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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1910)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN. MONDAY, JUNE 20, 1910. QUEEN IS VISIBLE . BUT TD INTIMATES YOUNG ROOSEVELT TAKES WIFE TODAY I BRITISH QUEEN, WHO KEEPS HERSELF SECLUDED, EXCEPT TO HER INTIMATES. l Strain of New Order of Things Proves Severe to Mary . and She Retires. Ex-President's Son to Wed Miss Eleanor Butler Alex ander at 4 o'clock. i ILP ."Via- o . a - ', $' - .' "' Changes are planned Kaiser's Military Compliment to Her Majesty 3Ineh Appreciated Me mentos of King Edward Are Soon to Be Uistributed. LONDON, June 19. Special.) Such is the Important part played by Queen Mary in the new order of things that she is beginning to feel the Strain and Is anxious to take as complete a r.est as possible for some little time to come. For this reason; except"- on special oc casions she is seeing no one beyond the members of her family and one or two especially intimate friends. She has always enjoyed robust health and this has improved of recent years, but hav ing a very sincere affection for the late King, the shock of his death de cidedly affected her. The Queen Is desirous to go to Bar ton Manor, in the Isle of Wight, and it is stated that she will do so as soon as the visit of the court to Windsor Is at an end. She has no great liking for foreign travel, and she will spend the next few months at Windsor, Bar ten Manor and Balmoral in succession, with probably an early visit to Broad Btalrs, where Prince Henry is at school. ' Kegattas" to lie Visited. Although royalty , will not give any formal countenance to Henley and Cowes this year, It Is fully anticipated In the court entourage that both these and other regattas, on river and coast, will receive the personal patronage of their majesties In future years. Queen Mary in recent seasons has enjoyed oc casional trips on tho Thames without any ceremony, and next Summer may be expected to be afloat In the royal launch on frequent occasions when the court Is established at Windsor. For the time, the only river craft belonging to their majesties which are likely to be used are those which are housed at the Chinese pavilion, on Virginia Wa ter. Although the public are not excluded from the southern shore of the lake, its dimensions are such that the royal party may enjoy boating exercise and line-fishing without molestation. That Is likely to be a favorite resort for the court during the Windsor season, and It offers opportunities for a form of . relaxation preferred by the royal chil dren to athletic games. Mementoes to Be Distributed. But before the- King and Queen go Into residence at Windsor Castle; other members nf K"iner KlrtwurH'o fnmilv will have the privilege of selecting memen toes from among the purely personal belongings of King Edward. This was the case alsofter the late Queen's death, and some of the royal ladies interpreted the permission very liberally. .King Edward watched, one of his royal relatives making her selec tions, and .with a qujzsjical,. half-Jocular and half-protesting expression on his face exclaimed, say pray leave some of the walls." . ltoyal Residence for Ireland. It Is also believed a royal residence may be set up in Ireland. There seems, indeed.' a genial expectation that Ire land will receive a generous measure of royal favor In the new reign. The first Indication of this will be seen- next Bummer, when the King and Queen will visit Dublin soon after the coronation possibly in the course of Horse Show week. There Is a jmmor also that the naval maneuvers will take place off Lough Swilly and the North of Ireland this year. Great pleasure has been given by the iction of the Kaiser in appoint ing ' Queen Mary to the chief hlp of the Blucher Hussars, in suc cession to King Edward, who received the honorary command of the distinguished regiment- from the 'old Emperor as far back ns 1883. The Blucher Hussars -are quartered at Stolph, on the Baltic, a little town not far from Varzin, which Bis marck used to call his "Pomeranian Tus culum." There -are only three Prussian regi ments which wear the scarlet uniform of the British Army, and the Bluclrer Hus sars is one of them. Another is the Zie tli'or Hussars, of which the Duke of Con naught succeeded his father-in-law, the renowned "Red Prince," as chief; while tire third; is the Hussars of the Guard at Potsdam, in which the present Kaiser received his military training. On the occasion of her next visit to Mecklen-burg-Strelitz to see her venerable aunt, the Dowager Duchess, Queen Mary will doubtless go to Stolph to Inspect her regiment. Memorials to Be Many. All sorts of memorials to King Edward are In prospect. The Jews of the East End are- to erect one of their own. This may take the form of another East End hospital under " the patronage of tho Queen Mother. Then the proposal by the Peace Society to mark the late King Edward's work in the direction of peace has taken practical shape. It is intended to raise at least $25,000 and towards this amount Andrew Carnegie and Sir Will lam Mather have each promised $5000, at the same time expressing a hope that the" movement will ? be participated in by as many as possible. Beyond the, placing of a marble bust of his late Majesty in the Peace Palace at The Hague, nothing had yet been de cided on: but Andrew Carnegie has stip ulated that tho scheme shall Include use ful propaganda work In perpetuation of the late King's efforts to promote good will and peace, and that none of the money shall bo -frittered away In bricks and' rhrtrtar or in petty proposals." Steps have, been taken to ascertain the wishes and: to secure the support of King George and, the Queen Mother. SPECIAL POLICEMEN OUT Strike Situation Unchanged Mayor Simon Acts Today. The strike situation is 'still unchanged. Practically no teams were workine vea- terday, it "being Sunday. Around strike headquarters there were but few to be seen,-and those were, new accessions to the union ranks, recruited from the men Imported by the employing draymen. Several", special policemen who have. ' been ldentliied with the strike will be discharged today. Mayor Simon believ ing-that there is no element of danger In the" -situation. - The. employers say they will- not import more men. but may en gage them irt -Portland.- - There -are still 38 specjal policemen j t WW." r 1 r. MARY OF Slump is stayed Market Operations Based on ' . Past Events Completed. MORE FUNDS AVAILABLE Kxports Expand as Abnormal Price Standards Are Corrected Bear Party Timid In View of Recent Liquidations. NEW YORK, June 19. The arrest of speculative activity reflects a com pletion of operations based on past happenings and a mood of uncertainty over future developments. ' The pause in liquidation is evidence of the ac complishment of much of the specula tive deflation that resulted from the excesses of last year, and more imme diately by the alarm' felt over the in junction obtained by the Government against proposed freight Increases. The assumption of satisfaction with the agreement with the Government and the railroads over the rate settle ment which was expressed In the vio lent rebound In prices was met by re newed complaints from prominent rail road officials, mixed with cheerful pro fessions from other railroad officials. The bear party, however. Is kept in restraint and the stock market is al most stagnant. The extent to which liquidation and the decline ln prices have gone makes the bears cautious. Readjustment in commodity markets has kept pace with that of stocks, and the state of the country's foreign trade for May shows the effect in the ex pansion in exports and in the falling off in imports resulting from the cor rection of abnormal price levels which had been maintained. The money market gives evidence of the recuperation already effected In the credit system. The easy tone of call andi short time loans owes some thing to the disposition of leaders to keep funds available Ijor the Fall de velopments. With the passing of the July settle ments and the falling due of British treasury bills now imminent, a ple thoric state of money, in London is likely to result.' Abundant resources to meet a call for funds from New York In the Fall thus seems assured. INSURGENT WAVE WANES f-TVintlnucd From Ftryt Pape.) tives, but they have denounced the President Just as bitterly as they ever assailed Cannon and Aldrlch, -and they are today as anxious to prevent the re nomination of Taft as they are to pre vent the return of Cannon. So long as the insurgents centered their fire on Cannon and Aldrlch, so long they seemed to appeal to a certain class of the people. It is not to be de nied that the insurgents gained in numbers in Congress because of their opposition to these two men, for they have played upon popular prejudice. Paramount Issue Destroyed. However, Cannon and Aldrlch are no longer to be regarded as Justification for a split In the Republican party. Aldrlch has announced his purpose to retire to "private life at the close of his present term, next March, and it is conceded on every hand that Cannon will never again be elected Speaker of the House. Thus have the Insurgents been robbed of their chief ammunition; their paramount issue has been de stroyed. - Handicapped as they are by the elim ination of Cannon and Aldrlch. the in surgents wuld still be reasonably well intrenched but for the fact that they have undertaken to destroy the Presi dent, the leader of the whole party, and the man they themselves helped place in the White House. For It will be recalled that not a small part of Taft's strength In the Chicago con vention came from insurgents, and not an inconceivable part of the support given him in the campaign came from the same quarter. Without giving Mr. Taft a fair op portunity to "make good," and with out showing the courtesy and consid eration due 'his high office, the In surgent leaders have undertaken of late to belittle and belabor the President of the United States, and to threaten him with defeat when his present term expires. He has been accused of po litical Infidelity; of subserviency to corporate and corrupt influences; of sis;:;- x ' , JK A . J 4 v 2 ENGLAND. surrendering the party leadership into the hands of Cannon and Aldrlch, and of all manner of lesser crimes and mis demeanors. Taft Works for Harmony. These accusations and attacks have been utterly without foundation, and they grow out of the fact that the President, exercising tie power given to him as, the chosen leader of his party, has undertaken to bring to gether the discordant factions of that party, and in so doing , has sought to persuade the smaller faction to Join with the larger, rather than Induce tle vast majority to bow to the will f the diminutive minority. He worked for party solidarity, but believed that in the party, as elsewhere In the Govern- j ment, the majority should rule. ! Such an effort on the part of Presi- 1 dent Taft was a mortal offense, as viewed by such men as La Follette, Cummins, Beverldge, Poindexter, Nor-, rls, et p.l. They, though in the hope less minority, insisted that, they were right, and all who disagreed with them were wrong. Being right, as they contended, the President should have recognized them as the nucleus of a reorganized Republican party, and should have brought the vast majority to their standard, and should himself have acknowledged his past errors and mended his ways. Here again it was merely an effort of the insurgent leaders to bring to themselves greater power. LaFollette and Beverldge- and Cummins sought to replace Aldrlch, Hale, Crane and other regular Republican leaders in the Sen ate, and wanted the help of the Presi dent to that end. It was not that they loved the President, but because they knew his influence and wanted to use him, and, had they been successful, they would have carried their -campaign further and sought to compel the President to bow to their will in legis lative matters, once they gained con trol. But the President could not see any good and sufficient reason to lend himself to any such scheme, nor could he figure out wherein it would bene fit him or benefit the party to put aside leaders of long experience in favor of men, admitted novices, and known to be actuated by purely selfish motives. For .his refusal to bow to the will of these mountebanks, he was censured In public speeches; his legislative pro gramme was opposed, the policies of the Administration were . unfairly con demned, and all manner of obstacles were placed In his path. The insur gents did all this, and the people heard of It.' Nor did they fall to. comprehend the full purport and import of all that was said and done. They seemingly analyzed the situation: went to the mo tives of the men who had undertaken to assail even the President, and the result is found in Iowa, In Wisconsin, in Indiana, and will be found In other states where insurgency has, of late, assumed large proportions.- FREIGHT MEETS BOXCAR THTtEE CARS OF CIRCUS TRAIX WRECKED, 5 HORSES KILLED. Engineer of Switch Engine Hurt and Traffic Is Tied TL'p for Several Hours. COLFAX, Wash., June 19. While a loaded boxcar was being pushed up a grae between Riparla and Grange City, Wash., on 'the line of the O. R. & N. the car and switch engine behind It crashed head-on into the first section of a special freight " train carrying Campbell Brothers' circus, which was on its way from Walla Walla to Lewis ton. The accident happened at 6 o'clock this morning, and traffic between Walla Walla and Spokane was delayed until late this afternoon. Martin Baker, engineer of the switch engine, was internally injured and his foot was crushed. The ' brakemen on the car was slightly hurt." Baker's in juries are serious but are not thought to be fatal. Three cars of the circus train were wrecked and five horses were killed. No onf on this train was hurt. 0 According to Information received in Colfax, it is customary for switch en gines to push loaded freight cars up the" grade between Riparia and Grange City, a distance of a mile and a half, at such times as the track is not occu pied with regular raffiiS Baker says he expected to meet the circus train at Grange City and was going at a rapM rate. The boxcar ahead of him shut off his view of the approaching train, and when rounding a curve the crash came. Baker is said to be one of the most reliaWe and experienced railroad men in Southeastern Washington. He was formerly a conductor on the Colfax Moscow branch- . KERMIT TO BE BEST MAN Beautiful Decorations and Music by Orchestra of Fifty Will Mark Wedding of ex-Presldent'e Son. to Gotham Belle. NEW YORK, June 19. fSpecial.) Arrangements for the marriage of Miss Eleanor Butler Alexander, only daugh ter of Mrs, Henry Addison Alexander, to Theodore Roosevelt, Jr.. are com plete. The ceremony will take place Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock in the Fifth-avenue Presbyterian Church, at Fifth avenueand Fifty-fifth street. Invitations have been issued to as many persons as the church will hold, and no one will be admitted without a card. While the guests are assembling there will be a concert of orchestral music, under the direction of Nathan Franko, who -will have 50 musicians, in addition to the organ. Miss Alexander's attendants . will be Mrs. Snowden A. Fahnstock, forrllerly Miss Elizabeth Bertron, at whose wed ding, recently celebrated, Miss Alex ander was the chief bridesmaid; Miss Harriet Alexander and Miss Janeta Alexander, her cousins; Miss Jane W. Delano and Miss Jessie Millington Drake, of Paris. t Kermit to Be Best Man. Kermlt Roosevelt will be his broth er's best man, and the ushers will be George Emlen Roosevelt and Monroe Douglas Robinson, cousins of Mr. Rooseveft Jr.; Francis Roche, Hamil ton Fish, Jr.; Fulton Cutting, John W. Cutler, Grafton Chapman, Eliot Cutler and E. Morgan Gilbert, i Soon after midnight a corps of flor ists under the direction of Wadley & Smythe will begin an elaborate decora tion of the church. There will be many pink and white blossoms, roses, lilies of the valley and peonies. The main aisle will be entirely In white, and there will be clusters of roses and lilies at each pew. The scheme will extend to the altar, the steps of which will be carpeted with lilies of the val ley and bride roses. ' Roses Decorative Feature.' The pri'e dieu of'white satin will be festooned with bride roses and above the prle dieu will be an arch of white flowers. This decoration will be car ried up to the organ loft and will be surmounted with masses of delicate pink rambler roses, for whidh the en tire market of the South has. been cor nered. On either side of the organ loft there will be great bushes of these roses against a background of palms. The columns on each side of the church will be festooned with rosemary, and at the base of each window there will be a mass of ferns and roses. Bride's Gown White. The prevailing keys of the costumes worn by Miss Alexander's attendants will be dull pink and pale blues of pastel shades, and she will wear a rown of conventional white satin and old point lace, with a veil of tulle. While the invitations to the cere mony have. been general those" to the reception, which is to be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Alex ander, 4 West Fifty-eighth street, will be limited. Nevertheless, it will be a large reception. The destination of Mr. Roosevelt and his bride for the early part of their honeymoon has not been divulged even to their closest friends, but they are to live In San Francisco, where they are expected to arrive early In July. CROCKER HEIRS PROTEST Texas May See Long Eight Against Southern Pacific Road. AUSTIN, Tex., June 19. (Special.) Attorneys for the Hubbard heirs and the . Crocker estate last evening filed a formal protest with the Texas RaiL- road Commission against granting the application of the Southern Pacific Company for permission to issue and register $10,000,000 In bonds on part of the line from San Antonio to Cluero, Tex., which the railroad company as serts has ' never been valued and no Improvements on the Galveston and Victoria divisions of, the road. The protestants ask that they be given a hearing in the matter and the Commission has notified attorneys of the- railroad of the petition, but has taken no action. Complainants allege that the railroad company has already defaulted .In payment on bonds held by them and that it would be manifestly unfair to allow the road to Increase its indebtedness. 3 DEAD, 25 HURT, IN WRECK Train Laden With Emigrants Bound for West, In Crash. NORWICH, Conn., June 19. A pas senger train loaded with emigrants bound for the West on the Ontario & Western Railroad was wrecked at Par ker, a small station 16 miles southeast of this village, early today. Three pas sengers were killed and 25 passengers injured. The wreck occurred when the emi grant train crashed Into a locomotive, running light. The train was made up of eight coaches and an engine, and carried 371 emigrants. ' ASSEMBLY BELIEVED BEST Klamath County Republicans Have Fight on Hands. MERRILL. Or.. June 19. (Special.) The first gun of the coming political cam paign in Klamath County was fired in the opera-house here last night, when a meeting was called by Republican County Central Committeeman C. T. Oliver. Mr. Oliver came down from Klamath Falls, accompanied by County Clerk C. R. De Lap and Sheriff W. B. Barnes, and held a conference with a number of the Re publican war-horses of the south end of the county. The campaign, as outlined by Chairman Oliver, was that good, clean men were to be put in the field for all offices, and the Courthouse fight is not to enter Into the campaign. Mr. Oliver stated that while the direct primary law was in ef fect In this state, he did not believe the county could get its best material out for the county offices without reverting back to the old plan of tha assembly, and in this every man of the two dozen staunch Republicans at the meeting con curred. This meeting was as a preliminary to the precinct caucuses which are to be held in each precinct on July 9, when delegates will be elected tp the general county convention,, held In Klamath Falls July 21. - " George Noland, a Democrat, is the in cumbent of the Circuit Court bench. To get a man who can defeat Judge Noland is realized by the Republicans as a diffi cult one. There" is considerable timber here, the most prominently mentioned be ing ex-Clrcult Judge Henry L. Benson, but Mr. Benson so far has said he would positively not take the- place. The next man In the field is District Attorney Kuy kendall. . The County Judgeship fight will attract as much attention as that for Circuit Judge. J. B. Griffith; Democrat and preacher, is the encumbent.- Frank Its. White, formerly with The Oregonlan, but a resident of this city. Is most promi nently mentioned as Republican candi date for this office. For Sheriff, O. L. Carter is being groomed by his friends to be an opponent of W. B. Barnes before the primaries. NEAR-BEER SALE DOOMED IDAHO JUDGE'S DECISION MAY CAUSE PROHIBITION. Troy Mar Held Guilty of Selling Beverage- Without License Case Goes to . High Court. SPOKANE. Wash., June 19. (Special.) District Judge Edgar C. Steele yesterday handed down a sweeping decision at Moscow. Idaho, which, if upheld by the Supreme Court, will prohibit the sale "of "near-beer" in Idaho without a license. County Attorney George W. Supplger in stituted a test case against G. W. Thomp son, of Troy, in which Thompson is held guilty and Is to appear in July when Judge Steele will pronounce osntence. Judge Steele upholds the contention of Supplger "that the sale of all malt liquors without a license and regardless of whether such liquor Is shown to be in toxicating, la a violation of the Matutes and therefore a misdemeanor." The decision calls attention to the fact that the local option laws have . never been In operation In Latah County and that no question is raised as to the effect of the local option law upon the old law still in forca in Latah County. Judge Steele- says that "under the act of 1891, to regulate the sale of intoxicat ing liquors, the Legislature in the ex ercise of its police powers may prohibit the sale of any malt liquor, and where It Is a matter of common knowledge that it would render the law regulating the sale of intoxicating liquor difficult of enforcement unless the sale of all , malt liquors be prohibited and when the- traffic in malt liquor Is liable to be used as a cloak under which to violate the law, the Legislature un questionably has the power to prohibit the sale of malt liquor as a proper means of regulating the sale of intoxicating Uquora." PROXY BRIDE IS SLAIN Woman. Wedded by Power of Attor ney Dissatisfied. SAN JOSE, Cal., June 19. Jerry Petro novltch, aged 39, cook In a restaurant, this afternoon shot and stabbed his young wife, aged 19, and. then cut his own throat. Both are dying at the Bel videre Hospital. About a month ago Petronovltch gave a cousin in the town of Split, Delmatla, power of attorney to marry the girl for him, and after the ceremony In ' that country' she sailed for America, arriving in thia city two weeks ago. The young bride was dissatisfied with conditions here, and her constant requests to be al lowed to return to her home in the old country led to today's tragedy. Causes Debility Here Are Facts Backed Up by a Strong Guarantee. Catarrh causes debility. In our opinion, most people suffering from general debility have catarrh. Such cases of debility cannot be completely cured by medicine not designed to eradicate catarrh. In every case where our remedy falls to give entire satis faction we will not charge a cent for the medicine employed during the trial. Now, surely no one should hesitate to believe us or to put our claim to a. practical test under such conditions. We will take all the risk; no one else can lose anything by the transaction. .We make these statements and this offer because ke know and have time and again proved tbat Rexall Mucu Tone rarely falls to do as we claim. It is not a cureall prescribed to cure every disease that flesh Is heir to. It is Intended for one purpose, i. r., to cure catarrh by assailing the diseased condition in a reasonable, scientific way, which Is to employ agents that have been found to have the tonic and alterative power to correct faulty metabolism (tissue change) and to stimulate and help nature overcome the cause or causes of catarrh. This being done, appetite increases, nutrition Im proves, weight is gained, comfort of body is attained and life's work taken up with the zest natural to .the per fectly healthy Individual. We want you to try Rexall Mucu Tone. Follow directions and take it regularly and consistently for a rea sonable length of time. Then, If you are not satisfied, come back and tell us and the money you paid for the treatment will be returned without any argument whatever. Rexall Mucu-Tone comes In two sizes, 50c. , and $1.00 a bottle. Sold only at our store, The Rexall Store. The Owl Drug Co., Inc., Cor. 7th and Washington Sts. HAND SAPOLIO FOR TOILET AND BATH. Delicate enough for the softest skin, and yet - efficacious In removing any ataln. Keep the skin In perfect con dition. In the bath gives all the de alrable after-effects of a Turkish bath. It should be on every waab.sta.nd. iU GROCERS AXD DRUGGISTS. 4 f- r-f- I KELSO SCHOOL, WHY Do you devote so mueh time to the interior and exterior decoration of your house, and so little to that most important part, the HEATING r OF IT? "Why don't you come to us and let us tell you the truth about all kinds of heating systems 1 We don't charge a cent for advice. We are in a position to know, and we do know. We install Steam, Hot Water, Warm Air and Vapor systems of heating! Come and see us! The W. G. McPherson Company HEATING ENGINEERS, N TOUCH WITH FRIENDS and RELATIVES m mmMMm A GRANDMOTHER may not be as spry as she used to be, but she is in close touch with her world for all that. The telephone enables her to make as-many calls as she pleases, and in all sorts of weather. - - Formal gatherings have their place, but it is the many little intimate visits over the telephone that keep people young and interested. Grandmother's telephone visits do not stop with her own town. The Long Distance Service of the Bell Telephone takes her to other towns, and allows relatives and friends to chat with her although hundreds of miles away. The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company Every Bell Telephone is the Center of the System iV GRACES . y qracje: THE. Good Glasses Aid the Eyes Because they supply the lenses necessary aid for . perfect vision when the eyes go wrong. Besides making good glasses we know how to fit them. Our Toric Bifocals represent the highest type of lenses. 4 COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. 133 Sixth Street Grand Trunk Pacific Steamships The New Steel Steamship " Prince Rupert" Length, 120 feet Twin Screw 184 Water-Tight Bulkheads MOST LUXURIOUS f Victoria, Vancouver. Prince Rnr SeattlC tO i "Idll Charlotte I,la,ld and SI SIX DAYS' CRUISE Seattle to Prince Rupert and Return. $36.00 Including Leave Seattle June 19. 26, July 3, 10. 17, 24. at Mldnltrht Sundays. For tickets and reservations apply to local ticket agents or J. H. BURGIS. G. A. P. D., Grand Trunk Pacific Steamships, First avenue and Tfesler Way, Seattle. Wash. . v- , 'ft : I ( f- n j V KELSO. WASH. 328 GLISAN ST. FACE, knots per hour Double Bottom. Wireless Telegraph. O.V PACIFIC COAST. pert, Portland Canal. icnart, the new Uuld Seattle to Stewart and Return $4S.OO 3s3 & s a : s " " " I Meals and Bertha.