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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1912)
:4; TITE MORNTXG OHEOOXTAX. TTIURSDAY. .TUNIS 1.1. 1912. (CUBAN TASK DIFFICULT rXAVY PREPARES TO UKMAIX IN JfcLAXD MAXV WKKKS. 'Humor Heard Tliat Cuba Ibiclf Fos " toretl Rebellion Which Xow Is IW-jond Control. t WASHINGTON. June 12. Naval of floors ar of the opinion that their task of policing eaitern Cuba will be a Ion one. for Tuesday's orders show ths colliers are being made ready to carry supplies to the vessels In Cuban wa ters sufficient to meet their needs for weeks. ' The collier Hector Is scheduled to leave Hampton Roads next Monday for .Key West, and probably will proceed (from there to Guantanamo. The col Uler Celtic Is under orders to leave Bos lion within a fortnight, and her cruisi wlso In all probability will end a Guantanamo. t The commander of the gunboat .Taducah reports great uneasiness in Santiago and vicinity. Reports also rame of ominous movements -on the part of the lnsurrectoa and of appeals for help from plantation owners. From one source came a rumor tha Cuba Itself had fostered the lnturrec tlon for certain political purposes, but thai .ha mnvumjint h A rnn h,vnnif If. j control. The State Department knows nothing to confirm this rumor. There was talk today at the Wsr Department of sending some Army of fleer to Cuba to make an Impartial In ventilation of conditions there and possible to act as an Intermediary In restoring peace between the factions. It Is the common belief that If tn the end Intervention in Cuba Is a necessity there must be sweeping changes In tbe organic law of the republic to' guard gainst the recurrence of conditions that have made the present insurrec tion possible. EX-WOOER KILLS WIDOW Woman Ignorant! Courts Death ) and finds It In Salt Lake, t v SALT LAKE CITT, June 12. When Mrs. Margaret Martin thrust some flowers under the nose of a streetcar j conductor on leaving the car at the 1 Haltalr Station yesterday, she Ignorant- ly courted death. W infield Wood, a col lector, riding a bicycle, aaw th pleas entry, drew a revolver and shot ' the woman through the body. She was tekem to the hospital to die. Wood .waited for the police. In explanation of his crime Wood nald that Mrs. Martin had enmeshed him In the thrall of vices two yeara before, borrowed his money and caused him to neglect his wife and children, i Mrs. llartin was shot and wounded 'even years ago by a Mrs. Douglas, who said that her husband had fallen fa victim to Mrs. Martin's allurements. lately Mn Martin' had been -working at a Saltalr beach lunch counter. She ils a widow, 37 years old, and has chll jdren almost grown. .BUFFALO, WYO., FLOODED I Wall of Water Rashes on Town i One Dead, Others Mar Be Lost. ! BILLINGS. Mont. Jun 12. One man known to be drowned and many others escaped a similar fate' at the .Inland town of Buffalo, Wyo.. last I night, says a special to too. Dally Cassette, when a wall of water 25 feet high rushed down upon the city with out warning, following a cloudburst In Clear Creek Canyon, ten miles west ;of the town. The high water con tinued for two hours, arriving-at 7:39 and subsiding at 1:30. The lower part of the city was com pletely inundated, houses were demol ished and the people were driven to higher ground. r'lfty head of horses were drowned In a livery stable. The water was six feet deep on the main street and four feet deep in the lobby of the principal hotel. The property loss is at least 1250.000. Details of the disaster are meager and many more may have been drowned than first reported. The en tire town Is engaged in rescue work and Sheridan has been appealed to for help. CUBAN TROOPS ARE ACTIVE llavuna Pleased Ilecause Additional Warships Are Not to Be Sent. . HAVANA. June 12. News from Washington, that orders for additional warships at Havana have been counter manded has been received here with the liveliest satisfaction dlxslDat.nir tha Iperll of Immediate-Intervention. - The Government continues to impress the fullest confidence In its ability to :tamp out the Insurrection. General .Monteagudo, who ' is in command of the Cuban troops In Oriente, Is so Jnatlsrted with military conditions there that ha does not deem it necessary to augment the forces now in the Held with a contingent of 3000 veterans of fered by General Juan Mario Menocal, ex-President of the Veterans Assocla- Ion. ' ' Government reports show that the roops are still pursuing the insur- ents In an effort to make an envelop. ng movement, but the insurgents arc ported as threatening the city of iuantanamo dtsplto the presence then sf a strong force of marine and a con tingent of Cuban troops.. OUSE FAVORS BORAH BILL rrlgatlon Committee Urges Home stead Measure Be- Passed. I oheoonian news bureau, (Washington, June II. The House Ir rigation committee today 'favorably reported the Borah bill ' wtilch ha passed the Senate, directing that pat ient be Issued to all homesteaders' oh (Joverirment irrigation projects as ioon as 4 hey comply .with the home sttead law and cultivate .half their en try, the Government to retain a 'Hen upon the land to cover art unpaid wa er charges. This will enable recla mation settlers to get title. In three B ears Instead of waiting ten er more, as now required by 'law. j The prospect 1 good1 for final pass age of the bill before adjournment lAn amendment requiring ..payment of 0 per cent of the water- charges be- fore receiving the patent, was struck .ut. v ..... . EIR HALTS AVIATION HOPE fHlrth Turned Lady Crevllle's Am bition to Other Desires.' j LONDON, June 12. (Special.) Lady jOrevllle. It is rumored, has no longer the ambition. to become a licensed avla- or. The tragedy or her brother's death clinched her decision to try something less sensational than flying, j I.ady Orevllle is a daughter, of J. W. Grace, of New York, and a cousin of Lady Donuutchmore. She created a sen sation when she went for an aerial tjia with her brother over London, a I ahort while before the Journey which ended In his disappearance and pre sumably his death. She practically qualified for her fly Ing certificate, but at the express wish of ber husband she abandoned the Idea and Joined the Rambler's Club In stead a tame thing by comparison and the picturesque, gipsy-like life which the membership ef tbe "Ram blers" Involves will no doubt be more suitable to the mother of tbe young son and heir which Lady Grevllle has Just presented to her husband than the risks surrounding a flight ever St. Paul's Cathredral or tbe House of Parliament. It took ber husband some time fore he could subdue by argument the adventurous spirit In his wife, but now the arrival of- an heir is said to have reconciled her to the stalder order of things and she Is oulte busy develop ing Ideas to make the Kamblers' Club a big attraction for society women. To begin with she bas devised a novel kind of canvas tent for us at race meetings. RUSE, DECLARES BARNES TALK OF COMPROMISE SIGX OF WEAKNESS, HE SAYS. ' Gossip in Lobbies at Convention City Suggest Dark Horse New Yorker Emphatic in Statement. CHICAGO. June la. A murmur of gossip suggesting a possible compro mise candidate or dark horse which swept through the hotel lobbies yester day and last night drew forth a vigor otis statement from William Barnes, Jr. nf New York. Mr. Barnes gave out the following comment on behalf of the Tart forces: iriere nas been talk regarding a compromise candidate for President. This proposal is purely a ruse on the part of the Roosevelt forces who realise that they will be defeated in the con vention and are now endeavoring to break up the Taft alignment by talk ing compromise. 'Mr. Roosevelt said and in this I agree with him. The compromise can didate will be me.' That the Roose velt men themselves are talking com promise tonight Is the positive evi dence of the loss of their causa and of their hope of creating dissension in the rank of President Taft, through appealing to the very natural Instinct on the part of any Republican to avert sharp division of forces. But tbe purpose is perfectly clear to the dele gates assembled. My only object in making this state ment is that it may be given such cur rency that it will also be clear to tne Republicans throughout the country." Mr. Barnes was emphatic In hi decl aration that there would be no com promise. BANK ROBBERY FAILURE TELLER GIVES $115 AT POINT OF CIS THIEF CAVGI1T. Denver Pedestrians Chase Him as He Rnns and. After Several Shots, Effect Capture. DENVER, June 12. X man giving Is name as J. Caldwell and hi age us 30 years, walked. Jnto the State Mercantile Bank 1 In . the Ernest and Cramer" building, "a few minute be fore the closing hour Tuesday, ejbdwed his way to the. paying teller win dow, presented a pistol and In sub dued tone ordered Earl B. Funk to hand over the money In the rack. The man secured about 1115 in gold. hurried toward the doer-and ran along crowded business thoroughfare. He was captured after a ahort chase by pedestrian and police. In which sev- ral shots were fired. The money was recovered. ' Caldwell said he came to Denver ten ays ago from hpnkane. Wash., where was employed hy the street railway company. Ills wife was taken into astody in a downtown rooming house. where the couple, have been living. nd was held as a witness. . BESS CLUB TP BE HOST MARYLAND OFFICERS AND AD MEN ARE INVITED. Ten Vaudeville -Acts From Portland Theaters Will Be Featured on Programme. Officers of the cruiser Maryland. -del. egateg to the Padflo Coast Ad Men's convention, and newspapermen visiting In Portland will be the guests of Port land newspapermen at the annual Rose estlval Press Club Jinks at the Port land Press Club tonight. The club room sre In the Elks' building, at Sixth and Stark streets. No Individual invitation will be sent out, the pro- ramme being Informal, and the Invita tion general to the guests. , Ten of the best vaudeville acts now t various Portland theaters will b featured for' the evening's entertain ment. An orchestra will furnish mu sic. Refreshment will be served. It is planned to start the programme" t 8:30 P. M.. but if the electrical par ade Is held, the Pres Club Jink will not begin until the parade la over. Charle N. Ryan, chairman of the en. tertalnment committee, promises some brand-new stunts. He says talented women performers will have a promi nent place on the programme. Boats Pressed Into Service. PRATTLE. June li. Word was re ceived by the owners today that Cap- n ikirtiana w. Perry, or the revenae cufter Manning baa Impressed the barge S, James and the tug Printer, which were at Kodlak with too tons f coal, for relief purposes. . The St, James is being used to house refugees nd the tug has been converted into dispatch boat. Business Man Shoots Tramp. ECHO. Or June 1J. (Special.) H. Smith, a business man of this place. last night shot' a drunken tramp, the ullet striking ' the man in the face and lodging In his neck. Mr. Smith says the shooting 'was tn self-defense. was not arrested. The injured man was taken to the hospital at Pendleton. Four Tramps Burn to Death. MAKINAW CITY. Mich.. June 11. Four unidentified tramps were burned to death here last night in a fire that destroyed a small fish shed. The tramps act started a fire near the shed and then crawled Into tbe building to sleep. Dan Tomba ef Bowllnr Oreen. Mo.. Is prnhably h ounsat ratlkrain with a hnk account in America. ie is now s 1 11 ovt-r seven yours old. has an account the Farmers Hank of Howllne Oman. ivntl if engaged Jn htilng calves, a. shown I P.l Ml. Af hi. Chuck. h flr, n n t, - wrote, t. r: eiiters protes COLONEL SAYS PRESIDEN'CT TREATED AS GIFT. Right, of the People to Nominate Whom They Please Is Dis cussed by Roosevelt. OYSTER BAY. N. T.. June 12. With an attack on his opponents In the Re publican National Committee and on President Taft. Colonel Roosevelt pro tested last night against the course o affairs at Chicago. ' In a statement he said Mr. Tsft as earned "that the Presidency Is to be treated a a gift within -the bestowal of the politicians. In defiance of til duly expressed wish of the people. "Such conduct." the Colonel wrote "come dangerously near being trea on to the whole spirit of our Instltu tlon. to the whole spirit of democratl free government." The ex-President laid especial stress on the action of the committee In seat ing Taft delegate from the Thirteenth District, of Indiana. . notwithstanding the fact, he aaid. that the Roosevel men. clearly were In the majority In the. convention which was called to elect these two delegates. Colonel Roosevelt statement says in part: "The question at Chicago becomes clearer with every vote of the National committee. It is simply whether the people have the right to nominate whomever they wlah for the highest office in tnelr2glft or whether by de liberate theft and fraud certain m chine leaders, acting in the Interest of special privilege, are to be permitted to deprive the people of this right. are face to face with the que tlon whether the people rule the Re publican party or whether the party Is to be ruled by the discredited bosses whom the people hsve repudiated. Who are the. regulars? The great majority of the Republican rank and file who have Just overwhelmingly re pudlated the bosses, or the bosses who have Just been overwhelmingly repu dieted by the rank and file? The Na tional committeemen, like Messrs. P n- rose, Mulvane, Murphy and company, have no claim to speak for the Repub lican party, have no claim to consider themselves regular. They have Just been repudiated by the Republican party. They - have no wish tor Re publican success. Their actions mak, It evident that In their anger at the party that bas repudiated them ttey now seek to bring tl-e party down to share their own disaster." DR. EDWARD ELLISON WEDS Brownsville Man Marries Classmate on Day pt Graduation. LOS ANGELES. Cal.. June 12. (Spe claL) A marriage of Interest to a wide circle of friend wa solemnised In the Highland Park First Presbyterian Church today, when Miss Francis Gault, daughter of Frank M. Gault. of Geary, Okla., became the bride of Dr. lid ward Ellison, formerly a resident of Nebraska, now of Brownsville. Or. The bride since childhood ha lived with her aunts. Miss Jessie Gault and Dr. Sophia Gault. In Highland Park. She was an Occidental student and on the day of her wedding was graduated from the Los Angeles College of Oste opathy, where Dr. Ellison also re cetved his diploma in January. - Dr. and Mrs. Elison'a honeymoon will fcncUide the Columbia River trip and they will be at home after July IS, in Brownsville, where their new residence is in process of construction. WOMAN GIVES NO SPEECH rolite "Cop" Induces Orator to Give Vp Demonstration Idea, HAN DIElrO. Cel.. June 12. The In dustrial Workers tried to hold a street meeting this afternoon, but when Mrs. Laura P. Emerson, who has been live In the agitation, attempted to address the crowd, a police sergeant induced her to desist. The sergeant was very polite. H touched his helmet and Informed her that for the present, at least, street oratory' could not he permitted. Taking her arm, he escorted her from her im provised rostrum. , Meanwhile other policemen kept the crowd moving. In af few momenta the attempted dem onatratlon wa at an end. FREEL DEFEATS STRIKERS Stereotypers Divided Over Chicago Delegates, but Vphold President PAN FRANCISCO. June 12 Presi dent Free, of the International Stereo typers and Kleetrotypers" Union. Bold Ing Its ltth annual convention here. was victorious Tuesday In hi ftsrht sgalnst the seating of three Chicago delegates, who were barred becauce tlte charter of their union had been an nulled. Freel took away the Chicago char ter because the union Joined In thi strike of the web pressmen. A re port of the committee on credentials favoring the seating of the Chicago men was refused by President Freel and acting on his order to return a second finding, the committee reported against the three contestants. The controversy over the seating of the three. contested Chicago delegates prevented the organisation of the con vention at the morning sesalon. Freel' .ruling aroused a storm of angry altercation in which hisses and catcalls frequently were heard. The factions buried tbe hatchet at the close of the business session today and turned out in force tonight for the grand bail held under tbe auspices of the Ladles' Auxllliary No. 11. RAIN AND ASHES FORM LYE Aftermath of Eruptions Bnrns Bod ies of Thoee Alive. CORDOVA. Alaska. June 12. Al though five day have passed since Katmal volcano burst forth In erup tion, there ha been little relief here from the volcenlo smoke and ash which hang low over the mountains. The first real danger here from the volcanic action wa mad apparent Monday night, when a heavy rain began to fall, the water mixing with the aah In forming sulphuric acid, which burned painfully whenever It came in contact with the unprotected part of the bodies of people on the street- Be fore the caase of tha burns was re alised, many persons received painful burns In the eyes, although none was severely injured. Analysis of the drinking water yesterday showed that It contained sulphuric add and phy sicians have directed householders to use lime water as a counter agent. Telephonic report from Katalla aald similar condition .prevailed there. ' The men in charge of the naval wire less ststlon here were busy yesterday' enlarging their apparatua to Increase sending power, so that they could com municate direct with, the revenue cut ter Alan n log. which. U doing relief service at Kodlak. They hope to get 1 In touch with the Manning tonight. j BRISTOL BAY KAFE, IS IIOTE j L. O. Belland, Formerly of Alaska, Thijik District Not Affected. L. O. Bellsnd. who was superintend ent of salmon canneries on the Nuaha- I gak lUver. In Bristol Bay. Alaska, for a I number of seasons and whose brother has been a fur trapper for years In J that district, said Inst night st the I Multnomah' that he was absolutely: certain no alarm ahould be felt for! the people and Interests In the Bristol Bay district on account of the recent I reported volcanic disturbances Ini Alaska. , . "For the last 20 years or more." j he said, "there have been volcanic dla- j turhanres In Alaska, hut they have al ways been In a southerly direction, never affecting the Bristol Bay dis trict. Many years before we went north we learned of volcanic disturbances having happened with accompanying floats of ash, but upon reaching Bris tol Bay the natives were entirely ig norant of the happening. For this re a-". son I am sure that the Bristol Bay district has not been affected, but am fearful for much of the district south of lt SHEEPMAN KILLS EDITOR! PAISLEY SCRIBE DIES AT j HANDS OF ANGRY HUSBAND, j t'nexpectcd Home-Coming Is Fol lowed by Tragedy Coroner's Jury Exonerates Slayer.' PA ISLET, Or.. June 12. (Special.) L. R. Jones, editor of the Chewaucan Press, wa shot and Instantly killed here Monday night by Frank Cannon, a well-known sheepman of Central Ore gon. The shooting took place in the woodshed of the Cannon home, where the editor had fled when Cannon re turned home unexpectedly and found Jones In company with Mrs. Cannon. A Coroner's Jury this afternoon brought In a verdict of Justifiable homi cide. Testimony at the hearing showed that Cannon repeatedly had warned the newspaperman to desist in hi atten tions to Mrs. Cannqn. Whether the sheepman deliberately timed his homecoming to trap Jones and 1 he wife I not known. When Can non entered the house Jones fled and the irate husband opened fire, follow ing the editor. Jones tried to hide In the woodshed, but Cannon pursued and fired at close range. Jones fell dead. Cannon gave himself np to the officers. W. Lair Thompson, state benator. has ben employed to defend Cannon Mr. Cannon is the daughter of a pioneer of Lake County and her hus band has made a fortune la the sheep business. Jones came here two yeara sgo itnd founded the Chewaucan Press He bad borne a good reputation. CLOSED SHOP INTENDED BUILDING TRADES STRIKE IN LOS ANGELES CALLED. Anton Johannsen Passes Word In stituting What I Regarded as First of Series. LOS ANGELES, June 12. (Special.) A strike of the union members of the building trades has been called tomor row. There is no dispute about hours or wages, but the closed shop Is the workers' objective. Anton Johannsen. of San .""ranclsco, now under Federal ndlctment for alleged conspiracy to transport dynamite illegally, backed by aeveral Han Francisco union officials and local leaders, la the head nf the movement. Johannsen arrived today and the word was passed to go out to morrow morning at 9 o'clock. The Builders' Exchange declares this Is a violation of a promise given by the organisation to the effect that 0 days' notice of any strike would be given. There are approximately 6500 union men in the building trades and It is expected 4000 will strike. Contractors onight say that they have enough men on hand to take the places or the strikers and it will be unnecessary to niport help. It Is understood the strike I to be confined to the build- ng trades' department, but it is to be he forerunner of a series scheduled with the object of making this a closed shop city. Many members of the Building Trades Council opposed the strike and here was a determined fight in that organization before the programme was put through. OLD ODDER IS PASSING EXGLIS1I LANDLORD'S ESTATES BEIXG DIVIDED. - Tenants Are Xow Becoming Owners of Small Tracts Which Are Offered for Sale. LONDON. - June 1. (Special.) Tbe true old English note of hospitality sounded In tbe fest held at Benham Valence, near Newbury, In honor of the coming of age ot itlr Richard Vincent Sutton. A thousand gueata were en tertained, the tenantry presented a congratulatory addreas. and the heir to 1500.000 a year, an Inheritance from hi father, who died two month before he wa born, made a speech. Such an event ha undeniarf.e social nterest. emphasizing, as It does, the eudal strnoture of English society in country Paris, with the squire house as the fount of patronage. The level- ng tendencies of recent day have done much to remove old social landmaraa, aided by the restless spirit nf change ntroduced - by the automobile nabit. which makes the formerly stav-at- hnme squire constant wanderers from their country seata But the great territorial families still elgnatixe family happenings with Jun ketings on their estate. People in the neighborhood of Dunrobln Castle still slk over the happy memories of the Marquis of Stafford's coming of age, while there were gay doings at Went- worth Woodhouse, the historic York- hire seat of the Earl and Countess Fltxwtlllam. when over T000 guests were entertained for their son and elr's christening party. 1-anlownera, conscious that the old order Is passing, are, however, throw- ng their estates Into the market, and enants are becoming landowners on a mall scale themselves. Lord Ilches- ter's Fomerset estate of Redlynch. the tately Kentish home and estates of he E'er! of Crsnbrook. together with Iseount Churchill's sest and estates t Leicestershire, are now in the mar- et. One of the biggeat real eatate gent in London haa done more than ii,00u,0M worth, of business during this. frf Jlj no fpf KODAK SIMPLICITY Every step In photography has been made simple by the Kodak system. Loading in daylight, focusing without a ground glass (no focusing at all with the smaller sixes), daylight development and Velox printing these are Kodak features. We have a complete line of Kodaks and supplies, and we do prompt de veloping and printing. Ask for a Kodak catalogue. COLUMBIAN OPTICAL CO. 145 Sixth street. Sell lag Blear, Retwtea Alder aad Morrlsoa. last year, much of the property sold having been cut up for small holdings. DURING TOREADOR PACK BOMBITA, FAMOCS BULLFIGHT ER, IS RECOVERED. Spanish Enthusiasts, Including I"Jng Alfonso, Gives "Tlie Ear" to Noted Athlete. MADRID. June (Special.) In splto of all the dangers threatening Alfonso's throne Spain Is gay today. For Bomblts, the most famous living toreador. 1 bark again In the bull ring and has been greeted by thou sands of Spaniards, especial the wo men, with frenxled enthusiasm. Hi daring was such that last year ha received an ugly wound, being gored by a bull whose agility he estimated a shade too .lightly. Doctors said he would never perform again. but strength of will in their patient has since aided the surgeons and, todar there Is no weakneaa discernible in tbe national favorite. So much doe be excel that Spanish society, right up to the King and Queen, delight to show Mm honor. He re ceives enormous fees, runs his own automobiles and Is met with In most exclusive salons. On his first performance after his recovery his cool audacity. In the face of the angry bulla, roused the vaat gathering to urh transports that when he at last despatched the animal ths air rang with erle of "the ear! the ear!" by which they signified tholr wish that Bomblta should tarry awsy the hull's ear as a proof of prowess and popular approval. King Alfonso Joined In th clamor and the ear wa accord ingly awarded to the dexterous per former. The Queen was there, too. In Joyous raiment, but though she does her best to conciliate Spanish opinion. she lias small taste for bullfight and takes hut a languid Interest In tncl- j The End of the School Year Is apt to be a drag on many children, unless the mother is careful to supply the kind of food to properly nourish their fast-growing bodies and rapidly developing brains. Grape-Mnfs FOOD meets Nature's demands for the necessary food elements, in proper balance. Its rich nourishment is in concentrated, easily digested, form, supplying body and brain with vigor and endurance. "There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts 'Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. aM C dent that aend her companion Into wild excitement. FRENCH COMBINES QUEER RoyaUMs Join With Socialists to De feat Radicals. PARI8. June I.. (Special.) Queer result have followed seven by-elections in French constituencies within the past month. If they prove a true indication of the general tendency In the country, radicalism Is doomed to extinction through the strange co-operation of royalists and socialists. Adversity makes queer bedfellows, but It Is truly a strange circumstance that ha brought royalists and social ists Into the same camp. Ths radicals are the backbone ot the Republican majority In tbe Chamber. There waa no uneaatneaa about theae aeven elec tions for the seata had been radical for yeara. In each case the first con tests brought a radical, a royalist and a socialist candidate into the field. Every time the radical came out at the top of the poll, but not with a major ity of more than half th vote pulled, a required by French electoral law. So second ballot were ordered and In each caae either the aoclallat or th royalist withdrew and these two par ties lumped their forces together and beat the radical every time. In two caaea the first ballot gave majorities of 1000 and 4000 for the radicals, hut the opposition Mending In the second ballota have returned royallats with the aid of advanced socialists. It so happens that the radicals op pose proportional repreaentstlon as a leap In the dark, yet had there been such a system In those eases the seata would still be held by radicals. There is dlsmsy In Republican circles In Parle, though all agree that the oppo sition union Is unnatural and cannot long continue. Sir Ttenry Irvie.rs wrltlns .effectually ene realed Ma meanlne and openlnss s atehful mra. Ma once a rata a letter of Instant dismissal ts a subordinate. hs with difficult? deciphered It, and used It as a free pass te the Lyceum Theater la London fcr ysrs Sh oes Repaired ffs call for and deliver shoes to any part of the city, if In a hurry we repair shoes while you watt at our downtown shop. 1.11 11th streot. between TV a s h I n gton and Alder. Fhone for a wsgon. Hocks darned FRKK. PERFECT LAUNDRY WORK sua After a trlsl erdr you will not he qulla so sat Isflod with anv other laundry. Von will recognise the difference. bnlrts mended KKbh,. 0 1 J. M. J. Kohler & Chase Latablshed 1850 Wholesale and Retail We Rent Pianos All Standard Makes Sole Agents for Web er, Steck,,,Yose & Sons, Fischer Kohler & Chase and other standard makes. (Sole agents for pianola pianos.) Out-of-town dealers should write for our special whole sale arrangement and share in the profits of pianos which will ho sold in your vicinity this season. Exclusive territory now open to responsible dealers, Write today. Kohler & Chase 375 Washington St., . Portland, Oregon SAPOLIO The, big cake that does not waste, scatter or melt CLEANS, SCOURS, POLISHES FROM CELLAR TO GARKE1 START A DAND Ze&gs rtia: r. AST II r JB. 4 Vl I K4ST TFATM I AT KVKH.ICTT I SF 3I.U--,J-I.JI I I '"- i ft FIMOS 0aVtftf aafBaaaBfAfa)