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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1911)
3 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, JfARCn 1911 naro Abbatemaggio. when the trial of the li Camorrlsts la resumed next Tuesday. With a fine show of indignation the accused declared that when permitted to speak they would refute their former associate's "Inventions." " During the recital they said they, had composed themselves with great discretion. In order not to disturb the serenity of the coart. which "certainly must eventually acknowledge their innocence." Abbatemaggto's cleverness In telling his story yesterday filled the Camor rlsts with rage. Posing as a penitent. prepared If need be to give his life In expiation of his crimes, the Informer made a deep Impression.' and the law yers for the defense todsy decided on a long list of questions to be put to him on cross-examination. In the hope of discrediting his testimony. The priest. Clro Vitoxsi. during the conference with his lawyers delivered to the latter the memoir which he has been occupied in preparing during his PEACE MOVEMENT WAITS RESPONSE Let Yonr Own Next Corset Be an E & S Yon Will Then Discover New Graces in Your Figure New Charms in Whatever Costnme You May Wear With a Comfort and Freedom Which Cannot Fail to Improve Your Poise and Carriage Latest Models Here in All Sizes Priced From ffl to $3 Drug: Sundries Drug Sundries 25c Mennen's Talcum Powder. .15 5c White Clover Soap, dozen. . . .45 15c Fancy Toilet Soap, 3 in box.10 25c Woodbury's Facial Soap 16 25c Packer's Tar Soap 16 25c Wedding Bouquet Soap 15 10c Complexion Soap 7 Current in Britain Is Strong but Grey Says America Now Must Speak. 50c Graves' Tooth Powder 25c Rubifoam 25c Colgate's Dental Powder. 25c Colgate's Dental Cream.., 20c Eastman's Tooth Powder. 15c Viola Talcum Powder. . . 25c Colgate's Talcum Powder, ..19 .20? ..20 .12io ..15 VtTO BATTLE APPROACHES The Most in Value, The Best in Qnality Torlca Offrr rw Compromise but IU til. a If KHN It and Kadlrals (auf Asqulth lo Us. tiaj for Ctowlnft Slrncclc. BY T. P. OTONNER. M. P. Sp-Ia: CM to Ihe I'htraxn Tribune, ropy. riM lull hjr th Tribune Company.) Lo."lON. Man-h Si The tide of our Anglo-American cntent Is following tpatltjr and uninterruptedly, but not In much a fierce current. The agitation pa5.-d tlila tek from the politician to the clerjrym-n. A certain jaua? is suitKesteti bjr some cautious ol servers, especially by Sir IMoinl !rey. This doubtless 1 n plrr.1 by the Idea that It Is wise to asralt a corresponding response from America to tne wild welcome of the Idea by English public oplt.lon. but the feeling undoubtedly ti!I li strong and unanimous and no voire dares to raise Itself against H. Home aff.it.-s stlil are In the lull caused by the Interposition of voting, appropriations. This pause Is account, able for some of the rumors circulated this week mat the Tories will throw oui their speculations of a possible ro in p rum I. e and stlil engage in weav ing new scenes for meeting the attack on the House of Lords by projects of self reform. New St henic I-augtH-d Out. Lord Melbourne. lately governor-general of the Transvaal, atarted his tumping campaign with a great flour ish of trumpets and In three speeches in different parts of the country he brought forward a brand new scheme of reform. The Tory Journals announced osten tatiously this new scheme and prophe sied that It would knock the bottom out of the Liberal programme and the veto bltL but opposite results followed and the new scheme Is bound to be merely the same as the old tinkering schemes already proposed. Lord Kose bery and Lord Lansdowne like the new scheme to retain carefully the heredi tary principle and also to secure dom ination In the new second chamber by the Tory majority. The scheme, therefore, already has been laughed out of court and the sit uation remains the same, only more so. that Is to say. the conviction of the Liberals Is deepened that self-reform by the Lords Is cults as hopeless now as before the last election. Veto BUI to Be Driven Through. This leads to a greater and even fiercer determination to push on the reto bill without delay and without :ompromise. Two or three half-hearted Liberals ie icrorted to have ap proached the Labor leaders with a .scheme of compromise, but all such sffers are dismissed with contempt and tnger. Indeed, so strong Is the feeling of the Radicals that the battla must go to the bitter end that they held a meeting to condemn Iremler Asqultn because he seemed to yield more time to the obstructive Tory tactics than was safe. Another rumor atarted by the Tories with the view of suggesting that As qultn was weakening and that a com promise still was possible was that I'arllament would separate for a full month at coronation time. At once the Tory newspapers announced that this long vacation was given for an oppor tunity to hold new conferencea and new proposals of compromise. Battle Ilmrned April t. Asgullh replied strenuously, denying any such Idea caused the lung vaca tion. He then reduced the Eastern vacation to four days and gave notice that next Monday. In order to meet the obstinate Tory filibustering Intend ed to delay the veto bill, he would pro pose the most drastic form of closure. loubtless the Tories next Monday, when the closure Is proposed, will raise a big howl and perhaps they win force an all-night sitting, but the 1-lberal blood now is thoroughly up and Asqulth's resolution wiil be car ried at any cost. Thus the ray la cleared for the veto hill and on Mon day. April 3. we shall be once more in the fnll fury of the veto fight. Cabinet Weakened by Illness. The only weakness of the ministry at the' present moment Is the number of Its members on the slrk list. This necessitates another shuffling of the ministerial cards, ttecretary Haldanes removal to the House of Peers was the first step In this reconstruction, but other are expected. t.loyd-Oeorg still Is absent, the malady of his throat proving obstinate and the bad weAther of the last few days bringing back the old symptoms, but all of the reports thst he was struck down by a malignant disease are false. His absence weakens the ministry, especially as the debates of the last two weeks have been mainly on his budget, but the ministry ploughs its way along with the subordinates and whenever the obstruction becomes too palpable, the closure Is Immediately applied. The situation in Ireland Is quite sat isfactory. The annual subscription for the parliamentary party has Just started with a big boom, largely helped bv gigantic gatherings In every Eng lish and Scotch town during the St. I'atrick s day celebrations. Relations AVith (iermanjr Improve. One indirect but prompt effect of the campaign for an Anglo-American entente la that England s relations with Germany have entered Into a new and friendlier stsge and even the diffi cult Kagtlad railway question, which threatened their good relations for years, approaches an amicable settle ment. A wave of peaceful feeling la passing over Europe and men see vis ions already of International and uni versal peace, all of which helps the cause of home rule as the necessary and first point of departure In reliev ing England from the danger and shame of an unreconciled and unllb erated Ireland. e PIONEER WOWS. OF KOSB- KM, CALLED -GRANUM.." 14 NO MORE. ' l 1 'Vv Y A. -A t i Mr. Mrtlads K--ktdU. ST. nOSETtVKG. Or.. March 23. 8p-cliL)-Mn Mellnda Kuykondt.Il, ST years oM. a pionwr rldenl of Doug lu County, d!d at tn horn of her oo, E. W. Kuykendall. In this city. ytrday of pneumonia. "Grandma" Kuykendall. aa sha waa familiarly known hare, was bora In VI County. Indiana. In ISM. where sha resided during the early part of her Ufa. When a youna woman ihe married John K u yd en da 11. The couple crossed the plains In search of a horns In Oregon, anlv in this -tat. In They located In Tualatin Plains, where they re mained for a year, thence moving to the Vmpqua Valley and sett Unit near Wilbur, eight miles north of Roseburg- Her husband. John Kuy kendall. died It years ago, the widow making her home with her sons Mrs. Kuykendall Is survived by four sons. Pr. O. B. Kuykendall. of Pomeroy. Wash.; Dr. William Kuy kendall. of Eugene; H. C. Kuyken dall. of California; E. W. Kuykendall. of Rose burg; and one daughter, Mrs. Leaele Pickering, wife of Colonel Ab ner Pickering. U. 8. who la sta tioned In the Philippine Islands. The remains win be 'sent to Eugene for,, burial. FOE ANGERS CAMORRISTS Prisoners Prepare llerre Attack on Ftldrncv. VlTfcKBO. Italy. March li. The attor neys tor the defens. flocked to the tnla Saarla in Gradi today to consult with their clients on the rounter at tacks to be matie oa tn. Informer, Oen- confinement. The memoir contains a repetition of matters already known, an attack on the Jailers at Naples, who are described n worse "than those of the Inquisition." and winds up with a eulogy of the author. His whole Ufa, he says, has been devoted to "reclaim' ing lost lambs to the fold." AMERICAN VMS RECORD PITTXAM THROWS HAMMER MORE THAN 153 FEET. Oklahoma Man Beaten In Fast 100- Yard Dah Oxford Loses to Cambridge by Tno Tolnts. IX)XDON. March 15. Cambridge won the annual intervarslty sports with Oxford at Queen's Club today, with six points to four. - The annual Intervarslty SDorts of Oxford and Cambridge were held at Queen's Club. O. 3. Putnam, a Rhodes scholar at Oxford, from Kansas, was an easy winner In the hammer throw, besting the varsity reaord with a mark of I5J feet 3 Inches. W. A. Zelgler. from Iowa, also of the Oxford team, was second, with a throw of 134 feet 1 Inch. It. L. Lanice. of Oklahoma, a third Rhodes scholar, who was expected to credit Oxford with the 100-yard -dash, was beaten by alacMlllan of Cam brldfte. by half a yard. MacMlllan's time was 10 seconds. A year mo Putnam won the hammer throw, making; 14i feet 8 Inches. Zeiir ler captured the weifcht event today with 39 feet S inches. Putnam was second with 37 feet SV Inches. Large started In the quarter mile race, but was out of form and soon rave up. Edlefsen Fuel Company has the best country slab and block wood. Both phones. This Will Stop Your J Cough in a Hurry T Kare S3 by Msklsc Thta t'emsjk J fyraai at liaase. I This re-lpe makes a pint of better couch svrup than you could buy ready made for t-'.SO. A few doses usually conquer the most obstinate couh stops even whooping couich quickly. Simple as It Is. no better remedy can be had at any price. Mix one pint of granulated sugar with S pint of warm water, and stir for 1 minutes- Put SS ounces of Plnex tfiftv cents' worth) in a pint butt s: then add ihe StiKar syrup. It has a pleasant taste and lasts a fam ily a Ions; time. Tnke a teaspoonful every one. two or three hours. You can feel tills take hold of a cough in a way that means business, lias a good tonic effect, braces up the appetite and Is slightly laxstive. too, which Is helpful- A handy remedy for hoarseness, bronchitis, asthma and all throat and tunc troubles. The effect of pine on the membranes Is well known. Plnex is the most valu able concentrated compound of Nor. wrKlan white pine extract, and Is rich In cuialrol aD4 .n the natural healing; pine elements, other preparations will not work In this formula. This Plnex and us;ar Syrup rectp. has attained irre.nt popularity through out the L'nlted States and Canada. It has often been imitated, though never auccessfully. Some of tha best - known Portland drueirtsts. such aa Ijitie-Darls Drur Co. distributers and otnera. thiuk so well of the above recipe that they guaran tee it to give satisfaction or refund the purutuuter price Spring1 Suits That Embrace Perfection in Every Phase Priced at $12.50, $15.00, $17.50 to $25.00 We are now showing a complete assortment of Women's and Misses' Xew Spring Suits that are perfect in stye, perfect in quality of material and perfect in workman ship. They are sure to command attention. You will find here just the suit you want most. Smart models in French serges, worsteds and novelty mixtures, with coats 24 to 26 inches long. - These Suits are shown in plain colors, also fancy mixtures and are overshadowing values at these prices. Novelty Spring Coats, Very Reasonably Priced at $8.50, $10.50, $12.50 to $25.00 Never has there been a season's showing in which every Women's Coat need could be supplied more-readily than from our present comprehensive display at these prices. They come in fine all-wool mixtures, in serges, diagonals and coverts, in the most becoming styles shown in many seasons. All colors. Women's Lingerie Dresses, in a Complete Assortment, at $4.50, $5.50, $6.50, $8.50 Every late feature of fashion is brought out in our, ex tensive showing of Women's Pretty Lingerie Dresses. Perfect in fit and finish and without doubt the best val ues ever offered. They are daintily trimmed with fine Val. lace, guipuire insertion and Venise medallions shown with either high or low neck effect, kimono or regulation sleeve. women's Km-intr Dress Skirts in Several Styles, at $3.90, $4.50, $5.50 Many new Skirts have been added to our showing at these prices, so our collec tion is very complete. These garments come in about twenty different styles, and are shown in .three different widths. Materials are all-wool serges, panama, taf feta and poplinette in plain colors; also novelty mixtures. The snappy styles and fine quality materials are sure to please. I ?! te mi Pretty New Wash Fabrics at Moderate Prices The very Wash Fabrics that most every woman wants for Spring or Summer wear is here in full assortments Xovelty Shantung, Seco Silks, Voiles, Dupionne Silks, Scotch Zephyrs, Irish Dimities, Mercerized Foulards, Batistes, Organdies, Lawns, Flaxon and dozens of others; all are marked at the lowest prices it is pos sible to quote on equal qualities. Come and profit by an early selection. Mercerized Batiste shown in neat floral and figured designs; also in bor- Ofln dered effects; priced at, yard ZUll Flaxon, a popular new fabric, comes in flowers, figures, dots, stripes 9f)P and checks, also plain shades; ydxUU Mercerized Foulard, as pretty as silk, washes beautifully, comes in me- Q Ij n dium and dark colorings; yard. ..L Jb Imported Irish Dimities, shown in a large variety of pretty flower O C p and figure designs, at, yard Zdu Anderson's Imported Scotch Zephyrs in the new style checks, plaids, OCn stripes and plain shades, at yard. Xub Dupionne Silk, a very pretty and dur able fabric in plain shades, sim- OCn ilar to Rajah weave, at, yard Zu U Seco Silks, shown in large variety of the new wanted plain shades, 00 p priced at, yard Zub Xew Xovelty Shantung Silks, in pretty self-colored figure and dot de- A C p signs, at yard Tub A Great Display and Pre-Easter Sale of the Latest and Rarest Designs The constantly increasing popularity of Dainty Embroideries and the cer tainty that they wrill be in great de mand this Spring, has induced us to make a strenuous effort in this dis play and sale, which in its variety, is wonderfully comprehensive. In this limitea newspaper space we find it quite impossible to convey more than a slight idea of the beauty of the offerings, their daintiness and their unusual worth. A face-to-face inspection will compel admiration at once. The Variety Is Surpassingly Large The designs are fascinating and they are new. Espe cially will the patterns in Flouncings and Corset Cover Embroideries appeal to the woman of critical taste. Seven .Lots to Pick From EMBROIDERIES AT 10 CENTS A YARD In values to 25c; 5 to 12-inch Cambric, Xainsook and Swiss k Embroideries, dainty edges with insertions to match, shown in an unlimited assortment of pretty new patterns, finished with good, firm edges. EMBROIDERIES AT 15 CENTS A YARD In values to 40c; 6 to 14-inch Cambric, Xainsook and Swiss Embroideries, fine edges in hundreds of dainty new patterns with insertions to match; well-worked embroideries, finished with fine, firm edges. $2.50 EMBROIDERIES 98 CENTS 27 to 52 inches wide The finest St. Gall Embroideries ever shown in this city. Beautiful 27 to 52-inch Flounc ings, shown in a wonderful assortment of blind, open work and insert Venise lace patterns, suitable for flouncings, skirts and dresses. EMBROIDERIES AT 25 CENTS A YARD In values to 50c; 14 to 18-inch Cambric, Nainsook and Swiss Corset Cover and Flouncing Embroideries, all new, up-to-date patterns in an endless assortment. EMBROIDERIES AT 33 CENTS A YARD In values to 85o; 14 to 18-inch Cambric, Xainsook and Swiss Corset Cover and Flouncing Embroideries, shown in unlimited variety of beautiful new patterns. EMBROIDERIES AT 37 CENTS A YARD In values to $1.00; 27-inch Fine Swiss and Lawn Em broideries, full 27 inches wide. The kind so much in demand just now for dresses, skirts and combination suits. All new patterns, well worked and perfectly finished. EMBROIDERIES AT 79 CENTS A YARD In values to $1.50, 27-inch An out-of-the-ordinary gathering of fine Swiss and Lawn Embroideries, full 27 inches wide, shown in a large assortment of dainty small designs as well as large bold scroll and eyelet patterns. Fashionable New Silks 44-inch Poplin, a silk-and-wool fabric of soft, graceful weave that makes up beautifully. Comes in Deat small scroll designs in all the wanted shades, per yard .1.50 32-inch Pam-Tub Silks that wash and wear like linen. Come in cream ground with neat small stripes in navy, 'green, red, tan, black, etc., per yard ' $1.25 27-inch Jacquard Poplins, of excellent weight and bright finish, shown in all the correct Spring and Summer shades as well as cream and black; per j-ard ' 75? 27-inch Tokio Pongee Silks, a washable, durable fabric of excellent weight and perfect finish; comes in all the popular new shades; best $1.00 grade priced at. 75p New Woolen Fabrics 54-inch Scotch Tweeds, shown in the popular new semi-rough weaves in correct Spring and Summer weights; all the new shades of tan, brown and gray, at $1.50 44 to 54-inch Fabrics in shadow stripes, blind diagonals, fancy Pan amas, novelty worsteds, plain serges, etc., in the new shades of gray, tan, brown, green; special value at ....... $1.00 SHEPHERD CHECKS Xew black and white Shepherd Checks in Priestley and Jamestown weaves, in all widths: 36-inch at 50; 44-inch at 75; 46-inch at 85; 52-inch at $1.00; 54-inch at $1.25. CREAM SERGES New Cream Colored Serges in black pin and chalkline stripes; fab rics made from selected wool and free from all imperfections. Three widths, priced as follows.: 44-inch at 85?; 50-inch at $1; 54-inch j e-s r ill V Specials in the Furnishings Section Business here is steadily gaining, due to the kind of goods we carry and the moderate prices asked. . Just now new Spring stocks of all kinds are to the front, and a better collection would be almost an impossibility. ' Men's ILiglit-Weight Merino Underwear, 75c Values 55c A very special offering of Men's Light-Weight Merino Shirts and Drawers in natural gray the Shirts are made with fine-ribbed cuffs and bottom, front and neck bound with fancy tape; the Drawers have fine-ribbed anklets and suspender straps and good pearl buttons. The best 75e values. Special per garment 55 Men's Fancy Negligee Shirts, $1.50 Values 95c A sale of Men's Fancy Xegligee Shirts, made with soft turndown collar and shown in assorted plain colorings of mercerized material resembling silk. They are cut good full size and very neatly fin ished. Best $1.50 values, priced this sale .9o? Men's Windsor Ties, 25c Values Your Choice at 18c A special line of Men's Windsor Ties made good, full size and shown in a large range of new Spring colors. These Ties sell regu larly at 25c each. Your choice while they last 18 1