OREfiOXIAX. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3, 1912.
TITE
Quit If!
TELLS OF
SURVIVOR Or CHAMPOEG CONVENTION WHO YESTERDAY
CELEBRATED 91TH BIRTHDAY.
Srissco Stops It
PUBLICITY FIGHT
1ABQS IBIAL BOTTLE 72X8. )
Daughter of Burt Hicks Com
pelled to Listen to Vile
Language of Pickets.
C. C. Chapman Says Western
Community Advertising Is
Strongly Opposed.
a. . .
. . - in..! iii i ncrr
mm
EAST MAKING HARD
STRIKERS
NSULTS
. : a
v. " .
STATES WELL ORGANIZED
Orrton People Xceil to Increase
Their Efforts f They Wish
to firing Settler Here In
fare of Opposition.
'Tin West l up asalnft a campaign
ef aararesslve opposition In community
advertising 'n the Kast. Instrt of the
apathy tliat vji met with a few year
ao. and all the alvertulnar we are
now doln is only a drop In the bucket
compared to what we ouKht to be do
In to overcome the resolute opposition
and competition that has arisen In the
Kast. ' said C. C. Chapman. Oresron Im
migration Asrent. yesterdav. referring
to-t;ie statement made by J. M. Ilunna
ford. second vice-president of thaj
ireat Noithern. who declared that the
competition of Kastern states today
was renderln- advertising of the re
sources of the We.st mut'li more diffi
cult and expensive than It has ever
been before.
"Amide from private associations that
are worklnar actively to stem the tide
of" Immigration from farming lands of
the Kas: to farmtnc lands of the West,
and to draw back to their deserted
farm lands settlers from other sec
tions, many of the jtates have organ
isations and have larsre appropriations
for the conduct of Immigration and
settlement work." said Mr. Chapman.
-In New York. Wisconsin and Virginia,
the state Immigration officials are vig
orously attacking the Oregon advertis
ing and are publishing everything that
t available to counteract Its effect.
Where we are spending one dollar to
advertise, they are spending ten dol
lars to combat It bv advertising their
own state and br belittling the claims
of tho West. Anything that appears
In the papers that casts a stigma upon
Oregon or the West Is reprinted and
are taken that it gets Into the
hands of those who are known to con
template moving westward to seek
iconic e
-Faaslae Letter- Hearted.
"Many ef the states have reprinted
in tl.elr advertising Booklets and oth
er mediums the 'famine letter- issued
by the I-ortland I-abor Council, ac
counts of the transactions of the Co
lumbia Orchard Company, and other
material of the same sort, and are
placing it with care In sections of
tlirlr states where It Is thought It will
have the strongest effect against emi
gration. The Governor of Illinois Is
soliciting a large appropriation to be
expended In efforts to hold at home
intending emigrants. . He has asserted
that It Is a mistake for any one to go
West, and that the representations
from Western states In advertising
booklets and pamphlets are untrust
worthy. Kastern railroads have begun
to copy the met hods of Western rail
ways and to apply them In Eastern
ections. Exhibits and exhibit cars
from the West, that were once received
with welcome, are now met with a
tpecles of hostility from those who
,'nr their effect to draw away the
agricultural population rrom the farm
lands of the Bast.
-New Tork has established a depart
ment of agriculture for the purpose of
loldlng and bringing farmers to the
late. Demonstrators and traveling ad
. isors under salary of the tate keep
ii close touch with the people ami
very effort is being made to dissuade
o-ople from leaving the state to aeek
loniea in the West. Virginia and
Maryland are each spending more mon-
v in immigration work today than
ttr of the Western states. Virginia la
ff-ring for from II to t.'O an acre
.p!e lands which she advertises un
W the claim that they are as good as
jregon apple lands which are selling
from 140 to 150. Georgia has an ap
propriation of 1I00.0OO. half of which
u io ba spent to attract foreign irn
nigratlon. and half to attract Imml
natlon from the Northern states. Flor
Ca. Arkansas. Tennessee and other ec-i.-ns
of the South are not only con
torting under state appropriations ac
tive publicity campaigns to attract Im
migration, but are endeavoring In
very" way to belittle the advertising
that has In the past drawn people in
nch great numbers from their farms
to the lands of Canada ami the WcbL
Fast la Vtaklas; I .
am not in the least pessimistic
About the outlook. I merely mention
Mre facts to show the extent of the
revulsion In the K?t against the ad
vertlerfls that has been settling the
West at her expense, and to show how
tir oin methods of publicity have
en adopted and are being carried
ut more thoroughly by them than by
we who originated them.
"There is one way to combat thl
ompetltlon In advertising and the
ampal.n of misrepresentation and be
littling, and that is to tell the truth
about uregon and to keep aet telling the
truth steadily upon all occasions and
it every opportunity. The publicity
work that has been carried on by prl
ate organisations here Is done under
tate appropriations In the KasL Ore
run could do no better than appro
prlt liberally to carry on her immi
gration movement and by continued
true statements of the opportunities
lhl state offers, counteract the oppo
sition of Kastern statea from which
i'ie lias been drawing settlers."
MINUS CLUB WILL MEET
Orrson - FirM - Iljlantl - Minus"
l.nnrlinm Called for Friday.
After a long period during which no
nif-ting was held. U A. McArtliur. sec
retary of the Minus Club, suddenly an
nounced yesterday that he had discov
ered a possible source for a new de
ft. It which the club might take up and
tlierebv renew' Ita avowed reason for
existence, which Is the absorption and
maintenance of financial deficits. Mr.
.KArthor railed the meeting for Krl
.( noon at a luncheon In the Com
n crc'al Club, announcing that Q. M.
tit land would be able to produce a de
felt from the Oregon First excursion
t.j San Krandsco. which the club would
consider. In announcing the meeting
he called It the -Orea;on-First-Hy land
Minus" luncheon.
I O. Lively, who Is In San Francisco
tlila" week conferring with officials of
;ho Parama-I'aclflc Exposition, regard
ing the livestock exhibits, will be In-.r-ii.tr.l
to look Into the "Hyland
-:nus" and notify toe Minus Club, of
incli he l a member, whether they
...all solemnly take the deficit upon
tlem-'lves and thereby continue to
exist as an organisation.
I; e
i
KRIXCOIH SIVIBB MTTIIIrH. IHH.II; BOIQIHT 1-REHRVfKD
TO HIM BY ORMiOX SI FKIIAulSTS.
PIONEER IS NOW 94
F. X. Matthieu, of Champoeg
Fame, Has Birthday.
AGED MAN STILL ACTIVE
Ili-lorlc Moctine or 18 13, lu ll His
Xvlc tllrd Qnetion of Sovcr-
clsnty of Oregon Kccallod.
sinrln of Karly Injs Told.
Francois Xavier Matthieu. the Ore
gon pioneer whose vote In the historic
Champoeg meeting of May. 1SI3, set
tle. I the question of American sov
ereignty in the Paclrtc Northwest,
celebrated his tth birth. rfcy yesterday
at the borne of his son. S. A. Matthlem.
Sil llugene street. Throughout the
div aged pioneers and other friends
called upon the venerable man to con
gratulate him upon his annlvrsary.
Among the callers were Captain
Thomas Mountain and Cuplaln Pease.
Karller In the day Mrs. Frederick
KKirert. Ir. Ksthrr I'ohl and Mrs. tlraee
Walt Hoss. members of tho State Equal
Suffrage Committee, who Ttslted him
and presented him with a bouquet of
daffodils. Mr. Matthieu assured the suf
fragists that he expected to vole for
their measure at the coming election.
Save for falling eyesight. Mr. Mat
thieu Is as hale and hearty as a man of
to. His mind Is perfectly clear and ho
readily recalls Incidents of his boy
hood in Qubec. lie Is of French
Canadian extraction and was born In
Terrebonne. 18 miles from Montreal, on
April 2. lsl. While still a lad the
province In which he lived was trans
ferred to the Knglisli by Napoleon. The
failure of the new masters to trant
them the privileges which they had en
joyed under France was the cause for
much dissatisfaction. While wurkinit
in Montreal the young man saved his
money and bought powder and bullets
with which It was hopel to win free
dom from the English.
Dislike of F.aallsh Iteglas tlarly.
Every Sunday the young men ft his
nationality engaged In a military drill,
but when their purposes became known
Matthieu was obliged to leave the
country. After some difficulty In get
ting passports he arrived in Albany,
N. V. From that point he made his way
gradually to Buffalo. Detroit. Cleve
land. Milwaukee and Mackinaw. He ar
rived In Chicago, a small settlement.
In 1838. Later he entered tije serv
ice of the American Fur Company and
spent some time In the region of the
Black Hills.
It was a time wheat the Immigration
to the Pacific Northwest had set in and
Matthieu was engaged to accompany
a party as his knowledge, of the Sioux
languase was considered an advantage.
After the usual hardships the emigrant
train reached Tr. Whltman'a mission
near Walla Walla.
Mr. Matfhlcu's recollections of tho
famous missionary are vivid even after
more than half a century. Dr. Whit
man, he says, was one of the best men
he ever knew. He furnished the travel
ers with flour and provisions and re
fused to accept any payment for them.
Faasoaa Meetlag Recalled.
Upon his arrival at the Hudson Bay
station st Champoeg Mr. Matthieu
worked for a Frenchman who was
building a bridge In the vicinity. Ijter
he worked for tho Hudson's Bay Com
pany in harvesting grain for the Rus
sian government. The company was at
the time under contract to furnish
1S.O00 bushels of wheat yearly for the
privilege of trapping In the Alaska
country.
It was while he was thus e-n gaged
that the famous meeting was held to
determine whether the Oregon country
thould become British or American tet
rltory. After several attempts to come
to' a decision by ballot or viva voce
Joseph Meek called to the men as
sembled at Champoeg to declare their
preferences Of the ll2 men present 50
Immediately passed over the mark on
the ground which showed they desired
Ajiierlcan authority. To give a majority
Mr. Matthieu and his countryman
Lucier then crossed or. This deter
2 fZM
mined the future of the states of Ore
gon. Washington. Idaho and Montana.
Shortly after the provisional govern
ment was established Mr. Matthieu was
appointed Justice of the Teace. One
of the lavs provided that no liquor
should be made In Oregon. It became
known that a sailor had set up a "still"
near the present town of Uervais. When
Mr. Matthieu and his assistant colled
there the man refused to comply with
the law, saylns that It was a "freo
country." When the officers entered,
the cabin Mr. Matthieu says the moon
shiner shouted "Hell and damnation,
whoever, saw a courthouse In a 'still'
house." Tho stuff he manufactured
Mr. Matthieu says was known as "Blue
Kuin." The officers found It unneces
sary to close the place, as the drink
was so strong that, to use the old
man's words "it would kill a man at
ten yards" and there was no one who
would risk drinking it.
CONGRESS MAY BE HELD
SlUVICY OF I.OGGED-OFF UXD
IMiOBLKMS I KC.KI).
Mib-Conimittre? Io Ho Named by C. C.
hapmnn lo Plan for Meeting in
Portland Soon.
C. C. Chapman, presiding over an in
formal meeting Monday of a general
committee at the F'ortland Commercial
Club to consider tho problem of logged
off lands and their reclamation, was
Instructed to appoint a subcommittee
of five to consider plans for holding
a 1'aclfic Northwest Lodged -Off J .and
Congress In tho near future. The com
mittee will be announced today and will
report bark to a meeting of the general
committee which will be called by the
chairman as soon as the subcommittee
has formulated its report.
In the call for the meeting Monday,
which was Issued over tho signatures
of i:. B. Piper, president of the Portland
Commercial Club: G. F. Johnson, of tho
promotion committee, and C. C. Chap
man. State Immigration Agent, it was
suggested that such a congress be held
under the auspices of the Portland
Commercial Club, Oregon Development
League, Oregon Conservation Associa
tion, Southwestern Washington Devel
opment League. Olympic Peninsula De
velopment League, Oregon Immigration
Commission, West Coast Lumber Man
ufacturers' Association and other sim
ilar associations.
F. B. Holbrook. in the committee
meeting, declared that there was lesa
need of a congress than of systematlx
Ing the Information that can be gath
ered from those who are actually clear
ing and farming cut-over lands. The
testimony of expert farmers, he be
lieved, would be of more real value
than the findings of any organization
that set out with a purpose of clearing
and marketing land. Mr. Holbrook,
while not entirely opposed to tho idea
of calling the congress, said that the
utmost caution should be used In or
ganizing and conducting such a con
gress. If best results are to be obtained.
In his opinion the plan of the South
western Washington Settlors' Agency,
while meritorious in many respects,
was not tTomplete and could In several
details be made safer for the settler.
F. C. Knapp. president of tho Port
land Chamber of Commerce, said that
in many sections attempts to settle cut
over lands would endanger the timber
wealth of the state. He believed that
srat care bhould be exercised in agi
tating the subject until a carefully
thought-out plan could be developed,
since creating a false sentiment
througout the state might do more
harm than any of the good that might
result from loo hasty action.
None of the speakers opposed the
Idea of the congress directly, but all
agreed that It was a subject that should
be approached with care and held
within strictly practical lines. H waa
generally conceded that In case such
a congress Is called, discussion of
clearing methods in cut-over lands
should take precedence over market
ing methods.
Those present at tho meeting were C.
r. Chapman. O. M. Clark. F. C. Knapp,
H. I. I-angllle. F. B. Holbrook. J. H.
Hlak. David Davis, K. O. Crawford. A.
Is. McDonald. It. 1. Sabln. J. F. Larson,
A. C. Callan. A. B. Hendricks and Phil
S. Bates-
EMPLOYES CARRY ARM&
Judpe Galena Announces That Night
Sessions or Court Will Be Held
Vntll Murder Trial Is
Made History.
Commanding during her recital the
undivided attention of the 12 Jurymen
who are to pass upon the guilt or In
nocence of her father, who stands ac
cused of the murder of W. A. Wort
man, a union picket. Miss Lilly B.
Hicks, daughter of Burt Hicks, yes
terday told from the witness stand In
Judge Gatens' court a story of Insults
heaped upon her by the strikers.
When Bhe declared that one of the
pickets had once shouted, "Look at the
t ," a wave of Indlgnatlo'n swept
through the courtroom. She had fre
quently been called a "scab-herder's
daughter." and men often peered In
sultingly at her through the windows
of her father's shop, where she was
employed as bookkeeper. She had al
wavs kept the office door locked, she
said. She had walked several times
from the shop to Grand avenue and
East Oak street, where she caught her
car, with one or another of her father's
employes, and the pickets had followed
shouting "scab" and "damn scab" and
taunting the men because they had to
be escorted by a woman.
Woman Finally Resigns.
Finally, Miss Hicks said, her father
Ordered her to close up her books and
leave for home at 4:30, about a half
hour before the pickets assembled and
she kept this up until she quit her
father's employment.
"I quit because 1 didn't care to be
subjected to Insult any longer. I was
so nervous that I could not have stood
the strain many more days," she de
clared. Private Prosecutor Davis allowed her
to leave the stand without cross-examination.
W. B. Conn, one of the Hicks' work
men, told of being beaten into insensi
bility by pickets. Thic was after he
had been warned, that men were fre
quently kiued during strikes and that
he had better come out. He recovered
consciousness In the office of a physii
cian. where he was carried by a sym
pathetic passerby, and was unable to
resume work for several weeks.
More Threat Made.
Later the pickets told him that they
had tried to get him once and that
if he failed to strlko they would "get
him proper" the next time. The epi
thets which he recited In the. court
room as having been applied to him
were the acme of vlleness and In
decency. '"Which one had the fit," was a
question he often heard asked by
pickets, and he declared that he once
received word from O. B. Kaser, the
picket captain, through a third party,
that he was to have another nt. He
was not allowed to testify further con
cerning this, however, the state object
ing to it as hearsay.
A. S. McCarl. blacksmith in Hicks'
shop, gave an answer which aroused
the enthusiasm of the attorneys for
the defense when Special Prosecutor
Davis Insisted on knowing why he had
ceased his connection with labor
unions.
"I will tell you." McCarl said finally.
"When the strike started In 1903 in
San Francisco I was working in the
John Hammond Car shops, building
streetcars and doing general machine
work. Hammond offered me a dollar a
day more if 1 would stay and I put
It "before the union and they said I
couldn't stay, that I had to go out
with the rest of the men. I went out
and some time later they wanted me
to do picket d-uty. They said 1 might
as well Join the fighting gang.
Job ncket Refused.
"They said I would have 5 a week
when I went on strike and If I would
do picket duty, a little more, but if I
Joined the fighting gang, the better
Job I would do, the more I would have.
I told them that I refused to do any
fighting except when I had to. They
aald "you don't need to kill a man, but
put him out of commission so he won't
be able to work.' I said no.
"About three of four nights after
that, at the corner of First and Fol
som streets, six of them attacked me.
They beat mc so bad they put me out
of commission all right. 1 was taken to
a hospital in an ambulance, where a
surgeon took nine stitches In my head."
Mr. Davis "Haven't you got a soft
place there yet?"
"Perhaps, and maybe others have,
too." -nswered the witness. "Anyway.
I wasn't out again for five weeks and
I was attended by the doctor for some
time. Since then I have gone through
throe operations, performed by Dr.
Angclus here In Portland, as a result of
the same thing. I liad a good reason
all right."
Mr. Davis asked the witness several
times f he had not been ejected from
the union because he got drunk and
was too brutal while a striker. Thla
McCarl denied vigorously.
Lle passed by Attoraey,
In an altercation over a letter pro
duced by McCarl to prove his former
affiliation with the union. Mr. Ma
larkey passed the lie to Mr. Davis and
Judge Gitens Interrupted the attorney
for the defense with: -'Tou lie-" That
language is Improper. You have prac
ticed, law long enough to know that."
Patrolman Stlllwell testified to hav
ing seen Emll Schmidt, one of the em
ployes of the Phoenix Iron Works,
standing off a crowd of plcketers with
a loaded revolver. The union men had
appealed to him to arrest Schmidt but
he had refused. Stlllwell had also seen
a picket attack a man with a knife. He
went with one man on a streetcar to
the city limits to protect him agajnst
possible attack from three strikers who
had boarded the car. Stlllwell testified.
The men working in the shops sought
in every way to avoid trouble with the
strikers, be said, but he had often
heard vilification and abusive lan
guage. In cross-examining Stlllwell
Special Prosecutor Davis tried to leave
the suspicion that he may have been
influenced In his testimony by John F.
Logan, a member of the Civil Service
Commission, who la one of the attor
neya for the defense.
Kaaploye Carries Revolver.
After the pickets had threatened to
leave him .lying dead In a strip of
woods near hiB home. James Morrow,
another of Hicks' men. started carry
ing a revolver, according to his testi
mony. Sometimes he carried the re
volver and sometimes not. he ssld. ac
cording as the action of the strikers
made his courage ebb or flow. The
defendant and he had once found it
Dandruff Xa Maddening.
Swlaaro stops dandruff quickly, grows new
hair and restores gray and faded to ita nat
ural youthful color.
Swlasco stops baldness, bald spota. falling
hair, scabby scaip. sore scalp, brittle hair
or any hair or scalp trouble.
To prove that our claims are true, we will
end you a large trial bottle free if you will
end 10c In silver or stamps to help pay coat
of poatago and packing to fcwlssco Hair
Remedy Co.. 4739 V. O. Square. Cincinnati.
Ohio.
Swlasco will be found on sale at all drug
gists and drug departments everywhere at
ioc and 11.00 a bottle.
necessary to walk between lines of
pickets on the sidewalk and Wortman
had remarked, referring to Hicks, "I
have a good notion to knock that big
fellow's head off."
The tone made him certain that the
threat would be carried out. the wit
ness said, but the attack did- not ma-
WONAN WHO CROSSKD PLAINS
I 18U3 WILL BIS Bl'ltlEO
THURSDAY.
Mrs. Zerllda P. Toiler.
Mrs. Zerllda P. Tozler, who came
to Portland in 1SG3, and who died
Sunday morning of paralysis was
born In Bloomington, Ind., De
cember 22. 1841. Her father.
Elder Leroy Mayfiold. was pastor
of the Baptist Church at that
place 27 years. After his death
his widow went with the family
to Nebraska. August 1, 1858, Miss
ITayfield was married to Charles
T. Tozler, and, with her two
children, Albert and Rozella,
crossed the. plains with ox teams
In 1863.
Three other children Kdyth
Tozler Weathered. Leroy and Nel
lie, now Mrs. E. E. Cox. of Hart
ford. Ind. were born in Portland.
Mr. Tozier dlefl in July. 1S99. and
Rozella in 1885. Leroy Tozier is
n o w an attorney at Fairbanks,
Alaska. All the suvins chil
dren were with Mrs. Tozier when
she died.
Mrs. Tozier received a stroke of
paralysis January 14. a second one
the next day, and was taken to
the hospital January 17. Tho
funeral will be held at 11 A. M.,
Thursday, at Holman's chapel,
and at 1 o'clock the body will be
taken on the Oregon Klectrlc to
Hillsboro to the family burial
plot.
terlalize. Mr. Davis cross-examined 3
great deal about this incident, his ob
ject being to leave the impression that
Hicks was not much frightened If he
would walk between lines of strikers.
Night Session to Be Held.
Conn said that the pickets would
shout to the streetcar conductors!
"Don't let the d scab get aboard"
and McCarl said that they were seek
ing constantly to pick fights with him,
hurling nasfy Insults and taunts which
a man ordinarily would resent.
Commencing tonight, Judge Gatens
announced that night sessions will be
held from 7:30 to 10 o'clock. This has
been done at the request of the Jurors,
who are anxious to have the trial con
cluded and get back to . their occupa
tions. They have been at the Court
house every day since March 19 and
six of them, those belonging to the
February panel, two or three weeks
previous to that date.
HUSBAND REGAINS BRIDE
Stepmother's Interference Proves to
Be Fruitless.
' The numerous troubles of Marie
Hewitt Starke, which began last week
when she ran away from her step
mother, Jessie Francis Starke, and was
married to Charles W. Foster, 19 years
old, were brought to 'an end yesterday
by Circuit Judge Kavanaugh, when In
vestigation showed that the girl was
really 18 years old instead of only 16,
aa had been asserted by her guardian.
When the young couple ran away to
Vancouver and were married the step
mother Immediately rounded up her
stepdaughter and attempted to have the
marriage annulled. Habeas corpus pro
ceedings caused her to discontinue this
procedure. The young girl and her
husband were In Judge Kavanaugh's
courtroom early yesterday, anxious to
get a decision as to the legality of the
marriage. It was proved to the satis
faction of the court that the girl was
18 years old, and he announced that
the girl could say for herself whether
she wanted her husband or not. She
Immediately declared she wanted him.
With her selection the stepmother
declared she would wash her hands of
the affair and started to leave the
courtroom. The young bride inter
cepted her and a reconciliation fol
lowed. RAILORAD TRACK URGED
f.ino Betwcne East First and. East
- Second Is Proposed.
Construction of a railroad through
the middle of the tier of blocks between
East First and East Second streets,
north from Hawthorne avenue, or fur
ther south, wnicn snau oo opo m j
railroad companies ami iih "
through the warehouses which may be
erected on these blocks, is a plan advo
cated tv M. B. McFaul and M. O. Col
lins, committee from tho East Side
t
1 1 -v ' : 1 1
XJhAi lj
DO YOU WANT COMFORT?
THEN GET A
SUMMIT
Town and Country Shirt
f The most comfortable shirt made
the soft standu p collar that is attache'd
right to the shirt means absolute com
fort and assures you of being well
dressed.
CJ Ask to see them and you'll want
one.
At All Shops That Sell Shirts
Guiterman Bros., Makers
1 , St. Paul, Minn.
Business Men's Club. They have had
some preliminary plans drawn showing
this branch railway running through
the center of theses blocks and across
the intersecting streets from Haw
thorne avenue.
"The convenience of such a plan is
obvious to any one who will consider the
situation," said Mr. Collins. There will
be reduced cost in handling goods to
and from the freight cars. A car could
be switched direct into the warehouse.
All that will be necessary will be to
secure a franchise to cross tho inter
vening streets, which probably will be
secured without trouble."
It Is announced that the plan is re
ceiving considerable favor from the
owners of the property.
MURPHY CASE POSTPONED
City Attorney Asked to Consider
legality of Charges.
With two members of the Civil Serv
ice Commission virtually admitting that
proper charges had not been preferred
against Cornelius G. Murphy, head
meterman in the water department until
his recent dismissal, and the other mem
OREGON
FIRST
When Marino
Plays His Violin
the merry thrcng gathered in this big dining-room
grows silent sometimes almost breathless lest they
miss one golden note that's only one attraction at
Ye Oregon Grille
For in addition Harry Glynn sings every evening and it's
worth while to hear him sing.
And the while you're being served with good food you Vc
being well entertained. Programme 6:13 to 8.30 and
10:15 to 12:13.
Every
tester
SEASIDE AND GEARHART
CLATSOP
PACIFIC
SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT
AT THE HOTELS
A good time to make hotel and other arrangements lor vacation sea
son. Trains leave Portland 8 A. M. Daily and 6:30 P. M. Saturday.
CITY TICKET OFFICE, FIFTH AND STARK STREETS.
XORTH BANK STATION, ELEVENTH AND HOYT STS.
if
ber silent on the subject. Mayor Rush
light yesterday suggested that an
opinion bo secured from tho City At
torney on the subject. His suggestion
was taken and the case was therefore
postponed.
Mr. Murphy was discharged by the
Water Board upon charges initiated by
Mayor Rushlight, but which he declared
yesterday were prepared by City At
torney Grant. The fact that Mr. Grant
prepared the papers led Roger 15.
Kinnott, counsel for Mr. Murphy, to
predict, after the meeting, that Mr.
Grant's opinion would be to the effert
that 'the charges were sufficient to
meet the requirements of the charter.
Mr. Murphy appealed from the action
of the Water Board because he con
tended that he was not properly served
with charges, and that the whole action
was illegal, as well as to deny the
charge, which was that he sold city
property and appropriated the fund3
to himself.
J. E. Stearns Is Aspirant.
CENTRALTA. Wash.. April 2. (Spe
cial ) J. E. Stearns, Deputy Auditor ot
Lewis County, today announced h's
candidacy for the nomination of Coun
ty Auditor on the Republican ticki.
to succeed H. H. Swofford.
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