Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1911)
1 3 ' tuts artmyraty QKEGomy, itksday, jm.ir.z5, i9ii .. LEADING AVIAT0B5 WHO ARE COMPETING IN GREAT AR0TJND-ENGLAND FLIGHT NOW IN PROGRESS. ' MIANIGAL SAYS HE'S GETTING FAT Prisoner Would Show Report ers That He Is Not on Verge of Breakdown. WIFE HIS ONLY WORRY I a 'I -aT r sf I . J . .w . oa- .vtfataVu jiF !. I atT7d-War--- - I a -e ttV I' I 1,1 I'lf.U- ! . ' I, ( : . k x V l t'l I Misting Button on Confrd I)?na- I mltcr Tronm Fmtented as Etidrnce Thai II I "ot Losing Girth Perceptibly. LOS ANOELE3. July S.-To prove that ; ts vii not wmstln awr btrtuw of ' marry or the outrom of his llir-d , fnn rjlon n th McNamara Synmltlna- ! ea. Ortt FL McManlcal railed nrwm- . paprmri Inta t.s Coronra Junrroom SaV and ahOW4 hr a tnluln Knllnn rrntn 1 tn band of Ma trouxra that ha waa not loalna a-lrth- Mi-Manlcai bad read In the carters al- !rcatcs that ha was astramrly nfrrout and oa tha Tare of a mental break- down- He admitted belnc worried about his wife, who Is sow la a hospital. stricken a 1th nervous proetratlon. but aside from that declared hlmeelf per- rtly content. Bert Conner. E. Ira Bender and A. R. Maple, onion men who war reindicted br the (rand Jury last week on chancel of rnnxptrary to wrerk the county hall of records with dynamite, will be tr- ralrned next Wednesday. Ciarenr-e 8. Darrow. chief counsel for the McNamara brothers, returned today from Saa Fraarlsco. where he had spenl several day In conference with labor leaders there in reference to evidence lie expects to procure from that city. He had BOthlnf "to aay upon Ms return. It was announced by his aseocTltes. how ever, that a bill of exceptions to the de cision of Juiife Bordwell overruling the motions to quash tha MXamara Indict ments would be &!ed July 11. Mrs. McNamara. who waa stricken with nervous prostration last week, wai e::-ht!y Improved today. BOMB WRECKS MILK VAN Slack I! a ox Explode Infernal Ml rlilne on Gotham Kerry. NEW TORK. July J 4. Police patrol finals and fire tucs were sent speed inc up the North River early today by the explosion cf a "black hand bomb on board the ferryboat Nether- land. sMca waa on Ita way to tna Jarkawanna staUm In Hoboken. The bomb had been placed In a mltk ran which waa part of the cargo of a milk van on its way from an Italian dairy company's depot on the lower Kast Elde. The side of the van waa blown out. milk and fragment of the tee cana were scattered all over the boat and a waconload of chlckone. which oojcplel ir adjolnlns; beria on trie deck, waa sent soartnc oat to sea. The bun I rod or at passeris-tr In the cablna war thrown into contusion but nobody waa Injured. MASONS JOIN IN SEARCH Lodges of Coal State Try to Kind K. E. Harden, of Pasadena. LOi ANG1XES. July Zi.i Special -All efforts to secure trace of E. E. Bar den. Pasadena traveling; salrsmii who disappeared mysteriously about Mir- 1. l:e so (ar proved fruitless, al t.iouib the police of a score of cities In tne Pacific Coast and Middle West ern states have been asked to aid In tr search. Harden was last heard from In Boise, Mario. At that time he was on the way to his home In Pasadena. The Pasa dena Lode e of Masons, of which Harden waa a member, today sent out cards asklna- all lodcrs In Ortion. Washlnc ton and Montana to aid In flndlns him. Harden has a wife and two sons In Pasadena, NAVY TO DECIDE BATTLE Doth Side Claim Victory In Xarra-j-anrtl Bay "Kngageinent." WASHINOTON. July II. The Navy IVpartment will soon announce which f'.eet won the "Battle of Narragansett Bay." Rear-Admlrl Osterhaus. who 'rofumanded one of the fleets, and Com iMtnJfr sherle. who directed tee other. 'each claims to have gained theoretical possession of Lone Island Sound. Eacn claims he annihilated his -enemy From the official reports of the um pire, soon to reach him. Secretary Meyer will decide which fleet won. In terest In the theoretical naval battle was very keen, and It la not expected that the officers and cruw of the "an nlhllated fleet" will be willing to bury -their claims of victory under official reports. ENGINEER SAVES TRAIN ew York Police Seek W reckers Who Piled Tie on Track. NEW TORK. July $. Bloodhounds are aiding the detectives searching to day for tho highwaymen who made an attempt to wreck a Long Island pass enger train near valley Stream. L. I last nUht- A lS-car train, crowded with pleasure-seekers, waa speeding Into this city when Whltford. tho engi neer, saw an obstruction on tho track. He threw on his brake, reversed his enclne. and brought the train to a stop within IS feet of the obstruction. A tie had been planted In a hnl dug be tween the rails, the end tilted toward the approachlnsr locomotive. It had been firmly spiked down between tha ties and then securely tied by ropes. BULLETS FLY DURING RIOT Cleveland Garment Workers Try to Storm Manufacturer's Home. CLEVELAND. July J4. Msny shots were exchanged between strikers and guards In a garment strikers' riot here today. Two etrlkers were wounded and the police made many arrests. The rioting occurred at the home of Charles Sperling, father of E Sperling, of E. Sperling Co, cloak makers. The garment workers believed that .outside work for the Sperling factory waa being; cup at fperlinf'a home. mil 1 - in nil , .. -ivyi-s.- -,' ?; f KBi: esa" III III:- i ? ' Ill II B ' . th ;fp ft cr I , . $ - 1 tvutl, 1-lt.KME k.LKlNtS ASU SHIP GOMES EMPTY Passengers Left in Italy Account of Cholera. on QUARANTINE IS FEARED Health Ofrieers at w York Say There I Xo Danger of Spread ing of Please No New Cases Are Reported. NEW TORK. July St. For tho firs lime In manv a year, a great passenge liner between Italy and the Inited States arrived at Nw York thla morn In, her cabins empty and steerage void of life, with not a passenger aboard. The cause was the cholera epidemic In New Tork City and Bos. ton. which Tnlled States neaun ci flclals are fighting with all the vigor at their command. So rigid la the quarantine now In force at this port, t.iat the TOO passengers orginally booked to take passage on the steam ship, the San Giorgio, were oisem barked at Nsrlcs by the officials of the company. This action followed a cable from the I'nlted States that the time of quarantine for passengers bound from Naples to this country had been in creaaed from five to 1 days. The steamer waa sent on to arrive on schedule time on account of Its large consignment of perishable freight. The stringent measures taken to pre vent further spreading of cholera here undoubtedly will prove effective, ac cording to the health officers, who to day noted that no new casea had de veloped since last Saturday, when Manuel Berrnudes. a Spanish foreman, was found to be suffering from the disease at Bellevue Hospital. The re ports from Hoffman Island thla morn Ing stated that there were no further suspicious esses of sickness among the detained (aaaengers of the steam ship otoitke and that more of the passengers probably would be Teleaaed soon from quarantine. No further deaths were reported from Swinburne Island, where Bermu dea la said to be In the same condition aa when he arrived there from Belle vue. The steamers Perugia and Prince de nemonte are atlll at anchor off the quarantine station. iiraitn officers are trying to run down the sailors who were occupants of the sallora' boarding-house where Kermudea waa taken 111 with choler. before he went to Bellevue. where the nature or his Illness waa discovered. CHOLERA VICTIM IS B CRIED Children of Woman Wlio Dies In Boston Watched for Disease. BOSTON. July 21. The body of Mrs. Tomaaslnl Mastrodenlco. Boston's first victim of cholera, waa burled today In a little graveyard near the quarantine station at Gallup's Island. The woman's two children were taken to the quaran tine atatlon today, where they were watchet by experts. "We are trying to watch every Immigrant that comes from New York." said Pr. 8. H. Dur- gln, chairman of the Board of Health, today. No trace of the Spanish sailor who recently came to Boston with chol era was found today. COMMONS HOOT ASQUITH (Vmtlnued From Flrt Pare-) about to assault him, but waa pulled back by friends. The speaker's pleadings to "observe the decencies of debate." were drowned In the uproar. The wonder was that he crowded House did not come to blows, but the belligerent members were pulled down by neighbors. The polltl- al hatred engendered by the veto bill made today's session the stormiest In the memory cf the oldest member. Every means short of personal vio lence waa successfully used to prevent Mr. Asqolth from explaining the vlewa of the government. So vlo.ent were the opposition members and so indignant l..m. -a . mm . I AXDKK BKAtMUiT, KKKXCH EJiTK.tXTS AND WKYMANN, AMKKICAfi-BELOW, IN RECENT FLIGHT AT GENOA. AND CAPTAIN S. K. CODV. were the ministerial adherents that the speaker, after two hours, decided to sus pend the sitting to obviate graver dis orders. Asqolth Given Speech to Press. The members dispersed amid a scene of violent excitement, with shouts of "traitor." "coward." following the Prime Minister as be departed, to which the Ministerialists hurled back cries of "You are beaten! We will wlnl" Mr. Asqulth tonight Issued to the news papers a summary of the speech he was prevented from delivering. In It he con tended that the principles of the machin ery of the bill had been before the people at two elections. By no form of referendum devisable could the opinion of the electorate have been more care fully ascertained. The government has accepted the Im portant amendmenta In the House of Commons: the purpose of the Lords amendments waa to set the machinery aside. The government had proposed specifically to describe what were finance bills: the Lords proposed to create a committee, which the Premier described aa a "Junta." to determine wnai were finance bill and what were matters of great gravity whatever that might mean which should be put herore tne conn trv bv referendum. There wss not i great budget of the last TO years which could not possibly have been thrown out by such a Junta. Premier Explains Position. "When you have a Unionist majority In both houses." continued the Prime Minister, "the whole thing becomes dead letter. Measures of the most far reaching effect may be passed In defiance of public opinion and over the heads of the electorate. You live under an unchecked and undiluted single cham ber fovernment: but with the Liberal government In power, you would have a House of Commons, fettered beyond all Its predecessors. In control of finance. and In all eaaea where an Irresponsible and non-representative body. Independ ent of both houses, should so determine. every deadlock will be settled only by referendum." "These amendments.' added Mr. As qulth. "taken aa a whole, amount to rejection of our bills. After quoting constitutional writers and the history of the passage of the reform bills by William IV, he gave his promise to create enough peers to Insure the passage of the present bill. Balfour Is Apologetic A. J. Balfour, leader of the opposi tion. In reply to the speech the Premier was unable to make, received a quiet hearing. He waa somewhat apologetic. He went on to denounce the policy of the Government, when he waa Inter rupted by the Home Secretary. Winston Spencer Churchill. Mr. Balfour turned hotly upon the Home Secretary and said he remembered him as the ring leader of a gang of disturbers, who. when a constitutional queation was at stake, kept a Minister atanduig i hour without allowing a word to be heard. Mr. Balfour reminded the House that the parliamentary bill had not been re lected by the House of Lords. "The Prime Minister seems assured that the Constitution provides for the creation of peers aa the ordinary min istry for dealing with a deadlock be tween tha two Houses." he continued. "I believe revolutions may be neces sary but that the Prime Minister la destroying the prerogative of the Crown and the Independence of the House of Lords at one stroke not to avert war or to carry measures which the masses of the people are passion ately desirous of but for one object only to prevent the people of this country from expressing any new ver dict on a question which they had twice before expressed in their verdict on home rule." KIXG TRIES TO QVELI STRIFE Asqalth and Balfour Called to Con ference With Monarch. LONDON'. July 14-Klng George has actively intervened In an attempt to steer the warring political tactions to a peace ful goal. None Is more anxious than ne to avoid swamping tne nisionc noun of Peers with a battalion of new crea tions, and If his personal Influence can effect It. he wMl arrange some plan for overcoming the present deadlock. His Majesty today gave auaience to Premier Asaulth A. J. Balfour, leader of the opposition in the House of Com mons, and Lord Lansdowne. the Unionist chief In the House of Lords. It waa understood that Hi Majesty would see other leaders later In the day. Mean- hlle. the political situation is so out of gear that the King postponed his In tended departure for Goodwood, where he was going this afternoon to visit the Duke of Richmond and attend a four dayjr race meeting. I IS Hard Luck Pursues Weymann in Airship Race. FRENCHMAN IS IN LEAD American's Biplane) Bucks Like Broncho In Fickle Wind, but When He Finally Gets Away He Flies Like Pigeon. EDINBURGH. Scotland. July 24. With Weymann. the American aviator, delayed by a series of misfortunes, J Vedrines, the French aviator. In a Mo rane-Boret monoplane, maintaina the lead in the Circuit of Great Britain aviation race for the Dally Mail's prize He covered the distance of 143 miles from Hendon to Edlnbaugh this morn Ing In less than six hours' actual flight time. Beaumont followed Vedrines closely, Weymann was held up at Hendon, awlting the arrival of a new propeller. Then he started on a trial flight In fickle wind. His biplane bucked like a broncho, but he made a safe landing. Later, word waa received here that the American had again headed for this city, going with the speed of a pigeon. AUTO PLlfNGES OVER CLIFF Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Rogers, of Van couver, Barely Escape Death. WASHOUOAL. Wash.. July 24. Spe- clal. Their automobile plunging over 3-foot embankment overlooking the Washougal Klver, Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Rogers, of Vancouver, grazed death this morning, a tree on which the machine hung saving them from being crushed to death on sharp rocks. Mrs. Rogers sustained a broken limb hove the knee, two broken ribs and several bruises. Two of Mr. Rogers' ribs were broken, he waa badly cut about the head and also sustained many bruises about the body. Robert Rlngo, 6 years old. saw the accident and notified hie mother, Mrs. Hans Rlngo, who lives 200 yards from the scene. She and A. A. Clarke res cued the autolsta from their perilous po sition beneath the car as it hung from the tree and summoned Dr. R. L. Smith, who attended them. . Mr. and Mrs. Roirers were taken to the Ringo home. The accident happened on tne state road four miles from Washougal as the Rogers were returning from a fishing trln. The automobile struck a rut in the road, and the steering-gear railing, the machine plunged over the bank 20 feet from the river. FIRE RAGES IN HOSPITAL Litres of Feeble-Minded tniiuren Endangered in Kansas Blaze. WICHITA. Kan.. July 24. "Word reached Wichita late tonight from Win field that the State Hospital for Feeble- Minded Is on fire, and that the entire institution is doomed. Reports from Winfield say that the two main buildings of the asylum are already burned to the ground. Both were filled with feeble-minded children. It is feared the loss of life is heavy. The Institution Is two miles outside the city, and the telephone communi cation was destroyed 'with one of the burned buildings. The fire is still burning furiously. x BEATTIE STICKS TO STORY Virginian Accused of Killing Wife Still Insists Robber Shot Her. RICHMOND. Va., July "24. Henry Clsy Beattie, Jr., continued to exhibit an unruffled calmness toaay in jail. where ha la waiting action oy tne YANKEE DELAYED BEAUMONT PHOTOGRAPHED , grand Jury August 14 on the charge that he murdered his young wife. He Insists that not he. but a high wayman, shot Mrs. Beattie while they were automobillng last Tuesday night on the Midlothian pike. Beulali Binford, the 17-year-old "wo man In the case." who. according to the police, supplies a motive for the crime. Is in another cell In the same prison. BREADMAKERS IN TRUST Department of Justice Has Eye on Xew York Baking: Combine. NEW YORK. July 24. The Journey men bakers In New York, New Jersey and Connecticut have taken up their cudgels against control of the bread .business in New York City by any one corporation or combination. Delegates from 66 locals of the Bakers' Union are organizing the trl-state anti-bread trust conference, which purposes to (fight an alleged attempt to control the trade and drive hundreds of small Inde pendent bakers,- out of business. That the Department of Justice has its eye on the proposed bread trust Is Indi cated by a statement given out by Max Freund. representing the International organization of bakers' unions. CROWDED CARS FORBIDDEN Police Eject "Straphangers" From Minneapolis Trolleys. MINNEAPOLIS. July 24. With the Police Department and the streetcar employes at last in accord, the strap hanger, it seems. Is about to come Into his own, even though he be left on the curb. The police have been hauling streetcar crews off their cars and hal ing them into the Municipal Court, charged with violations of the strap hangers' ordinance. To date 33 crews await hearing. The crew of an overloaded car "beat the po lice to It" by refusing to budge an inch, and then called on the officers to eject passengers above the capacity of the car. This done, the car proceeded, comfort ably filled. Pendleton AthleteCets Big Offer. pendleton; or.. July 24. (Spe cial.) Donald Rader, Pendleton High School athlete and star baseball player, who has been a resident of Medford and a member of that team In South ern Oregon League for the last year has received an offer from fhe Boston Americans. He finished the Medford High School this Spring. He contem plates entering the University of Ore gon this Fail and is reluctant about accepting the offer. COOL DAYS BY THE SEA AT CLATSOP BEACH Seaside "Seashore Limited" Leaves Portland 9:20 A. M. Daily. "Week-End Special" Leaves Portland 2:30 P. M. Saturday. Other Trains Leave 8:00 A. M. and 6:30 P. M. Daily. ROUND TRIPS, $4.00 DAILY, $3.00 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. City Ticket Office, Fifth and Stark Sts. The North Bank Station, Eleventh and Hoyt Sts. 17 You Would Derive Pleasure From Your Housework Secure One of These Cool Frocks HOUSE DRESSES 98 Cents Selling Normally at $1.30 and $1.75 Fresh, crisp new dresses so correct in measurements that alterations are seldom necessary. The make of these garments is the same high standard and the fit as perfect as always shown in this section Made of splendid percale in light cool blue and white check and black and white checks. Made with the cool collarless neck and short sleeves bound and finished with a bias band of the material, has a wide pleat over the shoulder and fastens on the side front. The skirt i3 plain gored with an inverted pleat in the back. Also another very attractive model in the ever popular seersucker gingham in nurse stripe. These dresses are made with high necks and turn down collars and long sleeves, with a strap and pleat over the shoulder. Plain skirt, button front style. See Window Display - This PIANOS Advertisement PIANOS Appeals to PIANOS Women PIANOS Please Read Down Go We have only a few days left in which to close out the balance of our stock some of the very best styles and makes left in both Pianos and Player Pianos. Bather than pay storage on them, we will sacrifice way below factory cost this week, and we now say this is your last great opportunity. Some splendid used Pianos at your own price. Easy terms on everything if desired. Office fixtures of all kinds at a great sacrifice. HOVENDEN PIANO CO. 106 FITTH STREET Gearhart Columbia Beach First-class Hotels at Gearhart and Sea- side. Camps and Cottages. Surf and plunge bathing, fishing, motor ing, tennis, golf and other sports. Business men spend week-ends at the Beach without loss of office time. PIANOS Buyers PIANOS the Prices NEXT PERKINS HOTEL