VOL. XLIX-XQ. 15,148. PORTLAND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16. 1909. . HIS WIFE DRUNKEN AND FOUL-MOUTHED Gould's Witnesses Give Lurid Pictures. SHE SOBS IN HUMILIATION Former Servants Tell of Stag gering in Inebriety. VILE NAMES FOR HUSBAND "Poppy" and "Hound" Among Terms or Endearment Sits Drunk on Floor and Tears Hair in Rage When He Enters. JTETV YORK, June 15.-Torn -Kith an ger and extreme humiliation, alternately flushing: with iihame. sobbing: or clench ing her hands in exasperation, Katherlne Clemmons Gould sat through a trying or deal In the Supreme Court today at the continuation of her suit against Howard Gould. It was a day of testimony for the de fense, during which Mr. Gould's attorney sought to bring- out that Mrs. Gould's habits were such that her husband was Justified In leaving her. In the event of proving this, the defense hopes to under mine the charges of abandonment. Drunken Society Woman. Mrs. Gould having naively told yester day what is required of a woman of fashion in the matter of dress at Palm Beach and elsewhere, witnesses for the defense recited today the indulgence of the same woman of fashion in the matter of alcoholic stimulants. That Mrs. Gould had been intoxicated on various occa sions, that she had called Howard Gould "you little hound": that once she was apparently so under the Influence of liquor as to stagger; that her maid brought liquors to her room, were among the statements brought out as employes of the Gould estate related on the stand their experiences with their former mis tress, j Mrs. Gould's lawyer, Clarence J. Shearn. who had objected strenuously at first to the trend of testimony, but was over ruled. Injected into the case the rather novel argument that, admitting even that his client had been intoxicated, that should have strengthened rather than have weakened the ties between wife and husband. Erratic Mistress of Castle. It was a rather erratic' administration that Mrs. Gould conducted at Castle Gould, according to the testimony. Verbal clashes with the " manager of the great estate, heated arguments with carpenters over the construction of a hencoop, a period when she remained In her room for two weeks, consuming seven bottles of brandy with other liquors these incidents and others were sworn to on the stand. One of the carpenters testified that at the time of the quarrel over the hencoop, Mrs. Gould "could not walk straight." Stormy Night at Castle. Also there was an account by a former steward of an exciting night when, he said, she wanted the house locked, al though Howard Gould was out on the lawn. This, said the steward, did not seem to appeal to Mrs. Gould as an argu ment against closing the front door and she told him to go ahead and lock up. To appease her, he testified, he shut the door, but did not lock it. This was the night that Mrs. Gould is said to have called her husband "a little hound," a term which she applied to him, as testified, after he had come to her room to see what the matter was, confusion having been spread through the great castle by the ringing of bells In Mrs. Gould's room and the burglar alarm system. Finds One Defender. While the most of testimony was against Mrs. Gould, one witness spoke in her favor. He Is Charles H. Davis, or Glencove. L. I. He testified that In 1902 and 1903, he did considerable work on the Gould estate and saw Mrs. Gould frequently. He had never seen her in toxicated, he said, but at times he knew she had been drinking, because he could smell her breath." Evidence Confined to Abandonment. On motion of counsel for Mr. Gould. today's evidence was con fined to the hearing on abandonment only. Mrs. Gould has declared that she has not spoken to Mr. Gould since July, 1906, when she complained to him about the conduct of Maurice Malloy, whom Mr. Gould had put in charge of Castle 3ould. the Long Island home of Mr. and Mrs. Gould. Subsequently Mrs. Gould said her husband sent Elijah W. Sells to her to say that Mr. Gould would return to her If she would agree to certain con ditions, or he would arrange either for a separation or divorce. These proposals were rejected by Mrs. Gould. Before the resumption of the case to day a letter from Mrs. Charlotte Weston, a sister of Mr. Nicoll, Mr. Gould's attor ney, was given out. denying that Mrs. Gould had given her a dress. Mrs. Wes ton said she had never seen Mrs. Gould. When the letter was shown to Mrs. Gould she said: "I did not give the gown to her per sonally, but she was one of the actresses who received a box of gowns that I sent to one of the theaters." Maurice Malloy, superintendent of the Castle Gould, was the first witness today (Concluded on Pus XI CUSHMAN OFFENDS UNION LABOR MEN SATS HE HAS XO USE FOR EM PLOYES WHO HCRL BRICKS. Washingtonian Discourses Upon Pa triotism Before Union Men and Criticism Results. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, June 15. Representative Cush man put himself in bad with union labor men in Washington with a speech he made yesterday to employes of the Gov ernment printing office. Cushman, as orator at the Flag day celebration, gave utterance to this statement: "I have but little respect for a man who throws high In Jhe air his hat on the Fourth of July, when bands come by led by numerous American flags, and who on the day following Independence day, sends a brick crashing through a street car window because employes of the com pany happen to he on strike, and because the car happens to be operated by non union men." Cushman's remarks were discussed later at the Typographical Union, and he was more or less severely criticised by local union labor leaders. It was concluded that he had delivered inadvertently a speech he had prepared for a non-union audience. PHYSICIAN IS IN TOILS Dr. C. Warren Chester Arrested in Los Angeles After Chase. LOS ANGELES. June 15. (Special.) After a chase of many months Dr. C. Warren Chester, wanted all along the Coast on charges of obtaining money under false pretenses, was ar rested on the street tonight by Detec tive Harris. He Is In the County Jail, pending the coming of the Sheriff from Mendocino County, and declines to make a statement. Some time ago Chester and a part ner were arrested and convicted on a similar charge and ''fined $250 each. They appealed and, when , the higher court sustained the judgment, they failed to appear. Then warrants were issued and forwarded here, because Chester was supposed to make this city his home. Chester fled to Mexico, re turning to California only a few days ago. It Is alleged they realized a large amount on illegal practice of their pro fession. GOVERNOR HAY LEFT OUT Gets Lost In Crowd Waiting to Hear Executive Deliver Speech. SEATTLE, Wash., June 15. (Special.) Standing in front of the veiled statue of George Washington yesterday afternoon for more than an hour waiting for. the ceremonies attendant upon the unveiling to begin, when, in fact, they were in progress in the Exposition auditorium. Governor M. E. Hay missed his part on the programme. Governor Hay was down to accent h monument from the Daughters of the American Revolution in behalf of the state, but when the time came for him to make the speech, he was neither on the platform nor in the audience, and the presiding officer. Judge Hanford, was compelled to excuse him on account of the multiplicity of calls upon his atten tion and to ask President T. F. Kane, of the State University, to receive the mon ument for both the university and the state. MAY MAKE ALASKA "DRY" Congress Provides New Requirement for Saloon Licenses. SEATTLE, Wash.. June 15. (Special.) That a man to obtain a liquor license In Alaska in the future must present a petition to which the names of a ma jority of the people in his precinct are signed is the principal clause of a bill passed without noise during the past Win ter, according to Judge Porter J. Coston, townsite trustee of Nome, who has Just arrived from Washington. Not only must the majority of men In the precinct show their willingness to have the license granted, but the women are also included, and this fact has led some Alaskans in Washington to the be lief that the Northland will now go dry. MELAS MAY GO UNDER BAN Alleged Non-alcoholic Beverage to Be Analyzed at Albany. ALBANY, Or., June 15. (Special.) Believing that "melas." the alleged non - intoxicating drink manufactured by the Salem brewery contains enough alcohol to come under the provisions of the local option liquor law. Sheriff Smith and Deputy Sheriff Munkers to day bought bottles of the beverage from three local emporiums and will have a chemical analysis made of it. If the analysis discloses enough alco hol to show that "melas" Is Intoxicat ing, the officers will file complaints against the three men who sold It! TAX UNEARNED INCREASE German Government Proposes Hen ry George System to Reichstag. BERLIN, June 15. The Reichstag re assembled today. Among the official communications laid before the House was one from the government concerning the proposal to tax the unearned Incre ment in real estate values. The govern ment has decided that it is inexpedient to do this for imperial purposes, inas much as there are seemingly unsur mountable difficulties in the way of an equitable adjustment of the taxes on city and county values, but it approves as Just the taxing of the unearned incre ment for local purposes. STRIKERS SEEK TO MAGNIFY TROUBLE Raid on Newspaper Is Made an Issue. TOKIO STILL KEEPS SILENT Japanese in Hawaii Trying to Force Hand of Government. SEND APPEAL TO TAKAHIRA No Farther Disturbance Reported in Islands, but Agitators Hold Frequent Meetings for Discussion. HONOLULU, June 15. Strong efforts are being made by the Japanese strikers to get the Japanese government to make an international incident of the forcible entry into the office of a local Japanese newspaper and the seizure of papers by the Sheriff last Friday. Leaders In the strike appealed to Ambassador Takahlra at Washington by cable today, and de manded an Immediate investigation of the alleged violation or the treaty right. The message recites that the Sheriff, without warrant of law. broke Into the office of the Jiji, arrested its editors and seized their private papers and books. The message complains of other acts of the Sheriff and territorial officials. Efforts Made at Home. Determined efforts. It is said, are being made to secure the influence of the po litical parties in Japan In the matter, and to get Influential newspapers in the em pire , to bring pressure to bear upon the Japanese government to institute an In quiry rnto the arrest of Japanese subjects and the seizure of their papers by the ter ritorial authorities. The four Japanese editors of a local paper and several others of the 17 Jap anese arrested last Saturrtsnr on, day upon indictments growing out of the siriKe or me sugar plantation laborers, were, released on ball today and their preliminary hearings were set to com mence on June 18. Many Conferences Held. The situation remained practically un changed today. No attempt was made by the striking laborers to interfere with such of their countrymen as have re turned to work. Many conferences were held during the day by delegates from bodies of strikers from various parts of the island, but what the object of a general meeting held or what plans the strike leaders have agreed upon has not been made public. While the feeling among the Japanese, of whom there are 6000 or 8000 still out, is tense because of the arrest of some of their leaders, they have carefully re frained from any untoward act that would give the authorities cause to take even more drastic measures. TOKIO MAKES XO MOVE YET Washington Watching Hawaiian Sit uation Very Closely. WASHINGTON. June 15. Although (Concluded on Page 2.) FIRE INSURRNf tr'-nflM. those in frvofTof A SANE FOURTH"! FlREllNbURAJSCr HAN. ervous xitizjen; 'willies : mother. PENNILESS ORPHAN NOW MILLIONAIRE CHARLES FISHER STRIKES PAX DIRT IX ALASKA. Returns at Age of 44 and Seeks Out Brother and Sister He Has Not Seen for S3 Years. CHICAGO, June 15. (Special.) Left a penniless orphan' when he was 2 years old, his brothers and sisters scattered and adopted by strangers, and having never even seen a picture of his parents, Charles Fisher, at the age of 4-4, has returned, from the Alaskan gold fields with a fortune -of fZ, 000,000 and found his lost relatives. One of these, Mrs. Joseph P. Clyens, is entertaining the brother that she has not seen for 35 years. Fisher, whose father's name was Myers, was born in Syracuse, N. T-, and was one of a family of four children. When his father and mother died he was adopted by Herbert; Fisher, who later moved to De troit, where the lad was educted. At the age of 17 years the young man struck, out for himself. He worked as a carpenter in Seattle, where he later mar ried. He went to Alaska during the gold craze, and after five years of working and waiting, struck a rich vein of gold. A week ago he went to New York, where he found his brother and one of his sisters, and was directed to Mrs. Clyens. He will start on the return journey to his home at Fisher Creek, Alaska, Thurs day. PELTS GIVE OUT BAD ODOR Cougar Scalps "Spoil" While Stored In County Court Vault. SALEM, Or., - June 15. (Special.) County Clerk R. D. Allen is in a quan dary. The last session of the Legislature passed a law offering a large bounty for killing mountain lions, coyotes and other wild animals, and providing that certain parts of the beasts' anatomies shall be brought to the office of the County Clerk and there held until the County Court shall have an opportunity of passing on the claims for county money. Recently relics of several animals have been brought to the Clerk's office, the names of the hunters duly registered and the scalps of the animals stored in the Clerk's vault, which Is not provided with refrigerator facilities. The warm weather of the past few days has caused a mighty stench to go up from the- bones. The young women in the office com plain strenuously, while holding their noses, but the Clerk, who Is trying to obey the law, is helpless, and the County Court does not meet until July 7. HAMILTON'S BAIL $20,000 Second Charge to Be Filed, but Bonds Will Be Supplied. OLiMPIA. Wash., June 15. (Spe cial.) Ortl3 Hamilton will be charged tomorrow with embezzlement, a second charge, and bail will be fixed at f 10,000, which is equal to the amount under which he is now held. He will furnish the $20,000 ball and will be given lib erty to await trial here at the Sep tember term of the Superior Court. This is the announcement made to day by Judge Robinson, attorney for Hamilton, who says this1 plan has been agreedi to by the Prosecuting Attorney. Robinson says the state was opposed to permitting Hamilton liberty on less than $20,000 bail, but is willing he be released from jail if he furnishes this amount, which his relatives are pre pared to do. Last night It had been planned to make the second charge forgery, as was reported in the dispatches, but to day it was determined to make the sec ond charge embezzlement- A "SANE" FOURTH. pouce mrn, -u WILLIE TUFT WILL SEND RADICAL MESSAGE Would Tax Earnings of Corporations. ALSO FAVORS AN INCOME TAX Plan Would Net Government Over $20,000,000 Yearly. REPUBLICANS APPROVE ACT Tariff Leaders to Be Asked to At tend to Corporation Tax, and States Will Act on Incomes. ESTIMATED ANNUAL YIELD OF CORPORATION TAX. It has been estimated that a 2 per cent tax on th-e earnings of cor porations available for dividends would yield approximately $20,000. 000 & year, while at the same rats a tax on all Incomes would yield from $70,000,000 to $80,000,000. On the basis of calculations of earn ings for 1907 and 1908 the follow-lowlng- collections would have been made by the Government from the great industrial organizataions: Approximate Tax. Corporation. 1908. 1907. Amal. Copper Co.. $120. 000 $280,000 Am. Car & Fry. Co. 160,000 160,000 Am. Ice Co 30,000 26,000 Am. Locomotive Co. 100.000 135.000 Am. Sugar Ref. Co. 130,000 220,000 Am. Woolen Co... 25,000 68,000 Am. Tel. & Tel. Co. 260,000 260,000 Am. Tobacco Co... 500,000 540.000 Colo. P'l & Ir'n Co. 46.000 50.000 Diamond Match Co 4O.OO0 &an. Chem'c'l Co.. 25.000 28.000 Gen. Elec. Co 200.000 220.000 Int. Harvst'r Co.. 220.000 -Int. Paper Co.... " B6.00V 56.000 Nat. Lead Co.". 60,000 Nat. Biscuit Co 75.000 80,000 Nat. Carbon Co... 20.000 20.000 Pullman Co 200.000 220.000 Rep. Iron 8fl Co. 80.000 120.000 -U. S. Rubber Co.. 70,000 100,000 17. S. Steel Corp.. 180,000 320,000 W. IJ. Tel Co 180,000 260.000 West. Elec. Co 80,000 The larger railroad companies would have ' paid into the Federal Treasury in 1908 from $100,000 up to $500,000. WASHINGTON, June 15. President Taft tomorrow will send to Congress a message urging the, passage of an amend ment to the tariff bill Imposing a tax of 2 per cent upon the undistributed net earnings of corporations, and the adop tion of a resolution submitting to the sev eral states an amendment to the Consti tution giving Congress the power to im pose a tax on incomes. This understanding was reached at a session of the Cabinet today and was approved by Republican Senate leaders, who conferred with the President. Attorney-General Wickersham ' will draft both the amendment and the reso lution. In view of the emphatic stand taken by President Taft, a number of progres sive Republicans have signified their in tention of following his recommendations. The President favors an amendment pro viding for a tax on the net earnings of corporations, not only because of the added revenue it would produce, but also because he believes it would throw a healthy light of publicity upon the affairs of corporations. NERVOUVCI71ZEN. MOTHER OF WlLUE. THOSE IN FAVOR OF THE. USUAL FOURTH: , WILLI L mCl AMH IIMADI C Tf ULUnilU UMMUL.L W TAKE CHINA POST PRESIDENT OF WABASH FINDS DUTIES LIE AT HOME. Railroader Regrets to Disappoint Taft, but Does Not Wish to Give Up Work. CHICAGO. June 15. (Special.) It was because he did not want "to drop the plow in the middle of the furrow." that Frederic A. Delano, president of the Wabash Railroad, and the man sought by President Taft for one of the most Im portant of the country's diplomatic as signments, declined to become Minister to China. "I know what I can do in my present line, but I do not know what I might be able to do in public life," said Mr. Delano today. "I entered railroading as a profession. I have had no schooling in diplomacy. To fall to heed my country's call was no easy thing to do, but I be lieve I am serving my country in some small way where I am, and in what I am trying to do for the development of railroads at home. "I have a family of four daughters, and to take them from school and attempt their education in Pekin, where advan tages are missing, I think would hardly be fair to them. These things do not seem to me small objections, even had I no ambitions of my own. "I entered railroading as a profession, and I do not consider that I have ac complished all that I set out to do. r do not think it a wise plan to drop the plow In the middle of the furrow, and so, not without a hard struggle, I chose not to enter the career that an assign ment to represent the- United States in Pekin would have impelled me toward." TAX NETS STATE $184,000 Largest Inheritance Tax Ever Paid In Illinois Is on Morris Estate. CHICAGO, June- -15. (Special.) The largest inheritance tax ever paid the State of Illinois was remitted to the State Treasurer today In settlement of an obli gation against the estate of Nelson Mor ris. The interest dates from the time of the death of Mr. Morris and, with the amount of tax, the total due the state was nearly $184,000. 'This is the largest inheritance tax ever paid in Illinois, but will be exceeded as soon as the bill that was signed by Gov ernor Deneen Monday goes Into effect July 1," said Walter K. Lincoln. State Inheritance Tax Attorney. The value of the Morris property in Illinois amounted to .over $16,000,000 and appraisement was made by S. W. Ayers. U. S. STEEL STOCK BARRED Paris Bourse Will Not Handle Amer ican Securities. PARIS, June 15. A newspaper states that M. Caillaux. Minister of Finance, has decided against the listing of the common stock of the United States Steel Corporation on the Paris Bourse, because first, the government cannot legally en tertain an application for the listing of stock which has not been made by per sons issuing the stock, and in this - case the application was made by a "bankers' trust;" second, it was proposed that a "bankers' corporation" should issue cer tificates to represent the shares, which Is also held to be Illegal. In addition, technical objections were) raised by the treasury, and a strong pro test was lodged with Premier Clemenceau against the exceptional treatment accord ed a foreign corporation. FALLS 3 STORIES, LIVES P. Garber, of La Grande, Plunges From tipper Window to Street. SPOKANE, Wash., June 15 (Spe cial.) Falling three stories from a window ledge of the Ridpath Hotel, and landing in the court below, P. Garber of La Grande, Or., was seriously in jured. Garber was sitting in an open window about 4 o'clock this morning, when he lost his balance. Whether he suffered from a fainting fit or merely lost his balance is not known. The injured man was conveyed im mediately to the hospital. Dr. Doland stated this afternoon that unless com plications set in the man would live. His injuries consist of a fracture at the left elbow, a scalp bruise and concus sion of the brain, which is not thought to be serious. WALKS TO DEATH IN SLEEP Eleven-Year-Old Lad Killed by Train En Route to Seattle. GLENDIVB, Mont., June 15. (Special.) Mr. and Mrs. E. Pratt, of Wadena, Minn., who arrived here last night on their way to the Seattle Exposition, took the first train back to investigate the dis appearance of their 11-year-old son from the train. A terrible discovery awaited them, for the boy, who had not been missed un.til the train neared the vicinity of Medora, N. D., had fallen from the train near Curlew, N. D., and his body was cut squarely In two. The parents say the lad was addicted to sleep-walking, and that he probably walked off the train while in a somnolent condition. KAISER OFF TO MEET CZAR Rulers of Germany and Russia to Confer on Yacht. BERLIN. June 15. Emperor William left here at 10 o'clock this morning on a special train for Dantzig, where he will embark on the imperial yacht Hohenzol lern and proceed to the Gulf of Finland to meet Emperor Nicholas of Russia. RAILROADS PROVE PROSPERITY HERE Large Increase Shown in Net Earnings. FIGURES BEAT THOSE OF 1908 Business Has Recovered Eastern States. in HARRIMAN LINES GAIN Only One of Nine Big Systems Is Be hind Others Show Increase of 14 to 53 Per Cent Only Loser Is Pennsylvania. CHICAGO, June 15. (Special.) Thera is complete substantiation of the state ment that great recovery Is being ex perienced in railroad business in reports of nine of the leadintr systems of h. country for ten months of th r.f.e.n. year. Of these roads, five, at the pres ent ume. snow gross earnings for the ten months greatly In excess vr come for the same period in 1908, while only one of the nine shows a decrease in net revenue Only One Shows Decrease. Some of the striking increases in n earnings for the period are those re ported by the Louisville & Nashville. 53 per cent over last year; Atchison, To peka & Santa Fe. 25 per cent: Union Pacific. 21. per cent, and Southern Pa cific. 14 per cent. The Pennsylvania, the only road of the nine to show a de crease, reports a gross of $114,538,000. a falling off of 313.000.000, though tha net. S33.202.000. is . rtprros E. r ... 3953,000 from the same period of last year, owing to economies In operating expenses. Figures for Each Road. The net income for creases from 1908 are: Ten Months. 1908. roads with in- Atchison .....IS Canadian Pacific 19! Net 076.000 140.000 542.000 942.000 210.000 918.000 202,000 3S3.000 017,000 . Increase. $3,768,000 705.000 1.377.000 649,000 4. 258. 00O 2.936.000 953.000 6. 491, 000 6. 906,000 ftonnwtern ....... Great Northern .... Louisville & .Nashville New York Central . . Pennsylvania Southern Pacific ... Union Pacific Decrease. . Gain Mostly in East. Tonnage for the first week of June exceeding that of any similar week in the last ten years Is reported by the (Concluded on Page 5.) INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTER DAY'S Maximum temperature 69 3 degrees; minimum, 54.8 degrees. TODAY'S Showers: south to west winds. -Foreign. Russian sect makes human sacrifice to idol stained with human blood. Page 4. National. . Ballinger asks R. H. Thomson, of Seattle to be chief of reclamation service. Page 3. Japs of Hawaii determined to make in ternational question of seizure of news paper office. Page 5. Slight by Aldrich to La Follette causes angry scene in Senate. Page 3. Taft W,J' Bend messase to Congress recom mending tar on corporations. Page 1. Delano refuses ministry to China and gives reasons. Page 1. Government orders detention of steamer Nanticoke. though no contraband aboard. Page 2. Politics. Cushman makes speech which antagonizes labor union men. Page 1. Domestic Shasta limited train on Southern Pacific not to run to Seattle. Page 2. Pauper's son makes 12,000,000 in Alaska. Page 1. Net earnings of big railroads show com plete return of prosperity in East. Page 1. Sending of consumptives to Colorado de nounced as crime. Page 3. Mrs. Gould, writhes in fury when former servants tell of drunkenness and abuse of hustand. Page 1. Boi,le.r, Ploslon at Denver electric plant kills four men. injures nine, with four missing, and puts out all lights. Page . Calhoun's lawyers fierce In denunciation of Heney. Page 9. Augustus and Arthur Helnze and three other United Copper officials indicted. Page 4. Mrs. Cleveland at Brandenburg trial de clares husband's signature forged. Pag 4, Sport. Coast League scores: Portland 6. San Fran cisco 2; Oakland 1, Los Angeles 0: Vernon-Sacramento, no game. Page 7. Northwestern League scores: Ttooma IO Aberdeen 12; Seattle 2, Portland ; Spokane 2. Vancouver 3. Page 7. Ketchel confident of whipping all comers, including Johnson. Page 5. Jeffries given ovation at Pittsburg. Page 13. Pacific Northwest. Participants in Rose accident relate thrilling experiences. Page 6. Pacific University makes bid for students from Portland. Page 6. Legislative investigation committee prepares report for Governor Hay. Page 6. Blackmail case at St. Helens postponed un til October term. Page 6. Commercial and Marine. Prices are soaring In bean market. Page IT. Wheat weak in all leading markets. Page 17. Third wool sale at Shanlko. ' Page 17. Eight-point drop in sugar stocks. Page IT. French ship Berengere finishes lumber "car go for South Africa. Page 16. Portland and Vicinity. Sellwood Republican Club condemns initi ative and referendum. Page 10. Reply made to Mayor Lsne in fire engine controversy. Page 11. Postmaster Young will submit data as basis for request for Federal building. Page 18. O. R. N. attacks statute regulating ship ment of livestock. Page IS. Order of Eastern Star holds annual grand lodge. Page 12. Country Club will resume its campaign for funds. Page 16. Medals are presented to men who con structed festival floats. Page 10. O. C. Olmsted discusses park and boule vard plans. Page 11. r1