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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1907)
THE SUNDAY OKEGONIAX, PORTLAND, MAY 26, 1907; iWAS MHS. SUULU S ' LIFE IN DANGER? aim Plot Said to Have Existed to I Poison or Drug Her. The AJAX STEEL RANGE is a model of simplicity. The body of the range is made of highest grade of blue planished steel.. This steel will not rust, chip, peel or turn white when heated. It will not warp, break or crack. The walls are double.' and' heavy asbestos is used as an interlining to prevent heat radiation. The AJAX STEEL RANGE is made to suit the housewife, and every new ANONYMOUS LETTER SENT . improvement has been carefully thought out and each new feature is practical. TO) p Charges That Men Belonging to the Federal Service Mere Employed i Against Jler Are Also Devel oped In Uiislern Scandal. NEW TOniC. May 23. (Special.) The statement that Mrs. Howard Gould had discovered a plot to poison or drug her and charges that mTi belonging to the United StHtes J'ostal Inspection Bureau and the United States Secret Service Bu reau were employed against her. were developments today In the investigation in the Police Department scandal.- Other . developments, outside of Commissioner Bingham's inquiry, were the announce ment of ex-Police Inspector Byrnes that lie had Instructed his counsel to bring ult against Mrs. Gould for her assertion that before her inarrlugo to Howard Mould his family employed Mr. Byrnes, then the head of the detective bureau, to try to find something In her past that would prevent Mr. Gould from making her bis wife. Warned of I'oUon. In Food. In the report printed here today of Mrs. Gould's revelations to Commissioner Bingham concerning the detective bu reau's hounding her. reference was not mad to n anonymous note which she received last Autumn, warning her "not to take coffee or food for fear of poison." v A woman friend, who was present while Mrs.' Gould was under examination, and who had permission to repeat what she said to a reporter, withheld this fact for vej-y cood reasons. The note reached her at a time when Jier gravest fears had been aroused by She detectives, who were following her everywhere, and 'by a letter from Abe Hummel, continuing anonymous com munications as to the attitude of the po- 4ice toward her. ( Lived in Fear of Danger. Mrs. Gould did not take the injunction not to partake of "coffee or food" lit 'erally. Sho felt that no attempt would be made to poison her under the circum stances, but believed that it would be to drug her in a public place and thus make flier appear to be intoxicated. In this condition sno eouici nave Deen ajsgraceu I'or compromised by the men who had .been hounding her. Mrs. Gould since that time has not ventured out unaccompanied and has 1'heen most cautious in selecting places to f take her meals when compelled to do so ' f -iway from her own apartments. - if r .r I IB1GA OF CHAMPION THIRST ' "JSciIICAGO.X DHCXK EVERY DAY IX NIXK YEARS. i Wife Wearies of Man Who Has Spent Over $8000 in Vain Kffort to i Kclice Drouth, jp STATISTICS OF MR. BICA'S THIRST. Times intoxicated 3S25 01a-s of beer consumed (esti mate) tS3,70O Glnab's of whU-ky consumed (es timate) 32.R.V) Irtink bill (estimate) $&!12.jO j CHICAGO. May 25. (Special.) The possessor of what is probably the most persistent thirst in the city of Chicago lias been discovered. His name is Fer dinand Bica and he jumped into the calcium of publicity today because his wife, Anna, has become bored with having a spouse whose throat-is al ways as dry as the desert of Sahara. Mrs. Bica has therefore asked Judge McEwen for divorce and the certificate ef evidence was tiled today. Divorce court habitues and officials, who have heard of the annals of some .of the longest and most profound : thirsts known to the records of bibu ilous history, were a -unit in pronounc ing Mr. Bica the king of bibbers. Divorce evidence has frequently of fered accounts of Chicagoans who drank. for years in a more or less con stant fashion, and whose score for "times drunk" would run well up rdnto the hundreds. But all such feats i look merely like the immature at jtempts of amateurs compared to ac complishments of so valiant a man of bcups as the drouth-stricken Bica. t Mr. BIca's record, according to Mrs. Rk. who ought to know what she is 'talking about, lies in the fact that he was Intoxicated every day for nine 'years. PLANS FOR GEORGIA DAY ' iAddrcss by Roosevelt Feature of Pro gramme at Jamestown. "WASHINGTON. May 25. Arrangements were completed today for the President's part in Georgia day, June 10, at the Jamestown Exposition. AY". X. Mitchell, the president of the Georgia Commission, was in conference with Secretary I.oeb today. The programme is to Include a parade of 10,000 men from the Army, .'avy and militia, an address by the President and the pronouncing of the benediction by Cardinal Gibbons. ' Mr. Roosevelt is to be entertained at luncheon in a house the exact reproduc tion of that in Rosswell, Ga.. in which his mother was born and married. Am bassadors Jusserand, of France, and Meyer des Planches, of Italy, have promised to attend. Prison Term for Forger. THE DALLES. Or.. May 25. Walter Kdwines, who was arrested here Tues day on a charge of passing worthless checks on the First National Bank, pleaded guilty before Judge Bradshaw and was sentenced to serve 18 months In the State Penitentiary." Edwines ia but 21 years of age, and says that he has a mother and father living In Colorado. Farmers Give Rights of Way. IITLLSBORO, Or., May 25. A mass .meeting was held here last night in the interest of the proposed Oregon 'Electric. Kailway., I L. ronaiat one Going Going Gone ! A Parable THERE was once a Bright Looking Suit that was the Pride of Its Maker Oh, it Certainly was a Swell Looker was that Suit and the part that tickled Its Maker almost to a Finish was the Fact that it didn't Cost a great deal to Make. The Tailoring part had been practically nothing at all but of course, when the Suit had Come from the Mill It was a Shame But that was only for a Brief Mo mentOld Dr. Goose Soon put it to Rights and then very Properly Claimed all the Credit for Himself. But alas, our Fine Looking Suit did not retain its Correct Appearance for long i For you see, Dr. Goose's work was Lacking in Permanency it Could not be expected that a . Mere pressing would overcome Actual Defects in "Workman ship, you know And what was Dr. Goose's Horror when he found, at the end of a couple of Weeks that his fine looking Suit was surely on the Blink. And when still Later it became very, very Bad why the old Flat Iron turned in bis Tracks and fled incontinently (whatever that is.) Now the Moral to. this little tale is plain as the Nose on your Face. Tou Can't expect a poorly Made Suit to hold its Shape no matter how Expert the Hot Pressing Iron For the only way to put Shape Perma nence into a Suit is to Build it Right There are a Few Suits Built Right About twenty per cent that's all And among these Rightly Built Suits, Standing 'way up . at the Top, are Sincerity" Suits. "Sincerity" Suits have the Right kind Of Cutting "Sincerity" Suits' ate cut to insure Fit Style and Shape Permanence. Then "Sincerity" Suits are made by Expert Needleworkers who sew Intelli gently to insure Fit Style and Shape Permanence. That's why Old Dr. Goose's work is Tiot necessary in "Sincerity" Suits. And that's why "Sincerity"' Suits hold their Shape and look Good until you're anxious to buy a new suit. See "Sincerity" Suits at your highest class ready-to-put-on Clothing Dealer's for yourself You don"t have to buy if you don't want to Be sure the label below is in each Coat It insures Style, Service and Satisfaction. of the engineers representing the com pany, explained that a line was to be constructed from the Portland-Salem road to this city by way of Bcaverton, and that work would commence as soon as right of way could be secured. A committee on securing right of way was appointed, and several parties signed contracts to give rights through their farms. The survey, as made, ex tends from Bcaverton to the Oregon nursery farm, about five miles north east of here and then on a direct line to this place. TROOPS CHARGE MINERS Riotous Strike Breaks Out on Rand. Thousand Soldiers Sent. JOHANNESBURG. May 25. With a view to checking rioting at the Rand mines, affected by the strike of 500 min ers, the police Issued a proclamation for bidding more than six persons to as semble within 300 yards of any mine. The strikers Ignored the order and marched to the Croesus mine with the supposed in tention of attacking the men working there. When the police ordered them to disperse they refused, whereupon the cav alry chargd them and they fled. The gar rison at Potchefstroom has been ordered to hold itself in readiness to reinforce the troops on the Rand. . CAPETOWN, May 25. The dispatch of iooo regular troops to the Rand, where white miners are on strike, has excited the whole country. The primary purpose of the dispatch of these troops is to over awe the Chinese miners, should they prove restless, leaving the police and valunteers to deal with the white miners, who are displaying brutality in their assaults upon strike-breakers and are seriously damag ing property.. Umatilla Pioneer Seriously Hurt. PENDLETON, Or., May 23. (Special.) William Cofrtnan. one of the best-known pioneers In Umatilla County, was serious ly, if not fatally injured, in a peculiar accident here this evening. He with a number of other men was sitting on a temporary railing surrounding the ex cavation being" made for the Oddfellows building on Main street, listening to a Socialist lecturer, when the railing sud denly gave way, precipitating Mr. Coff man and another man Into the pit. Coff man landed on his left shoulder, break ing the shoulder blade and causing in ternal injuries. The other man was not Injured. Workmen Injured by Cave-In. PENDLETON. Or., May 25. (Special.) Mack Oleson and P. S. McCarty. two railroad laborers who were severely in jured in an accident at Nolln this morn ing, were brought to the hospital in this city this evening. It seems that these men with others were excavating for a concrete pier for a. new steel bridge across the Umatilla. They had attained a depth of 15 feet and were going back to work after a train that had passed when the bank caved in on them. Both men were badly Injured Internally and Olson , Nickel TfZIMMlbJO sSj JVckel 'plated tsa Removabl END GATE FORjCOAL SECTIONAL Plate Top Nrrxrrt CAST EXTENTION Heavys CASTJBACK Grate IN POSITION ROMTjDRAPT DUPLEX GRATE -on wood on (Removed) COAL CHECK D&JKFT Nickel Plated Tea. 3helfjDpen Ve&tjcal Damper - K- Supports for pla te over ovei iW-..,!,,. - '!! ,,,.: . . xt'DeepZwapjwT" 1,1 ' " - - "fes V w'v rv- MMhm-mMmt: 4 ., Mllk m II " i Mr ''ll",:il,l:',::ii- amB r- vmmmi&iJMM: m- -mumnstx . jl mfflP- I err - m res ip m i' n minim urn j j wi us vjv- -t'.-wyiY i" j-oty - ash box . yfmfmmmmmmmm, -f Protzcting flooh Tt-VE Space S3. 3 $QQ Qwn; $1 Per Week End Shelf G4Stpon2Plue , SCIENTIFICALLY i PflOPOFl Tl ON ED VFLAFT . SPACE JOUBLE v""iKm 1 1 I iMNen iIlSJING WTH "Zrr- ' Val! MEAry ASBESTOS UN- cweop two Cast Jrom WW' ii OVPKI OVEMlKStNFOfi:EMENTS Cast Ir?rKt FLue Strip LUEDOOFL YSteelTFlue' BOTTOM XAsbestos'Uning THE HOME OF THE OUTFIT HOUSE OF DIGNIFIED CREDIT had his leg nearly torn oft, while Mc carty suffered a fracture of the arm. Olsen was unconscious when he reached this city and will probably die. TAKE BODY FROM GRAVE Remains or Nlcolal TJeraylan to Be Exhumed. PHOENIX, Ariz., May 25. The body of Nicolai Deraylan will be exhumed next Thursday. A session will be held Thurs day next before a magistrate for the tak ing of the depositions of persons ac quainted with the facts of Deraylan's death, as well as facts materialising on the occasion of the exhumation. It is learned that Samuel J. Schaiter. an attorney of Chicago, will be here to rep resent the so-called "widow," as well as Baron von Schllppenbach, representing the Riuwian Government. Michael Fein berg, representing the Chicago Public Ad ministrator, says that he is already fully satisfied that the identity of Deraylan and that of the dead woman is the same. Carries Big Lumber Cargo. ASTORIA, Or., May 25. (Special.) The schooner Alvena cleared at the Custom-House today for Redondo, Cal., with a cargo of 938,000 feet of lumber, loaded at Goble. I " am opposed to a wide open town S9 X. L. M. Davis on ballot. Peculiar to Itself In selection, proportion and combination of Ingredients, In the process by which their remedial values are xtracted and preserved, In effectiveness, usefulness and economy, Curing the widest range of diseases. Doing the most good for the money. Having the most medicinal merit. And the greatest record of cures, Hood's Sarsaparilla In usual liquid form or in chocolated tablets known aa Sarsatabs. 100 doses $! . iipiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiii iiiimuiiiuinninimiuuii!iun:miiiiiuiuiiiiimiiiiumii!iiiiiuu!:iiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiuUi nii.iii. i w 1 1 1 1 muni,,,,.! .1 i i u lh hi i lull :U iiuit ti Uu I ill i.i tl uitLuii i uUii i iUiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiBtiiiiiiiiiiiii! iirprpifl'ijtiinnr ISS llllilHlllllliliiiiiiliiMuiliiiillia!i(uf,Mmm v .r3nwi5!iiiiW 3IM 'Mi"ililhlhmiiTlfiiuIffl!!fii!WiM mm mm m l lialiiliiiiiiuiliBiiiiilBm !-:. j aaa . it mtnmm. ) 1 I 1 fr A vawmiiimwHWiiiiiiiiiiiMUK.iH !iiwigtmmwnniiiwi,uitMBiiiB,iii V raill!lll!w4ii:' . ; ill Mv. iT tr.M 'iiS'r.- .trr J5S - . - lh--.iLtilR.i...iB.ir.i.iiI.!.Tiii.Mt..,..fat;.i.-M:.t-.J... ..-..,....-..i,. i :igii:fe3gr,!,"l,l -asaaflMg . s ,? ... s-4W!i!WI!ll,!!l,WI!ll -r! iummMtmmmtm ljfflspilipiiii nuiiikiiuiiiibiiiluuiiituiiiliiiiiuu WHAT .ROADABIL1TY CONTESTS PROVE New York to Poughkeepsie high-speed clutch sealed in. PROVES Absolute and perfect throttle control Hie flexibility of a steain Perfect Score Glidden Tour. Where many high-priced cars could That the Oldsmobile is an exceptional car. That the wonderful per- Winning $6000 Pace, Los Angeles to San Francisco across rivers, over mountains, through adobe desert mna so sun competing car failed to finish. PROVES not finish. PROVES fo finances are not due to luck, driver or chance conditions. Your Oldsmobile will do the same. Standard construction. Tried, tested and proven materials. Right Cleveland, Washington and St. Louis, 1000 miles, and Philadelphia weight. Ample power. Perfect cooling, lubrication and car- buration. New York to Daytona, Florida, in Midwinter 1500 miles over un speakable roads. The severest test ever given a car in America PROVES 2000 miles non-stop runs. PROVES That to get there and back, the Oldsmobile power plant may be counted upon to give a maximum of performance for a minimum of attention. That an Oldsmobile owner will have that sense of security, that SUMMED UP The Oldsmobile stands for Readability, Service- -. :-3 faith in his car, that pride of performance that come only from Koadabuity and Serviceability, ability. Style and Satisfaction. The good car for bad roads ia the best car for good roads. THE OLDS MOTOR WORKS, LANSING, MICH. Mem. A. L. A. M. Immediate Delivery. Sample Cars at All Agencies. Phone for Demonstration. M. L. KEATS AUTO CO., Seventh and Oak Streets, Portland, Oregon iiUiUiiiuMaitnLii;" i - s