The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 19, 1920, Page 26

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_ FACTORIES URGED T0 Aggressive Campaign Plan- ned to Push Buying of Home-Made Goods .Mantifacturere of the city are to be Baked by the Pacito Northwest prod Bots committee to meet with a spe al committee today, headed by J. A Bwatwell, president of the Union Na Qional bank and also general chain Man of the Pacific Mets committees, to discuss thelr en. Paging in an aggressive advertising Gampaicn to further buying of home Products and to stop tife practice of gonsumers asking for products made te the Bast, which takes away Pa Wife Northwest dollars that should Be circulating here in the shape of tn, ‘This action was decided pon at a Meeting held yesterday noon at Blane’s cafe. EPUCATE PURLIC TO ASK HOME-MADE GOODS Harry ©. Marshall, advertising © of The Star, was one of the oxggheteh to advise with the sevamittee He said the problem was get the purchasing public in a of mind wheré they would not accept but ask for Pacific North: articles when equal in price and with the out-of the-state prod. He said merchants must follow Practice of giving the public what demands. Orin S. David of the Journal of said bankers can do the who sent large sums away | payment of goods manufactured tn ition with Northwest articles | spend that money building up a here. He urged banks to have service departments take, up matter in a systematic manner “Women hold the key to the home problem,” sald other speak- their retailers to sell Seattle Some retailers had the foods but kept them in the back Two cases were reported women refused to purchase the Seattle product was offered, the result thag the articles were Y FOR EXPORT It was pointed out that the aver! Person buys at least two pairs of | A year, and if 400,000 people King county purchased Washing | shoes (and they are being here, many of them for export), payroll could be built up. speakers said the various of the country, because of) Joss of export markets, are about | engage in a most spirited compe- to capture domestic markets smaller communities, reliance grown im quantity production distribution to offset a dvaxinos given this section, for nee, by the recent rai! rate in- ‘ie BIRTHS Bp ameere H, $028 Fauntleroy u 305 16th os reaw Be $970 49th iy RW. ‘ida, Ichijiro, $15 Yester way, ~ zo S11 King et. per. ee anther ¥., iT katate ven. boy. Herbert B.. 1910 BE. Lynn, girt. a et Norman, 5917 45th ave. asic. can H.. $16 18th N. boy. is, Lioyd L, 4734 Latona ave, rsom, Kenith. 124 W. Frey mm, Eng, 709 King » ry Andrew, 2903 Se. And- Name and yr Phe: Hays, Aubu: ilaon, EB. Marguerite, Seattle ie, John W., Grand ae, Perris, todise A. Aubarn’. Pareene Ghertes A, Se- Loma reerays, Jennie BE. Seattie: ‘Legal Jein, Rutherford, Seattie ‘tis, Mirle, Seattle .. lumes, Edmond T., Seattl bq ote) Seattle ttle . ‘ite, Tanen Beattie - pattem, Victor Dee, § Seattio - Legal Lowe, Naamah, Alamosa, Coic. Lonel num, Fred Wilson, Seattle Willetta KR, Seattle . es, Roy B., Tacoma . man, Olga E. it. Pa ater ris, Seattle . Bow % tite, Betick”: ul A, Seattle . ze] 7. Rd . tle . imsloy, deseia, y Ponte’ ton, Thomas GU. 8.N. .. ijivan, Helen A.. Seattle wustin, Albert W.. Seattle . edson, Elizabeth, Seattle DIVORCES GRANTED hilbreft, George from Grace May. ‘eppler, Hattie from W. 1. jeot, Alphone from Alive wnard, Fred from Anna Maria DEATHS 0, Ada telle, 4202 Lorliss ay. ikworth. Jobn, Seattl Steel Dock Bought by Barde Company ‘The Barde Industrial company has Purchased the structural steel stock of the Vulcan Manufacturing com pany, 1200 Fourth ave. S., it is an- nounced. The reputed consideration ts $250,000. oh Sales M Managers Buy Northwest Products Products made in the Northwest Will be purchased by members of the Sales Managers’ association of Beattic in future in preference to Bs articles imported from outside points. ee. This was the revolution passed by 5a the sales managers at their regular Monthly meeting at the N ington Thursday evening. Wash. ’ ADVERTISE Northwest prod: | who told of the expertences some | had reported tn their effort to! while others did not have - Ship News Tides in Seattle RATURDAT NOY, 20 First Low Tite ee First High Tide IDeA m, 1a | Second Low Tide hie p Le mite pm, aa eee DIRECT SERVICE a, Manila and Calcutta Also | Ports of New Line FL. R. James & Co., 631 Lyon bulld tng, agents for the Curtia line on Pur get sound, received word lant night that the 8.000-ton steel motorship Apheme would arrive here January | 15 to inangurate the new Seattle Aus- tralia service. Loading a cargo of Northwest producta here, the big mo torship will sail direct for Australian | ports via Singapore, A second vosnel will follow the Apheme a month later and regular monthly sailings are to be main tained thereafter. ‘The present schedule calle for 30- day sailings from Seattle to Australia via Manila and Singapore, Calcutta and Bombay, the vessels stopping at San Francisco and Portland on the trip back. Weather Bureau Report | TATOOS JALAND, Now aA. M | —Rising barometer: cloudy: wind south weat, 22 miles an by Pamed out: Str Queen at 9 DR mm) & steamer at b nat ght. November wind south, Cloudy; win Passed tn: Ste Dilworth | oe | Arrivals and Departures | November 1%—Str Alameda from fouth- western via Southeastors Alaskan ports attem November 18—fitr Brave Coeur from Manila via Ban Francisco and Tacoma a 4p m; str President from Ban Pedro via fan Francisco and Victoria, B.C, at 10 p.m. str Valdes from Southweetern Alaskan ports via Tacoma at 2 mk Salted November 1%—tr Katort Mara for Hongkong via Victoria, 1, C, and porte at 1045 am ba for British Columbian porta at 228 Dom eee Vessels in Other Ports Mantia—Safled November 16) Str Lute for Beattie via ports. Kobe—Arrived November 14: Str West iu tailed November ‘Vigilant for Puget Bound porta San Pedro—alled November 19) Str Cape Henry for Han Francisco and Puget Bound porta Ban Francteco—Salled | Ste Admiral Sehley for Beattie str Lake Filbert for Seatth str Stoel Exporter for Seattle via British Columbian ports at 16a m Arrived No- X. Baater trom t fone vember str Sratite and Rag’ Balled wan =e for Seattie at 1 . rived November 14: Str Hawaiaa from Seattic aad Tacoma st 2 pm eee Reported by Wireless November 1s—str thre Gey mour Narrows, southbound, at 11 p mj; str Alameda abeam Cape Laso, south bound, at J p m: str Apokane in Queen Charlottes Sound, southbound, at 11:45 a Crom Kore. neatils | top Soanghak is wiles wesrae Port Townsend at § pm. str Wat 7 Haimnidau for Seattle. 1.480 miles weet of Cape Fiattery at # p.m; at Areyil, Port San Lule for Beattie, 443 miles (rom Re- |attie at 8 pm; str Myaden Kahulul for San F: Bnd Keattie, 656 miles ern Glew, Beattie for Panama, 116 miles south of San Francisco at § p.m; str | Hollywood, Mesttie for Honolulu, 996 miles from Beattie at # pm: ete Wallan, Puget Sound for Portiand ahd New York, off Columbia River at § p mm: str Wallingford, Portiand for Beattie, 150 miles from Portiand at & pm eee Vessels in Port at Seattle Smith Cove termmat—ttr Maquan, str Bastern Leader, str Eastern Sword, air Edmore, str Iconium, str Baatern Maginer, str Westward Io. Great Northern terminal—ste Katort Maru. Bmith Cove anchorage—Str Endicott, Pier 6—Str West Jeater. Pier Str Valdes, str Bante Ana, ety Alameda. Pir 1—#tr Morning Be Bell st. terminal—U 6 # Surveyom, Pier A—Btr City of Ueattle C—Hte Gedney. Pret D—otr Prestgcat, Pacific Const coal bunkere—U SL HT Heather, U #8 Rush. Union Pacific terminal—str Yosemite Alaska Steamship moormes—Atr Victoria Stacy st. terminal—U 8 8 Burnside, San Juan fish dock-—Str Admiral Watson. Milwaukee ocean terminal—str Nile. Spokane st. terminal—Motor schr Libby Maine w —BHir Devel. Lake Union—Hulls Abiita, Abnoba, A dos, Addison, Allenhurst, Anmik, An- thon, Payden, Bertrand, Bingamon, Hiscayle, Black Wolf, Biantord, Cel win, Boughton, Pesuta, Puyaliop, ‘abacan, rari rdia, Cenina, Charum, Chesterfield, Chatcia, Cineas, Cinyras, Corus, Coxtan, Cols, Cion Eilsea, Electra, Rodymion, Fort Ha: Yison, Fort Jackson, Fort stanwix, Fort Union, Imufka, Leott, Kitan, att Oregon, str Comanche, str Washou str Washtucna, str’ Princeton, Chippewa, str Alonh, str Kodiak, Unimak, str Tanginak, str Fulton, ate famson, motor scbr Apex, tug IL oid ©. Todd drydocke—str ta Rita, motor schr Wm. Donovan (ex-Kirketind), str Delroaa, str Admiral Bebron. Puget Sound Briage & Dredging worke— tr Patterson, hull Kainbow, Ames yards—8tr Roosevelt Schwager & Nettieton dock—Ste Brave Coeur, LACK OF SALMON CAUSE OF WORRY Fish Fast Vanishing, Is Re- port at Hearing As a result of complaints from Alaska that nets and traps in the Coppér ricer are preventing the sal mon from reaching the spawning grounds and that depletion of the was opened Thursday at the Cham. | ber of Commerce under the direc. tion of the bureau of fisheries, Not only 1s the supply of salmon threatened by lack of propogation, but it was pointed out that the In dians living on the upper r: the river and tributaries a About 40 cannerymen attended the ls get enough fish for food, TO AUSTRALIA <11:00 A M—-Raining: | from Han Franciseo at p. m.; str Kast- | rway Docks & Warshouse Co, | wr fish is rapidly approaching, a hearing | THE SEATTLE STAR | Hammering Cause of Sharp Break on New York Exchan NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—Perstatent fore noon today resulted In @ bad break United States Steel to a new low for the year at 60%, under also a new low. Crucible dropped to 92, off TY, and Corn Products went to 68, Closing prices tncluded: United States Stoel 80%, off %; Crucible 90%, off 8%; Rethiehem “I 62%, off 3%; Baldwin 92%, off 2%; American Locomotive 80%, off %; Mexican Petr ff 5%; Pan-Amertoan ff 1%; Royal Dutch €5%, off 2% . off 2%; Southern hammering of stocks shortTy In the stock market, carrying while Baldwin sold 108%, off %; Northern Pacific 82%, off 2%; General Motors 13 off %; Studebaker off 2%; United States Rubber 59%, off 4; Corn Products 69%, off 4: American Sugar . Off 3%; Retall Stores 64 Off 1%; Industrial Alcohol 67%, off 3% | * 6 « 6 The stock market opened trremular to slightly Righer today. Prices fc United States Steel 81%, up %: United Fruit 191%, off %) Baldwin 874, up 1%) Chandi 4%. up %: Mext jean Petroleum 159%, up 2; New Haven 26%, up %: United States | Rubber 60%, up %; Brooklyn Rapid Transit 12%, off 4; Metall Stores STM. UD %: Binciatr Ol 26%, off “4: Reading 8%, up 1K; Cructbie Steel 99%, off %; Marine preferred 45%, up 2%; Northern itic 86 UP IM; Bethichem “Hi” 66%, up % | Am the market under way the trend generally was for higher Prices. Shipping shares which suffered in yesterday's decline showed | !mprovement. Marine preferred opened 48%, up 2%; Atlantic Gulf 109%, General Motors touched a now rd low, 13, off %. Mexican jen 1% Steele were atoady except Crucible, which NEW YORK, Nov. 19. ree roleum was up 1 at 159% opened at 99 and dropped to 97% There w ¢ improvement during late forenoon trading, Favor able business reports and dividend declarations strengthened @ few ke and there was short covering tn some linea ‘The market closed trregul: GRAIN MARKET |COMPETITION IS. Bearish Prices Down Marshall Fields a0, Rev. 38 Fagg: = Brotes CHICAGO, , Nov. 19.—Reductions today on bearish infiuences |!® prices has Increased competition stock and cotton marketa |*0 fast that “only the fittest” will Seary _ solite forced December survive’ the period of rendjust- eo bear whee ee B low open | ment, thru which the business of the were also off, A & market, country in now passing, James C. Influenced by the weakness in the Simpson, vice president of Marshall irop of 3a, Pield & Co., largest drygoods whole salers and retailers in the world, told the United Preas today. “Every progressive bustnem t# stripped for action.” sald Simpson ry ounce of ability, efficiency resources will be put to the lower wheat opened off 1%¢ and later | March opened at $1 zhe Md later declined 4c ember corn opened up 1%e> at ™ Ke and ta declined Je; May |“? corn opened an advance of we and ay and later was down teat.” 14%e, ber on! opened a! 4c. and later lost fic: May| Simpeon esha that @urtng the war | opened down Ke at 664% and standards of ervice In burtnens euf-| later lost she Rae fered bu® that now merchants of the e it CHICAGO, Nov. 19.-—Cash wheat-— Mem are resuming their course 7 No. 2 hard, $1.19; No. 2 spring, $1.70, DEMAlCy: Simpeon attribated the price read. Chicago Board of Trade lasers to the “immutable low of | (Priday's Qretations) supply and demand.” and expressed | the belief that the action of the fed Open High Lew Close | $27) $1794 OLTt Girey (eral reserve banks, by controlling | ae Ly LOT Lee ‘shessan bes very little to do with it. | “s~ ae ae. “a iS os San Francisco Produce | |_ SAN FRANCIACO, Mov, 19.—Irutter— 44% 44% AES etran, Ete per th) prime fireie, bbe per At ABS AS | Im rete, S80 per th ft tras, le per dows" extra pe | 29 me ft We per dos; Undersized pullecm Ewe per @ " 17 rete raga < ee naiboaediimeesl | < ts of H 1200 1360 taT8 nigh look Parade Wednesday! The downtown streets of Seattle be invaded next Weinesday N. Y. Coffee and Sugar NEW YORK, Nov. 19—fugar—Raw, | 4.200 per ib; granulated, 849196 Pr) noon ae e ae per! UNderclasemen'’s rooting fraternity | at the university, The tribe of Hook ory will be seated like potentates in| their autos, with « fair co-ed at each | wheel The big idea, the collegers| may, is to let the town know that the change opened | francs, ye Alumni to Lunch on U. W. Campus AN former Washingtonians be ie marks, L340, wp I centime; Cans dian Gotiare, 4e, Unchanged. | Portland Market Status PORTLAND, Nov. 19 —C att! eRe colpts, 11) bead; market slow to weak ind Cacheneet og reunion Tuncheon on the campus maraiieed. Pring mises, sitas@ia.ta; | Saturday, November 27, just before heavies, $9012.29 pire, 4 | the Dartraputh football’ game. | Bleep Receipts, © iy and unchanged, Patter—69¢ per ih Riga 89 @ 820 per dow Cheese—-Tripiets, te per My Hens 28@ 00 per ik committee in charge includes Mary Walsh, Eunice Spencer, Walter Wil. ama, Hazel Jones, Stewart Simpson, Lewis Schwellenbach, Carrol Ebright. Ward Kumm, Matthew Hil and/ Walter Shiel. 'Logged-Off Land At a preliminary committee meet ing held yesterday afternoon at the Chamber of Commerce a committes| including F. W. Strang, A. Floyd Seott of Tacoma, Judge R.A. Bab linger and M. J. Carrigan was named jto draft resolution to be submitted to the loggedoff land conference in | Seattle, December 6 and 7, redom mending a concrete and constructive program to be indorsed. E. F. Benson, immigration and tn dustrial comminsioner of the North- ern Pacific, was prenent and ex | Pressed approval of the conference | and its purposes, It wae decided that encth address op the program by a man with prac tical knowledge of the topic should be followed by an open discussion for | whieh an equal time will be allowed. Flown Half the Distance to Moon! NEW YORK, Nov. 19—Colonel Cedric B. Fauntleroy has flown half the distance to the moon. Oh, no, he wasn't trying to reach the moon The colonel was a flyer in the La lower bulk of ‘ann | $11. 20@ 11 £5. Bheep—Mecetpte, 2.500 head: market tx FT cits 9.781025; owen, 6 Money on Call NEW YORK, Nov. 19.—Money on eat. # per cent, six months, § per cent; mer paper, 7% per cent silver—London, 49 %e; New York, Top, $12.25; | 99 %e. North Dakota Corn 17,562,000 Bushels| FARGO, N. D., Nov. 19.—North Dakota's corn crop totaled 17,562,000 bushels this year, according to the report of A. J. Surrat of the United States bureau of crop estimates. The total last year waa 16,754,000 bushels. Thia year's yield was more than 7,000,000 bushels above the annual average of the state throughout its history. || Public Markets | Riis) PLACE bog oon, Ay , Pure | fayette escadrilie, flew in the Amer. an herring. a tbe tree mon ican army in France and then or new |Kanized the Kosciusko squadron 160: salmon, ™. |fight in Poland, He has piloted *°) | planes between 120,000 and 140.000 miles, or half the distance to the moon in 1,100 hours in the alr | Herbert Hoover asked him to return |to America to tell Americans what Poland needs matoes, Stall 104, Cottage chee ¢ hominy, Ib Stall 19 cans salmon, 2 cans Del Monte pork @ MARKET RATE | the. 1 Ib, No, 1 soft shelled walnuts, CORNER Stall 14, fresh salmon, 2 The the: black Castern oysters, pt. Stall 2 th: boneless | pork steak, 280 I Stalls 18-2 walnuts, ECONOMY ftan 40, $1.26; pean creamery b: butter ground Stall 3, lam f head 4-9, 8 ring beans or tomatoes, Monte pork and beans, Stale 450 can Royal baking powder, 8c ‘sack yellow corn meal, 40. SANITARY nail ean sliced rmalade, 800 i jar, Stalin 21-8, tale Pineapple, plokled | pink tip The Producer—We'll have to raise the price on that “Down on the | Farm” film, | The Manager—What's the reason? The Producer—Farm values are Boing up every day, LOWERED AGAIN GROWING SHARP Influences andl Says Vice President of ! by the Knights of the Hook, Mil | stadium is to be dedicated on Satur} Wisconsin cram longing to the "16 class will hold a|Wene—Under ¢ ma The Geese—Lave Conference Plans f7.-7 (GROWER BLAMED ‘HOG MARKET IS FOR HIGH SPUDS| —_ IN BI SLUMP) Jobbers Here re Pass Buck to/Reaches the Lowest Level Potato Farmer Since 1917 The potato situation continued to| CITICAGO, Nov, 19—Tog prices hold the attention of Western ave. | slumped again today on leading ive commission merchants Friday, So | stock exchanges of the country, low far as ¢ be learned spuds are, if} ent levels since 1917 being esta» enything, a shade « than they | lished wore yesterday, Apparently growers| Cleveland reported the biggest in Rastern Washington are making | drop, the market falling off 65 cents & fight to hold the price up, acec at the opening. Declines of 60 cents ing to jobbers here, but with no ble] were recorded at Indianapolis and outlet other than tt | Chicago, At Kansas City prices there is really no found ranged from $11 to $11.65, a new low ket as now constituted tor the last four years rehants are exhibiting @ reluc Hogs were off generally 50 cents tance to buy at $45 & ton, feeling) on the Kast St. Louis stock mar that spuds are due for @ drop, even | ket, ‘This was a new low record since if It be alight Among the latest arrivals on the ntreet are another car of navel oranges, which are quoted at $4 to 4.50) and a shipment of green stuff by steamer, Kastern cranherries are qnoted at 20 cents @ pound in #mall lots Friday, or $19 for a 100-pound barrel. The dairy market shows no ma terial change Local Markets (Wertoamre 1917, Rent grades of hogs reached the lowest price since 1917 on the Bast Buffalo market today, They were quoted at $12.50. Tt was predic that the price will go still lower be caune of the drop in the price of corn The decline, nccording to traders, was due to flooding of markets Hog receipta here today tot 000 head, Leftovers from yeater day were more than 15,000 head, |Chicago Quotations on Hogs CHICAGO, Nov. 19. fell again here today. ©; | tations showed prices 2 Hog prices ning quo to 40 cents Kansas City Prion Continue Decline iu KANSAS CITY, Mo. Nov. 19 Decline in the hog market here con | Unued today. Prices ranged from $11 | to $11.65, a new low for the last four years en ee Seg Prices Are Low CLEVELAND, Ohio, Nov. 19.—For the first time since early in 1917 the beat grades of hogs wold here today for $12.95. | under yesterday's clone. THRIFT WEEK TO BE BIG EVENT ‘That National Thrift week will be observed in Seattle on a large scale was indicated Thursday when pro Uminary plans for the big savings campaign were formulated at a meet- ing of prominent business and social workers at Pig'n Whistle. The men who will supervise the | local campaign are: chairman; Fred W. Dates Vige Dried, Green, per box... Grape Freit merida. Homey—Com per ora! trated, per Me Reckieberriee— Riva pert: Temowe Per bow Per case .. Pears Fersimmane Per tor Pemegranetes 1 Almonds ier %. Graham, vice econ president; . 8. Bayley, treasurer; H Japanese Ll, Kirby, executive secretary, and Miherte—Per Warren E. Crane, publicity director. Walnnte—Cai 3 | A corps of about 400 speakers will 4 | cover the theatres, factories and stores during the week devoted to the thrift movement, it was an- ss) nounced, S| Clear Weather for Per owt sss mon DAIRY PRODUCTS lifornia Contest owe hy Beg) | san ma rob rin pri Tricks Kane Yree Tollete 5 when the weather man predicted “| clear weather for tomorrow'sh Stan- 1 MO | ford-California football game at | Berkeley. The weather bureau gave out the Sladsome news that, as Uncle Sam's APMED s vene ses seecscee: ‘triem . Limburmer . see recs - Young Amertes ... # THE FARMERLABOR PARTY of King county will meet Saturday > aq (3, | 2008 at Good Eats cafeteria J. G. Je| Brown, campaign manager of #8 national farmerlabor party, Je | speak. ‘The wife governs beat who doesn't let her husband know she's trying. 4 The and ep Rroilers—All weights. Restore wil Primes Ye es 4 6.00 | gy HAY, GRAIN AND FEED Trnolemle Price Fer Tea. City Frise Barley — Whole WOMEN’S WEAR PRICES HAVE A DOUBLE DROP HERE First, women's apparel prices at Cherry's are keep ing pace with the drops in the market, Secondly, our price reductions are aided by our buying system. Being one of a chain of stores our merchandise is purchased in large quantities at QUANTITY PRICES. Our buyers have the latest tips on the best buys. You profit by their astute ness and their resources, Make these facta of real value to your pocketbook. There is also @ third factor—our generous credit terma, Don't forget this featura | f } | \ [muany TAILORED CLOTHES FOR MEN A eee MEN—WAISTS—FURS RPSOKIG LG AONE DROS AO 207 RIALTO Old Frederick & Nelson Bi ted by livestock men Drop; Hogs today opened tbc Henry King, | | Dampened spirits rose a little today | obwervers see it, the storm is about | the | FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 197% ~T STEEL PRICES — | WON'T GO UP } i] + «« $5,630,687.33 | 196,968.55 6.390.00 | | Gary Says No Addition® Clearings 6,297,987.00 NEW YORK, v. 19. Reteving | | Malwnees ... 5 seeee 1,009,844 stabilizs n of business is of the . * highest importance, the United $25 Average Income caten Ginet obeheretion ap Gelli pot te increase prices, altho cost af Tax Paid Last Year manufacturing has increased, Judge WASHTD Nov. 19 a erage in paid thé gov E. H. G chairman of the com ment was $25.55 per ind: poration, announced today. the basle of earnings of 191%, accord In rmal etatement Gary de ing to an analysis of returns just | eb * the base selling «of made at the internal revenue office ron and steel commodities xed | A total of 4,425,114 personal re by represent en of the im turns were filed in 1018. iving a to dust the 4 mmen la tal net income of. $15,924,639,351, of | March, 1919, the production conts ha@ |which the government received | increased and that “under such cim 91,127,726,225. This includes 67 per cumstances we would b ifed tp sons Who paid taxes on an income of | making additions to the average base | more than $1,000,000 for the year, prices.” . . . | Missing Airplane Sacramento Thug Arrives in Port) Wounds Machinist JACKSONVILLE, Fla, Nov, 19 SACRAMENTO, Nov. 19.—-An um ‘The passenger hydroplane Santa Ma | masked dit today shot and probe | ria, carrying nine persons from Key ably fatally wounded Exnil Dimich, Vest to Havana and which was re | machinist the Subway garage ported missing late last night, ar-| The bandit escaped. Before Dimigh rived safely early today, according to could comply with the request to put wireless dispatches bere from Ha-| up his hands, the bandit fired and vana. ran. The bandit wore an army coat prior sale and change in price We offer mubject.to THE UNSOLD PORTION, CITY OF EDMONTON PROVINCE OF ALBERTA 6% GENERAL OBLIGATION GOLD NOTES Yielding 9% Dated September 1, 1920 Due September 1, 1923 Price 95.04 Denominations $100, $600 and $1,000 BIECT TO INCKEASH WITHOUT NOTICE r Fexempt From Ail Dominion | Government | Taxation Two Mundred and Fight in Oregon, Washin eon Ranks. and California bave purch ndor nt of th tment to Trust Companies and Bond sed blocks represe: you. FINANCIAL STATEMENT Groma assessed valuation. ..........-..$86,605,715.00 Value munieipal property (not inciud- 19H PUBLIC ULITILER).. seererneeee ees 11,085,276.00 eae 8 9458,997.00 ‘Cabos ° 00 Net debenture debt Revenue from public % cont of operation) Net locql improvement payers’ share) 2 util itiea Telephone | or | Telegraph Orders at Our Expense Im addition to being General Obligation Notes, these are secured by long-time debentures, totalling $2,504,420, Principal and semi-annual interest (March Ist and September ist) payable tn U. S. Gold Coin in New York City and at the offices of Morris Brothers, Ine Legality approved by Malone, Malone & Long, Toronto MORRIS BROTHERS, Inc. “The Premicr Municipal Bead House” SEATTLE, WASH —No. 3 CENTRAL Hutaptianed BLDG. MAIN 1227, ELLIOTT 2540 One Over a @uute ‘Tacoma, Wesh—Fidelity Rgliding Milltew Century Other offices at Portiand, >the ao and San Francisco, Cal Pacific Meat | &PackingCo. 803 First Ave. Pike St. SEE IT MADE Special Demonstration of the Manufacturing of- Our Celebrated Brand Pure Pig Sausage See It Made in Our Show Window at 308 Pike St. SEE FOR YOURSELF Cleanliness, sanitation and only the best grade of fresh pork, direct from our ranch, enter into the making of our Pure Pig Pork Sausages. Special Introductory Price Saturday only 40c Ib. OTHER SATURDAY SPECIALS Fresh Dressed Hens, Ib. * Steer Pot Roast Beef, “ie Bae Round Steak, Ib. a0 208 Sirloin Steak, Ib. -...28¢ Smoked Ham (whole or half), Ib. 35¢ Fancy Eastern Bacon (whole or half), TBs. olels cislerobreie's-eiwiossie wow nana At Both Markets Pacific Meat &PackingCo. 803 First Ave. 308 Pike St. pres Y- ose. 156 cee eeoces po Second Avenue Betweon Madison and Spring, Over -Pig'n Whistle.

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