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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1909)
THE MORXiyG OREGOMAN, WEDNESDAY, JTJLTT 14. 1909. WOMEN IN CHARGE AT CHAUTAUQUA Mrs. Gilman Insists Cooking Will Soon Be Work of Specialists Alone. HOUSE FLY IS SWATTED lrofessor Swcctser Blames Insect for Many of Man's Troubles. Rev. Henry Ilnssell Talbot on Consumers League. CHAUTAtTQUA GROUNDS, Gladstone Tark. July 13. (Special.) This -was the day at Chautauqua -when the -women held sway and the fair sex -were on the grounds In largo numbers. Mrs. Charlotte Perkins Gilman was the main figure on the platform this afternoon and talked of the economic waste in the way the bimlness of the world Is conducted. "All women are supposed to be cooks." said Mrs. Gilman, but if 100 men were In a ramp we would not take 60 to cook for the other 60; at tho same time if 50 of them were women we would probably make all of them cooks." Mrs. Gilman implied that the master rooks of the world are men, and said that cooking will In time bo a business Fiu-h as the laundry business Is now, and when that era arrives cooking will be practically eliminated from the home. All waste and apparatus will then be abolished and mothers will be relieved of the waste and care of the bouse. The speaker Insisted that institutions would eventually be prepared where specialists will work. Mrs. Sarnli Evans Presides. Before the lecture of Mrs. Gilman, an original poem was read by Mrs. E. C. Moore, of La Grande. The poem was Addressed to Theodore Roosevelt and Mrs. Moore paid a Blowing tribute to the ex-President, whom she termed "the friend of the mothers of this Nation." Mrs. Sarah A. Evans, of Portland, pre sided today. The main lecture was fol lowed by an address by Dr. Esther C. Pohl. of Portland, on 'Contagion and IMsinfectlon." She showed how able women ' are taking up the question of sanitation. Her speech was a revelation that a woman has taken hold of the public health with a master hand. Dr. Pohl talked under the auspices of tho Visiting Nurses" Association of Portland, and the programme of tomorrow will be the last of that organization. Dr. Pierce, of Portland, will talk on "Tuberculosis" at 8:30 o'clock In the main auditorium. The biology lecture was given at 10 o'clock this morning to accommodate the visitors from Portland and taxed the seating capacity of the pavilion to its ut most. Facts wer established with dia gram and statistics. "Swat the Fly" was the subject of Professor Sweetser's talk, and he said the Increase of Summer complaints Is concomitant with the rise of temperature and with the Increase of flies. Flies Source of Many Evils. "Files have been shown over and over again," said Mr. Sweetser, "to carry the germs of these diseases and of consump tion on their bodies' which they have gathered from filth and sputum. In the light of these facts, the fight against the fly should look first to the destruction of all their breeding places, then the screen ing and fight against the Individual." ' The class will meet tomorrow at 9 o'clock, the usual hour. The subject will be "The Origin of the Species." Mrs. Alice M. Weister, of Portland, gave an Illustrated talk on "Art" this morning In tna biology pavilion. She showed a number of attractive views of famous paintings of the world and held a large audience. The Forum hour was especially Inter esting today. Rev. Henry Russell Talbot, rector of St. David's Church, of Portland, gave an able address on the work of the Consumers' League, and he was fol lowed by Miss Mary Montgomery, with a brief address, and by Mrs. E. B. Colwell. of the Congress of Mothers. There were many people present from towns In the state outside of Portland, as it is only In the metropolis that people are very familiar with the work of the Consumers' league. The Forum is coming to be re garded as the clearing-house of Oregon talent and every phase of human en deavor Is represented there. Immigration Question Is Topic. Dr. Boggcss, of the class" of sociology, discussed the subject of "Disease, Pau perism and Crime Among Immigrants." Tomorrow the topic will be "European Conditions From Whicn Immigrants Come." The subject will be so treated as to give an insight into the characters of the thousands who are coming to us annually from the Old 'World. Condi tions in Southeastern Europe will receive merited attention. The class meets from 10 to 11 In Biology Hall. "Junior Characteristics" will be the sub ject at the teachers' training class tomor row from 9 to 10 A. M. Rev. C. A. Phlpps will have the main address. This class meets In the pleasant grove where Con gressman Hawley's history class met for several years. The ball game this afternoon was a walkover for Gladstone, that team win ring from Oswego by a score of 14 to 4. The game tomorrow will be between lagle Creek and Clackamas. The second lecture of Dr. Eugene May, of Washington, D. C, was given tonight! He told of hiB trips through Switzerland and up 'the Matterhorn Mountains and was interesting from start to finish. He was preceded by the Knickerbocker Quar tet. Boys In Kaklil Attend Lecture. The boys in Kakhl were In evidence to day. Hundreds of Regular Army men and Oregon National Guardsmen are In camp at Clackamas, only a short dis tance from the Chautauaua grounds nni the session is being attended by all of the men who can obtain leave. Though this is the last week of the session camp ers are still coming In. Rev. A. J. Parker, of Dunn, N. C, and two other Methodist ministers made a pilgrimage to Chau tauqua today and went to Oregon City to see the church there. They are pass ing south from Seattle, where they have been attending .the Epworth League con vention. , The Misses Keller, assisted by Monta ville Flowers, will present their second grand concert programme tomorrow night. Every number has been chosen hs a compliment to the best musical and literary intelligence and taste, and they should make a strong appeal to ail lovers of great and good music. The ability of these artists is unquestionably of the first order and they have won the hearts of the people. The following programme will be given tomorrow: Morning. 9 to 11 v"hautauqua Summer school. 11 Chautauqua Forum, Willamette Uni veralty rally. "The Joys of Boyt," Presi dent Fletcher Homan, Salem University Quartet. Afternoon. 1:15 Concert, Chemawa Indian School band. 8a00 ymlrkerbodoar Quartets lecture. "The Village Statesman." by Hon. Henry Alberts Mrl,ean. president of the Washing ton Commission for Alaska-Tukon-Paclf ic Exposition. , 3:30 Baseball. 7:15 Concert. Chemawa Indian School band. 8:00 Recital. Montavllle Flowers and the Misses Keller; soprano. Miss Grace Keller. "My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice" (Salnt Saens) ; piano. Miss Luella Keller, valse in tl major (Moskoqskl); soprano. "Lleti Slgnor" (Meyerbeer), In Italian, from the opera. "The Huguenots;" '-Hamlet. Prince of Denmark." act V. scene 1, Mr. Flowers; piano. "If I Were a Bird" (Henselt); so prano, "The Nightingale and the Star" (Victor Herbert), from "Mile. Modiste"; readings, Mr. Flowers. OIL BURNER ON NORTH BANK Engine on Glodendale Road First to Vse New Fuel. VANCOUVER, Wash.. July 13. (Spe cial.) The first locomotive of the Spo kane, Portland & Seattle Railway to use oil has been put on the run between Lyle and Goldcndale, a distance of 42 miles. The engine makes two trips a day, one with a passenger train and the other with a freight train. The railway company has built an oil tank at Lyle with a capacity of 60,000 gallons of oil and has filled it with fuel oil. Tha oil tank on the engine holds between 3000 and 4000 gallons of oil and to load the tank it takes from ten to 30 minutes according to the state of the weather. It Is estimated that oil is M YIELDS OYSTERS Newport Industry Has Been Conducted for Years. ROCK OYSTER IS NOVELTY Native Oyster Beds Were Depleted Years Ago Baby Bivalves Are Now Transplanted and When Protected Grow Very Large. BY JOSEPH PATTERSON. NEWPORT, Or., July 13. (Special.) Not long ago a brilliant Italian his torian told us in one of the leading magazines of the part the vine played in history. One would scarcely think that so unpretentious a thing as an oyster could be responsible for much i YAQUINA BAY OFFERS NOVELTY IN BIVALVES HOCK OYSTERS TAKEN FROM ROCKS A!fD REEFS OF OREGON anunu. NEWPORT. cheaper than coal. Six gallons of oil Is allowed to the mile. coal will run for but 18 miles. I he railroad company has a large num ber of oil-burners stored in the ware- ,""IMS m tnis city ready to be fitted to the engines at any time. LOTS BRING HIGH, PRICE M. J. Jones Buys on Fourth Street for Over $100,000. One of the hlirhoat- nrloc 1 C- . ..... .J - . . L J!11U for an inside lot on Fourth street was paia yesterday by M. J. Jones to the heirs of the Holladay estate for the lot on the west side Of Fourth, 50 feet north of Morrison street. The lot in question is 60x100 feet, and the site is occupied by Jones' meatmarket. Mace's produce market and a saloon. The price paid for the property was between 100,000 and 125,000, and the deal was negotiated by Mackie & Rountree. Mr. Jones has made no arrangement to improve the lot, but because of its value it la altogether likely that a modern building will be erected there. The property was the site of the old Ben Holladay residence. The house was moved to the rear of the lot several years ago and is now part of the meat market factory. CAMAS ERECTS PAVILION Clark County Town Will Entertain Portland Grocers. VANCOUVER. Wash., July 13. (Spe. cial.) A big pavilion will be built in the corner of the baseball park opening on the public picnic grounds at Camas in time to be used by the excursion party of the Grocers' Association of Portland, which association will hold its annual out ing at Camas on July 22. The business men of Camae at a publio meeting last night decided to erect this structure, which will cost $600. Camas proposes to rival Bonneville, Or., as a resort for picnic parties of all kinds. The citizens have fitted tip public picnic grounds near the banks of the Columbia, and free use of these will be given to all" excursion parties. MAN SHIELDED DAUGHTER Kept Quiet During Scandal Charges So as Not to Injure Girl. WATSEKA, 111., July 13. That L. F. B. Sayler, the Crescent City banker, who was shot and killed Sunday by Dr. W. R.' Miller, remained passive for the sake of his 17-year-old daughter Goldie while talk of the alleged intimacy of his wife and Ir. Miller was" rife is asserted by the deceased's closest friends. Dr. Miller was in danger of being lynched last night. More than 100 men thronged the streets of Crescent City, trying to organize for an. attack on th Jail. of - the early history of a county in Oregon. Such, however, is the case, for back in the '60s and -'703. when Ta quina Bay had no railroad facilities and but few settlers, ships came regu larly from San Francisco with freight and provisions and took away tons of oysters for their sole cargo. Therefore, there came a time when the supply diminished, and new beds of Eastern and Japanese oysters were planted be side the remainder of the native specie. To tell the history of the oyster is left to another wiser person. The most startling fact ever made about oysters, to the knowledge of the writer, is that they grow on trees. On a page of Captain Bayly's (of the sailing ship Almorah) diary written in 1825, the able navigator said: "The Paramatta River, in Australia, is eauallv famous J to seamen for its beauty and oysters. The former is due to the overhanging wcea aiuiiK us DanKS, the latter grow on the trees: for the submerged rnnta and trunks are covered with the deli cious morsels, and these, were eagerly gathered by my men, who had obtained permission to have a day of leisure on the river." The oysters of Taquina Bay are found on the bed of the river, where they are planted in such a place that the current will wash over them and yet not be strong enough to carry them away, for in this section they lie on hard mud bottom instead of clinging to rocks and stumps. The native oys ter is smaller than the Eastern oyster, which is described as being larger and more up-to-date. Their flavors are generally considered to be alike. In the East the oysters are taken from beds which are fed by sewage and much typhoid fever is attributed to their use. In this locality the bivalves are raised in clean, wholesome water. The Jap anese oysters are quite large and their flavor is very similar to their Occi dental brethren. Their shells are long and narrow in appearance. Another peculiar shellfish of the same family is the rock oyster. This speci men grows in the soapstone reefs along the shore at Newport and is secured at low tide. They are imbedded in the stone, being completely obscured from view, so that they are extracted by the splitting of the rock with a pick. The flavor, though peculiar, is generally liked by all. Their shells are thin, being about three inches long and round, tapering from a diameter of one inch to a narrow point, which has an opelnlng in it for the neck. The sup ply of these seems Inexhaustible; how ever, as yet there Is only a lccal de mand for them. Occasionally a carload of small oys ters arrives and is planted in the Ta quina River. In three years they are dug with grappling rakes- and are shipped out fully . matured, a dozen times their size when planted! Spawn ing oysters are not edible. To prevent this some are turned over on the beds, which enables them to be enjoyed by en epicure, who is a connoisseur of the good things to eat in all seasons. Thus in a quiet way an industry little known or understood by outsiders has been carried on longer than all others by the peaceful inhabitants of the Yaquina Bay. STEALS BATH TUB; FINED Thief Doesn't Take Bath, but Sella Tub to Get Booze. VANCOUVER. Wash.. July 13. (Spe cial.) A Dutchman, who gave his name as John Smith, was sentenced this morn ing in the Police Court to serve five days on the streets of Vancouver for his having taken a copper bath tub from the rear of the Riverview Hbtel, pounded it out of all shape and sold it to a junk dealer for $1. John, the police aver, had great need to put the bath tub if its intended use but he apparently preferred to obtain the wherewithal to secure liquid for Internal consumption. Mrs. Clara Iligdon Dead. VANCOUVER. Wash., July 13. (Spe cial.) Mrs. Clara C. Higdon, aged 26 years, died of blood-poisoning in the North Pa cific Sanitarium in Portland last night. The burial will be in the Fourth Plain Cemetery in this county. The deceased was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Goesett, of Orchards. A brother was drowned in the Columbia River while out in a launch not long ago. Mrs. Higdon formerly had been, living la Ashland. THE COLUMBIA RIVER VALLEY The Fruit Basket of the World A poor man has a small chance of v e r becomlnv wealthy In the Far EaMterii States. Kven In the Middle Went the opening; are be coming; scarce and many energetic men see that they can better themselves by coming to the A'orthvrest. Some who have come West find they have not suffi cient knowledge of the country to be able to lo cate at once In a buslnesa which will pay them well. If you are of this number, why not Investigate tho district which has mora openings and opportunities for men of small or large capital than any other sec tion of the North west f The Columbia Hlver Val ley cannot be surpassed as a desirable place to live when you consider the many lines of business that are still needed, the large population which will sure ' ly settle here, and the vast Increase which will follow any small investment made at this time. It will pay you to look Into the conditions In this land of opportunity. Kenne wiclc and Pasco are al ready the important com mercial centers of this dis trict. For Information con cerning openings In all lines of business address KENNEWICK COM'RCIAL CLUB KENNEWICK, WASH. or PASCO COMMERCIAL CLUB PASCO, WASH. FRAME-UP IS THWARTED (Continued Fwm First Page.) Malone for not following her advice to keep away from the hobo camps. Malone Contradicts Himself. "If he obeyed me," she said, "he would not be where he is now. I told him he would get Into trouble if he did not etay home nights. He used to tell me he went to bed as early as 7 o'clock, and I had no way of ascertaining whether he did, as his room was upstairs and my rheuma tism prevented me from climbing. One night, I cannot remember whether it was the night oi the murder, he opened my door donwnstairs ellghtly about 7 o'clock and informed me he was going to bed. He never did that before, and I do not know whether he retired or not. I hired Malone as a chore boy and called him "kid," he was so young and evidently such a good boy. Why he has put me in all this trouble I can't understand." Strong as the discovery of Malone'a pipe and Mrs. Zigler's statements con cerning him are regarded by the defense, Malone's own contradictory testimony Is the most potent point against him. His habit of contradicting himself led one of the prosecution to call him "the limit" and another to term him "impos sible." Aside from the verbal contradictions of which Malone is said to be prone, Murgatroyd's defense declares it pos sesses a written statement by Malone which throughout contradicts a written statement supplied by him for the prose cution. Witnesses Intermingle Freely. To say that St. Helens is in a hulla baloo over the Murgatroyd murder trial is not an exaggeration. The hotels and rooming-houses are filled with witnesses, in several cases witnesses called by the defense being bedfellows with witnesses for the other side. This has started cries of "intimidation" by attorneys for the prosecution and the defense, neither of which seems sure of its witnesses over night. Fully a dozen people, including one woman, have been summoned from As toria in an attempt to establish an alibi for Murgatroyd. One of these, Chris John, proprietor of the Tacoma Oyster House at Astoria, says he is ready to tes tify Murgatroyd worked for him from December 3 to December 17 without los ing a shift. The murder of Livingstone was committed December 10. Others, in cluding Patrolmen E. M. Houghton and Thomas Lindelle. of Astoria, were called to swear to Murgatroyd's presence in that city December 8 and December 9, and the owner of the Parker House and his night clerk are down to testify the young man slept in that lodging-house after 1 o'clock the morning of December 11. To undermine this evidence C. F. Over baugh, assistant superintendent of Uie water lines of the O. R. & N. was called to testify as to the time of the arrival of the steamer Hassalo at Kalama the night of December 10. He testified the craft stopped at Kalama about 11:45 o'clock that night, but whether -it took on pas sengers, one of whom was Murgatroyd, he could not state and the steamer's log did not show. This point was raised by the prosecution to prove the murderer of Livingstone could have crossed the river from Goble to Kalama and reached Astoria early the morning of Decem ber 11. But one clash occurred in the proceed ings today which were devoted solely to examination of several venires. Attorney "W. H. Abel brought it about by saying: "In view of the fact that the Sheriff is subpenalng these veniremen I shall ob ject to his conferring with the District Attorney in selecting the jurors or con ferring with the District Attorney in re spect to the exercising of challenges." "It seems to me I have a right to ask the Sheriff or anybody else certain ques tions." replied District Attorney Tongue, "concerning any individual." Judge Campbell interrupted, saying: "I have abundant faith In the Sheriff and I feel that he will select the right material, but I think it would be ad visable for you to confer 'with somebody else regarding the qualification of Jurors. If I thought for a moment the Sheriff was taking any part in the prosecution, any side one way or another, I would immediately appoint an elisor to select the jurors, but I am satisfied the Sheriff is not taking any part. However, it is placing the Sheriff and you in an awk ward position." District Attorney Tongue then rose.nd after referring to Attorney Abel's course as captious, said: "I serve notice on him now that he will have to conduct this examination accord ing to law." "I will get my instructions from the court," responded Attorney Abel. Judge Raps for Order. Here Judge Campbell rapped for order and Attorney Campbell had the last "word by saying: "I apologize to the court, but not to counsel." , After two recesses taken to glean new venires, at the close of the after noon session 11 jurymen were in the box with the gamut of' challenges nearly run. The court directed Sheriff White to try a district beyond St. Helens for another venire that the work of jury-getting may proceed to morrow morning at 10 o'clock. As the crowd dispersed District At torney Tongue and his deputy. At- I torney Miller, sought a nearby saloon, 1 where thev hobnobbed with "Tnit. Blakeley. "Who is on the Circuit Court calendar to be tried for .extortion at a near date. District Attorney Tongue jocosely referred .to Blakeley as the "detective for the defense." in which there seemed to have been a grain of truth, as Blakeley is known to have visited Roy Malone frequently and in timated he had given away one of the juror's antecedents to the defense. Replete with odds and ends from which the defense hopes to win acquittal of Murgatroyd and from which the prose cution is equally sanguine of getting evidence to warrant his conviction, the St. Helens murder trial is the most labyrinthine case in the annals of Co lumbia County. At every step new evidence is found favoring young Mur gatroyd and with similar frequency the prosecution announces it can come to the front with more testimony favor ing its side.' Malone'a Name Brought In. "I believe Malone had a hand in the crime. This statement by District Attorney Tongue th,ls afternoon caused no little comment, due to the absence of any charge against Malone save a complaint accusing mm oi rooDery. While this charge against Malone was filed prin cipally to authorize his retention it is based on fact, the state's star witness having been accused of robbing several Goble stores and the plunder. It is said. having been discovered on him. Malone appears to be not more than 18 years old, but he is a puzzle worthy of PORTLAND'S EXCLUSIVE PERFUME EMPORIUM Our Perfumery Dopart v ment is known throughout the Northwest. We have the largest as sortment of all that is pood in perfume not only irom the famous manufac turers of this country, but also from the renowned perfumers of the Old World. From our immense stock of bottled extracts yon trill bo Buro to procure your favorite and particular odor. Agents for Roger & Gallefs, Ed, Pinaud's, Houbigants, Violet, Piver'B, Marcelle's and Valiant's Perfumes. Pill $8.50 SUIT CASES REDUCED TO $3.98 100 fine leather suitcases, tarboard frame, pegemont braced, handstitched leather straps good locks and bolts. Regular $8.50 values. Wrule They Last Only Each $3.98 Bag. V. S. Ft- Oil. "Name on Every piece" Chocolate Bon-Bons. Take Her A Package Today We have more than a dozen kinds to choose from and they range in prices from 5c to $2.50 a box. Always fresh. U-AR-DAS SPECIALTIES U-AR-DAS Bath of Benzoin A lightful preparation in tablet form for use in the bath. Leaves the body -with an exquisite odor and imparts a fresh, youthful C" luster to the skin rfOUC U-AR-DAS COMPLEXION SOAP Prepared from pure vegetable oils. Contains no other perfume than that from the oils of which it is composed. Cake, 15c. U-AR-DAS LUXURY The judicious use of this excel lent preparation will preserve and restore softness to Ihe skin and remove all unpleasant eruptions or sal- Cf lowness. Bottle .OUC U-AR-DAS COLD CREAM A superior preparation. Keeps the skin soft and smooth; excellent for gen- A tleman's use after shaving. Per jar T'VfC SHAVER'S Ordinary Razors, Gillette Safe ty's; also Soap3, Strops, Brushes, Cold Cream, Face Lotions, Cam phor Ice, Etc. WOODARD, CLARKE & COMPANY EXCHANGE 11 FOURTH AND WASHINGTON STREETS A6171 6172 i .- : the acumen of a man four times hla ace. He swears positively that he was intimatoly acquainted with Murgatroyd before the murder and yet, states the defense, at the preliminary hearing" when asked to pick out the man he accused of murder he selected not young Murgatroyd but Murgatroyd, Sr., as the alleged criminal. This will be put to the fore by the defense as will Murgatroyd's manner of receiving Deputy Sheriff Lockler at Dunsmuir when he was first charged with the murder of Livingstone. It ap pears that Deputy Sheriff Dockier, after comparing Murpatroyd with the descrip tion of him sent out, pronounced him to be the wrong man and so wired to Sheriff White. "If they want me," Murgatroyd is al leged to hava said, "they will find me In Dunsmuir as I Intend to stay here until Summer." The father of the accused murderer is positive of his son's innocence and has been energetic in obtaining the mass of evidence, part of which may be sub mitted before the jury tomorrow. At the close of the hearing today the pris oner's younger sisters, Adelaide and Muriel, arrived from their home at Elma, Wash., to be at his side. Tears trickled down their cheeks ss they kissed him in the presence of the jurymen filing out of the box. Prisoner's Sisters Figure In Trial. The appearance of the Murgatroyd girls at St. Helens will serve a double pur pose for the defense. They will not only be called, as character witnesses, but the younger girl will stand before the Jury to be compared with a photograph left oy her brother at Junction City to prove it is her likeness and not of Ethel Near, of Goble. with whom Deputy Sheriff Fowler, of Goble, declares Murgatroyd was acquainted. With this phootgraph Murgatroyd also left a picture of himself with Mrs. F. B. Richmond, now a witness against him. The defense "will point to this as favor able to him, declaring, if a murderer, he would not have left such a mark of iden tification behind. On the other hand it is said the prosecution will seize upon the picture of the girl to prove Murga troyd is acquainted at Goble and had an attraction to cause him to visit that place. Most strange of all the oddities of the Murgatroyd case, Sheriff - White, who gathered all the evidence against young Murgatroyd. is partially indebted to the prisoner's father for saving his sister's life in Nebraska as far back aa 1866. Then Murgatroyd. Sr., an escort of Governor Butler, of Nebraska, and an expert Indian interpreter, was a member of a posse that trailed a tribe of Cheyenne Indians who had captured Miss White, sister of the Sheriff-to-be. After & long chase the girl was recovered and returned to her parents unharmed by the red men. Today Sheriff White admitted the occur rence of long ago, but was unable to re call that a young man named Murga troyd had participated in the rescue of his sister. EXCITEMENT AT UNION AT TRIAL, OF COtTNCFLMKX. Two Oity Officials Convicted of As sault In Wresting Bottle of Near Beer From Citizen. LA GRANDE, Or., July 13. Speical.) At Union today Councilman O. P. Pratt and John Wolfe, on trial for assault and battery in forcibly taking near-beer from a citizen by the name of Clark, were con victed in the Justice Court and fined $5. They will appeal to the Circuit Court. In regard to this case District Attorney Ivanhoe said that he did not consider the men guilty of serious offense, but he said "conditions here seemed to warrant my actions in prosecuting the men." ExiMayor Law will be placed on trial tomorrow on a charge of poaching ducks It is said his defeoae will be that It was a mudben he shot. It is generally admitted that'these cases were brought out of malice in the quarrel over the liquor question, and tho crowds, which are swarming the courtroom awn' so wrought up that constant guard is being maintained to prevent violence. Chicago. A polytlot neimpapar printed In dozen different lancaaces U to b established by the United State socletlee for local eelf rovernment for the advancement of "home rule" and "personal liberty'; principle For shampooing the hair, Ivory is the ideal soap. A white soap, it yields a snow white lather, a lather that cleans the hair but does not change its color. Containing no 'free' alkali, it can be used without fear that it will make the hair brittle. Ivory Soap 99o Per Cent. Pure. 30 Cocoa. No. 27 After being roasted cocoa beans are broken and the shells removed. E v e n from the shells a nutritious beverage is made and in' some European countries the ground shells are sold as "cocoa tea." From the time the beans mature on the trees, to the time the aromatic brown cocoa is put in tins retains its natural purity and full flavor. Don V ask merely for cocoa ask for GfiirardellPs.