tite jronxnfG onEGoyiAy. titttrsdat. September 21, ioif. HARMON QUIGKTO GflASPBIGCIMNCE Governors' "Conference" With Supreme Court Excellent Political Capital. BOOM IN NEED OF SUCCOR Ohio Executive' Prrtdntlal Hnr nh H Been Faint but Spring Lake Meeting Came to K cne Very Obligingly. OREOONIAV NEWS BCREAL. uh Invton. Kept. JO. Governor Harmon, or O&lo. won tbe admiration of politician, renerally by "ooth way In which h. pulled off the Huprn. Court con ferrr.ee stunt at tba recent conference of Governors at Sprlne- Lake. While this mo did not appear aa the luctntlon of Ohio's chief execu tive, his championship of tha Idea, and tha later fact that he waa chowo to head a delesratlon of Governors to confer- with tha Hupreme Court d.oatlon aplenty that the " made la hi political Intereet. and de apmeUi will .how that Oorjrnor liarmon 1. fully alive to the Unpojf of the opportunity n..w ahead of him. It 1. perfectly apparent that Oover nor Harmon vrlU Inieet th. ' ' tares rights Into the campaign next year, he himself appear In a. the prin cipal champion of th. idea. A. head of the delation of Governors, h will load th. march on Washlnatou. and If he fall, in hi. effort to present hi. ap peal to th. Supreme Court he will not fall in yetting hi. appeal before tha public, which, after all t. tha highly essential thing which Harmon hope, to accomplish. Drlegalloa Vltso Beln cood lawj.r G.rn.r H.r mon know., and he knew t Lake, that a delegation of Oorernora St. no recognised ...ndlng befor. .the Vnlted State, hupreme Court and ha probably .till h. doubt of hi. ability to get recognition before the Jourtwhen h. come, to V, a.hlngtonto butt Into the Mlnneaota rate case How aver, that n.r.r for an Inatant detrrod Governor Harmon He waa " publicltr and irot It. and he even more when he come, to make Ble srrandstand play. Th. United State. Fupreme Court render, ua decision. In 0,nform',y,.w1!tf Ih. Constitution and th. law It J a not wared by political Influence, by .ee .lon.f or focal opinion ' b, ..nt.menl. There la no doubt In the world that " decision In th. M.nne.ota rat. c... will b. tha .eme after th. appeal or "tempted appeal by Oorernor Har mon a. would hare been had the Governor not been delegated to ln .truct the court In It. dutlea. If Jude st.nborn'e decision 1. In nitv w'th the Constitution and the tasTlt'wTli b. upheld. o.w.,h.tandlg ny protest Governor Harmon ns.y and If It be at .T" .-orstltutlon or th. Uw. It v U " .erset mlthout any appeal from the governors- Doom la Heavy The Harmon Presidential boom ha. bain laboring In a heavy ' ,t wa. launched. It hae not taken hold her. ha. been little enthu.la.m: there a. been no noise. Governor Harmon MmseT ; re:!.e. tbla. and wa. just in wd enough to use th. Governors' conference to promote hi. own poll. Ileal fortune., and th. Governor, were ra.lly duped Into becoming a party to the .rheme. rA. Having raised the ery that the Fed sral Go vernment. through court. U .ncroach.n, npon th. .tat... Governor Harmon will Uie front of the movement to e states, and h. unquestionably will re Into th. democratic convention next rear a. the champion of state rights. This l a good Issue and a popular on. in th. South, and If. by ' ' ' adroitly. Governor Harmon can win tb. support of the South, he will be In a poimon to make a stronc race for the nomination. Thla la Harmon first move Indicating k.en political fore sight. If he uas few more trump, of equal value up hla .leeve. be may be able to win out over Wilson. Clark and ail other comers. But he will have to move fast to cover lost around. ' $4000 DIAMONDS STOLEN Tb levee Enter Rtorw Vnll Pawn broker I at Lunch. 6AN DITOO. Cal, Pept JH While Pavld Wlsenberger. a pawnbroker, wa at luncheon at noon today thieves forced an entrance to hla store, emptied: three tray, of diamonds, valued at too. left Jewelry and diamond valued at I3'o. and made their .scape, leaving no c:ew. The crime wa committed wKMn .lht of where hundreds of per on pass every hour. TSe mear evidence left by the criminals Indicates, the police Bay. that tf-9 crime waa committed by two men. one of whom acted aa lookout while Ms acvmp!lce. with the aid of a .kele tcn key. cpened the door leading to the to-e. secured the Jewel, and escaped. M. Martina, of th. Meteor Transpor tation Company, whose office, adjoin those of TVisenbern-r. heard no nolae In tie room. SOCIAL ROW DEATH TO 3 ln Kejex-ted a Escort Would Arenjre Slight; Ho Is Among Slain. KXOXVTLI.E. Tnn.. Sept. t". Be cause Miss Elsie 11. lis refused to allow Oble Butler to accompany her horn, from a dance at Rafter. Tenn last nirV.t. three men are dead. wtn refused to co with Butler. Mis EUla requested C'lncy Phllllrs. a r-ov of IT. to acro-npar.y her. When Fuller saw trem kiv th. dance he followed and .net ruillpi John HraUtna;. ared rushed up to Butler and asked wsy he had shot Phil lips. In reply Butler shot Heading five times, killing him Isstaotiy. Then an unlJntiad person ahot Butler from be tin J. LAND TO BE DISCUSSED Conrrntlon at Denver to B Attended by 1 T Governors. FEWER. Colo, PepC 10. Men who are euthnrttlea on ub)ect. vital to th. development of th. Weal will address th Ftiblle Lands convention at Den ver September It to October S. Gover nors of II states are expected t at- s s4 sis S thaa. yri, jaA Mar r on Important eubjeot. Senator and RepreeentaUve. from those .tats, will take part In th discussion. Governor who will talk will be John r. Bhafroth of Colorado. Ch.st.r H. Aldrlch of Nebraska. William Spry of Utah. Joseph 1L Carey of Wyoming. Joseph H, Hawlsy of Idaho, and Edwin U Norrta of Hontana. The convention la regarded as th. mo.t Important gathering of represen tative Weatern people that ha ever been elled. The ll.t of speakers and their ubject so far selected followsi nmuf John T. Bhafroth Address of Oo.?rBor William Spry. Utah Rasponse te addreea of we. come. o.rnor Jo..pB M. Carey Wromln "Bsicliiin Not Coneervati'-a. . , l.ov.rnr Joeph 11. H.r. W T'rt Booid km Dene W ith Uur t eeler 'ioVernor rlwln L. X orris, Montaaa - .w Natlona-uin." Ooverrtor t hesier IL Aldrlrh. Nebraska The Federal epeclal Agnt Pysl-ot a Menace le Our Republican lnlltutlori. Ooecrnor John K. thafrolh Federal Revenue Compared With Local or State Hever. ue." Kx-Oovertior I. Bradford Prince. ew Mxco Tbe Rl.hls of the Preeerr Huel L. Dur.n. Sea Fran-!ico "ft tn AmeriraA Govemmeot Accordid Aaaka. Chariea T- Polt.r. Loe Anselee -'I he II leaa'.ltjr of Forest Reseoes Ueold of For- "rrsnsH. Short. Fresno. Cel. "8tat Con servauon Vexius Federal Conservation. Ex-United States Senator Henrr M. Js1' -The Win and Bencfloent Besulta of Our Public Land Policy." . , Ex-8cr:ary of Interior R. A. Balllnser. -attle. V'un. "A Portrayal of American Bureaucratic GovernmenL" John Howe Peyton "Practical Economics Practice.! br Railroads " Fruiele O. Trscr. Carlsbad. X. M TH- OHIO GOVERNOR. WHO IS STRONG FACTOR IN DEMOCRATIC RACE TOR PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION. w u af ' ti JIDHOX rate trrlsaUoo EnterprUe Compared With Government Reclamation." . J. J. Hrowne The PosslblllUea of Wsst m Water Powers." Pr V. T. Cooke, Cheyenne. Wye. -The l'oe.lbllltle. of lry Fsrmln." Mrs. Mary C. O. Brdfnrd. Itenver. Colo. "The Proper Development of the Reeort and Recreation Resource, of Our Mouatalp Country Bjtt. Denver. Colo. "flood Roads E.ntll to Our Be.t Development, and the Prob.em Presented by Conditions peculiar to the VTest.- Prrf ft C. Hll'e, Denver. Colo. Praoj tlrsl Economies Practl,-ed In Coal Mining. Ttr. Victor O A.der"n. Oolden. t-rtlo. -Practlml Fconomle. Practiced In Metalli ferous W'.rtns and Pmeltlnc." Robert H. Fultertoo. Oe Moines, Iowa "The Foreet R'unrru; the Supply. Con sumption and Annual Orowth." E. A. I-ane. Han Francisco. CaWTt Demand for Arreee to the Courts l"pen All Queatlors Arlsln. From Department Refu tations Pertaining; to the PuMlo Domain. Dr. Enoch, A Byrsn. Preeldent Washln-r-ton State Colieae -What Province ehould the etates Exerelae Respecting K atee Powers ? GIANT STORE TO RISE AAROJf IIOI.TZ TO BUILD AT FIFTH AVI TfASHLVOTOX. Slg-nlnr of 1 by Helra of Mead Ektate Awaited Department Kstabllslunrnt Projected. OrKanlzatlon plan, for th eatabllah ment of another department .tore in Portland have been virtually completed by Aaron Holti and associates. Nego tiation, for th. lOOsclOO-foot lot at the Northwest corner of Fifth and "Wash ington .treet a. the .it. for the build in for the new .tore have prosrre.sed so far that all that is now necessary la the slKnlnur of the lease by belr. of the Mead estate, owner, of th. property. Mr. Holta said last nlltnt some of the heir reside In the East, and that be fore the leaelna- proposal la finally ac cepted it probably would take from two week to 31) daya. He and Robert St ron it. manager of the estate, will leave for the East next week to com plete the detaila of the lease with the helra there. The major rrt of the money to be represented in thl. enterprise 1. Port land capital." said Mr. Holts. "My brother: Max Holts, of New Tork. la not connected with our syndicate In any way. We have the enterprise suf ficiently financed to assnre the Immedi ate establishment In Portland of a mammoth department store. Plan for th buildlna: nd of the entire project will be announced In full aa soon as the lease on the Mead property if aimed." WOMAN WANDERS AGAIN Ada Vlntrrburn. 6, Found Third Time at De-pot, Believed Insane. Ada tvinterburn. a youns; woman, wa picked up at the Union station yeaterday for the third time In a. many weeks for wanderfns; aimlessly about the railroad terminals. She I. 1 years old. tastefully dressed, of attractive appearance and haa are rw at . " " ...... . . til seek to aettle the case by char-- ,ft ner wim - Patrolman Hennaasy first found the rU who answered hla question a.. J eelil Vl A VaV at SI w n 1 aW tA rl val asjueiy an-i - .i. ....... Ke ATe Ia the mere. n .... - ouna: Vomrn i Chrl.tlan Association, but on ino i jiiu - " - found her at th tune place, and man arrest estea ner " - . w Kb A Irnown her In Mlsaourt Fris ent to the police station and sourht we te i tak. her to tneir nwi"". wuv wnco ia Municipal Court waa ready to rnak. tha an order IKOTQinRir ' " ' ' " " " " y aald the woman la well connected They In Ml.sourl ana naa uecwnm unn,i ed by a eerie, of reverses. She pent . " www.-, . . . - - - - remained ntll yaetarday. An ef will be made to have bar torn - fort Lmlttr- livl1" in..na aaTlany, - WOMAN LOUTH TO ACCEPf'LOSTSON" Acknowledgment Would Mean Loss of Chance of Getting . $25,000 Insurance. MAN WOULD EMBRACE HE Ex-Convlct Appearing In Mrs. Rim mel'a Home Town InlM That She la Hi Motner Friends ' Divided on Queation. NILES. Mich, Sept. 10. Mrs. E.telle Klmmel today stepped back from the embrace of the man who claim to be 1 '4 M KMmjJt S HARMOX. her .on, who disappeared It year ago and on whose supposed death she has collected $5000 ltfe insurance. In an other company the son' life wa in sured for 125.000, but the concern re fused to believe the boy dead, and In a prison at Auburn. N. Y, found the man who today greeted Mrs. Klmmel. "Why. mother, don't you know meT" the man who claims to be Georce Al fred Klmmel exclaimed aa the woman entered the home of a cousin where the man of mystery has been acknowl edged as a relative. As he spoke he stepped forward with arms extended, but tbe woman recoiled and responded sharply: "I'm not so sure about that. Mai Ia Cross-Examined. Then she subjected Klmmel to a cross-examination that went Into de tails of her son's early life and school daya In Nlles. Mrs. Klmmel Is not ready to deny flatly that the man Is her son, neither will she admit that his claims are just. When she saw him in Auburn she waa emphatlo In her denunciation of his claims. . Former acquaintances of the woman's son are divided as to the identity of the man. One Company Pay. "I do not want to cheat anyone of the 125.000 more life Insurance which my relatives would receive If they could- prove I'm dead." said Klmmel. "but I'm not deed. When I disappeared II years ago. undoubtedly my family did think I waa dead. "Seven years later my mother proved In court that there wa evidence to snow 1 waa aeaa. One Insurance company promptly paid her 16000. but another holding; a $25,000 policy, appealed, and aald they would locate me. They round me in ja-.u Then my mother heard of It. but .he refused to-chaniro her position. Four year, ago they brought us face to face in Auburn penitentiary. My mother ap rjeared not to recognize me. While we were talking the guards stepped aalde and I whispered In my mothers ear What am I to call you, if not motherT She looked at me in silence and then whispered. "When wa are alone, call me mother "That was an outburst of mother love which she could not suppress. At terward she appeared to regret It. I wonder whether that. Impulse will re assert Itself or whether, while ack nowledged by my friends, I am forever te be disowned by my mother. This man Is not Klmmel." declared Chief of Police George Francis today after a conference with the newcomer. "I went to school with Klmmel and would know him well.- OLD JUNK GASE ENDS JAKE TVEIXSTEIX LOSES 8CIT AGAINST 51. BAR.DE SOXS. Litigation Over $1000 Settlement Follow in e Arrest of Thieving Dealer Won by Defendant. Circuit Judge Kavanaugh yesterday afternoon found for the defendants in the caae of Jake Welnsteln against M. Barde tc Sons. Welnsteln had brought ault to obtain cancellation of three notes aggregating In face value $500 and the return of $500 cash, declaring that the money and notes had been obtained under duress, the agreement being that the rival Junk dealers were not to Inettttese criminal proceedings agatnat him. The trouble had its inception more thsn two years ago when Welnsteln purchased at various times Junk stolen from the Barde yard by Sam Brutigan. who was convicted snd sentenced to Jail for the thefts. Welnsteln said In his complaint that his rival. In addi tion to taking away from his place more Junk than he had purchaaed from Rrotlgan. insisted that he pay them $1000 to avoid being criminally proae cuted himself. Welnsteln alleges that h. was told that a great deal of the money he waa supposed to py had been expended by the Barde in con nexion with tb deal. Amon thoa ' HEAD IS SCALY HI ALLCAIIE OUT And Baby's Face Broke Out in Red . Bumps. Spread on Hands and Arms. Got Worse All the Time. Mother Says, "I Don't Think Any thing Else Would Have Cured Him Expt Cuticura." "When my first baby was six months old be broke out on bis bead with little bump. They wouia ary up and leave a rale. Then It would break out again and it spread all over his head. All the hair came oat and bis head was scaly all over. Then n 1 s face broke out all over in red bump, and it kept spread ing until it was on his hands and arms. I bought several boxes of ointment, gave him blood medicine, and had two doctors to treat him. but he got worse all the time. He had it about six months when a friend told me about Cuticura. I sent and got a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent, a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment. In three days after using tbem he began to improve. - He began to take long naps and to stop scratching his head. After taking two bottles of Kesolvent, two boxes of Oint ment and three cakes of Soap he was sound and well, and never had any breaking out of any kind. His hair came out in little curls all over his head.. I don't think anything else would have cured him except Cuticura. "I have bought Cuticura Ointment and Soap several times since to use for cuts aod sores and have never known them to fail to cure what I put them on. Cuticura Soap is the best that I hava -ever used for toilet purposes." (SUrnedl Mrs. F. E. Harmon, TL fTd. 2. Atole, Tenn.. Sept. 10. 1910. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold through out the world. Send to Potter Drug A Ghent. Corp , Dept. 16B, Boston, for a liberal sample of each, post-free, with 32-p. book on the skin. whos. names were ' used in the com plaint as having received some of It were District Attorney Cameron. Dep uty District Attorneys Fitzgerald and Hennessy, and Detectives Coleman and Snow. The trial developed that Welnsteln Is not ignorant, illiterate and unsophis ticated as he repreaented himaelf to be in his complaint, bnt rather a shrewd buslneas man. Witness after witness testified that the settlement hsd been at his solicitation and that the trouble was adjusted only after he had sent numerous persons to Inter cede with the Bardes. In the settle ment, it developed, allowance waa made for any Junk over and above that belonging to them which M. Barde A Sons took from Welnsteln's yard dur ing his Incarceration in the Municipal Jail on a charge of being an accessory to the thefts of Brutigan. The case against him was dropped. Explaining their failure to aocept Welnsteln's proffered settlement at once the defendants in yesterday's ac tion said that their Intention was to start a civil action against Welnsteln. TWO MEN CANT BE FOUND Fred Loy and James T. Handle Mys teriously Missing. Fred Loy. a former police officer, has been missing from his residence at 121 Sumner street since laat Thursday, and James T. Rsndle, who started to Port land from Perry, Wash, three months sgo, is reported never to have reached oree 1 Cadillac Our Smife 'for Mena . IL! U We are proud of them they come up to our rigid re quirements. They drape symmetrically over the figure, accentuating its finest points. They reflect personality and give individuality. They grip the fancy of those unsatisfied with mediocre, ordinary suits The newest of weaves and patterns manufactured in accordance with the Honor-Principle of our business e n this city, and his present whereabouts are also unknown. ' Loy was in the Police Department at the time of the teamsters' strike, but lately ha conducted a restaurant on Killinsworth avenue, opposite the car barn. Loy is 27 years old and 5 feet r i NOW ON Bierce - We cordially invite you to call at our show rooms and inspect these 1912 Models COVEY MOTOR CAR Twenty-First and Washington Streets, Portland ELLEM LEADING CLOTHIER 10 inches. When last Been he had on a blue'serare suit and a soft black hat. He Is of medium complexion, has smooth face and bro-g:n eyes. Randle notified his wife, who resides at 450 Belmont avenue, three months ago that he Intended to come to Port- DISPLAY - Arrow Woods Ele ii G land. from Perry. Wash. He is SI yexrS . old, with a height of 6 feet, lncmes. and a weight of 180 pounds. He ias a light complexion and brown eye. For merly he was a locomotive engineer, but lately has been working i logging camps. " n " ctric CO.