, 2] ™,; black oleomargarine, Be pt; Tilla- mook full cream cheese, She M.; butter, Sac T., 2 Ta. $1.16. T%.; mild full Stall 116, sugar cur lamb chops, 300 I. 200 Stalls 18-25, nail white beans, 3 Ibe, 2 Ths. 366 hocolate, 306 T fruit color Stall 40, cocoa, 300 T,; pure boc whole ean stant salmon, ling cod, lbe Th, $2.50 mack; sweet po cooking apples, 6 ta Royal baking powder, Postum, 380, Stall 58, black cod, 2 fhe 2 vhole salt codfish, nk pote pea, 4 Th: ©. 380; 7 : lamb stew, 150 Stalls 31-33,. large salt skinned soles, 18¢ I. ning, 12%0 Tb. Stall meat, 30¢ Th, Libby's new sauerkraut, 150 qt. Stalls 20-22, all nut margarines, 3 Ths, $1.00; comb honey, S6e each, 3 for $1.00; 40¢ bulk coffee, 3 Ths, $1.1 80-22-34, little link sausage, 30c Tb compound, 260 Ib,; boneless corned tbe Th, Stall 46, Carn milk, $6.50 per case cottes, 4c; 300 phe. Bar 200, Stall cotter, $1.4 apthe powder, RB LIBERTY BONDS At highest market prices, Also Canadian government bonds, Direct private wire to all impor- tant markets. New York stock exchange and New York curb stocks quoted. HERRIN & RHODES, INC. ; Established 1896 Stocks and Bonds Main 1513 119 Cherry | placed at $ I} The Koresapa, a Kerr Navigation | “a oa New York Coffee and Sugar Quotations NEW YORK, Oct Rio, 11@1T ibe per Ib; he feo—No. 7 4 Bentos, 26@ * entritugnt, 7.386 per th The value of the minerals prodaced the United States last year is 526,162,000, 29 No "beaker in Attacks Your Land Title What are you going to do about it? The Court Records are full of law- suits involving land titles, and Jaw-suits are expensive luxuries. If you hold a Policy of Title Insurance you need not lose a wink of sleep or a dollar of money. The ablest lawyers ob- tainable, at our expense, will defend the law-suit for you, and if they lose the law-suit, then we pay you the sum stipu- lated in your title policy. Demand Title Insurance when you buy your home. Washington Title Insurance Company “Under State Supervision” Assets Navy Torpedo Boat Destroyers — ‘There will be sold by sealed pfo-~ posais, receivable at the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, Navy De- partment, Washington, D. C., 12 o'clock, 17 November, 1919, following named destroyers ae TRUXTON BARR DECATUR Now located in the Fourth Nawal 4 District, Philadelphia, Pa. xact location may be from the Commandant, Fourth ¥ District, vy jadelphia, Pa, and should be obtained ing trips for inspection. will be for cash to the hi ders. Right to reject al served. Forms of Erepeant info tion concerning the vessels and terms of sale obtainable from Bureau of Suppiles an urth el} LOWEST RATES —to— CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCE LOS ANG 8. 8. WLENOMAH, = s. Ss. CELILO. O SCrOBER 30 MeCORM LING PUGET SOUND STEAMERS with rail Unes for all points on. Olym: {penineuta. 10:00pm |S. Kulshan, daily jAnacortes and’ Bel-| {ingh rr daily Te:sdpm [Str. vii tor Port] For] 3350 oat Sunday /Townsend, Port Wil- Tuea, jllams, Dungeness ani Thurs, |Port Angeles, 3 through te) eah Bay on day and The Flagler, Townsend, (Sunday Han \San Juan islands, Friday| Points marked ** are boat Passengers for these points and other boat landing points must their own arrangements for and assume all risk and Tiapaity making such nding. ||paseenger rate does not landing charges, * Baggage lability Umited te ing apparel, not to exceed whole ticket. 150 pounds Steamers and schedules Keene without notices dally for all points ( Tacoma) named in above Tiek

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