Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, April 26, 1909, Page 2, Image 2

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    LEY TO TALK
WOMAN OF MYSTERY IN WHITLA KIDNAPING CASE, WHOSE
PAST OFFICERS ARE STILL TRYING TO UNRAVEL.
We Want Workers in Our Garment Alteration Room Good Ones That
E TAX
are Capable and Dependable -To Such Steady Positions arS) Assured
tinman
Extended Debate Expected on
Tariff Bill Amendment
in Senate.
INGQM
Olds,
JO
MAY TAX $2500 SALARIES
Vurstion 0f Revenue Produced by
Payne Will Decide Senators on
Need of Taxation or
Incomes.
WASHINGTON'. April 35. The in
come tax. In connection with the tar
iff bill, will receive especial attention
In the Senate this week. It was an
nounced today. Senator Bailey, who
ha Introduced an amendment to tho
bill providing for a flat rate of taxing
Incomes, would make a long speech
Monday on this feature. Mr. Bailey
has made a careful study of the In
come tax question' and will be pre
pared to discuss the subject In all Its
bearings. He Is expected to express
himself pointedly, and no doubt he will
be subjected to many interruptions.
witn the result that there may be
much spirited colloquy during his
peech.
The committee on finance probably
will report Its final amendment to the
tariff schedules tomorrow, and as soon
as the opportunity permits the Senate
will consider the bill paragraph by
paragraph, taking them up in the order
that the Items during the reading last
week were laid aside for future con
sideration. The Democratic opinion is that tho
bill will remain in the Senate for three
or four weeks, and after the Senate
completes Its work the time of ad
journment will change.
Krequent utterances by President
Taft expressing the hope that Congress
will hasten the passage of the tariff
bill that business may be restored to
its normal condition may postpone the
real test of strength over the Income
tax proposition. Sentiment of the
Senate is pretty evenly divided on the
matter, but there are many differences
of opinion as to details df the legisla
tion. Some Senators believe It is im
practicable to tax Incomes of less than
S000. while others believe it will be
necessary to go as low as $2500. There
are others who argue that the fixing
of the minimum at any figure will re
sult In unfair discriminations.
Many Congressmen believe with
President Taft that the income tax
amendment should not be adopted un
less It can be shown that It will pro
duce revenue. Members of the finance
committee declare the Payne bill, as
amended by the committee, will yield
sufficient revenues. If the truth of
this statemnt is established It will turn
a number of votes away from the In
come tax amendment.
CRESAP'S SCALP SOUGHT
CHURCHES ASK COUNCIL TO RE
MOVE POLICEMAN.
f
- "' , '"":.-Si'::-.. . . .
': .. i 1
MRS. JAMES BOYLE
YORK BADLY NEEDED
Man Who Eloped With Boyle's
Supposed Wife Hunted.
AID IN KIDNAPERS' TRIAL
!
Vancouver Officer Accused of Saying
lie AV'ould Not Arrest Man Who
Disturbed Shannon.
VANCOUVER, Wash., April 25. (Spe
cial.) A petition to be presented to the
City Council, demanding the discharge
of Ira Cresap, policeman of this city,
wa read by the pastors of the Baptist,
Methodist. Christian and Presbyterian
churches at the morning services today,
because. It Is alleged. Cresap made re
marks about Dan Shannon, a revivalist,
who recently held a series of meetings
in a tabernacle in Vancouver.
The petition alleges that Cresap, "in
the presence of Claude Crawford W
Body. A. E. Betts, F. B. Woods? and
others, said, 'he (Shannon), ought to be
tarred and feathered and ducked in the
Columbia River; he is nothing but a
four-flusher of the worst type and a
grafter; I would not arrest the man who
threw stones at the tabernacle If I knew
who he was." "
The petition goes on to Bay:
"We believe that such conduct on the
part of the police officer 1e Intolerable,
that his Influence is a great detriment to
the caiwe of decency and of law and or
der in this community, and that he Is not
cify t0 b " tha po"eo frce of this
The petition was signed by more than
SO persons today.
Cresap denies that he said he would
not arrest the man who threw stones at
the tabernacle last Tuesday, but admits
that he made the other remarks. The
W.l KTatly lnterd In the outcome
of the controversy.
MARKET TONE IS CHEERFUL
Wall Street Feels Stimulus In Gen
eral liusiness World.
NK W YORK. April 25. The develop
ments last week were regarded as disl
..., T iHvoraoie from a flnmni.i
If Imprisoned Woman Is Not Wife of
Boyle, She Will Be Made to Give
Testimony Against Him '
in Whitla Case.
CHICAGO. April 25. (Special.)
George B. Perkins,' Ira Kepner and six
men of the Perkins Detective Agency,
Pittsburg, Pa., have been in Chicago for
two days, ransacking the Northwest
side in search of Frank A. York, form
erly of 876 Sheffield avenue, who is de
clared by detective Perkins to have
run away with Anna McDermott, the
supposed wife of James Boyle, In jail
with her husband at Mercer, Pa., await
ing trial tor kidnaping Willie Whitla.
The force of detectives Is in the em
ploy of the State of Pennsylvania, with
orders to run down York at any cost,
information having been lodged with
the prosecuting officers that Mrs. Boyle
was never divorced from York and
therefore is not the wife of Boyle, as
she has asserted since her arrest.
The success of the case now pending
against Mrs. Boyle for complicity In
the kidnaping with Boyle, is said by
the men working in search for York,
to depend wholly on his being found,
since If It can be proved that the young
woman is not Boyle's wife, she can be
compelled to testify against her puta
tive husband.
It was through former friends of
Anna .McDermott that the clew to
York's whereabouts was obtained. In
addition, W. F. McDermott, Jr., ad
mitted to a detective that the man
Anna eloped with in 1906 was Frank A.
York. Detective Perkins says he is in
possession- of information that Frank
A. Parker, alias Frank A. Minor, who
Is serving a sentence under the latter
title in the Jefferson City penitentiary,
is the man for whom Anna McDer
mott deserted York, and it is of record
that she visited Minor at the peniten
tiary,-although she now denies stoutly
naving Known him.
E ELLIOT DANCES
DOKS FRIVOLOUS STUNT IN HER
NEW PliAV.
" enecl was to 8timu.
late renewed demand for securities suf
ficient to outweigh the disadvantages in
the technical position in ih. .. BL" "
ket and to turn the price movement
upward again. 1
A more cheerful feeling in the great
basic .metal trades was another influ
ential factor in shaping the financial
view. Evidences multiplied of the ex
pansion of business In the iron and
rieeI.trrad- Clialrnin Garry informed
the United States steel stockholders
that their business had been restored
to about the volume of the December
rate.
Reports of the growth of the general
merchandise movement and Increase of
railroad traffic were more conservative
although Incoming reports of railroad
earnings showed gratifying compari
sons with last year. The money mar
ket gave evidence, that the period of
plethoric conditions was ending.
Couple Has Joint Birthday.
AL.BANY. Or., April 23. (Special.)
Mr. and rMs. Blbert 8. Robe, of Albany,
celebrated their birthday today. Both
were born on April 25, but not in the
ame year. They were married last Fall
and this is their first "joint birthday."
They went to Brownsville last evening to
spend the day at the home of Mr. Robe's
father, He v. R. Robe. Linn County's
oldest pioneer minister.
Canada Southern Railway, Chicago,
Kalamazoo & Saginaw Railway, Indi
ana Harbor Belt Railroad, West Shore
Rajlroad and Detroit & Charlevoix
Railroad.
These railroads have a combined
mileage of about 12,000 and they will
form the largest railway corporation
In the world. The Pennsylvania, which
is under one management, incorporated
as the Pennsylvania Company, has
about 11.000 miles of road.
The securities outstanding and issued
by the New York Central lines aggre
gate in round numbers J512.000.000. and
the company owns stocks and bonds in
.other corporations aggregating ap
proximately 1152,000,000. The total out
put of securities represented by the
lines owned and controlled by lease or
by stock ownership aggregate approxi- i
uiaici f H i I ,v uu.uvv.
MAYBRAY TELLS"STORY
DENIES EMPHATICALLY HE IS
"JIM" M'CANN.
Reviews His Life Historv nnl
Charges Accuser, Mrs. Gates,
With Being Insane.
DES MOINES. Ia., April 25. "I am
not 'Jim' McCann. I've been charged
With about evervtliino- afnna ... A
and I will say that Mrs. Lillian Gates,
who accuses me. Is insane."
ihls was J. C. Maybray's answer to
night to the assertion of the St. Louis
woman that Maybray was the suppos
edly murdered St. Louis horseman
Maybray told the story of his life.
"I was born in Mississippi" he said.
"I was a cattle-puncher on the plains
of Wyoming with Mayor Dahlman, of
Omaha, during the early '80s, until '88,
going to Chadron, Neb., where I became
a horseman. In 1891 I went to Galves
ton, and to Kansas City in 1895, and
learned the printer's trade. From 1896
to 1901 I ran a rooming-house In
Omaha. Then I went to Kansas City,
which is now my home. At the time
of McCann's murder, in June, 1903, I
was in, Kansas City. That July I went
to Denver and was HI there six weeks.
In 1904 I went to Tacoma, Wash., and
then back to Kansas City. In 1904 I
was married to my present wife at Ex
celsior Springs, Mo. I never knew Mc
Cann, and never saw him."
Entirely Insulted to Her Style and
Although "The Conquest" Is
Good, She Is Out of Place.
LONDON. April 25. (Special.) Louis
Waller and Miss Maxine Elliott began
their much-talked-of London engage
ment last night at the Lyric Theater in
a piay called "The Conquest." It is
iounaea on one or .Balzac s stories and
is by no means a poor or weak play. If
it does not succeed, the fault will not
be entirely with the play. The actors
will deserve a few unkind words. Bar
ring Mr. Waller's part and that of Miss
Frances Dillon, the other roles were not
well suited to the people who Inter
preted them.
The statuesque beauty and dignified
impresslveness of Miss Elliott were en
tirely out of place In the frivolous light
comedy work she was compelled to do
In the first part of the play. - The au
thor even assigned her the uncongenial
task of twice doing a gay and blithe
some dance with a silken scarf. Imag
ine Maxine Elliott doing a song and
dance to the music of "Little Court Fid
dler." It verged on the ridiculous and
so handicapped the rest of her perform
ance unjustly.
NORTH WILL NOT RESIGN
Director of Census in Difficulties
Over Administration. s
WASHINGTON, April 25. S. T. D.
North, director of the Census Bureau,
whose differences with Secretary Nagle
over the administration of Census Bureau
have resulted in several conferences be
tween the eecretary and President Taft,
said tonight it was not now his pur
pose to resign.
The question whether the Secretary
shall have full or divided authority over
the census office, which in a measure
formerly has been run independently by
the directors, is involved.
Several of Mr. North's friends in Con
gress will confer with the President,
probably tomorrow, in regard to the
matter and It Is also stated that Mr.
North may have the opportunity of learn
ing of his standing with the President.
GREAT COMBINE HIS AIM
(Continued from First Patje.)
PEDDLING STOLEN GOODS
Stranger Who Can't Explain Where
He Got Wares Is Arrested.
WOODBURN, Or., April 25. (Special.)
Marshals Moshberger and Kelsey today
imprisoned a man named Rice, who was
peddling shoes and cigars. He did not
give a satisfactory account of the pos
session of these goods and was arrested.
Twelve pairs of shoes and a box con
taining cigars were found hidden in dif
ferent parts of the town. It is sup
posed he robbed a freight car a few days,
ago, cached the goods and came back
Saturday to dispose of them.
An -effort- is being made by the officers
to learn what else he has cached.
ance & Wheeling Railroad, Chicago, In
diana & Southern Railroad, Lake Erie
& Western Railroad, ' Northern Ohio
Railway, Pittsburg & Lake Erie Rail
road, Michigan Central Railroad and
Betrayed Schoolgirl Is Charge.
BURNS, Or., April 25. (Special.) Fee
Carpenter Is under arrest here accused
of betraying Christina Tackman, a high
school girl. The girl alleges that she
was spirited from home several months
ago by Carpenter. She returned last
week and told her story. The arrest of
Carpenter followed.
Enough Good Values for a Whole
Month's Sellins are Grouped for
One Week's Business -and Frugal
Mothers Invited Take Advantage
Infants' Slitis. L. II. Rest's
terial, with dainty yoke and bishop sleeves, QQft
$1.25 value for the very low price of JUu
Infants' Skirts, of muslin or nainsook, trimmed
with tucking and embroidery, special D jr
price, each ..".MliwO
Babies' First Outfits, put up in neat boxes, consist
of two slips. 2 cowns. 2 flannel skirts 9 flannel nin.
ning blankets, 1 sacque and 1 pair bootees, all fine
materials, special wnue tney last this
week at, each, $6.45. $4.45 and
I nil illlV
.$3.45
Boys' and Girls' Rompers, of striped chambray, in
blue, gray, pink or white, ages 2 to 6 years, AQn
regular 65e value, special at .TUu
Baby Sacques and Gretchens, made wj jr
of flannels or cashmere, reg. 50c to $2.50. ttalt
Baby Slips, slightly soiled, but of daintv materials,
neatly trimmed. While they last, values P-l QO
to $5.00, on sale now at. each Q I lOlJ
Regular values to $7.50 at ".2.78
Baby Dresses, in dainty patterns and materials,
1 X- .l.-T FTA 1 . "
vaiues to t.ov, special at One-Third Less
D JL. r r rr
JllUy LJUUhCS r Tee BIOGRAPHIES" that we are giving free this week to all who ask lor them
be found in the infants' wear department. A complete record of all the happenings of baby's childhood days.
T-p TA.-. j 1 1 . . -
" j ul1 iuicichcu m a DaDy or expect to De, come in and ask for one of the ' ' B BT
DTrnt) AtlTTTTinjJ i 1 ...... -
They're to
Su
No Sale Ever Launched in Portland Has Presented
Such Values or Assortments as Those That Appear
in Our Sale Which Starts This Morning Come Early
its Jitoo at $19 .9 S
The purchase that brought these Suits was a triumph for the power
of ready cash buying, the most fortunate stroke of business we have
been able to make this season, or ever before. We 've never seen so
many high-grade Suits in a lot that cost so little. They are the very
acme of perfection jn plain-tailored effects, or richnessitself in the
handsomely trimmed models. There are nearly three hundred suits
in all. Every color, size and possible style shown in this assortment.
We can't be too enthusiastic in describing this lot, but nothing we
could say would do them justice. See the window and note won
drous values and styles then come promptly to the (pf f Ck
department and choose. Values up to $85.00 at lif. is 5
m m. n i . r i
Hats Worth
5 $8.48
1 i!!:5k
ill! lii
$25. 00 1
V
nais
Over
200 in
the Lot
The most varied assortment ever seen in Portland at this price.
Compare them with hats you have seen at $12, $15, and $20. You
would choose hats from this lot in a moment at an equal price.
Then there are some of them actually worth to $25 each. Chio
braids, lobster braids, Jap and milan braids in every one of the
season s best and most-wanted colors. The trimmings are wines.
qui
charm
ills, flowers and ribbons in many designs, most ft Q O
armingly applied. Values up to $25. Choice at P&Q
Marquisette Voile
A beautiful, soft, clingy fabric
in delicate colorings and rich
designs; does not crush. One of
the most-called-for fabrics of the
season. Price, the yard,
75, 60 and
GINGHAMS, from the best
American and foreign mills.
Largest assortment in Portland
here. On sale at, the
yard, 10 to
New Galateas, Percales, Dimi
ties, Persian Lawns, French
Mulls, etc.
V ; : ;
50c
75c
Women's Oxfords $2.39 and $3.19
A sensational sale of low shoes of the better sorts. A $3.00 offering
that has never been equaled in the history of our shoe department.
Women's Oxfords in brown kid, gunmetal, calf, suede, glazed kid,
patent leather and tan Russia calf. Several hundred pair of newest
styles, light or heavy soles. Pumps in ankle strap or plain effects,
two-hole ties and bluchers; also canvas Oxfords in blue, Of) )Q
pink, gray, brown and white. Any reasonable want, at )Ze0j
Women's High-grade Oxfords in a lot that embraces over 75 styles.
Two or three-button effects. Regular lace, bluchers and pumps.
They come in gunmetal, patents, black kids, Russia calf and brown
kid ; also in suede or calf leathers and fancy colors and combinations
yum uuiureu tops ana patent vamps, nanu-turned. or extension soles.
luwiy jJUbsiuiB wain in uie iuuu styles is nere tor your
choosing. Values to $5.00 the pair, for Monday's sale, at.
S3.19
GROOM IS 19; BRIDE 64
"I'LL GIVE HIM HIS OWN WAV,"
SHE DECLARES.
Knows He loves Her and Has No
Fear of His Seeking Out Com
pany Among Younger Ones.
COLUMBIA, Mo.. April 25. (Special.)
When Turner Acton, 19-year-old " bride
groom, wants hl own way, his bride,
who was Mrs. Sarah Anne Montemat, 64
years old, won't quarrel or threaten or
pout, she says. She will "coax" him.
And the ' gentle art of coaxing, in the
opinion of the venerable bride, will keep
peace and happiness at the hearth where
she and her boy husband shall sit.
"Neither husband nor wife ought to bo
boss,' " -says Mrs. Acton, whose hair 'a
white. "I won't expect to run our home
and I know Turner will not especially
If I coax him."
Mr. and Mrs. Acton are still in their
honeymoon and are furnishing a ot-
tage in the western ' part of Columbia.
They have been boarding slnc their
mnrriage with an aunt of tho bridegroom
on West Broadway.
"Yes, I have seen old fellow', so
creplt that they had to hobble around on
c:in:r. marrying young girls, says Mrs. I
Acton, who is old enough to be her own i
husband's grandmother, jand who. In j
fact in a mruininlhor arA T '
, m - . miii x iiata
known marriages like that to turn out
unhappily, the wife seeking men com
panions of her own age.
"But I don't worry one minute about
my Turner. I feel sure he loves me Just as
much as I love him. I know he is trust
worthy and honorable, and I'm not in
the least afraid of his ever getting tired
of me and running after young girls.
"I don't see why our marriage should
have stirred up such a commotion. Why,
there's been a newspaper man here al
most every day, and the newspapers all
over the country have been writing about
us. I even got a letter from a sister of
mine In Fort Worth, Tex., whom I
hadn't heard from In 20 years. She'd
read of the wedding.
If Turner and I wanted to get married
I don't see that anybody else need bother
about it. .The marriage was our affair.
Ho didn't have any home and neither did
1. and wa loved each other. Wasn't tha
tcnaun euuusn to marry t i aon t thinlc
it makes a particle of difference thft
I'm past 60 and he's not yet 20. . Ate
nasn i anything to do with love.
"I'm- sure he'll be good to me as .Ion
as I live, and I know I'll try to be th.
Desi wue i can to him. It s a pleasu
now to fix his lunch for him when he
goes out for the day's work."
WOMAN HinoULMATE"
BRANDENBURG XOT LEGALLY
MARRIED TO MRS. CABANNE.
The blackening of incandesr-ent limni i
due to vaporizing of the carbon. P f
Spring style snoea. Rosenthal's. '
Flaw in Divorce From First Wife
Will Be Rectified, He Says.
Tangled in Misstatements.
SAN FRANCISCO, April 25. (Special.)
Broughton Brandenburg seems to have
involved himself In a maze of lies, and
everv dnv be ho in. .Awmi Htai,.A.nAf..
li his statements.
He claimed when arrested that Mrs.
fcabanne, of St. Louis, was his wife, but
'now he admits she did not get a divorce
until .December. 1906, In British Hondu
ras, although he said he married her
there in October of that year. When
taxed with this discrepancy. Branden
burg said that, though not legally mar
ried to the woman, she was morally his
wife and his real "soulmate" and he
loved her young son as though the boy
were his own.
He said there was a technical legal
flaw in regard to the divorce from his
nrst wife, but that it would be rectified.
Little Jimmy Cabanne expresses the
greatest love for his stepfather and de
clares he does not wish to go back to
his grandmother ia St. Louis.
1'J 1
f '' vs j
L
READ!
What the 'Brttlsh Optician.-
the official organ
of the eye specialists of
Kiirope. had to say about
Thompson.
"LONDON. MavM. 'Ov
The wonderful s.k;!l
with whih Tht.mjmit
discovers tho various de
fects of the eye hart
caused quite a sensation
amonK thf oculists of
Europe. Th
V rvj demonstrated beyond a
' 5"; It nut-it thut h i. v.u,..o
of his profession.
VOCR EYES DESERVE THE BEST
THOMPSON Ui?
Ctirbett Bids.. Second Moor.
V