Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
~ Great Northern BASIN PROJECT INTERESTS ALL Columbia Irrigation Is of} National Importance | Local interest is again attracted to | the Columbia River Basin irrigation Project with the announcement of} the first annual convention of the} Notumbia River Basin league, to de} heid $4 Pasco April 21. Many Seattle Dusiniss men fend the meeting Tecornized to be of more are preparing to at:| thea re &lonal Importance, | tate of Wash: | . “Tho located in th Thgton,” said Gen. Goorge W. Goeth: | als, after bis investigation of the Project, “the benefits from the proj, at will not be confined theroto, but} Will extend to all parts of the United States.” as the project ts] Hey AN Seattle Is NO, “The success of the Columbia river basin project is certain,” said FW. Graham, agricultural expert of a railroad, ‘Tuesday “it is. going to be b eco. Honiic necessity. ‘Thore ar | Acres with deficient rainfall that the! Project will make productive, It is 1,750,000 hard to estimate the taxable wealth this will add to the state. | “Seattle people should realize that This is not a matter of concern only to the people of the basin. It Is of Ymportance to every part of the! Btate, not only from the standpoint of added land but from the | advertising it will give the state as aj Whole, and for the benefit to in. dustries from | increased E popalation.” | 1 lance to pr of the advance F } Dupont, | 222, up iM. | cific, 1 Rughson’s Hounds Give) Entertainment The Seattle Advertising club was Riven another treat at their mect Ing Tuesday noon in the ‘club rooms when the Wm. L. > Son company provided the entertai; Ment. “Hughson’s Order Houn< Suita, “and guests were decora with huge red paper neckties as they entered the room, by Mrs. Rose Haw- Foster. Real music was provided by Cam Winen and his “Hughson’s Jazz Hounds,” and the speakers were in- ‘troduced with an admirable mixture > of sense and nonsense by ‘phy. At the conclusion of the meet-| ‘dog a drawing was heli for prizes S.C. Mur- given by the Hughson company. ‘The speakers included George W. W. 8. MacNamara, John Reynolds, Del] Thompson and H. . Payzant. Ford May Acquire _ Another Railroad DETROIT, Mich., April 11.—Re- ports Were evrrent here today that ‘the Ford Mvtor Co. is negotiating io purchase the Virginian railroad. | Financial Flashes From James Macfarlane 2 Co 811 Second Ave. | Twenty industrials 102.11, off .45; 20 rails $6.58, up .05. ‘Dec. 31 shows net. income equal to $6.07 per share as compared with in 1921. Great Northern is valued by the faterstate commerce commission at 353,655. Figures exceed those by railroads. It is stated rail- ‘roads will contest valuations. / 1609 Fourth ave., “Uatitied tonnage (steel) March 31 was 7,403,320 as compared ‘with 7,282,989 on Feb. 23. Cudahy Packing Co, declared semi- per cent preferred stock and 3 per cent on 6 per cent preferred, both payable May 1 to stock of pecans April 20. Amorican Woolen Co. will es "$10,000,900 preferred stock. ‘Hudson Motors’ shipments for the fivst quarter, ended Feb. 28, 1923, qwere 18,773 cars as compared with “$,994 last year; net profit for the > first quarter of 1923, $1,659,208. Club Meetings ‘The Seattle Real Estate associa tion will meet at the botel Butler @t 12:15 p. m. Thursday. Wm A. Herren, field secretary of the ha ‘tional association, will be the honor A special feature of the meeting will be the attendance of Seattle's Rosebud Quecn, Miss Katherine Curtis, chaveroned by Mrs. Arthur A. Phinne: Business Changes \ Tire Plymouth Shoe company, have opened their » Mew store at 118 Pike rt one “Mies Elizabeth M. Selig, well ‘Known in Seattle for her clever gift Shops, who has for the part two > Years teen a resident of California, returned to Seattle a short time ago LEDGER A ledger is defined as a book of aeconnt so arranged as to provide for a summary of the financial transactions of a business organiza tion. They are of two kinds, general and subsidiary. Genera! ledgers contain the genersl or group accounts, un- usually in their most highly sum- marized form. Subsidiary ledgers are those which Pontalp the details of group accounts Or general ecoounts that are kept more briefly in the general ledger; a3, for instance, a creditors’ ledger. London, Entliand, uses $00,000,000 wallony of water daily. Masontc | Hugh | ‘kins ard the Misses Willie Zelen- jim rust, Harriet Woodward and Sarah | i« “Northern Pacific for year ended on hand! Growing! 12 WASHINGTON IRON WORKS The new boller shop of the Washington Iron Works is now under con struction and will be I-steel construction, 70 feet, This building completed in t with steel is one of the unt sash, and covers he next few weeks. The bullding ts & ground area of 80 by to In an extensive bullding program under way on the company’s grounds on the tract between Stxth and) and Atlantic and Massa usetts at. When completed the the larg nd most up to date of ita kind in the Woat WALL NEW YOR} epeculative co! ing the day migh owed & recession Judging in Tuesday's little headway nome holdings of General Motors » d to the belief that which has large imp GRAIN PRIGES CHICAUHO, April 10,—General Hqul- today influenced fop reports! nt with jthe recent advance |decline in wheat. wed a general impr cent purchases. |tereated in reports that the avernment was planning @ on all future sales of grain, Corn strengthened slightly after the dip. It of reports that eders pnaiderable grain The cash dermand was slack, how- er, and the market showed littie buying power. Commission houses sold heavily. Oats trading was dull and feature- s thruout the day, with the mar- Ket reacting to the influences in other grains. Good local buying appeared In pro- visions and the market showed a strong undertone despite the weak- ness in grains. Cash Wheat CHICAGO, April 10.—Cash wheat—No, BANK CLEARD } . Seattle Clearings Balances portland 4,085,966.69 was 703,126.15 | Tacoma } 2,504,000.00 | ——# LOCAL MUSIC Clearings | Balances .. 1421 the The Hooper-Kelly Third ave, has stock and fixtures of Rowe Music company, company, purchased according to The plant will be installed as a new string and band instrument de- partment with H. Rose in charg Howard F, Thompson, Rose's as- sistant, who fs an authority on vio- lins, will remain as his assistant in the new department. Ross has been identified with the music trade for the past 32 years, and for the past 17 years has con- ducted the Rose company. ‘The establishment of the new de- |partment compicies the business jon of Clarence H. Hopper and Edward P. Kelly, two young Se- attle men who started business in a very small way twelvo years ago in an upstairs talking machine store, May Get Another PITTSBURG, Pa., April 11.—Over | 100,000 steel workers in the Pittsburg | district are affected by the forthcom. ing raise in steel wages. In nddition the Frick coke plants in the Con- nellsville region announced corr sponding increases for 40,000 workers Labor leaders and steel official privately admit that another raise ts necessary as a result of the growin Jabor shortage. Some concerns, it cents an hour for common labor, | SNAPSHOTS A new trans-Enrope airplane ser- vice will link Belgrade with Paria, Budapest, Vienna, Bucharest and Constantinople. The trip from Bel- grade to Bucharest will take three hours, and that from Constantl- nople to Belgrade seven or eight hours; Belgrade to Paris, eight hours, Pines Unsolicited catalog from \Ameri- can firms are not welcomed by store- keepers in Mexico City. Personal calls by representative be much more profitable, one Potatoes eaten in Belgium in 1922 averaged 1,165 pounds per person, In other words, every Belgian ate 10 times his own weight of “pommes de terre,” ‘Re Flectrie housekeeping in in favor in Melbourne, Australia, ‘The power planta are owned and operated by the city, and “Julee” fo cheap and will be cheaper, STREET JOURNAL from the been thought rey ‘ourth figure ouraged general list displays SUFFER DROP : dation in all grains caused prices to| ‘Were al! there, decked out in yellow pee? on the Chicago board of trade| | Failure of export buyers to follow the} | er STORES UNITE, the C. H.} an announcement made Wednesday. ' Steel Wage Raise FINANCIAL REVIBW ailing in the market dur nduatrial rails were only 4 demonstrated that the bearish in foreing liquidation, ‘Thin reasint interests operating on the side an improved tone in today’s ral Motora at the year's beat ortant developments were in prospect , advanced to o8 Stool, 106 enora! Motors oft Me: Pe UD Mes ponies Securities Tureday’s Quotations Purnished by some & teyee 810 Second Ave., — Asked 12 “ Britis ‘ 5 . ‘ ' 1% 81% > o2% 1930. .314% 15 Foreign Money Status Tuesday's Quotations Pursished by Leges & firyen 810 Kecond Ave, Seattle Sormal value Yrenets franc. Tetgian franc | jis 00 cts Greek drachma... «oe Denver Live Stock Tuesda. Quotations | Cat tle—Receipts, 1,400, Market steady. | Steers. # rm, $4.54 | + ~ 42508; |_ calves, 86.0001 | Hoge— Reece! Market S@i00 |. higher. Top, %) bulk, $7,768. Sheep—itece!p Market 10@15¢ H 1 12.60; ewes, $913.59. | | Hens—25 @ 240 1b San Francisco Produce apenas’ . Qeetttians Batter—extras, A64¢ 1; peime firsts, 29%e dow: extra pullets, undersized pullets, 20%6 Cheese—California 1 see N.Y, _ Sugar a and arte Neier Raw 4 Granulated, $9, 24e Im fancy, efined, | tr firmer, Coffee—No. 7 Rio, 11% @1 : No. 4 Bantos, 14% @15%c Ib, see Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, April 10.—Foretqn ex- change opened lower. Sterling, $4.46%; 90.0667%; lire, $0.0496%; marks, 21 108 to the dollar. Close was irregular, Sterling, $4. france, $6,.0662%; lire, 80.0497; marks, 21,108 to the dollar eee Chicago Car Lots ‘Thesday’ Qnotations 10 Becond Ave., Seattle Grain— Recta, Cont. Estd. Lt. Yr. |Wheat......... 68 a1 6 Corn. . 146 146 1 Oats, Pee ts 78 s RIG isiedss O89 i 29 2 16 ‘ i 9,000; lant year, was pointed out, are paying 60 to 70|} are said to) 6. Cattle, 9,000, Sheep, eee Chicago Board of Trade Tuesday's Quotations Open High tow — Mowe 24% $1.29% Rit HER | 1.20% PANAMA CANAL IS PROFITABLE WASHINGTON, April 11.—The Panam canal is proving a profitable enterptise for the United States, ax well as a public convenience and necesrilty. For the six months ending March 21, 1,989 vessels passing thru the canal pald tolls totaling $8,689,606.70, For the same period a year ngo, 1,472 ships used the short cut be tween the Atlantic and the Pacific and tolls received were $6,645 ,343,08, Last month was the banner month in the canal's history, 415 commer cial vessels passed thru, paying tolls of $1,827,773, average | DEMAND FOR FARM PROBLEM © LUMBER BIG NEAR SOLUTION Optimism Becoming Gen- | eral, Says Appraiser Home Building Is General, Says Lumberman TACOMA, April 11.—Home build-| ‘That the “farm problem" is solving | ing, which 1s absorbing the bulk of| itself is the opinion of W. A. Keily,| tho lumber cut, ts continuing all over|engineer-appraiser of the Federal the country with the exception of the| Land Bank of Omaha, who is visite! country districts where the farmers | ing Seattle on a vacation trip. have not recovered from thelr heavy] “In another year the: farmers wan losses, G 8, Long, general man-|all be more optimistic,” wald i<elly | ager of the Weyerhacuser T Tuerday y had thelr bump} Co, stated yesterday on returning} after the war, but last year they be-| to his desk after an absenve of near-| an cutting costs, worked harder and ly & month, Long, as chairman of|#ot resulis, The same sort of! the committes on reforestation of] Process went on in industries, and the National Lumber Manufacturers’ | the industries have already recovered. | assoctation, attended the annual con | Fe ‘armers are operati more and vention of tho association in New|more on a business basin with re: | Orleans, March 23-26, and visited nu | wards to costa and oduction, Th ‘ous Other cltl White of & national refore en route tion towards formulation | toatl are the rising wige scale’ by themselves, meeting doing re work nd » policy } slopimiam is growing been slow, there is evidence that real] “An instance of the betterment of | progress is being made and some-| conditions may be found in Wyom: thing definite. may be expected from/ing. Thin probably as poor yenate and house, now Investigating | etandpc und the land bank had | reforestation in all parts of the coun-| loans totaling about $5,000,000 out-| try, when congress convenes again,” | standing aim 500 farmers. Yet said Long. ‘The senate committee] last ye with all of its difficultie nection | le has promised to visit this s than a dozen farmers failed to} this summer | meet their payments promptly.” | CALIFORNIA |MARKET IS BIG | “They are aclling at least 1,000,000 Local Markets | feet of lumber in Los Angeles every VEGETABLES day, and 1,000,000 feet is a lot of lum Prices Paid Wholesale Dealers ber, It is almost as much as is| Artieh per dow. 28) |manufactured in Tacoma each day, | A*?*" rn 110 46 jt ia twice ax much as San Ir . 6 used right after the earthquake ‘%@ 0 fire, when reconstruction was under one HL way. Los Angelos had the largest billding record in March in her his ne, a tory. They received over the docks | at San I D 200,000,000 feet of tum ber during March alone. ‘There was bunches |so much lumber there that you could | hardly turn around, | 1 oon oe “The home builling ta In evidence| Yakima Gema, ¢ everywhere except in the country | » [ily ar He. ats ie |districta, It in not confined to large | Khabaeb ate e Jeitles or to any one secti * a1 city os Memph r : Walla, e 1.90 by tho larg mer ' ce so 90 hat have be FRUtrs | homes | 000 there aro probably 600 hich have been buil Prices ¥ Apples. Arkaneas 1 id Wholesale Dealers costing 3 000 up. AVinesaps, eXtra fancy WHITE PINE Hananas— Per 18 IN DEMAND |tisiee"sb Ver "The white pine om turers | vige--Freah Ca ; are enjoy prosperity re |Geape Frult—Fioriae, box oe cutting all they can, their b pe Ge ob, pe shee ing to off their he pan fust | Ormages—-¥ 4 as a reasonable market fforded. Pineapple aban, per case | Some of them are baying Umber in| Tesetines. andard box tbo the Northwest NUTS “The national association reaf-| Prices Paid W Mags firmed ite previous stand for a na 10 onal reforestation policy. While 1@ there has been a bill before congress which never got very far, it looks| "iimtie, nic XO} ; | an if there might be something defi DAIRY PRODUCTS 17 nite come out af the investigations Prices Paid ts hippocs | of the two committees of congrens | Buttertar— now at work. Mr. McNary, of Ore-| A «rade, Seattle delivery ... Eaue—Yresh ranch, white gon, is chairman of the wenate com.| ™SEn ya" ra mittee which was in the South while| Pullets i I was there. The committee ix hold. | Milk—Cwt., £0.b. Beattie supply. 2 ing hearings in all parta of the coun-| * % DAIRY PROD mn try and will be here this summe fase ul nab rans jers to Metall Dealers | Matier—Local creamery, cubes ‘ « COUNTS TAXES * Chinese Calculator in Use in} Treasury Department uo POL LTRY AND MEATS } | Prices Paid by Wholesie Dealers | | to Shippers | | ryere and Honsters—Live, t BY ROBERT TALI HI ‘ON, April 11 jnation’s taxes, the foreign debt and| those other big figures running Into a string of numerala almost fat, § to 10 Me, long as your arm are calculated | Melgian Hares—< Ibe. and up on a Chinese adding machin ieeaseerd=-Gin, tive, pir is “I bought It in nghai 20 yearn | Hogs— ago.” explained J. 8. McCoy, actu] Cholce. jeht . ary for tho tres iy department, | yeqpert’ MMET veerteee es as he drew forward a simple little! rack of movable wooden balls strung dium to good cents for the little instrument while! ree jin China, where ho was sent by| Prime cows und hoiters ... jthis government to help straighten| Chotce cows jout the tangle over the Boxer in.| Fair to goo demnit oat “Anybody else in this country 00 use ‘em? he was asked. “Sure,” smiled the gray-haired ac-| fmooth heavy oH tuary. jet into an argument with! Rough hoavy . your Chinese laundryman over your bill and he'll produce one of these| "Yrftne iambe . seid things and figuro out the amount} Cull lambs «1.008 9. in leas time than It takes to tell.*| Xearlings ....... 10.26010 “What's its name?” was the next yy eee a question eal ER SUGAR p— FLOUR AND- "In China, they call tt a —" Wholesale Prices Yeplied MeCoy,as he pronounced a| Flour—Biends, locals 49's, bbl. word that sounded like a cross pe-| Mlends. batons : tween “chufang” and a sneeze, “but you'll have to spell it for, yourself.” Shipping Board Will Not Withdraw Ships Fears that the United States ship- ping board fleet now operating out of Seattle in the Japanese and Chinese trade, might be withdrawn| {iillnt apd ero from the service, wore allayed at|wheat—Keel toe the Chamber .of Commerce ‘Tutsday | AU-Grain © when a letter received from Ralph | ick V. Sollitt, sasiatant chairman of the 42.00] 44.00 | 49.00 | +4200 44,00 | 46,00 148.00 | Whole,. yellow, 120'« Cracked and feed meal, Onis——Whiole, food, 100' . Tolled and ground, 70 . M, 100'H, no, M shipping board, was read in the chamber. The letter stated that 100's, no DB. M. 4.5 rumors which had been ciroulated Weed, 40" In Beattlo to that effect aro without |¢ econnel Meal « funaarign, Linseed OW Meat : - : Alfalfa Men! "If T can help people, I'll do it by giving them a chance to help them relvex; and if T can uplift or inspire, ist It be by example, inference apd fuggestion, rather than by injuno- ton.”-—Elbert Hubbartd. Vish » Grit Granite Mout Scraps—ioo. | who acts as interpreter and Nalson | | officer. ae ee E Airplane Views CRUDE O1L, KODLCTION Savings Deposits Increase Becnamcaceat edie sm ceeaanane eB Sy INDUSTRY HITS TACOMA 10 GET RECORD LEVELS $250,000 PLANT Gas Will Be Made by New, With Business Activity | Simplified Process Crude off production 4 ting a new highest record in history, T | daily aver for the latest week| Latest figures o the tusiness #it-| TACOMA, April 11—Construction vallable is reported as 1,908,450 bar ation F ed by the department Of! o¢ « $250,000 modern pliant on the relx, With additional drilling opera-| commerce indicate a continuance Of| 1/1 1444 for the Tacoma Gas & Fuel tions getting. under only fur-| the activity previously which tetas tie Tiaclel ther gain is anticipated iw in general considerably in advance | Co. was announced today by an In March well ¢ letions in the usual seasonal trend, Lum-| J. Young, manager ereaved 187 over Kebri to 1,817. | ber production in March, on the] ‘phe capacity will be 6,000,000 cuble Initial productivity 9 a day | basis of three weeks’ reports, Will res a day, just double that of the larger, the @ There were brought in 472 “dustera” | wh und 168 “gasners,” At the end of the 0, contracts for March nuiderably larger than tn Feb-| uke & new high record sinc sent house will be pre Gas hile building manufactured under month the number of tests drilling la new process recently patented b; was 660 higher, "1 | Orders for commodities from man-|Mr. Youug and G, . ray 3 ufacturers continue in large chemical engineer, formerly of thi AXES AND in most lines; unfilled orders| University of Washington DAY ; recently reported for March 1 for| The Tacoma plant will be the first The Budget, organ of tk ational |#uch commodities nteel sheets, |one in the country to have a com Budget committee, presents taxation | steel barrels, and flooring were the| plete installation of the Young-Whit facts in u striking manner by show. | largest recorded in recent years, | well process, altho gas houses in five t the avera xpayer in the n prices again increased in| Eastern cities hav ipped one ‘i works about 45 days « year | Februar while the cost of living| unit of their plants for experimental to meet thene payments, and In the dex remained une ‘The| purposes, end some gas ts city about 68 days crop index 5 the hi t « De-| made by this process in ph Sut thin iw really only direct tax- | cember, 1920, at 30 per cen Bellingham 1 Eugene, Ore. raha inauont ne ¥ faa ul Fe. | the pre addr at. hb avi Young and Whitwell started thelr view. “The-consimer miaht look at | stock was only 7 per cent|experiments Just two years ago each dollar as it disappeors and | the local plant. They later continued charge up seven cents to what may continued \the experiments at the plant of the be called indirect taxatio: It is cer ings dey n-| Puget Sound Gas company at Ever: t more than this if the com » countr Wool | ett, of which concern Mr. Young ¥ modity price inde imited to was the| vice-pres t ae al ea ndiaide rate te | produc-| The Young-Whitwell method of ow bit U, 8, RAISIN GOES ABROAD The American raj is making a ord in ita invasion of the urkets, The total exports | year 1 which ends will exceed 100,000,000 new re i's 90 days hence pounds againet 60,000,000 in the fis eal year of 1 and 000,000 Inj tye +t The valu f t your's ©x p will pproxima: $15,000,000 | 4 Jand will also exceed that of any | °U earlier year. a “Tho raisin {is compara new factor in our export 4 aya the Trade Record of th Na tional ¢ bank of New York it} te only im 1898 that the quantity | 4¢ exported was of sufficient impor: |“ tance to obtain a place in the export of the government, and th tx of that amoun! 000,000 pound. year Will Not Restrict pe SALINA, Cassell Will Get was x, according to Mr. Young, t used require #0 nak faster process than th slig’ output of} ii | present | muéh equipment , Mr. Young has already had the process patented in the United Great and Canada. ing to the nd does not uminous coal. tain Planting of Wheat ee ns, April 11.—A ‘;,| Marine Major Will lion bushels in in| Be Here on Tuesday ts? Se rts "38) On a tour of inspection of the navy yards and marine bases of the | country, Maj. Gen. John A. Lejeune, movement | of several mil! Kansas ated by &£ heat crop this exp of moisture, farmers} ernment lared tod concerted tI noverpent |in command of all American marines, of Hansas to Veotrt|both at home and abroad, will arriv at acres so far as 1 am a te “4 a: Tae for x onou ascertain pres rs ¢ visit nt. OC, ee SARE Fare union, “Major General Lejeune is one of 1 himself a dirt farmer, said today the most tinguished officers of Ithe American fighting forces. He cited on a number of occasions while commander of the Second di- vision, First army, in’ St, Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne. Hi Post in Honolulu To take charge of the Honolulu | Champagne aera | office of the United ed in the Spanish war, Cuban ourd, ( H. Cas |insurrection and Vera Cruz engage- Jews | - ma ce and repair for the | ments. ng board here, is to leave for * a es : ee Angeles Wednesday night, where| “Mamma, why has pa’ ? mil In Seattle b 1 ate es for Hor auss he thniks so much, my ve ae caer to his coming here ie Wed y ich Tie eae ’ iat Tide production have you so much na canal Oh, go away, and do Hirsi baw Tide Yirst Lew Fide Kintner,| your lessons, you naughty boy. second High Tide second ¥ = Tide ae | Second Lew Tide Kecond low Tide | Weather Bureau Report | TATOORH ISLAND, April 10.4 A. M ~Darometer rising; cloudy; wind north- | east. 14 mijes an hour. Passed im, U. & } ®& Lieut. Geo. M Harris, at & a, m. Paseed out, atr Virginian, at 7 a. m.; mo-~ torahip Kennecott, at 7:40 a. m, one Arrivals and Departures | ARHIVED—April 10—#tr € from Vancouver, BC, at 11 [April tr Santa Crux from | Dp my ate N and for Ban isco Yim Bellingham, at 6:30 p. m. | SAILED—April Latouchs for ern Alkaka, at New York " wurline for H April Str Admiral It man for Port Angeles, at 9:20 p. mj atr Fuku Maru for Kobe via Yokohama, at 6:16 p. wir La Brea for Port San * via Tacoma, at 3 p. m.; ship Bt In tow of tug Sea Mon- Vessels in Other Ports Tacoma—April 10-—-Arrived, atr lowan from Meattle, & a. m, Rellingham——April 19—Arrived, etr Vir on from Han Pedro, Towngend—April 16 str Craster Hall for Heattle Santa Maite for Seattle $6. m An il 10-Arcived, str Horace from # a om m Wits 6, 2 a. m on mm Aires, 3 a. m. | fan Pedro—4pril \.—-Arrived, etr San | attic vin Tacoma; str Santa | ram Seattle via San Francisco. | April $—Maled, air Carolyn for Tacoma: | ‘ Pagseenen =’ sir Moordisk for Seattle, on wires, Wancy, heavy, 160 to 200 3: 12| , 88% Juan—April §—Sailed, tr Presi- It Jooked very much like a toy POULTRY AND ME 12) Gent Hayes for Seattle via Balbon, abacus by which tiny children are Prices Pald Whelessie Dealers pede taught to count in kindergartens, | Ducke—b; *2| Vessels in Port at Seattle but was slightly larger. Rows of |Hene—Dressed. “Bl smith Cove q Pier A—Str Man little balls, capable of being slid] pve heave. ty £9 y att an Maru, barge Wen. tingham ; up or down, were strung on 13) Live, lieht, pS lige Mg fle ; , Pier H-Str Tyo Maru, schr Mindanao. wires. In all, it wasn’t much big-|Frvere—Per tb. ‘ I aireet Termine &e le ie 3 i im | Geese--Dressed, per tb - er than a telephone directory. | Turkeys—Fancy, drom “They‘ve been used in China for| tive, fancy, tb ee ene thousanda cf years, but I iike it — pest ae rid—Str Kolght 7 better than the modern adding ma-!ows— counter, de ¢ 11-B—8te Owego, U. S, GG, Hatda, | — chine,” sald McCoy, whowe job is to|Hogs—Fancy ble pA et Sohal ac uk Pot ahth Da aie figure sums running into billions; Ve rancy Ml | Pier 2—8tr Vietoria. “T can tse It for computing any beret Had phi | Pler D—-Str HF, Alexander. mami. sp to. 9,904,$99,080,809 and . do LIVE STOCK Union Pacific ‘Terminal—Str Lurline, i 9,999,099 b id Quotations at Stockyards Pacific Coast Coal Bunkers—Bargo E)- | it in a jifty Cattle wel, ship Oriental, hip enj. ¥, Pack McCoy aid that he paid 60] Prime steers | 1 Moorings—Str Too- | E. Morse, str Silverad atr Delight, atr Wi Hartland, str Woat Ison. | Connectiout Street Torminal—-Str Com- mercial Traveler, atr Banta Crus, | Atlantic Street Terninal—Sehr Spokane. Associated Oil Dock—Stc Latouche. Hoattle Plover Mila Terminal—U. & ©. G. Algonquin. King & Winge Dock—Motorship Ruby, motorship Anvil, Stacy Btreet Terminal—t, 8, G. ¢. neer. jor Street ‘Torminal— 8, GOR, Discoverer. Commercial Boller Works Spokane Street Terninal Luckenbach, str Queen Pio- Schr Wawona, Str Shielakof, Str Walter 4 Drydocke—Motdrehip Boxer, ate Sagadahoc, #tr Commercial Spirit, 1 Bridge & Dredging Co.—Str Puget Sou } Schr Geo, Mill—#tr John ©. Weat Heattle ‘Training Btation Hetturnane’ Drrdock—Moto ‘ahip Oregon, tr Wallingford, achr Henry Wileon, Stream—Fi f—-Sohr John A, Alaska Stoamahtp Moorings--Str Redondo. Winslow Marino Railway Barge Coquit- lam City, ate Cacsat, whalers Nos 1, Every Chinese merchant deals wi ith foreign firms thru a ‘“eomprador,” ei poe iene ‘of this veluable py yan of stock trading, ‘9 margin ts reautred and the risk is limited te their firvt cout. 126 will sys 100 shar: the N. Y, Stock Exel Move of & points from option price you op estan o taki 308 Fourth Avenue | Southern California Trofin. What Are One Thousand Hours of Time or More Each Year, Worth TO YOU, MADAM? You actually can save that much of your valuable time that you now speriu in the four walls of your kitchen, cook- ing meals and baking for your family. THE AUTOMATIC GAS CONTROL OF OUR GUARANTEED GAS RA IS A PATENTED DEVICE KNOW? LORAIN OVEN HEAT REGULATOR as Let us install a modern labor, time and strength-saving Clark Jewel or Reliable gas range in your home this spring. You measure the even heat as easily as you measure milk in a cup. One easy turn of Lorain’s Red Wheel gives you the correct oven heat for any baking or cooking. It is impossible to waste an inch of gas in using your oven—forty-four accurately measured oven heats al- ways at your command. We carry a complete line of the de- pendable gas ranges on our sales floor. SEATTLE LIGHTING COMPANY Main 6767 THE GAS COMPANY Teren§i—sir Aa- | THE Art of Financing How to Raise CAPITAL for Legitimate Enterprises SENT FREE BY Walter M. Cookson ‘ormer U.S, Post Office Inspector During my twenty-one years as a U, 5. Post Office Inspector, 1 have gained valuable knowledge pertaining to the financing of Jogitimate businoss enterprises, I have studied the successful methods of scores of manufacturing and industrial concerns throughout the United States, who used proven methods for financing their enterprises. vo on ultra-conservative eite se of extrome merit, which needs additional capital for expansion, I will gladly for- ward free yaluable plans showing an easily operated successful methud of financing. Secure This Free Book The Art of Financing=-the latest book on the subject of raising money for legitimate enterprises, I am sending FREE while the limited edition lasts. You may send for your copy now with the assurance that you will receive promptly, valuable suggestions for a successful money-ralsing campaign, If you desire to sell a stock or bond issue, let me explain an oasily operated plan for quickly putting your business on a paying basis by a method which others admit successful, If you Your FREW copy of thia valuable book is waiting for you. ‘The ixeful Knowledge I dave guinod during years of experienes, In- vestigating all sorts of enterprises and studying successfe?: finan: ong methods, will be given reliable business men who have worthy projects that offer reasonable profit possiiilities to investors, Write me if you need lar, Walter M, 537 California, capital for financing, Bldg., Cookson, San Fernando Los Angeles, WM ee ag nt Mt A Sat Mt Sot Mt Bol Bat Bot Bat el Mt eB Sat Bt Bk ot el000o000n00Ccono0n0Ccs