Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, August 07, 1908, Image 1

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

    K
V
V
V
V
'
VOI,. XLVIII XO. 14,880. funiLAJi, uxv, "
. .. . i 1
HARD
FIGHT AHEAD
OUTCOME!! DOUBT
Hitchcock Sees Danger
of Taft's Defeat.
BRYAN HAS GAINED STRENGTH
People Not Afraid of Him as in
Former Years.
WELLMAN TELLS STATUS
Say Hitchcock W isely Is Not Over.
Confident and Republicans Will
Soon Get Scared, but Will
-Gradually Feel Better.
Walter Wellman to Chicago Record-Herald.
NEW YORK. Aug. 6. (Special.) "We
are proceeding on the theory that we
have a hard fight before ua; that there
Is danger of Taft'a defeat, and that we
must work hard to make sure of win
ning." Thia 1 the principle upon which Chair
man Hitchcock is planning his campaign.
He Is not making the mistake of under
estimating his foe. He la not like Wall
Street, living in a fools' paradise. Ha
knows he has a battle before htm, and he
la getting ready for It. He does not
Intend to be guilty of that most egregious
of blunders, over-confidence. In the end
he expects to win, but he Is going to
work Just as If he feared defeat.
Result Impossible to Forecast.
Mr. Hitchcock has told Judge Taft and
Charles P. Taft, and tomorrow will tell
President Roosevelt that in his Judgment
this Presidential campaign is to be no
easy thing, no walkaway. There are signs
of both strength and weakness, and as
yet there is no assurance as to which Is
to turn out the strong factor.
In m opinion. Mr. Hitchcock is a wise
young man to plan his work Just as if
he feared it was to be a desperate case.
It may or may not prove to be desperate.
It la now too early to tell. But having
had the opportunity to talk with men
from ail parte of the country, I offer a
few suggestions as to the trend of public
opinion.
Bryan Stronger Than Ever.
Almost every man I talk wth, be he
Democrat or Republican, admits Bryan
Is stronger than he was ever before.
Almost every one comments on the fact
that few men. are now afraid of Bryan.
In this one factor alone he has made
progress enough to give at least the right
to hope. When he ran for President in
16 and 1900. a very large part of the
public looked upon him as a dangerous
man. He was regarded as a revolution
ary, almost a Socialist, and by some was
classed as an anarchist. Level-headed,
sincere men believed implicitly that. If
Bryan were to get into the White House,
the country would Quickly go to the devil.
It la now almost universally admitted
that this fear has passed away.
Republican Scare Imminent.
From all parts of tjie country cornea
the opinion that this is not going to be
a very bitter or exciting campaign. It
may be close. I have good reason for
believing that in a few weeka the Re
publicans will have a scare on. That is,
they will sudVn!y become alarmed over
the progress Bryan is making and will
not be able to conceal their anxiety. AI-'
ready there are signs of the coming of
such a scare. After it has reached its
climax the Republicans will gradually
begin feeling better .and by October will
have recovered their normal composure
and confidence.
MRS. SAGE PLANS GIFT
May Donate Site for Government
Military Preparatory School.
NEW YORK. Aug. 6. It la learned
from frienda of Mra. Russell Sage that
she is thinking seriously of purchasing
Constitutional Island, in the upper
Hudson, opposite West Point, and pre
senting it to the United States Govern
ment as a site on which to erect the
world's greatest military preparatory
school, a school that will be to West
Point what Eton is to Oxford and
Lawrcncevllle is to Princeton. She Is
very much In earnest about this proj
ect. She will send a representative to
West Point within a few days to look
Into the matter and put her In pos
session of all the facts concerning
Constitutional Island, the attitude of
the West Point authorities toward the
idea and whether or not Congress la
likely to give Its sanction In the event
of Mrs. Sage obtaining title to the
property. Mrs. Sage would like to give
to Vest Point a preparatory achool, it
Is said, where boys, particularly those
from remote places, where the public
schools are not the best, can receive
the preparatory education necessary
to pass the rigid examination required
of all candidates for cadetshlps at the
United States Military Academy. In re.
cent years the percentage of cadeta
who have been lost to the Army aa
the result of their inability to pass
the West Point entrance examinations
has been very large, particularly in the
mathematical branches.
Jtwiiiiif jj g imkti .
. .t ppmtY ATTOTTRT 7, 1,fS. PRICE FIVE CENTS.
FRUIT AT STAKE
IN WHIST MATCH
POIXT AT ISSUE IX REAL ESTATE
, SETTLED IX GAME.
Nelsons, of Xevada, Secure $15,000
Fruit Crop by Holding Trumps
Against Harts' Skill.
LOS ANGELES. Aug. . (Special.)
With a fruit crop worth J15.000 as the
stake, the fiercest game of whist ever
seen in the Southwest was played last
night in a little Summer cottage at Cor
ona del Mar, near Balboa Beach. The
players were Mrs. George Hart, a
beautiful Los Angeles society woman, and
her husband, a prominent broker, on one
side, and George A. Nelson and Hugh W.
Nelson, Nevada mining men, on the
other.
The game was the outcome of a real
estate deal, the Nelsons trading the whole
town of Winchester, Riverside County, for
the Hart ranch in Slmi Valley, north of
thia city. Both parties insisted on hav
ing thia year'a valuable crop from the
ranch.
The Harts had leads and leads, and
American and International whist signals
at their finger tips, but the Nevada men
had the trumps. In spite of brilliant and
bewildering playing by the Harts, rough-and-ready
cowpuncher luck won. Mrs.
Hart lost without a wince. The. Harts
led the first SB points, though It was close,
and then their rivals Jumped ahead and
stayed there.
DEATH ROLL IN TABRIZ 800
No Missionaries Among Those Killed
by Bombardment.
TABRIZ, Aug. 6. There has now been
25 days' fighting In the streets of Tabriz,
and the casualties, due chiefly to bombs
thrown from mortars and shrapnel, are
estimated at 800. Many of the finer resi
dences of the city and hundreds of shops
in the basements have been looted. The
loss In this direction is placed at more
than 13,000,000.
The American mlsslonarlea in the city
have been exposed to stray bullets, but
although they have had some narrow
escapes none of them has been Injured.
During one of the heavier bombardments
a pleoe of shrapnel fell in a garden with
in a few feet of one of the mission ser
vanta. There la a very bitter feud going on be
tween the conatltutional progressives,
who hold 11 wards of the city, and the
reactionaries, who hold one large ward.
The mass of the people, however, have
Informed the central government that
they are not opposed to the Shah. Those
who are xealous for the continuance of
the old regime regard the constitutional
progressives as revolutionaries. The lo
cal assembly, or Anjuman, did, on one
occasion, express sedltionary views, but
later acknowledged the supremacy of the
Shah and adjourned Indefinitely in token
of submission.
To Use Quick-Flrlng Guns.
TEHERAN, Aug. 6. A battery of
quick-firing guns has been sent from
here to Tabriz. The Shah Is augment
ing the military forces In Teheran by
the formation of new unite of troops.
ALL BEFORE GRAND JURY
Alleged Gould Divorce Conspirators
Called to Testify.
NEW YORK, Aug. 6. Mabel MacCaus
lan, principal witness against Mrs. Ben
Teal, wife of the theatrical manager;
Henry T. Mousley, a private detective,
and Mips Julia Fleming, all of whom are
under arrest, charged with attempted
subornation of perjury in connection
with the suit of Mrs. Frank Gould
against Mr. Gould for divorce, together
with Blanche Hale, a hairdresser at the
Hotel Lincoln, and Miss Marie Falk, a
dressmaker, were called before the grand
Jury today and questioned-
Mrs. Teal and Mr. Mousley are out
under 15000 ball each. Miss Fleming's
ball was reduced to $2000 today and her
release may soon follow.
GIVES MINISTER SALUTE
Dutch Warlhlp Shows Governmenl
Approval of His Action.
WILLEMSTAD, Aug. 6. After noon the
Dutch cruiser Gelderland left the port
and stopped outside the port to await
the sailing of the inter-colonial steamer
Chrlstianstadt, which is taking M. do
Rues, the ex-Dutch Minister to Venexuela,
who recently was expelled by President
Castro, to Trinidad, where he will em
bark for Holland. When the Chrlstian
stadt approached, the Gelderland fired a
salute and the populace ashore cheered
him and the Queen. This Is taken to
mean that Holland approves De Rues'
actions.
. : -v".' i '-i;,V -..- aV
on
COLONELS
TO
Command Brown Army
at Camp Murray.
VSLL DIRECT REGULAR TROOPS
Efficiency of McDonell and
Yoran Recognized.
SPLENDID WORK IN FIELD
i
Mobility of Troops Xlcely Demon
strated by ManeuversEIaborate
Receptions for Governor
Chamberlain Tonight.
MURRAY, Wash., Aug. 6. (Special.)
At no time . during the present in
struction maneuvers in the American
Lake district, or during the 1 field ex
ercises of two and" four years ago, has
the extreme mobility of United States
troops been so fully and nicely demon
strated as today, when all the regulars
in camp were formed into a provision
al brigade and marched southward to
attack the position of a theoretical di
vision supposed to be marching from
Portland to Puget Sound.
The maneuver was not a new one,
but the taking into the field 6f all ap
pliances for an extended campaign
was a test which has seldom been ap
plied, and never with such thorough
success. This success was not an ac
cident in any way, but the reward of
persistent progress in all branches of
the service.
Troops Show Good Training.
Critics who have in the far past
commented on the rather cumbersome
methods of taking the field would
have changed their minds had they
been at American Lake during today.
Especial progress was shown In the
work of the Signal and Hospital Corps.
The equipment of a mixed force of in
fantry, cavalry and artillery was com
plete. There was forage for the ani
mals, tools for making trenches, quar
termaster and commissary supplies,
equipment for establishing field hos
pitals and dressing stations, means of
Instant communication from the point
of the advance party to the main col
umn, and from th,e main column on
back to the headquarters of Brigadier
General Brush at camp.
Scene Stirs Patriotic Pride.
With the command six miles out,
headquarters was able to know the
movements of the brigade. It was a
scene calculated to Inspire confidence
in Uncle Sam's fighting men when the
column passed easily through camp
and took the field. The pack trains
and wagons had a business-like and
substantial appearance. Provision was
apparent for every emergency that
might arise in warfare.
On the edge of camp, cavalry patrols
and flankers were sent out, Infantry
advance parties hurried into position,
and the fighting machine felt Its way
(Concluded on Page 14.)
OREGON MEN AT
ate" . z .r :
,L. ,.--vvr-"Vrc ,:
r"3
HEAD
BRIGADES
Vs.
f
''y .
W ,"..' A" ' k , 'V
: I 1
BREAKS LEG ON
MOUNT ST. HELENS
BOULDER STRIKES J. AXDERSOX
WHILE XEAR SUMMIT.
Carried to Timberllne by Two Men
and Then to Mazama Camp,
' Where Doctor Is Found.
CASTLE ROCK, Wash., Aug. 6. (Spe
cial.) When near the "summit of Mount
St.- Helens Tuesday afternoon, John An
derson, a sawmill man of ' Little Falls,
was struck by a bowlder which broke his
right leg in two places at the ankle.
With him at the time were his partner.
Perry Olson, and Henry Hanson, his fore
man. The two men carried Anderson
down the mountain side to timberllne. Ol
son started at once for the camp of the
Mazamas at Spirit Lake, 12 miles distant,
arriving there at 3 o'clock Wednesday
morning.
A relief party, headed by S. E. Forsythe
of this city, and with George Williams as
guide, started at once for. the foot of the
mountain to bring in the injured man.
The party returned late at night and Dr.
O. C. Akins, of Portland, who is wltu the
Mazamas, set the broken leg.
This morning, Anderson was made -as
comfortable as possible in the big auto
belonging to J. A. Byerle, and accompa
nied by G. F. McClane, the start was
made for this city, the party reaching
here at 8:30 tonight having covered a dis
tance of 46 miles over one of the rough
est mountain roads ever traveled by an
auto.
The Injured man will be sent to Portland
in the morning. He displayed remarkable
endurance on the trip over the mountain
to the camp at Spirit Lake. Although
the men carrying him stumbled many
times, the injured man never uttered a
groan.
ELECTROCUTED AT SALEM
George A. Goss, Lineman, Killed In
stantly by Shock of 2200 VoIt3.
SALEM, Or., Aug. 6. (Special.)
George A. Goss, aged 38, was instantly
killed this afternoon by grasping a live
wire carrying 2200 volts.
Goss was employed by the Portland
Railway. Light & Power Company and
was engaged in rebuilding the com
pany's overhead system on State street.
He was on a pole when he grasped the
wire which it is claimed was an old
wire with the insulation worn off, and
hung there until lowered to the ground
with ropes.
Goss leaves a wife and baby.
FALLS 900 FEET, WILL LIVE
Woman Balloonist Tumbles" When
Rope of Parachute Breaks.
A B BOTTSFOTLD, Wis., Aug. 6. Drop
ping through the air 900 feet yesterday,
when the rope attached to her parachute
snapped. Mrs. Eva Jones, a woman bal
loonist for a carnival company, still lives.
The branches of a tree broke the fall.
The woman was rendered unconscious
and Buffered from several broken ribs and
was otherwise Internally injured. She will
recover.
AERONAUTS MADE CAPTIVE
German Army Men Arrested on
Landing In Russia.
KATTAWTTZ. Russia. Aug. 6. Word
has been received here that three German
military balloonlsts, who landed yesterday
In a balloon a short distance south of
Warsaw, were taken into custody as soon
aa they stepped from their car. The bal
loon also was seized by the gendarmes.
CAMP MURRAY
fit. JfcJV
r.- .ass-,"- r
&
J 1 -
ji Jr..
Sf.w: i '.4.
taMsesi
EXPLORERS DIE
FROZEN
NORTH
Death Takes Ericksen
Party on Ice-Floe.
PERISH AS THEY REACH SHORE
Esquimau Tells News With
His Dying Breath.
SEEK TO CROSS ICE-CAP
Danish Explorer and Two Compan
. Ions Driven to Sea on Ice and
Starved to Death on Green
land Coast.
COPENHAGEN, Aug. 6. Mylua
Ericksen, the Danish explorer, has met
his death In the Far North. According
to information contained In a tele
gram to the committee of the Denmark-Greenland
expedition, Ericksen
and two of his companions who sailed
with him from Copenhagen, June 24,
1906, to the unexplored regions of the
Northeastern coast of Greenland, per
ished In a snowstorm. The three men
were on an expedition of exploration
over the ice when disaster overtook
them.
Large tracts of unknown land have
been mapped out and the entire north
eastern coast of Greenland has been
chawvd.
A Iciter telegram says Ericksen and
his companions were on an ice-floe
which drifted out to sea. Their pro
visions became exhausted and 'they
drifted for days, growing weaker and
weaker. When the floe was finally
driven back to land, the three men
did not have sufficient strength to
make the effort to return to the 'sta
tion. They must have perished on the
shore.
The Esquimau, who brought the
news of the disaster arrived at the
station in a dying condition and sue
cumbed immediately after making his
report.
SOUGHT TO CROSS ICE-CAP
Exploration of Earth's Coldest. Point
Cost Erlcksen's Life.
NEW YORK, Aug. 6. Mylus Erick
sen had devoted several years to the
exploration of Greenland. His first
expedition was when he returned from
that country in November, 1904, after
two years and a half in the North. The
expedition that sailed from Copenhagen
two years ago was supported financial
ly by the Danish government, and his
plans had been approved by many soci
eties of scientists, including the Amerl
can Geographical Society. ' On a former
occasion Mr. Ericksen distinguished
himself as the chief of a party which
traversed the route across Melville Bay
to the Cape York Esquimaux settle
ment on the west coast of Greenland.
Mr. Ericksen planned on this last
trip and this was the most adventur
ous portion of his undertaking to
(Concluded on Pago 8.)
-4
.,, ''-: -.
AUTO HOLDUP MEN
CAUGHT BY POLICE
JUST IX TIME TO PRETEXT ROB
BERY OF TRAIX.
Hot Chase by Xevada Police Ends in
Arrest or Men Who Robbed
Wheelers Xear Reno.
RENO, Nev., Aug. 6. (Special.)
Captain Cox and a posse of state po
lice arrested three armed men at Car
son yesterday, who, it is believed, are
the men who held up an automobile
and robbed Samuel Wheeler and wife
within sight of Reno. . The police had
been on the trail of the three men
since a few hours after the robbery
Monday night, and there Is little doubt
but they are the men wanted. They
will be brought to Reno for Identifi
cation by their victims.
While the robbers were at work.
Wheeler had a good opportunity to
look at them, and the officers believe
he will have no trouble In Identifying
them. None of the Jewels taken from
Mrs. Wheeler were found upon the
suspected men. - -
In the arrest last night the officers
believe they frustrated a plot to rob
one of the Southern Pacific express
trains. The men were armed, had ma
terial to be used for masks and were
headed as If to reach the railroad at
a point near Hazen. The police sev
eral days ago received warning that a
train holdup was being planned to
take place close to Reno.
HEAT CAUSES SUICIDE
Robert Turnbull, Ex-Pugilist, Kills
Himself In New York.
NEW YORK. Aug. 6. Probably crazed
by the heat of the last few days Robert
Turnbull, a prominent operator in subur
ban real estate, formerly a professional
pugilist of some note, shot and killed
himself In his home In Brooklyn today.
Turnbull is said to have been formerly
lightweight champion of America. He
fought against Jack Dempsey for the
professional championship and was de
feated after fighting two draws.
Afterward he traveled with the John L.
Sullivan athletic combination.
Another suicide attributed to the ef
fect of the heat was that of Morris L.
Briskey, who hanged himself In Brook
lyn today. There were a number of heat
prostrations today, but these were chief
ly due to the oppressive humidity. The
temperature was not unusually high.
WIDOW AFTER 71 YEARS
Nonagenarian W ho Eloped at 1 0
Mourns Her Aged Husband.
CHICAGO, Aug. e. Mrs. Benjamin
Harris, a nonagenarian, bent and
wrinkled, sits weeping alone in a smaii
apartment from' which her husband was
buried yesterday, the first time In 71 years
of married life that she ever was sep
nmteri from him.
From the home of the Little Sisters of
th Poor. Fiftieth street and Prairie ave
nue, where the funeral of Harris was
v.irt fivB wealthy Chicago women fol
lowed the body to the grave. These
Tt-nmen Boveral veara aeo prevented sep
aration which poverty seemed about to
force on the Harrises, taking tne coupie
from the.Junnlng poorhouse ano estao
Ilshlng them In a little home. Since then
the five benefactors had contributed gen
erously to support Harris and his aged
Mr. Harris eloped with his bride when
she was 19. For a time the pair eeemea
In a way to become rich. Then reverses
came. All their savings vanished, but
their 111 fortune had been united.
WIFE NO. 4 ASKS DIVORCE
Alleges Spouse Abused Her When
She Bought Him Xew Suit.
SALEM, Or., Aug. 6. (Special.) W.
D. Claggett, who recently sued his
stepson on a trespass charge, alleg
ing that the young man had called too
frequently at mealtime, was today
made the defendant in a divorce ac
tion instituted by his wife, who is
Claggett's fourth helpmeet.
One of the principal allegations of
the complaint is that the defendant
became abusive and profane when the
plaintiff bought and presented a shirt
to defendant, so that he might have a
change of apparel, "which he aorely
needed."
The complaint also charges Claggett
with buying refuse meat and provi
sions for her to eat, and getting his
own meals down town. The couple
have been married about four years.
Claggett la nearly 70 years old and la
reputed to be wealthy.
EYESHADE CATCHES FIRE
Celluloid Flames Vp and Burns
Man as He Lights Cigar.
RITZVTLLE, Wash., , Aug. . (Spo
lal.1 Edward Finnell. a business man
of Paha, was seriously burned about
the face and head today. While wear
ing a celluloid eyeshade he attempted
to light a cigar. The celluloid shade
exploded, a piece of the blazing com-
oeitlon flying Into one oi his eyes.
"TY" COBB HAS RICH BRIDE
Detroit's Hard-Hitter Wins Heiress
at Augusta.
AUGUSTA, Ga., Aug. 6. Tyruso Ray
mond Cobb, better known as "Ty" Cobb,
the heavy hitting ballplayer of the Detroit
American League team, was married to
day to Miss Charlotte Marion Lombard,
daughter of one of Augusta's wealthiest
citizen.
TAFT SPEAKS FOR
SPEEDY JUSTICE
Wins Plaudits of Vir
ginia Lawyers.
REFORM NEEDED IN COURTS
Procedure and Delay Help Rich
at Cost of Poor.
WOULD REDUCE EXPENSE
Fix Salaries and Cut Costs Do
crease Number of Appeals and
Settle Damage Suits by Arbi
tration, as In England.
HOT SPRINGS, Va., Aug. .-Thera
was no reservation in the Southern hos
pitality accorded to William H. Taft by
the Virginia State Bar Association here
today on the occasion of the address of
the Republican candidate on "The Law's
Delays." His presence and introductory
pleasantries were applauded by an audi
ence representative of the social life of
the Old Dominion. The burden of his
speech met the expressed approval of the
lawyers present. At the conclusion Mr.
Taft was surrounded by members of the
audience, who presented themselves for
personal acquaintance. A group photo
graph was taken under the trees, with
Mr.' Taft in the center. At the banquet
nnirhf m-hlch broueht to a close the
20th annual session of the association, i
Mr. Taft responded to the toast, "The
President.
How He Won Virginians.
Mr. Taft prefaced his 40-mlnute speech
today by expressing two embarrassments
he felt in appearing before a Virginia
audience. The first he made clear by thia
anecdote:
"As I was entering the hall today, I
was introduced to a very charming
daughter of Virginia, a married lady, of
whom I Inquired, on hearing her name,
which was a Virginia nme. whother shu
was a relative of a friend of my own
from Virginia who bore the same name.
. 'Oh, no,' she replied, 'my poor hus
band la a Yankee." "
The story seemed to remove the first
embarrassment. The other was Mr.
Taft's diffidence In discussing before :
the bar of Virginia a technical ques
tion. "Because, you know," he said, ;
"eight years ago I ceased to be a Judge
and became a mere politician."
Drive 40 Miles Today.
wr. ni fat with Mrs. Taft.
llilliuiiu. ...
General Edwards, chief of the Insular
(Concluded on Page 11.)
INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS
The Weather.
YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature,
degreea; minimum, i.
TODAY'S Fair; northweterly wlndi.
Foreign.
Whole Japanese detachment masaacred br. ,
Corean insuritents. Pag 2.
Brickaen. Daninh explorer, and two com-:
panlona perish In ice oft Greenland coaat. ,
Page 1. !
Germans ralae great fund to build new
Zeppelin alrahlp. Page 11.
Canadian Pacinc atrtkers assured of aid of j
American unlona. Page 11. 1
National.
Honduras refuses to restore exequaturs of!
American and other Consuls. Page S.
Politics.
Bryan defends labor planks against Van;
Cleave s attack. Page 5.
Democratic clubs to be organised through-1
out country. Page 5.
Wellman warns Republicans against over-;
confidence of Taft's election. Page 1.
Taft sneaks to Virginia lawyers on conrt-i
reform. Page 1.
Cummins to be elected Senator at extra
session. Page 3.
Dcmefrtlc.
New York betting law does not forbid beta ;
between Individuals. Page 2
Dismembered body In Chicago Identified and
suspected murderer arrestea. rage o.
Dorr arrested In Los Ar.gelea for stealing
railroad stock. Page '1.
Wrilst game played at Los Angeles for 15.-
000 fruit crop, page i.
H&rrtman arrive at San Francisco and dis
cusses railroad affairs. Page 11.
Reno hold-up men captured Just in tlma t
prevent another crime. Page 1.
Sports.
Coast League scores: Portland 4, Ban Fran
cisco 3; Los Angeles l. uaKiana u.
Page T.
M. D. Wisdom returns from canvass or en
tries In Pacific ortnwcst atocn snowa
and race moets. Page 14.
Pacific Coast.
Oregon Colonels to have charge of man
euvers at American Lake. Page 1.
Two conventions of Idaho Democrats at
Wallace. Page 0.
Passengers on launch Rose spend night of
terror at sea. off Yaqulna Bay. paga i).
Judge Hanford assails labor unions. Paga 6.
Falling rocks break man's leg near summit
of Mount St. Helens. Page 1.
Commercial and Marine.
Local wheat market not affected by slump
In Bast. Page 1.
Chicago prices decline on better orop news.
Page 13.
Further advance In wheat at Beam.
Page 13.
Stock prices rise as grains decline. Page 13.
Funds on hand for operation of Government
dredge on Coos Bay. page n.
Portland and Vicinity.
Board on charter revision may make sweep
ing changes. Page 10.
Systematic plan for work will be adopted
at good roads convention, page 14.
6outh Portland residents want bridge at
Sherman street. Page .
Daughters attack will of Mra Bridget
Carr. page in.
Automobile makes run to Government Camp
In seven hours, page l.
Street parade planned In honor of Oregon
athletes. Page 1.