s TIIE MORNING OREGONTAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1909. i LORDS THREATEN TO DEFY PEOPLE Reject Budget, Demand Is sue Be Laid Before Peo ple at Election. OPEN WAR ON COMMONS Asquith May Refuse to Call Election. Churchill Issues Manifesto Against Lords Balfour to Defend Theiu. LONDON', Nov. 16. In the House of I,nrds today Lord Lansdowne, leader of the opposition, gave the formal and ex pected notice of hie intention to move for the rejection of the budget bill when it comes up next Monday. His motion, he said, would be expressed, thus: "I move that this house is not Jus tified in giving its consent to this bill until it has been submitted to the judg ment of the country." The terms or Lord Lansdowne's motion were communicated to Premier Asquith and discussed by the Cabinet Council. Unionists anticipate that 300 peers will support Lord Lansdowne, while support ers of the government in the House of Lords number only 40. On the rejection of the budget it is ex pected that the Premier will move in the House of Commons a resolution strongly condemning the peers action, affirming the sole right of the commons to deal with matters of taxation and declaring the peers' attempt to force a dissolution unconstitutional. What further course Premier Asquith will take is not known, but it is quite unlikely that the cabinet will resign, unless the government is defeated at the elections. Mr. Balfour, leader of the opposition in the House of Commons, will deliver a speech at Manchester tomorrow night, which probably will outline the Unionist election manifesto. , Churchill Issues Manifesto. Winston Spencer Churchill already is out with a Liberal manifesto. In a letter on the situation he says that the power to force dissolution Is the prerogative or the crown and that finance is the exclu sive privilege of the House of Commons. Therefore, he argues, the rejection of the budget is an, invasion by. the. Lords of the royal prerogative and of the Com mons privilege, and that, if the Lords establish at the gpHeral election the right to control the country-- finances, they will make themselves the predominant power in the state by their ability to destroy the budget, stop the King's reve nue and force the dissolution of .Parlia ment every : year. lord's Perform Act of War. Liberal newspapers, describe Lord Ianedowne's motion as an act of war. The Daily Chronicle says: "The Lords have chosen the way of destruction.. It Is as though some influ ence riadbeen at work to bring the House tt Lords before the people's gaze, with all Its . Imperfections on its head. Bold and unashamed, it is standing forth as the seifish defender of privileges In land end liquor and the champion of tax ation on food. A more shameful con spiracy against the commonwealth has never been unmasked." WOMAN DRINKS ACID; LIVES Hotel Porter Saves Wife From Sui cidal Death. some of these men and politicians "clean up their own back yard" before starting on mine. Every time an accident happens east of the Willamette River it is a roast for the Twelve-Mile House and Merrill, and hours are spent coaxing, bulldozing and threatening victims of automobile acci dents into saying that they received liquor at the Twelve-Mile House, pro viding they had stopped there any time during the day in which an accident oc curred. The Twelve-Mile House Tavern and the resort on which it is situated is cost ing from $5000 to $7000 more per year since it was built than It takes in,, as it is five years ahead of the times, of the mossbacks and the hypocrites of this section of the country. I shall abide by and stick close to the law and my rights as laid down on the statute books of the State of Oregon. I will not commit suicide, skip out of the country, or be run out of business by my enemies or anyone attempting to use me to further their' own political ends and they will find me fighting on the job against them at the next elec tion. . . A few hundred of the good people who patronize my roadhouse and tavern dur ing good weather will attest to the fact that a roadhouse and tavern could not be run any better than our place has been run. If our employes make a misj take and serve people who should not be served we will have to suffer the fine and the consequences, but we will not be "Jobbed." We ask for Justice and flirness only. FRED T. MERRILL. P0LIGEARED1SCUSSED ninrinn nnnnrp sr ks.'K.Sr.-.J .".rr." i : n tool. vzai ITtn . 1 -rx XU 1 MimBSmV II il ill II 11 CIVIC INSTITUTE TAKES VP SUB JECT OF CRIME. ALL MONOPOLIES Former Secretary of Interior Pleads for Government Regulation. PUBLIC'S RIGHTS LOST Ex-Cabinet Official Says Law Is Needed Effecting Entrance on Alaskan Coal Lands Eliot Is Emphatic, Also. plant on the Coast, is anxious to fight the Coast League and get possession of Portland. The Tacoma magnate represents the at titude of the other Northwestern di rectors. If Judge McCredie will consent to Join with them, they will organize an outlaw league and take Portland. A meetting to eettle the question will be held in Seattle next Thursday. DCGDALE WOl'LD GO "OUTLAW" Favors Drastic Measures Since League Is Put 'Out. SEATTLE. Nov. 16. Although D. E. Dugdale. president of the Seattle Club in . the Northwestern League, is out of the city, men close to him in baseball matters believ-a he will favor going "out law" as the result of the refusal of the Pacific Coast League to permit Portland- to maintain a team in the North western League. Judge Bennett Tells of Woes of Jur ist and Slg. Slchel Pleads for More Consideration. Because, as she said, her husband had been acting "kinda mean" to her, Sadie Erskine. a young colored woman, the wife of Walter Erskine. night porter at the Seward Hotel, tried to commit sui cide by drinking carbolic acid. Ersklne's promptitude in summoning the ambulance .1 H.ahfnv tViA TL'nmnn to the Good Samaritan Hospital are the principal fac tors that saved tne gin s me. if Lv.L-fno a nctr i n f to her uncle C. O. Coffey, herself described the affair as an accident. Other testimony is that -u v,cy hiishnnil Hee&n nuarrelinK over trivialities this afternoon and that in fulfillment of a past threat, she rushed to a lVi-ounce Dottle or caroouc aciu aim iimindH It Rrskine rushed at her and seized her throat, forcing her to throw up about half the dose. Ta i h hnmttiii it took four stronir men and four nurses to hold the woman while Dr. George Cathy, interne at the hos pital administered emetics through a sponge, because the woman refused to swallow. Late last night Dr. Cathey said ttiA woman was out of danger. The Erskines live at 3S3 Glisan street. 1 m NEGRO GAMBLERS CAUGHT Black "Black Jack" Players Put Vp $200 Ball When Surprised. Caught by Detectives Craddock and Mallet playing "black jack" in the rear room of a poolhalL at Seventh and Ever ett streets Monday night, five negro play ers were brought to police headquarters and forced to give $M0 ball for appear ance in Municipal Court this morning. George Perry, who was conducting the game,- ported 100 bail, the other four giving $25 each. All were crowded around a table in tensely interested in the game when the detectives surprised them. Although a general exodus of players from the room was attempted, the officers had barred every avenue of escape and a peaceful surrender was effected, and J44.96 was confiscated. Need of some legislation to prevent the possibility of untried and possibly innocent persons being Incarcerated for the whole of the Summer, while the judges are having their vacation was brought out by the discussion of the Civic Institute last night. Frank fa. Bennett Municipal Judge, did not at tempt to deny these cases, but re marked that matters were considerably worse in other counties, where court was held only twice a year. Judge Bennett told of the problems which confront a Municipal Judge in Portland. "Wifebeaters are my worst problem, he said. "At first I used to sentence them to hard labor; their wives seemed to desire it. But In less than a week the wife is unable to support herself. How can we punish the man without hurting his family?" 'Give him his own meaicine, tunc" fmni the audience, and the suggestion was received with applause. A volley or questions mu - Judge Bennett. "Do you only get the i h limhnrcffr drunks at your coirt. or do the champagne and terra pin drunks ever come i asked a woman. "I get both kinds." answerea tne judge, "but it is true I do not get quite so many of the second." fv... tv.A Tini i en Hpna rtment Cornea in for a good deal of undeserved criticism which should be given ruinei i apathetic public was -the universal opinion or all lour speaneio uu m gramme. Sig Sichel made an especially strong plea for a 'really well-founded knowledge on this point. He said: "When a lawyer or aocior or ummcus man imes wroiii. the fact is not maae a slur on the whole profession. But if a police officer does wrong, the head lines never state that Officer So-and-So is suspected of bribery: they say "Rot tenness in the ponce uepaDiinejii. ; H. J. Parkison, editor of the Labor Press, spoke in strong condemnation of the present City Jan. Dur. exoneraueu the police force from blame. "They are to be pitied rather than blamed." he said. The afternoon session was devoted to the subject of "Charities," preceded by a visit to the City and County Jails, in which about 25 people participated. Rabbi Jonah B. Wise told of the fright ful conditions in Russia, which have driven the Russian Jews tothis coun . .. .i .utK hnvA mndn them denend- ent on their co-reiigionists ior abid ance of all kinds. He added a short appreciation of the Neighborhood House to the address which Mrs. S. M. Blumauer gave on that subject Deiore the institute. t. , v. rHwIn V rvTTnrA. snnke of the Catholic charities of Portland and of the way in which the Catholic Church is organized to take care of its own poor. Mrs. MHlIe rt. TrumDUii spoae oi me need of co-operation In cnarity. CINCINNATI, Nov. 16. Pleas for the Government regulation of monopolies were voiced tonight before the joint con vention of the National Municipal League and the American Civic Association by ex-Secretary of the Interior James R. Garfield and by Charres W. Eliot, president-emeritus of Harvard. Both declared that it was imperative that the Govern ment take immediate steps for the con servation of resources. Mr. Garfield said that the country's natural resources were in imminent danger of exhaustion and that interests which develoDed this Bource of National wealth must be -regulated. Garfield. Calls Attention to Alaska. Mr j zirt dl (1 ftinrt maintained that In- t.ADta nt triA nftnnlp UPTP not beirUT TrOP- erly safeguarded in the Alaska coal fields nd that legislation on that subject was urgently needed. He said in part: "The permanent wenare or our ruuu cannot be assured unless we, in this gen ppatinn nrrtvidfl for the conservation of our natural resources. Hitherto we have been needlessly wasteiui. we nave ue too much occupied with the present; too little with the future. The inventory of our resources , shows toe immeumio danger of their depletion or exhaustion. "Conservation is pre-eminently a move ,... fm- the. nnhlic welfare. Exactly as the railroads are regulated because they are puDiic utilities, -terests that develop natural resources be regulated oeeause they deal with pub lic Interests. Unfair' use or monopoliza tion of either is lntoieraDie. , "In Alaska the coal area of 1.000,000 acres has been withheld from entry pend ing investigation. Laws providing for the disposition of these coal lands are not what tney snouia ue. Public's Rights Unguarded. TELLS BAXKEK-LCMBEnMAX IS PCT OX WITNESS STAND. am improvements have been made ir. rnt vears. but the rihts of the pub lic are not safeguarded. "None of these lands should be aisposeo, oi umn -B..- tion is enacted which will provioe .v-j nrhifH the coal can be de veloped as it Is needed under such regu lations as win prevent epctuuw monopolistic holdings by a few great In terests and will yield to the Nation a fair monetary return. Under a leasing system all these conditions can be readily improved. "Congress has wisely provided for the great irrigation projects that have been started but there is immediate need of . mntrni the use and de- velopment of water power to the enOT that, as with otner resources, may, under a system oi ia lease, protect its own great interests and obtain, just compensation. "Demand Must Be Heeded. "The great progress that has been made through the recent years will not be stopped. The people of our country will not tolerate any ""r" They demand and will seeto it that their demand Is heeded, that the great policy of conservation shall be in the interests of public welfare." Dr. Bllot was equally emphatic. He said in part: "The sentiment of preserving our natural resources has gone like wildfire throughout the country. The people have reached positive convictions and they mean to have conservation." In the afternoon session A. L. well, of Pittsburg, who has prosecuted the municipal corruption in that city, said that the greatest deterring elements In reform campaigns are public apathy and lack of financial support. The spread of the municipal commis sion form of government has been rapid, according to an address by Clinton Roger Woodruff, secretary of the National Mu nicipal League. "There i one danger, however, which advocates of the commission must guard against the feeling that it constitutes a panacea for all municipal Ills." he said. M'CREDIE LOSES FIGHT (Continued From First Page.) Spokane Talks Outlawry. SPOKANE, Nov. 16. The decision of the Coast League not to grant the North westerners application for a franchise is a disappointment, but it may mean out law ball in this league. Spokane's man agement is well supplied with money to wage any war this league may declare. PORTLAND IS AGAIX REBCFFED California Magnates Leave Xo Crumbs of Comfort. BT W. J. PETBAIN. In furtherance of an apparently pre concerted scheme to humble Congressman McCredie, president of the Portland Base ball Club, the Pacific Coast League late last night voted against granting the Northwestern League permiesion to place a team in Portland. At the same time there is no record that the Southern autocrats refused the Jerkwater village of Vernon, or the tail to the San Francisco continuous-baseball kite, a franchise. The action of the (lifornia end of the Pacific Coast League is eimply in line with the high-handed actions of that or ganization since it first condescended to , - nririi ,1 i oH hnuohnll Tt has con tinually bulldozed the National Associa tion of Professional Baseball Leagues Into believing that it is a dangerous organiza tion ayd must get what it wants all of the time, and the National Association has humbly kow-towea to an oi J . 3 " ' ... 1 1...- . Vnnr YlL T fr nrt CM 1 1 rttl OrfSA P TP i II It is for the Northwestern League to decide whether it shall be legislated out oi ex istence by the Coast League, or whether it jihaTt ero, outlaw and eventually get the tnmA recognition humblv granted the outlaw California State League, which got everything it asked for at the hands nH Notional Association. There are business men in Portland who are ready to finance an outlaw team, and the attitude of George Schreeder, at Tacoma. and the Spokane magnates Indicates that outlawry is much more preferable to eating put of the hand i nr n , PalffArnio enntinttent. Ul LUC (11 1 VJ 11 1 1 1. v ........ If Portland has to have the worst of It always and at the hands of tne jwing- Berry-Long combination, let us get n njAn...nihr nnri without finV QUalmS. for outlaw baseball will pay here Just as .11 DnntKn ( '...I O . Vl (1 1 1 Aver did. Well OO ' Perhaps Judge McCredie may advocate such B. plan, for he is not the man to stand rebuffs "such as have been handed him by the California clique. At any rate, the fans will learn something of considerable interest to them when Judge McCredie states his intentions. Presi dent Lucas, of the Northwestern League, i .i ha,. in a fpw dnvM. and the baseball situation may furnish some lively ; vutfnni hiitiv weeks have passed. One thing is sure, and that is that Port land is tired enough of California tyranny just about to follow any plan wherein relief is offered. LIMITED POWER FOUGHT UNIFORMITY OF CLASSIFICA . TIOX BRINGS OX ROW. BANKING CHECK ACCOUNTS unrestricted as to amounts. SAVINGS ACCOUNTS $1.00 and up. FOREIGN DRAFTS, Money Orders, Travelers' Checks and Letters of Credit available the -world over. COLLECTIONS effect ed on any point in the United States. .We transact a general banking business and so-( licit your patronage. "With a most central lo cation, new . equipment throughout and adequate facilities, we can render prompt and satisfactory service to our patrons. MERCHANTS SAVINGS & TRUST COMPANY Corner Sixth and Wash ington Streets. J. Frank Watson, President. p.. L. Durham, Vice-President. W. H. Fear, Secretary. S. C. Catching. Asst. Secretary. O. W. T. Muellhaupt, Cashier. E. M. Hulden, Asst. Cashier. George N. Davis. Trust Officer. Stanley Baker, Realty Manager. oi.. in th mnmlnr and four in the aft ernoon, tried to make speeches and were arrested without attracting me t.uu that would have gathered- a ween ago. They are mostly recruits who have ar- The Police Court docket was cleared of .11 1. T TXT W nacan A Hnzen OI" mOTC, and late arrivals had their cases con tinued, while 38 were given .iu-aay sen tences and one of them an additional fine nt tinft a it wa his second onense. Carl Swan, of the Fort George Wright delegation or prisoners, toio. an un.i that he was wilting to work on the rock--.iia i tVirnA innnrM a dav." and was turned over to the squad of rock-breaking orators. He increased tne numoer ui rockpile workers to eight. MITCHELL IS UNCONSCIOUS Chauffeur Has .Not Recovered, but Girls' Are Regaining Faculties. Arthur E. Mitchell, chauffeur of the party of Joy-riders Sunday, still lies un. at th Rt. Vincent Hospital ..un. v,i. trn o-iri nortners in the mad ride are picking up rapidly at the Good Samaritan tiospitai. in " younger of the two, is sun arowsy ow ing to the concussion of the head from nrUlnK atlA I H 1 1 fT. 1" i Tl C Dr. Zanl who is attending the two : i l.i lost nltrht thev WOUld both be about shortly. He added that Miss Brown gave no signs ot aicuuuwam other than extreme drowsiness, when admitted to the hospital, and, in view of: her present condition, he ascribes it to the concussion of the head. i For thirty years we've made Sincerity Clothes good eitough to mate good .The. re p iifarion back of .our labei is the best possible p'lcdgecS. the wear ahead oi the suit or overcoat that bears it. Mn who think. i v - - they can't be fitted 7 T in reaay-maaes or "feel that. ' ready -mades y. r . 1 are :tiot jit ior .mem, will find Clotttes the exception. That's why an exceptional shop must be sought to.iWthem. Extreme ia,guaity, not in price. Look for the Sincerity label. . A Doofc nboof tlotlafor nothing ' Write a md otk mr or il tCtih, tlttthim t FUchtjr Co. ml PAIR IN SAN FRANCISCO EFFORT WILL BE MADE TO REACH HOME SECRETLY. FRED T. MERRILL FIGHTS 1 Declares He Will Not Stand for Be ing Made a "Political Goat." PORTUAXD. Nov. (To the Editor.) Whether or not I am being used as a 'political goat" for the next election in Portland or not, I am positive of the fact that I am receiving pretty rough treatment. .' Heretofore I have not answered these accusations and mis-statements being somewhat ashamed of myself and my bad Judgment In being the cause of an in vestment of JTO.om or jm.000 in a re sort and an Investment whereby every enemy, jealous-hearted, competitor and political aspirant who wanted to deceive the church people and prohibitionists into voting for them had an opportunity of usit myself and place of business as a jwlltlcal goat." I will not stand it any longer and will not be lied about further and I will make Incidents In Maybray Game, Where in Ballew Libst $30,000 on Horse Race, Are Related. COUNCIL BLUFFS, la., Nov.' 16. The first story of a Maybray victim on the witness-stand was told today in the District Court, when T. W. Ballew, of Princeton, Mo., told how he was swindled out of $30,000 on October 14, 1908, in this city, on a fake horse race. Bellew was the first witness called for the state in the trial of John R. Dob bins, who isalleged to have led Ballew into the Maybray game. y Bellew Is a .merchant, banker and lumberman. He testified that 13 years ago he owned 15 lumber yards In Northern Missouri and oouthern Iowa. Bellew's testimony occupied the en tire day. ' On direct examination he told of his meeting with W. H. Martin in Princeton and a subsequent meet ing with Martin and Dobbins in Kan sas City, when they laid before him the scheme to beat a supposed gang of Pittsburg millionaires on a horse race. He told how he came to Council Bluffs and obtained 30,000 in drafts from two Omaha banks, and bet, first the money of Martin and George Wil son, supposed superintendent of the millionaires, and then his own, on a race which ended In a fiasco and in the collapse of one of the riders. GRANGE REBELS LOSE OUT Administration of Nationals Wins Over Insurgents at Election. DES MOIXES. Ia.. Nov. !. The ad ministration of the National Grange won a complete victory over the Insurgents in the annual election today. X. J. Bachelder,' ConeWd. N. H., was elected master; C. M. Freeman, Tippe canoe City. O.. secretary, and D. C. Mul len. Nampa. Idaho, gatekeeper. Th Ttrlnr wnll of the new Penr.svl .-ani. terminal RtiLtinn in New York City are nfarlv hair a mile long and contain 4!o.OOO cubic. feet of granite. authorization, as the vote by which he was- turned down indicated. Just tell people that I am -soured on the Coast League." said McCredie last night. "They have thrown- me down. I came with a fair, square proposition ana they handed me something. I am eore and I am willing to admit it. It was nniitin to allow the northwest League a permission for another year at least. I can't tell what we win uo unui I have returned to Portland and talked It over with Walter. I don't want to make any rash threats, and so we will wait and see. "Will I retain my club In the Coast League? That is one of the things that I want to think about." At the forenoon cession the directors completed the work of electing officers. D. W. Long was unanimously chosen to succeed himself the secretary and treas urer. J. W. Brooks retired from the board of directors, as representative of the Vernon club, being replaced by D. Maier, who. Bince the death of Fred Maier, is the chief etockholder in the Vernon club. The other directors are: Portland, Judge W. W. McCredie; San Francisco, Frank M. Ish; Oakland. E. M. Walter; Sacramento. Charles Graham; Loe Angeles, Henry Berry. The vice-presidents are Judge W. W. McCredie, Ed Walter and Henry Berry. Judge McCredie will leave tomorrow for Portland on the Shasta Limited. He still has a number of business matters to attend to before leaving for Washington to represent the State of Washington in Congress, and is in & hurry to get back. Cal Ewing and his wife sailed this morning on the steamer China for a month's outing in Honolulu. SHREEDER SHOUTING OUTLAW Tacoma Magnate Anxious That Mc Credie Go Out With Him. TACOMA, Nov. 36. "I am ready and willing to go outlaw in baseball." de clared George M. Shreeder, owner of the Tacoma franchise in the Northwestern t .hon be learned that the Coast League' had rejected Portland's applica tion tonalntain a team in me ii"i western League. ' - . Shreeder, who owns the finest baseball Railway and Interstate Commerce Commissioners Get Into Acri monious Discussion. TCioHivr.Tnv Nov. 16. Because of . nnntAn4inn nf mnnv members that an attempt was being made to limit the atot miivflv commissions, an iunl v . -" . " ' acrimonious discussion marked the open ing of the annual convention oi i- tional Association of Railway Commis The discussion arose over the recom mendation of a committee that the con vention indorse the proposed Federal law giving the Interstate Commerce Commis sion authority to prescribe uniformity in classification for interstate traffic and urging state commissioners to make ex ceptions sparingly. Commissioner Gothlin. of Ohio, con tended that those who voted for the re port hound themselves to maintain the classification fixed by the Commission on interstate shipments. ' He was sup ported by Commissioner Burr, of FJorida. i.inor riork or the Interstate Commerce Commission, chairman ot the committee that made the report, deciarea that the Ohio Commissioner was unfair in placing such an Interpretation upon the report. He said the Commission simply desired to call attention to the ne- cessisty of exceptions not Deing maue. EIGHT NOW BREAK ROCK Spokane Industrial Orators Are Ar rested Without Disturbance. SPOKANE, Nov. 16. Ten "orators" were booked at the police station today. PIONEER IS LAID TO REST Memory of Late Peter Taylor Hon ored at Funeral. The funeral of the late Peter Taylor, one of Oregon's pioneers, was conducted at the Fourth Presbyterian Church last Saturday afternoon by Rev. D. A. Mac Kenzle. the pastor. . At the time of his death. Mr. "Taylor was the oldest member of Portland's Volunteer Fire Department, organized July 29, 1853. Besides being a fireman he was a member of St. Andrew's Society, and was the first president of that or ganization. A large delegation from that body attended the funeral, and as a token of regard placed a beautiful floral piece in the form of St. Andrew's cross upon the grave. ! FOUR-YEAR-OLD KILLS TWO LitUe Sisters Fall Victims to Cliild i Carelessness. CHARLOTTK, Mich., Nov. 16. For a second time little Ruth Butler. 4 years old, is responsible for the death of a lit- 1 vlctAI Some time ago she pushed a baby sister off a tied. The infant strangled to death. This morning a 15-day-old baby died of the effects of cnioroiorm smnmii j Ruth, who had seen the mother use the drug to stop achinsr teeth. It is oroposed to transform the notorious Bleckwel Iland In the Eart York, into the ereatest tuberculosis hospital in the world. Sherman Bixtta and Morrison, Opp. Postofflc. Rent a Piano will want a Piano in your this Winter. It will give Perhaps you feel th'at. you are not ready to purchase the Piano you desire to own. Most musicians look forward to the time when they will own a Stelnway. Rent a Piano from us and all money paid as rent, up to ix months, will be applied toward the purchase price of a Stelnway or other first-class Piano. We have the largest stock of Pianos in the city and the finest line of the old standard, reliable makes: Stelnway Everett A. B. Chase Ludwlg Packard Conover Kurtzmano Kingsbury Emerson Estey Wellington. Tou home you Former Mrs. Frohman and Her Mil lionaire Husband Throw Friends Off Trail In Oakland. Oblivious of the wishes of their Port land and Tacoma friends, the beautiful Margaret Illlngton-Light-Frohman-Bowes and Edward J. Bowes are spending their honevmoon in an apartment-house in San Francisco. After the ceremony at Reno by which the grasping Tacoma millionaire was enabled to annex the charming ex actness, and the performance of which Is said to have cost him $5. the couple headed direct for San Francisco. At the Oakland pier they were met by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ramsdall, prominent society folk, and entertained by them on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Bowes are eviaeniiy nui superstitious. They were married on the 13th day of the month, after three days of marital freedom for Mrs. Frohman that was, and the bride was wedded in a trousseau made from goods which at one time had been seized by customs of ficers at the port of San Francisco. The actions of the Bowes are in entire keeping with statements made by the , bride when she was last here, when she announced that she would soon retire from the stage, and intimated that ahe preferred the privacy of home life. It was the wish of her former husband to keep her before the footlights. It la ex pected that the couple will endeavor to reach their Tacoma homo without pub licity attaching to their movements. BOWES AXD BRIDE MTSTCTTT Tacoma, on Alert for Them, Cant m Locate Honey moo tiers. TACOMA. Wash., Nov. 16. (Special:) There is considerable speculation among Tacoma people as to whether Edward T. Bowes, the millionaire real estate operator, and his actress bride, formerly Mls Illington, are in Tacoma. No one seems to know, and the servants at the house deny to newspapermen and callers the rumor that they are passing a quiet honeymoon within the walls of their own mansion. Despite the servants' denial there is a well-defined rumor that the couple is somewhere in the city. It is said that a hurrying automobile occupied by a man who looked like Mr. Bowes and a woman with classic features was seen to draw up at the Bowes home. f Francis Thone, Composer, Dead. PARIS, Nov. 16. Francis Thone. com poser, died today. He was born Oc tober 18, 1S50. G. P. RUMMELIN k SONS 126 Second, Between Washington 8 Alder FURRIERS White Fox Neckwear and Muffs Ermine Neckwear and Muffs Black Lynx Stoles and Maffs FUR COATS -FUR TURBANS Fur Rugs Fur Robes Fur Gloves II Store Open Saturday Evenings Etabllhed 1ST0. SEND FOR CATALOGUE Here is the Machine which writes, which adds, which subtracts, and which covers the whole field of wnting, adding and combined writing and adding The enrtiii K Typewriter (New Model 1 1) with WAHL Adding and Subtracting Attachment too Remington Typewriter Company (Incorporated) 249 Stark Street, Portland, Ore.