Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, November 21, 1907, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE 3iORMtx OKJblGOxMAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, liM.
T TO FIX
THE JURY FAILS
Democratic Judge Dismisses
Prejudiced Venire in the
Powers Case.
DETERMINED ON FAIR TRIAL
Sheriff and Deputies Were Directed
to Strong Democratic Precincts
in Summoning Men Judge
Wants No Suspicion.
GEORGETOWN, Ky.. Nov. 2D. The at
torneys for Caleb Powers, In his fourth
trial on a charge of killing William Goe
bol, won for him today the first substan
tial victory, when Special Judsre Morris
sustained the motion to discharge tho
second venire. Tho main contention
throughout tho proceedings so far has
been that politics has been injected Into
the case at all previous trials: that an
efTort to continue this condllton has been
made in the selection of the venire of
200 men summoned from Harrison County,
and that the defendant could not obtain
justice at the hands of a Jury composed
entirely of political opponents. It has
been argued that It Is reasonable to sup
pose that the 12 men ultimately selected
to try tho case would all be Democrats.
Picked the Democrats.
For this reason counsel for Caleb Pow
rs attacked the venire drawn from Har
rison County. Testimony introduced to
sustain counsel's view was Ineffectual
until proof was forthcoming as to the
political character of those sections of
Harrison County from which veniremen
were summoned, which demonstrated that
these preolncts were largely Democratic,
so much so as to create a suspicion that
undue influence had been used In di
recting the Deputy Sheriffs from Scott
County towards these. Democratic pre
cincts. The weight of testimony Introduced ex
onerated the Sheriff of Scott County and
his deputies, but the result of the work
In Harrison County led to the expressing
of an opinion that fcited a sensation.
In sustaining the moWon of the defense.
Judge Morris, an ardent Democrat and
an appointee of Governor Beckham, said:
Judge Wants No Suspicion. (
The proof Indicates that tho Demo
er&tto majority In Harrison County was
somewhere In the neighborhood of
1(100, perhaps more, In the last election.
The proof indicates that in the pre
cincts where the veniremen were sum
moned there is an overwhelming pre
domination of Democrats, not sq much
In the last election as In previous elec
tions, perhape. Now, In looking over
these lists in proof here It must be
striking that so many Democrats were
summoned on these venires and so few
Republicans.
I do not want to preside at the trial
of any man when there Is any just
ground of suspicion that he has not had
b fair trial and that there has been
any discrimination against him In the
selection of the Jury, for that Is the
vital point of the trial and because
there might be well-grounded suspicion
of discrimination, and I do not think It
more than right that I am going to
sustain the motion to discharge the
second venire.
Following the order discharging the
venire. Judge Morris overruled the mo
tion to discharge the first, declaring that
the objections to It had not been sus
tained. But four of these remain, and
they will tomorrow present excuses that
may relievo them from duty.
COMBINED TO DOWN SHARP
llnrriinan Dines and Officials In
dicted in Utah.
SALT LAKE CITY. Nov. 20. The
Federal Grand Jury today returned In
dictment against the Union Pacific
Railroad Company, the Oregon Short
Line, the Union Pacific Coal Company,
J. M. Moore, general agent of the
T'nlon Pacific Coal Company, and Ever
ett Buckingham, .assistant general su
perintendent of the Oregon SJjort Line,
for alleged violation of the anti-trust law.
The technical charge is a combina
tion in restraint of trade, those Indict
ed having combined. It Is charged, to
force D. J. Sharp, a Salt Lake City
coal dealer, out of business because
he had lowered the price of coal from
that alleged to have been fixed by the
so-called combination. Indictments
were returned against the same cor
porations and persons some months
ago on the same grounds, but these
indictments are now quashed, and the
ones returned today take their place
In order to perfect them, the previous
Indictments, It was feared, not being
technically perfect.
SAYS RATES WERE EXCESSIVE
Lumber Firm Complaln.-i to Commis
sion Against Harrlinan.
OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash
ington. Nov. 20. A complaint was filed
today with the Interstate Commerce
Commission by the E. H. Lewis Lum
ber Company, operating In Oregon and
Washington, alleging that the Harrl
man roads In the Northwest In 14 dif
ferent cases exacted freight charges on
, cars of lumber shipped from Oregon
and Washington to the East in excess
of the legal rates published by the
roads.
All the excess charges were made
subsequent to the time the new rate
law went Into effect, and on this
ground complainant asks the Commis
sion to require the roads to refund tho
amount of the excess and hereafter to
conform to their published rates.
BRIBE TO J3ETRAY UNION
(Continued From First Page.)
dined other ofTers of a similar nature
since ho began, his Investigations. The
caller said that he was open to a coun
ter proposition. This party. Brandenburg
pays, offered to assist him in the work
he was doing.
The statement then continues:
I told him that I was about to leave for
the. South and that I would communicate
With him as soon as I had anything to say.
Various communications passed between us
up to October 28. On that date Mr. Gomp
ers came to New York to meet me. We
then together discussed a proposition. 1 am
no; connected with the National Manufar
tnrers Association, but his proposition was
one that must be later taken up by them
as the parties who are principally interested.
James W. Vancleave, president of the Man
ufacturers' Association, was Jn the city at
that time at tho Waldorf but I did not
know It.
While Mr. dampers and I were conduct
ing discussions and i was endeavoring to
set legal counsel, my men in the Hotel Vic
VTTFWIP
toria found that there was a plot laid for
me on Sunday the 27th. This trap I suc
cessfully evaded and called all negotiations
with Mr. Gompers oft before the matter was
even put before the officers of the Manu
facturers Association.
Mr. Gompers wished to know what I Had
secured in the way of material in the
South, and In order to mislead him I gave
him a fictitious typewritten page incom
plete end unsigned. This is the paper
which ha has read so dramatically.
I am a friend of labor unionism and
want to see the members of honest labor
In the control of honest leaders. Mr. Gomp
ers has foolishly precipitated a storm on
the heads of himself and his friends. I
shall have more to say tomorrow.
DISLIKE CHEAP FOREIGN HELP
Oregon City Paper Mills to Be Asked
to Discharge Austrians.
OREGON CITT, Or., Nov. 20. (Spe
cial.) A petition Is In circulation re
questing the management of the Wil
lamette Pulp & Paper Company and
the Crown-Columbia Pulp & Paper
Company to discharge the foreigners
that are working In the mills.
There are a large number of Aiw
trlanB employed in the paper manu
factories here, and the Americans fear
that foreign labor .may be obtained
cheaply while so many men are out of
employment. It la reported that In the
event of the company declining to
grant the request of the petitioners, a
mass meeting will be called for the
purpose of agitating the proposition.
The mills have been practically closed
for the past week on account of the
low stage of water, but they will prob
ably resume operations In a few days.
MINGLE WIT Hi WISDOM
LAWYERS OF STATE GATHER
AT BANQUET BOARD.
Annual Dinner of Bar Association at
Commercial Club a Bril
liant Affair.
With true Democratic simplicity, the
Oregon Bar Association held its annual
"dollar banquet" at the Portland Com
mercial Club last night. More than 100
of the leading Judges and lawyers of the
state attended the dinner, which was
enlivened by the presence of the Univer
sity .Club Quartette, consisting of Frank
Branch Riley, John D. Carson, C. B.
Aitchlson and Henry Teal. In addition
to singing appropriate verses set to popr
ular music, following the Introduction
of each of the speakers of the evening,
the quartette made a hit with a selection
of Its own composition, entitled, "I'm
Working on the Railroad." being a trav
esty on the financial panic.
Thomas G. Hailey. newly-elected presi
dent of the association, presided as
toastmaster. State Circuit Judge Thomas
O'Day was the first speaker when cigars
were passed. In presenting Judge O'Day,
President Hailey spoke felicitously and
congratulated the organization- on the In
fusion of so much new blood lrhthe form
of younger members of the profession,
to whom were extended a glad welcome.
He urged the members of the association,
as they honored their profession, the
state and the Nation, to lend their best
support, that the profession might be
built up and receive the respect to
which It Is entitled.
Judge O'Day was presented as a mem
ber of the bar who. If not in size. In time
was the "baby of the courts of the
state." Judge O'Day. In discussing "The
Bar," likened -the legal profession to the
connecting link between the people and
the courts of the state. He urged either
therepeal or the amendment of the at
tachment law of this state, which he
considered was solely responsible for tho
condition that necessitated the calling
of a series of bank holidays by the Gov
ernor. He said it was largely the fear
of an undue Invocation of the law of at
tachment which alarmed the bankers
and business men of the state, and sug
gested the proclaiming of the holidays.
In regard to this undesirable statute he
said Oregon and California were the only
two states In the United States that had
such a law. In the other states he said
the present financial trouble had not af
fected tho courts in any way, while In
this state all court business had to be
suspended.
John Leland Henderson, of Hood River,
was scheduled for a toast on "The Law
yer's Silent Partner." but substituted the
reading of "The Barrister's Grief," from
Shakespeare's "Richard the Third." The
selection was read so well that It called
for a verse from the" quartet. In which
the ability of a lawyer to act at times
was commended.
Circuit Judge Thomas A. McBrlde, of
Oregon City, was heralded by another
selection from the quartet, entitled.
"Boys Will Be Boys." This venerable
Jurist, in disposing of the toast, "Hu
morous Phases of the Law," kept the
guests In a constant uproar of laughter
with his recital of a few of tho amusing
Incidents he had noted during a long and
useful career on the bench In this state.
In concluding his remarks, Judge Mc
Brlde advised his associates not to take
themselves too seriously, but rather to
appear In their respective walks In life
much as a $20 gold piece looks when dis
covered In a pile of clearing-house cer
tificates. In fulfilling the assignment, "The
Country Precinct." A. S. Hammond, of
Marshfleld, Injected a great deal of
humor Into the subject. He took serious
exception to the subject assigned him.
explaining that the people of Marshfleld
no longer considered that they were In
the country. Instead, that town was
held to be the hub of the universe. "The
Bench and the Bar" and the relations of
each to the other were discussed"- S. B.
Huston, who took occasion seriously to
criticise the disposition of sbme judges
to exceed their prescribed function and
officiate other than to enforce the law as
they found it.
George S. Shepherd, in responding to
the toast. "The Law and the Facts,"
said he welcomed the annual banquet of
the association for the reason that It
afforded the practitioner one day in the
year when he could say what he thought
of the courts without being subject to a
fine. He remarked humorously "that the
fact the law had not received the re
spect to which it was entitled was un
doubtedly due to the courts themselves
"If the Judges studied the facts more!
Including the sciences and astronomy T
have no doubt but that they would be' In
a position to render betrtr decisions," he
concluded.
Circuit Judge H. L. Benson, of
Klamath County. In speaking of 'The
Circuit R(r." distinguished between the
frontier jurist and the city Jurist who
travels about In a Pullman ear. He said
the circuit rider was fast becoming a
reminiscence.
Other toasts were responded to as fol
lows: "The Science of Law." a. e
Clark: 'Some Experiences of a Prose
Eastcutor." Gus C. Moser, Deputy Dis
trict Attorney: "The View From Below "
Waidemar Seton. Justice of the Peace
for East Portland, and "Municipal Taw "
John P. Kavanaugh. Cltv Attorn,.. 1
Portland.
-
Matthew McCormick Dead.
WOODBURN. Or.. Nov. 20.-Matthew
- yv ". ?-. .Mat
MM iirilllfU nn ll.ai.nn ..I
. .... .,..... eer or
died last evening at the home of his son
Charles McCormick. of paralysis in the
87th year of his age. He was widely
known throughout this section, and was
highly esteemed. He was a native of
Ireland. Two sons, John and Charles
of this vicinity, survive him.
LDVE LETTERS TO
01
(Continued From First Page.)
you must not tell any one where you can be
reached by telegraph.
Plots Against Mrs. Brown.
X want to ask you not to tall Madame
that Max Is back. It will be Just like her to
come aa soon as aha knows Max Is here.
What will you do If she comes here? Go
take possession of the B-street house, take
all the furniture out of It and rent it
wouldn't that be a good way to repay her?
Send what furniture and pictures are hers
to a storage house and store yours In a
different place. I won't be at all sur
prised to see her come after she knows that
Max Is here.
I saw la yesterday's Tribune a little Item
that Mrs. Arthur Brown antrtalned at
whist a day or so ago. It so arouses every
feeling of resentment In me when she la
called Mrs. Arthur Brown that I can't con
trol my bitterness. To think that she goes
by the name and holds that which I. in
all right, honor and decency, ought to have,
makes me a whirlwind of fury. It will be
different some time soon, won't It. Arthur?
Am I not the one woman you want to bear
your name and represent you aa your wifa?
Well, beloved. I know you will do what
you can and I am content. I must take
the babies home now. so good night. Let
me hear from you at length about every
thing. How Is Jenny Deal doing? Could
you not have stayed aa well as not last
week? How long before Max will go home,
do you know? I will be very lonely to
stay a whole month at Ketchum when I
want to be somewhere else.
Good night. Sweet dreams of me. T am
loving you and longing to put my bead on
your arm every night.
DOLLY.
Is she dear tonight?
Sheaf of Letters In Evidence.
Justice Stafford had no sooner taken
his seat than Mrs. Bradley resumed
her place in the witness chair. She
Identified over 100 letters written at differ
ent times by Senator Brown and her re
plies. They covered the period from 1901
to 1906. It was evident that the sight of
the letters produced conflicting memories
In the witness, for she sobbed audibly.
The witness took time to read some of the
letters, In each instance replying In quav
ering, faltering voice:
"Yes, 1 wrote it."
Examination of the letters brought out
a code used by the pair. "Aluminum"
was written In one of Mrs. Bradley's let
ters, and she said It meant, "I love you."
Transparent cloth, was pasted over the
writing of many of the letters.
Resuming her story, Mrs. Bradley said
she had gone to the Brown home on the
night of November 19 last and remained
five days. She told Brown she had come
to return some of his calls. "He seemed
sort of paralyzed," said the witness, "and
said I must not stay there, I said: 'I
didn't say that to you.' I urged hlrn to
keep his promises. He said: 'Go away'.'
and he would tell me later what he would
do. I said: 'If you don't Intend to keep
your promises, tell me and I'll go away.'
She related many Interviews during the
five days, saying Brown did not stay tnere
while she was there, but that she went to
his office and upbraided him as a de
ceiver. Had Thought of Snicide.
"Did you at any time think of ending
your life?" asked Mr. Powers.
The reply was In the affirmative, but
was Indistinct. "I was In the lowest
depths of despair." she said, and added
she determined to go away, and that
even then he dissuaded her.
"Did you then leave him?" asked Mr.
Powers.
"Yes."
Witness sr.ld that even as late as No
vember 27, 12 days before the tragedy,
Mr. Brown had asserted she should re
main In Salt l.ak and take a house. At
that time he would say he could do noth
ing for her and again he would renew his
promise of marriage, when "we would
go to Goldffeld, Nev., to live."
As late as Thanksgiving day, 1906.
they had dined together.
"He was very kind, very ead, very
dejected, at that time," she said, "and
didn't want to talk," while she had be
come very nervous. She contradicted
the testimony of Mr. Kelley concerning
visits to Brown's house, saying she had
never walked around the house and
thrown pebblesat it, nor carried a pistol
there.
Pursues Brown to Washington,
Brown, she said, had told her of his
Intention to come to this city, but she
did not know the date. She became 111
December 1, after learning of his
departuref but she did not care wheth
er she lived or died. She could not
sleep and had no appetite. Mr. Liv
ingston had told her of Brown's depar
ture and had given her money, which
he said she could use In buying a
ticket to go anywhere except to Gold
field. She decided to go to Los An
geles, and had bought a ticket and
started as far as Ogden. but feeling
that If Mr. Brown was beyond her In
fluence he would not keep his prom
ises, the Impulse seized her to follow
him to Washington City, and she
chRnged her ticket for one to that city.
She had lost so much blood In her
illness, however, that only will-power
kept her ut, "I was very 111 on the
train. I got so tired that I could hardly
do anything," she said. "I slept very
little and ate next to nothing: on the
train."
She could not remember what train
she took out of Chicago.
She arrived Saturday morning, Decem
ber 8, after a night in which she had had
little sleep, and several days of almost
complete fasting.
"Had you formed any purpose before
reaching Washington of doing harm to
Senator Brown?" asked Mr. Powers.
Reads Mrs. Adams' Letter.
"I had none: had formed none."
She told of asking at the Raleigh Hotel
for Senator Brown's room, and engaged
one for herself. She changed her cloth
ing and then went to the Senator's apart
ment. She asked a maid when the Sena-
The Lanpher. die in
a hat always stands
for superior quality.
Soft hats In the newest
shades and shapes. Stiff
bats in dimensions that
are becoming to the
wearer.
LANPHER HATS
are sold by
LEADING DEALERS
LAXPHEE, SKINNER & CO.
ST. PACL, UXSM.
tor would return, and sitting down to
wait, she saw a letter on the table and
read It. This was Mrs. Adams' letter to
Mr. Brown quoted above.
Mrs. Bradley wept copiously as she told
of It. She said she was distracted, and
did not know what to do, and went out
and walked all the forenoon. She had
formed no purpose regarding the Senator.
The Adams letter was then shown Mrs
Bradley. She said:
"Yes, I guess that's the one; H had
something In It about me."
She went back to the hotel several
times and once her attention was at
tracted by hearing the Senator's foot
steps. "I knocked and went In. He turned
and asked:
" 'What are you doing here?'
Did Not Know She Shot Him.
"I said: 'I came to ask If you won't
carry out your promises to me.' "
"What did he say?" asked Mr. Powers.
"I do not know. He Just rushed
towards me."
"What did you next doT"
"I didn't know anying until 1
heard a shot which seemed to arouse
me."
Did you shoot him
"I T not know. Judge.'
"Did you
go there for the purpose of
shooting him?
"I did not."
"Did you go there with any purpose
of revenge?"
"No."
"Did you know he was shot?"
"I did not. I didn't know anything
about i it."
"What did he do?"
"He Just walked the floor and swore."
"Did you take aim?"
"I did not"
"Had you ever fired a gun before that
day?"
"I had not."
Mrs. Bradley said she did not remem
ber Mr. Taity s asking her -whether she
was Mr. Brown's wife, nor anything about
the room.
This recital was given In a voice that
scarcely rose above a whisper. Her feel
ing at that time towards Brown, she. said,
"was one of utter dependency, trust and
love."
"Can you give any reason why you shot
Senator Brown?" she was asked.
"No, I have no reason."
The Adams letter was then read.
Did Not Aim When Shooting.
At 2 o'clock District Attorney baker be
gan the cross-examination.
"You say you did not aim the revolver?
he asked. "Are you sure?"
"I am." She said she did not remember
taking the revolver out of the . andbag.
nor did she recall destroying any letters
or papers In her room. Some memoranda
which Mr. Baker Intimated had been
made by Mrs. Bradley In her room were
exhibited, but she did not recall writing
them. The documents had been torn up
and -pasted together, but the witness in
sisted that she had no recollection of
either the writing or the destruction. She
said she had also found other letters from
Mrs. Adams In Brown's room, but did not
read them. Mrs. Bradley said she had
never before read any letters from Mrs.
Adams to the Senator. "I knew of the
old relations between them," she said,
"but thought It had been broken off.
Was Friend of Mrs. Brown.
Mrs. Bradley said she had also known
Mrs. Brown Intimately.
"Did you go frequently to her house
from 1898 to 1901?"
"Not more frequently than she came to
mine."
"Did you take meals at her house?"
"No more than she took at njine."
"Did you frequently go there as often
as two or three times a day?"
"I did not."
The witness went on to say that the
friendship with Mrs. Brown had been
broken off In 1901, when Mrs. Bradley's
sisters had told Mrs. Prown of the rela
tions between the witness and the
Senator.
Some letters relating to this rupture
were Identified. One letter was signed "L.
M. J.," and Mr. Baker asked the mean
ing. The witness demurred to telling,
but at last said that In his first letter he
had called her a "little mint-Julip," and
she had adopted the Initials. This caused
general laughter. In which the witness
Joined. In another letter written by Mrs.
Bradley to Brown In July, 1901, and ad
dressed, "My life, my all," Mrs. Bradley
said:
Hatred of Mrs. Brown.
"I shall kill her or go mad!"
"Did you refer to Mrs. Brown In that
sentence?" asked Mr. Baker.
"I don't know," was the reply.
Mrs. Bradley did not deny writing the
letter describing Mrs. Brown as looWng
like "an Indian Chief," but said It was
dated after they had broken off their
friendship.
Being asked if she remembered having
written a letter to Brown prior to Septem
ber, 1902, In which she used the expres
sion, "the longer the madam stays there
(In Senator Brown's Brlgham-street
house), the more strongly entrenched is
the enemy," Mrs. Bradley replied that
she did not recall it. She admitted that
she had told Mr. Brown that his older
children by his wife did not need the at
tention that her children deserved from
him. But she declared she had never
written him saying: "T need the Brlg-ham-street
house for our "little ones and
jf9BftBsvVt8nAs2D
Piper Heidsieck.
guished for
I HUNTER BALTIMOReVe j hS
WKmli l&SjfflM I IS NOW LABELED A BLEND OF STRAIGHT RYE WHISKIES. WHICH C&MS
5fPiWeZffi5Mi5 S MEANS THE INTERMIXING OF NOTHING BUT STRAIGHT t lHwEgPsA 7l5ffi!
nY JJFJeS WHISKIES. MARYLAND'S PUREST RYE PRODUCTS ARE USED 5 hTOIw" YJrK
tfflWfc$SlE&0i T TH'S FAMOUS BRAND ITS TONE AND FLAVOR j wSmfjfmM X
S E AMER WHISKEY j
for our unborn children." On objection
the question was not pressed.
Not Trying to Break Up Home.
Referring to the passage In the third
letter to Brown already quoted: "It
aroused In me the bitterest resentment to
see her spoken of as Mrs. Brown; It
makes me a whirlwind of fury when I
know that I ought to have your home
and bear your name," Mr. Baker asked
Mrs. Bradley If she was not trying to
break up the Brown home.
"I was not." she replied. "You have not
heard the other side." she added.
Mr. Baker brought out the fact that,
when the son, Arthur Brown, was born,
Mrs. Bradley was living with her husband,
but Brown was paying her rent and
Bradley was only paying her board. No
one but herself and Brown, she said,
knew Brown to be the father of the child,
who was christened "Arthur Brown," not
Arthur Bradley. There were about 40
persons present at the christening and.
while no one knew the facts except her
and the Senator, some of them had after
wards told her they suspected the truth.
ADAMS TRIAL N EARING END
Case May Go to Jury by Saturday
Night.
SPOKANE. Wash., Nov. 20. A special
to the Spokesman-Review from Rath
drum. Idaho, says:
After being on the witness stand almost
continuously since 10 o'clock Tuesday
THERE'S only one thing that beats a good chew of
tobacco
That's a good chew of the best tobacco and the
best is always
PIPER HEIDSIECK
CHAMPAGNE FLAVOR
PLUG TOBACCO
Not only the best tobacco grown but the very
choicest selections from the finest crops are used to make
That's what has made it so popular among men of
cultivated tastes that no other tobacco is considered
good enough for them.
Costs more than ordinary tobaccos, but is inexpen
sive enough for any man who wants the best. Distin
its delightful "champagne
lasting enjoyment and unalloyed satisfaction.
Piper Heidsieck is the only plug tobacco the
sold in every good tobacco store.
morning, undergoing direct and cross-
examlnatlon, Steve Adams, who Is on trial
here for the alleged murder of Fred Tyler,
was let down, and Clarence Darrow, for
the defense, said his side would finish
within half an hour tomorrow morning.
The state's rebuttal will not take long
and It Is possible that the arguments may
be begun some time tomorrow. In this
event, the jury will have the case by
Saturday night.
James H. Hawley, leading attorney for
the state, was at Adams all day. Two
minor witnesses were called on direct and
cross-examination by the defense, and
then Adams again went on the stand. He
said his memory was bad when pinned
close on a date or an Incident, and like
number of those who testified for him.
crouched behind I don t remember.
ine cross-examination was far more
severe and much longer than at the
former trial.
New Northwest Postmasters.
OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash
Ington, Nov. JO. Postmasters appointed
Miles, Or., Edgar A. Johnson, vice R. E
Cunningham, resigned: Rutledge, Or.
wimam uuiinger, vice C E. Young, re
signed; Star, Or.. Mary J. Harlow, vice
MUos Pitcher, resigned; Greenacres.
Wash., William T. Donohue. vice H. M.
A.lams, resigned; Thornton, Wash
Harry H. Goss. vice L. L Holt, resigned.
Give Eagleson a Hearing.
OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash
Ington. Nov. 20. At the request of Sena
tor Heyburn. Surveyor-General Eagleson
or Idaho, will he given an opportunity
flavor
gives
) to answer the charges on which his reslg-
nation has been demanded, but the Sen
ator apparently has no expectation tliat
Mr. Eagleson will be retained.
The second of Its kind in the country Is
the picturesque temple of worship which
7000 Greeks at Lowell. Mass.. have built.
It being a tioo.000 structure, with a brll
11nnt golden dome and two golden turrets.
And
It' -y
Fact!
Columbia
Tailoring
Acknowledges
No Equal
Better in character of fabrics;
better in making and finishing;
better in fit and style; hand
somer, nobbier, more satisfac
tory in wearing qualities, than
any clothing of any other make
tailor-made or ready-made
to be purchased in this town.
Columbia hand-tailored, made-to-measure
garments cost a third
less than other first-class
tailor's productions and no more
than the better grades of ready
made. One order proves it.
OUR
Twenty -Five Dollar
Kigh Quality Serges
Black or blue, make a suit that
for all-round service is incom
parable at tho price. One "feel"
of the goods, one look at the
finished 3uits in our delivery
room, will convince you that you
need Columbia attire, both from
appearance and economy stand
points. Suits, $20 to $40. Over
coats and Raincoats, $20,
$25 and up. Trousers
$4 to $10
OOLE.1
GR NT PHEGLEY, Mgr.
ilks Building
Seventh and Stark