Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (April 9, 1910)
THE MORXFSG OREGOXIAX. SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1910. 9 Oranges Are Now Cheap and Good 3st One-Third Less Than Table Ap 5,000 California Orchards Stripped of Choicest unimlknsil 99 jrai s O) icummcw now mmrf Grand April "Sunkist'' Sale Begins Monday, April 11, 1910 Of all times of the year this is fruit buying time. Of all fruits oranges are cheapest and best right and of all brands of oranges the J'Sunkist Orange is King. At this great sale "Sunkist" Oranges cost one third less than table apples. Get choicest "Sunkist" Oranges, then inquire what choice table apples are worth prove it yourself. The unsurpassed lusciousness of "Sunkist" Oranges will make you want to go back to the store for moreand more of the delicious fruit. Every table should have "Sunkist" Oranges for every meal. Sunkist" Oranges Are Seedless They are firm, sweet, tree ripened, delicious. Their ex J quisitely rich juiciness is found in none but "Sunkist" brand. Their deep tint vouches for matured full-flavor in the ten der pulp. They are picked by gloved hands and with the same extreme care that is taken in their scientific cultivation. "Sunkist" Oranges are our choicest fruit from 5,000 groves, f - "Sunkist" Lemons are firm, tree-ripened and con tain an unusual amount of juice. -You'll quickly see the difference between "Sunkist" and common lemons. Beautiful Orange Spoon FREE! Send us 12 "Sunkist" lemon or orange wrappers and six 2-cent stamps and we will send you free a handsome orange spoon of Rogers' full standard plate. You can easily have a full table set in a short time. Start saving the day the big sale opens. Send your wrappers and stamps to "Sunkist" on the Wrapper "Sunkist" oranges and lemons are sold only in tissue paper wrappers bearing the word "Sunkist" Insist that the oranges and lemons you buy are wrapped in that manner then you are positive about the quality. in.M. ayijif. J iimu. .lUH lJMii.lli't. U' ,?;ytW.-lK!'g"-i;wx 't 3 . . "Eat More Oranges Physicians' Advice "Sunkist" Oranges are unsurpassed as a tonic. Physicians advise oranges as a diges tive aid. they have tremendous food value for brain and nerve cells. - Morning, noon and night is orange eating time. YonU be surprised at the health-giving qualities of "Sunkist" Oranges. California Fruit Growers' Exchand 69 Chicago, HI. tzy !UIIKJMlJJJWIiHWIU lit At V; irkiirm 2. HENEY TO SEET.fi. Prosecutor's Pilgrimage Europe Is Explained. to THIRD TERM TO BE TOPIC tnformatkm Will Be-Given of Inner Working of Ijeaue in San Fran Cisco -Land Cases Only an Incidental Consideration. Portland friends of Francis J. He Tie y, prosecutor of the Oregon land frauds, yesterday announced that the purpose of his visit to Burope Is to Join Theodore Roosevelt. The fact that the ex-President has pre at confidence In the astuteness of the Western law yer, and that Mr. Heney has been for many years one of the closest of his advisers, 1s Riven as a reason for the pilgrimage at this time. It Is believed that Mr. Roosevelt hae no personal interest in the results of the Oregon land fraud rases, of which there remain for trial the charges against Ringer Hermann, ex Commissioner of the General Land Of fice, John N. Williamson, ex-member of Congress, and the Mays-Jones cases now pending on appeal. If these sub Jects are discussed at all. It Is be lieved by friends of Prosecutor Heney that It will occur in only an incidental way. "Inside' Story to Be Told. It is said that the real purpose of the via it Is to Inform Colonel Roosevelt fully on the "inner workings' of the propaganda which is believed to be in existence throughout the United States for the nomination of the ex-President for another term in the White House In 1912. It is not a secret that the Roosevelt League, of San Francisco, is not overlooking any effort along that line, and as he is one of the lead ers of the organization, Heney's friends believe that he has been delegate! to present the views of the Californians as noon a Mr. Roosevelt may be reached. This view is supported somewhat by the announcement made by Prosecutor Heney following the close of the Her mann case, when he said that he. had decided to postpone a retrial for two reasons, one of them being considera tion for the advanced age of Mr. Her mann and the other because of a de sire to consolidate the Hermann, Wil liamson. Mays and Jones cases, all charges of participation in the Blue Mountain conspiracy, if the Court of Appeals should remand Mays and Jones for retrial. Joint Trial to Be Resisted. It 1s certain that the attorneys for Hermann will resist any effort to force the ex-Congressman before a Jury in connection with Mays and Jones. Her mann has heretofore been separated from his alleged confederates, and while the court has the authority to rescind and consolidate the cases with out the right of appeal or laying foun dation for error, it is believed that Heney would be compelled to assign urgent reasons for such action in or der to be successful. With that view of the situation In mind, friends of Mr. Heney believe that he had the visit to Colonel Roosevelt in. mind when he announced his change in programme regarding the cases. One of the closest friends of Heney announced that Colonel Roosevelt had sent for Heney to Join him and that they would remain together after the meeting, returning to the United States by the same steamer. Mrs. Heney left San Francisco on Wednesday or Thurs day, and will Join her husband in Washington. LOT OWNER WILL NOT PAY Property Offered as Recreation Park for Tired Councilmen. Rather than pay the sewer assess ment of $20 agrainst his lot in the Ter williRer Homestead district, Frank J. Richardson declares that he will let the city take it for payment. He wrote a letter to the Mayor and Council and suggested that the municipality might make excellent use of the property as a park "for recreation for tired and wornout Councilmen." The letter cre ated merriment yesterday morning when read before the sewer committee. Richardson, who has a law office at 305 Swetland building, says in his let ter that his lot is at places 40 feet be low the natural level, and that "a billy goat would require an aeroplane to get from the bottom to the top of It." He entered emphatic protest against the assessment of $20 against the lot, and declared the total tax against it in 1909 was 36 cents. The committee overruled his remonstrance, but took no action on his suggestion for the use of his lot as a recreation park for wornout and tired Councilmen. SEASIDE FOLLOWS CHICAGO "Catch Your Own Trout, and See It Cooked"' Is Latest Fad. SEASIDE, Or., April 8. Special.) To enter a restaurant, order a mess of trout, and then before one page of the daily paper can be read, have them caught, cooked and served is the latest Seaside gastronomical fad. Yesterday M. I Barrett, proprietor of the Gold Bar Restaurant, which is built directly over the Necanicum River, dropped a baited hook from the back door and immediately landed one of the largest trout ever caught here. The fish measured 19 Vi Inches. If vour hats one-sixteenth too small your "head knows it. A Gordon stiff hat fits you to a sixteenth. Free Sunday excursion. Woodburn Orchard Co., Henry Bldg. Both phones. 2,131 fj. NATURAL LAXATIVE FOR CONSTIPATION O Speedy Recommended by Physicians Refuse Substitutes A' TRACKWALKER SET FREE JURY ACQUITS WATCHMAN OF BLAME FOR W RECK. Section Foreman Tells of Trouble in Boarding-House Over Setting of Two Tables. Samuel B. Lewis, trackwalker for the O. R. & N. Company, and an ex-sc!dier, was acquitted at 3:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon by the jury in Judge Gan tenbein's department of the Circuit Court, which has been trying him on a manslaughter charge. The jury was out only 15 minutes. Lewis was alleged to have deserted his post on the track between Dodson and Bonneville, on the night of November 22, last, during a heavy rain, permitting a fast freight to be ditched by running into a land slide which had washed down upon the track. , Engineer Thomas F. Rogers was scalded and crushed to death in the acident. Foreman Stith was the only witness called by the state in rebuttal yester day morning. He was asked whether the day watchmen ate breakfast with the night men, or whether the day men had their breakfast first, and were then sent out to relieve the night men. He replied that there had been some trouble at the boarding house, and that the proprietor objected to setting two tables, but that he was about to in sist upon It when the accident occurred. SOCIETY HEIR TO FARMS Grant County Man Leaves Estate to Aid Boys and Girls. "W. T. Gardner, superintendent -of the Boys' and Girls' Jtld Society of Oregon, has just returned from a trip to Can yon City, where he was called by the attorneys for the estate of W. L. Jus tice, who recently died and left to the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society all his' real and personal property. This made the society heir to an un divided one-half interest in about 420 acres In Grant County and a homestead of 120 acres In Fox Valley. "It is nedless to say that the society much appreciates the benevolence of Mr. Justice," said Mr. Gardner, "and especially so as it is the first time a farmer residing so long a distance from Portland has remembered the good work of this society. It seems that a year of so ago much active work was done in Grant County by the society in taking charge of children who were being brought up in idle ness and vicious surroundings, and this generous- bequest undoubtely. was the outgrowth of the interest taken by Mr. Justice and other citizens of Grant County in the work of this child-saving institution." WIFE L0ST;HUBBY" HERE Moyie, B- C. Man Iears Spouse Will Shun Him When Seen. J. S. Wilson, of Moyie, B. C, is in Portland seeking his wife, and to make matters worse, Wilson is afraid that because of his own misfortunes his wife will have nothing to do with him when she sees him. According to -his story, he was kid naped at Sandpoint, Idaho, letters he gave to oe posted to his wife not be ing sent. Although the alleged kid naping started as a joke, it turned out to be earnest and he says Probate Judge Pender kept him in Sandpoint as a witness. For days he has walked the streets, hoping to see his wife, Nettie Wilson. He thinks she may be . using her maiden name, Nettie Haines, believ ing he had deserted her. Mrs. Wil son has a friend, Minnie Wood, sup- posed to -be living in Montavilla, but Wilson says he can find no trace of: her at the address he understood was hers. No Man is Stronger Than His Stomach rv. A. strong man is strong ail over. No man can be strong who is suffering from weak stomach with its consequent indigestion, or from some other disease oi the stomach and its associated organs, which im pairs digestion and nutrition. For when the stomach is weak or diseased there is a loss of the nutrition contained in food, which is the source of all physical strength. When a man "doesn't feel just right," when he doesn't sleep well, has an uncomfortable feeling in the stomach after eating, is languid, nervous, irritable and despond ' cnt, he is losing the nutrition needed to make strength. Such a man should use Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It cares diseases ot the stomach and other organs ot diiestion and nutrition. It enriches the blood, tnvliorates the liver, strengthens the kidneys, nourishes the nerves, and so GIVES HEALTH 71XD STRENGTH TO THE WHOLE BODY. Yob can't afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this non alcoholic medicine op known composition, not even though the urgent dealer may thereby make a little bigger profit. Ingredients printed on wrapper. A Yearly Eocoinnie Gos&jrsmt If You Purchase a. Five or Ten-Acre woqdborn orchard 0 Already Planted FMCI Already Planted Free Excursion and Dinner on Sunday April 10 Phone or Call for Particulars Send for Our Art Folder WOODBURN ORCHARD CO., Inc. 505-506 Henry Bldg., 4th and Oak Sts. Phones: M 8304, A 7473 Office OpenAIl Day and Evenings from 7:30 to 9