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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1912)
, THE arORXIXG OREGOXIAX. SATURDAY, OCTOBER. 1912. 8 JOHNSON CONFERS WITH ROOSEVELT Colonel Asks No Quarter and Agrees With Mr. Bryan, Governor Declares. POLICE GUARD FURNISHED Chicago Chief Details Force or Men to Kecort Callfornian, but He Spurns Them and Walks) In Streets Alone. . CHICAOO. Oct. 13. Spurning the of fer of a squad of police and a detail of detectives to protect him. Governor Johnson strolled today about Chicago, alone or attended by personal friends, and at noon and tonight made speeches In local theaters. Trusts and their regulation were dis cussed by the Governor in his address tonight. He insisted that regulation by commission was the solution of the problem. Governor Johnson visited Colonel Roosevelt this, morning and in both speeches assured his audience that the Colonel would be back in the fight soon. The two candidates will confer tomorrow and decide on final plans for the last two weeks of the campaign. "The greatest two-handed fighter this world has ever known," was the phrase of Governor Johnson In his characterization of Colonel Roosevelt In his address tonight. Mr. Bryan's Contention Vpheld. "Neither today nor yesterday, last week nor last month." said the Gov ernor, "has he asked any quarter from either of the old parties that are op posing him. He upholds as just and right the contention of Mr. Bryan that that which has happened to him should not be allowed to stop or confuse the fifrht. "He asks the Democrats and the Re publicans to continue their campaign, but I ask you now, you who are in terested in this great cause, to redouble your efforts in order that you may take on your shoulders a little part of the burden that he has borne so long. I ask you all to add a little of enthu siasm, a little of sacrifice In your work, so that all bearing this burden with him, may make the cause go forward as he would have done." Governor Johnson called on Colonel Roosevelt at noon and after a confer ence of half an hour emerged from the room smiling. Colonel la Looking "Fine." "He looks fine," said the Governor, speaking of the Colonel. "I told him so, and I also told him not to worry; that we are doing fine; that the peo ple were awakening to the fact our work was not a voice In the dark idly calling out a challenge to them to arise to their own responsibilities. "He laughed and told me I was mak ing an argument to him in so speak ing, and suggested I savethat to give to my audience today. "I suggested he be In no hurry to get away from the hospital and that he had better see that he did not spoil his chances of regaining his health quickly by attempting to get up and around too soon. I tried not to excite him. but when we talked we rot to feeling pretty strong and Mrs. Roosevelt and Mrs. Johnson had to I top us." "Keep Fight Going-," la Command. Colonel Roosevelt's parting injunc tion to Governor Johnson was: "Keep the fight going full blast, Johnson; don't let our boys slack up In their work because I can't be with them for a few days. Tell the people you speak to I wish I could be out there working with you myself, and that I certainly will be as soon as my loctors will let me." Mrs. Johnson said she thought Col onel Roosevelt looked exceptionally v.ell and was told by him that he felt better than he looked." Twenty-five policemen escorted Gov ernor Johnson from the Grand Central Railway station to his hotel. The i:irra ruard was ordered by Chief of Police McWeeny, as a result of the attempt to assassinate Colonel Koose velt. Chief McWeeny said no chance would be taken of a similar attack on the Colonel's running mate. LA GRANDEJJKELY TO WIN Oregon Teachers, Eastern Division, Meeting at Enterprise. ENTERPRISE, Or., Oct. S.7. (Spe cial.) With nearly 500 teachers In at tendance ; the .twelfth annual conven tion of the Oregon State Teachers' As sociation, eastern division, opened here today. The sessions will continue un til Friday afternoon. The programme to Friday Includes addresses by President Kerr of the Oregon Agricultural College; President Fletcher Homan, of Willamette Uni versity; President Penrose, of Whitman College, and President Campbell, of the 'iiii-orultv of Oreeron. La Grande probably will get the 1913 convention and the new officers of the association will be chosen from eau - , . .m-o that citv. Pendleton would have had the next meeting if the Umatilla county teacn ers had not decided to stay at home .v.; ,... An the snecial train from Baker was coming to Walla Walla County, a straw vote was taken of n hnnrri with 259 voting, includ ing both men and women. The result was Wilson 143. Roosevelt 65. Taft 35, Debs 9. Chafin 6. On woman puffrage the vote was yes 177. no 81. With .1.-. nnlv votinsr the results were Wilon 26, Roosevelt 20, Taft 9, Chafin 3, Debs 1. For United States Senator Lane 17, Bourne 15. selling j. uarn o FALL FROMJRAIN HURTS Claud Kevnolds, of Castle Kock, Taken to Chehalis Hospital. runni.IS. Wash.. Oct. 18. (Spe . , 1 ) nam! Reynolds, of Castle Rock was taken to a hospital here today ciiffariTisr from serious Injuries re ceived by falling from a train near Winlock last night. His left ear was norirlv torn off. There are two holes rut in Reynolds' head and it is be lieved he suffered serious internal in juries. Section men found the man by rnilrnftil track. Joseph T. Pouliot was bound over to the Superior Court loaay oy justice ' Westover for burglarizing Robblns' -Tat Market at Mineral Monday night. - He pleaded guilty and will appear later before Judge Rice lor bciiiciuc. LA FOLLETTE'S LOGIC USED Democratic Committee Sends ex Candidate's Magazine to Voters. SALEM. Or.. Oct. 18. (Special.) Local voters are receiving letters from Will R. King, Democratic committee- . i . i II man. in which they are advised that they will receive free, until after the close of the present campaign, copies of La Follette's Magazine. The reason for sending this to the voters, he states, is to show why Roosevelt should not be President. In his letter he says: I am sending you complimentary La Fol lette's Msitazine. which you will receive un til after the close of the preent Presidential campaifrn. Kindly accept the same with the compliments of this committee. You will observe from this manazine that some very extraordinary reasons are given by Mr. LaFollette as to why ex-President Roosevelt Is not entitled to yonr support. I recognize that owing- to my party affili ations it is possible I may take to the sug gestions and advice of LaFollette, when he argues that Mr. Roosevelt should not be President, a little more readily than some who may have been affiliated with other parties; but. disregarding that feature. It seems to me that a careful reading of La Follette's Magazine should convince thu most ardent admirers of Mr. Roosevelt that he should not again be President and that the recognition of him for a third term, which would overturn all precedents upon the subject, is a dangerous course for this country to pursue. Mr. Roosevelt's strong tendency to disre gard and overturn our National Constitution and precedents should bo sufficient to con vince any lawyer that to return him to the Presidency is. to say the least, a dangerous experiment. I trust that after reading LaFolIette'a Mag azine you will kindly pass same around among your friends. U GUIDE FAITHFUL WOMAN" MAKES 600-MIXE TRIP IN ROWBOAT. Kuskokwim River In Far North Scene ot 56-Day Journey Red skin Goes Back Alone. SEATTLE, "Wash., Oct. 18. (Special.) Completing a voyage of 56 days, which began in a row boat at The Forks, 600 miles above Bethel on the Kuskokwim River, Mrs. E. T. Smith an j her little adopted daughter, Awai tha, 11 years old, arrived here at 10 o'clock today on the power schooner Bender Brothers. Little Awaitha was born at Nome and has always lived at mining camrs in the far north. Mrs. Smith, the wife of Elmer T. Smith, agent for the Kus kokwim Commercial Company, at The Forks, is making her first visit to Se attle in seven years. It is a dangerous trip down the Kus kokwim from The Forks, and only through the skill and faithfulness of their Indian guide, Senka Simute, who rowed them all the way to Bethel, were Mrs. Smith and her daughter able to make connections with the schooner. the last vessel to leave the Kuskokwim this year. 'It required 11 days for us to reach Bethel from The Forks," said Mrs. Smith, shortly after her arrival. Mrs. Smith said that Senka Simute, her guide and companion during the 11 days' journey aown the Kuskok wim, was employed in her husband's store at The Forks, and the most faith ful Indian she had. ever known! He was not only skillful in maneuvering their boat down the treacherous Kus kokwim, but guarded them day and night. He was left at Bethel to begin a 600-mIIe journey alone up the river to The Forks. GOGMEAT SOLD AS FOOD PEACE DELEGATE TELLS OF EX PERIENCE IN MUNICH. Scientific Growing; of . Mushrooms Also Appealing as Method of Re ducing Cost of Living. NEW YORK,. Oct. 18. (Special.) Mrs. Elmer Black arrived on the Mau- retania today with a plan for reducing the high cost of living by the Igor- rotte route. "When I was In Munich I saw 100 dogs sold for food in one day to poor people, exclaimed Mrs. Black, en thusiastically. "Of course, the dogs had been inspected bofore the sale and they were perfectly fit to eat. Munici pal markets are successful on the Con tinent, because of the system of rigid inspection. Mrs. Black, who Is prominent In so ciety, became interested in mushrooms, as well as dogs, while she was abroad as United States delegate to the In ternatlonal Peace Confef-enee at Ge neva. She saw at the municipal mar ket In Geneva hundreds of tons of mushrooms brought In from mush room farms. "If mushrooms were scientifically cultivated here." said Mrs. Black, "I believe they could be made to take tne nlace of meat as the principal food for the poor and materially reuuee tne cost of living." HOUSE WARMING PLANNED Transportation Club Will Open New Quarters. Plans for a formal opening and "hntiaa warmlnsr" hnva been COrnDleteu by officers and members of the Trans portation Club. The affair will lane r,iD.a in thplr newr cluh rooms in the Multnomah Hotel Thursday night, No vember 24, from 8 to ii:ju r. an. Dancing, "500" and vaudeville will be tha fan n rp m nf entertainment i Acr Mfrqhmpnts will be served. The committee in cnarge consists oi N. C. Soule, of the O.-W. R. & N. Com nanm, nhitrman- A T.. Ktenhens. of the Pacific Coast Steamship Company; R. W. Pickara, or jne Aarin dsiik xiuau, ir l. .1 . 1 1' nr rnn mini iiRrii r i I I 11 .v. Merriman, of the Southern Pacific, and v. w MnRhAr. of the Pennsvlvanla Company. E. B. Duffy, of the Denver & Rio Grande, has cnarge oi tne vauae- ville features. LA GRANDE GETS PAPER Morning Examiner Will Start Publi cation Soon. t a iiDivnr Ot- rir-t is. ( Snecial. " After a lapse of several months since the Morning Star ceased publication. La Grande is soon to have an uo-to-date morning paper. It ?s to be known as the Morning Examiner, published (Ka r.vamitipr Piihlishlnsr Company. which company has just absorbed the East Oregon Publishing Company and will put out an eigni-page paper ween- . i t-. an onlan-oil Kiinriflv edition containing magazine and colored comic section. mi.- .Jttji.lal anrl rail Hi n ftI fttftff 1 I1C Cult"'"' ' E. Haymond. editor; W. A. Hearst, city . j i . t a w a (1 o 1 p r in also n member euiiui, v. . - of the editorial staff and Edward Lang will have cnarge oi me untummu u partment. - Three Taken in Raid. In a raid on 104 U First street about . . . 1 tcrht MaV .TnhrtROn WSS R.T- IXJV lasmnb". r rested on charges of conducting a bawdy house and selling liquor with out a license. With her were taken Margaret Morris, charged with va- . .i n.n.a C RarlcAr charged grancy, mm vji r - - with visiting a bawdy house. The raid was made by ratroimta oienai l. uu Aloe. WILSON ILL NOT DISCUSS COLONEL Democratic Nominee Says He Is Hampered in Talking of Trusts and Tariff. GOVERNOR SPEAKS IN RAIN Crowd Cheers Him for Refusal to Discuss Third Party as Long as Roosevelt Is in Hospital. Plans Are Unchanged. piTTaRnno. not. 18. Wet weather campaigning brought Governor Wilson a series of merry incidents tooay an traveled throusrh West Virginia and Western Pennsylvania. Tonight In FlttsDurg ne spunc throughout the day he faced umbrellas underneath which stood enthusiastic crowds." . "I don't want to keep you siamiing in the rain," said the Governor at Wheeling, as he began to abridge nis speech. "No; no. go on," urgea tne crown. rr, -in.,AmnP fnnn.t a His- tumOUt everywhere, notwithstanding the driz zling rain which fell most of the day. Third Party Not Dlacnswed. n.i . i n n nnvarui a nerles nf sub jects in his speeches. At Wheeling he was loudly applauded when he said he would not aiscuBs tne uium io. .j s-i -i van in the hosrjital. l U 1 U i 1 1 i.uu.i i v. . t " " ... ' The Governor was saying there was a corner on prosperity m wic i v.. "vorv definite notion UI1U nidi, no " - - as to how the whole population of the United states snouia nave ieas n, . own prosperity." He began to discuss the trusts and monopolies then, but dropped short. "1 am a little bit oamperra, e bo.iv.. i j i r. r. i thia nnrt nf the oues- tion, because I have denied myself the privilege at present of discussing any thing that concerns the third party. As long as Mr. Roosevelt is confined to the hospital in Chicago. I shall have nothing to say about the third party. But I want to say this about the Demo cratic programme. Free Field for All Vrgcd. mi.. u. that Via created the trusts, that has created monopoly, is . 1 . .3 unfair rnmnetition. If We can only bring it about that newcomers shall have a Tree neio, men we take care of these gentlemen in the trusts, because then the most Intelli gent competitor will get the market, and the little man can grow big, in stead of making himself big by the legislation of Congress and by special favors from the Government. j mnra v.v havinfcr Federal law thread all this system of ours with statutes wnicn hiiuh ni . i . tv.ee c-entletnen dlrl to inai to watt, . " -j c- - build up their monopolies, and which will see to it tnai me me commit the offense against fair com petition, have time to think it over in ........ . .UU1. Y.A,r Tl - ! 1 1 some buiicing irora muiu - not for some time come out. Cbanee for Competition Seem. - . ..al 1. 1 1 tha nentten- x am iivt in I - i i -..til V,e rrnwiiad. Just as SOOr as the law takes hold or tnis tning anu men are behind tne law, wno wum. i injure nobody In particular but to ad- 4..B-tAA r ovprvhrxh'. then Bne cial favors will be withdrawn, fair competition win oe set up, una will be another face upon affairs in America." j. ne vxu v c i !-' r - j ne.i K-U Ar1nrlr tt went tO a m i n..,nn an1 MIS riB r! V rfili: II iLl banquet of the wuson uuh ox Alle gheny County. Many r-ruiutsiui tnunui. r n n a n u n (i 1 1 m "I believe," said the Governor, "that my one qualification for the Presidency is the pleasure with which I listen to the opinions or an sorts ui jjcujjio. Governor Wilson is firm in his In tentlon of closing his speaking engage ment. tomorrow night when he ap pears .v.. . The Governor reiterateu mm . would do no more speaking until Colo nel Roosevelt was able to speak again. Big Crowd Cheers Wildly. ine'wiwtoi o-u-w ........ onstration that Governor Wilson has had In his campaign greeted mm m Duquesne garden here tonight. When -A 1 Ve,.e vara r-heers. but ne ruse iu nj'caa -. the applause was almost continuous , . . i nnAAnv. nt in niinntaa tnrougnout me ocw. - ... i. . r aiiirana wan a series .lliO uu.ciuwi o of short sentences and epigrams which the crowd constantly punciuaum """" applause. Once the crowd rose in the middle of the speech and began a dem onstration that lasted several minutes. ROOSEVELTFEELS LIVELY (Continued From First Page.) reached for my manuscript it made me gasp a bit, but that was all. "It was quite amusing, ne weui vu, when T reached for my manuscript to ... fhat it had a hole in it from the bullet; and there was a hole in my spectacle case, too. The Colonel's eyes twinkled as he recalled the surprise he had felt at the discovery. 'Amusing, did you say, coionei: asked one of his hearers. "Well," he qualified, "it was inter esting." Speech Is Matter of Course. Colonel Roosevelt showed no Indica tion that he had felt the fear of death. He said he had no means of knowing, as he delivered the speech he had promised to make, whether he was wounded fatally, but accepted as a matter of course that he should go on until he finished, if his strength held out, but when It was all over and he had turned away to go to the hospital, he said, he found it difficult to keep his temper when half a dozen men scrambled over the edge of the plat form and asked him to shake hands. "They wanted to shake hands," he said, as though It still surprised him. "Didn't they know that It is Impossi ble for a man who has just been shot to shake hands with genuine cordial ity V Kmc f Assailant Not Mentioned. Of the shooting itself Colonel Roose velt had little to say. Not once did he mention the name of John Schrank, his assailant. He talked In an unemo tional way of being shot, as though he were discussing the case of a man with whom he was not acquainted. He said he felt no bitterness or rancor. Colonel Roosevelt spoke of his pres ent condition and speculated on the chance that he would have blood-poisoning or some other serious compli cation. The physicians thought he was getting well, he said, but they had told him there still remained the chance of a setback. The Colonel said he felt no pain at present. He placed his right fore finger carefully on his breast to indi cate the position of the wound and said that while he still had an occasional twinge to remind him of It, he was at e8The Colonel still had trouble with his broken rib, he said. His only ap- A HAPPY. LAUG CHILD IN FEW HOURS If Cross, Irritable, Feverish, Tonrue Coated and Sick, Give Delicious "Syrup of rigs." Tour child Isn't naturally cross, ir ritable and peevish. Mother! Kxamlne the, tongue; If coated, it means the lit tle one's stomach Is disordered, liver Inactive and its thirty feet of bowels clogged with foul, decaying waste. Everv mother realizes after giving delicious "Syrup of Figs" that this is the ideal laxative and physic for chil dren. Nothing else regulates the little one's tender stomach, liver and bowels so effectually, besides they dearly lovs its delightful fig taste. For constipated bowels, sluggish liver, biliousness, or sour, disordered stom ach, feverlshness, diarrhoea, sore throat, bad breath or to break a cold, give one-half to a teaspoonful of "Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all the clogged-up waste, sour bile, undi gested food and constipated matter will gently move on and out of the system without griping or nausea, and you will surelv have a well, happy and smiling child again shortly. With Syrup ot rags you are not arug ging your children, being composed en tirely of lnsctous figs, senna and aro- matics It cannot be. harmful. Full directions for children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the package. Ask your druggist for the full name, "Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna," prepared by the California Fig Syrup Co. This Is the delicious tasting, genu ine old reliable. Refuse anything els offered. parent worry was lest the rib should not knit quickly enough to permit him to make a few speeches in the closing days of the campaign. No Quarter Is Asked, re t o-er that rib knit so that ,ke eo-e. Vinlri " ha said, "and it doesn't pain me to take a deep breath, I hope to make some more speecnes wees, al ter next. "They'll have to be short speeches at first, I suppose," he said, "but I'll make some good ones." The Colonel paused for a moment. He set his Jaw hard and clenched his first for the only time during the in terview. "I ask no quarter," he said. ' "It is amusing to see the predica ment of Governor Marshall." he added with a laugh. "The Governor has i n makinp- hia ramnalci on the as sertion that I was not at San Juan Hill. This may stagger him, out in a ween he will discover that I was not shot at ,ii ,i.t anvwnv It was birdshot and that it hit another man -instead of me, and Anally, tnat i was in jsnosn that night." Trip Home on Monday Planned. His physicians told the Colonel that probably he could leave for Oyster Bay rt Mnnrtnv nr Tnesdav and the Colonel at .once made up his mind that he would go on the earnest train on jnunuay which would suit his purposes. i-.nin-.Al IJnnnQi-fllt Tllfa nf the vi.ft V I'll'I't. A.vwau.w.w urw w ' of Goverhor Johnson, his running mate. who spent a snort time witu mm ima af lernoon. "We discussed the social and indus trial planks of the platform," he said, "and talked over the political situation, but for the most part we talked of other things, not politics." SACRIFICE OF LEG FATAL CRIPPLE WHO GAVE WITHERED LIMB FOR OTHER DIES. Billy Rugh Gasps, "I'm Some Good After All," and Dies for Girl He Never Saw. GARY, Ind., Oct. 18. "I guess I'm some good, after all." Billy Rugh, the 41-year-old cripple whose withered leg was amputated to save the life of a girl by a sHin-graft-lng operation at a hospital here, spoke these words this morning and then dlea- u , Pneumonia was said by the physi cians to be the cause of death. The ailment, however, resulted directly from his self-sacrifice, having been due to irritation of the lungs by the ether that was given him when his leg was cut off to furnish skin for the body of a person whem he had never seen. Rugh had no relatives, and since coming to Gary several years ago, made his living sellings newspaper on the streets. He had to be trusted for the first bundle or newspapers .... which he started business Miss Ethel Smith, the girl for whom . tiAAn v, u lec- nnd later his life. had been terribly burned In a motor cycle accident. It is just two days since her recovery advanced sufficient ly to permit her removal from the hospital in which Rugh died. DINNER GUEST HONORED Friends Entertain for Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Lively. In compliment to Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Lively. 'Who are soon to leave, for San .v,e,e Mr T.ivelv is to as sume his' new position as director of the livestock department ' ama Pacific Exposition, his friends of the Portland Livestock Exchange and their ladles gave a banquet in .the la dies' dining-room of the Commercial O. M. Plummer, who will succeed Mr Lively as vlce-presiaeni oi mo -i TTa.inn etrwir-v-a yds. n resided i , in a Ar i of short speeches, bade farewell and expressed their good wishes ior uieir uoyoi .."s friends. Mr. Lively was presented i . i. - nu.nntintafl umbrella as a memento from his business associates in the Livestock Exchange. iiie pre sentation was made by F. C. Sharkey, ex-president of the Livestock Ex change. Those present were :Mr. and Mrs. D. r t t..-.i.. xt,. onH Mm. O. M. Plummer, J.' F. Carroll. Miss Carroll, Mr. and Mrs. T1 t r , TV T T TnnerhtreV. Mr. and l. xi. " " ' - c ... r m r -Et.n.nTi William Burke. Jr.. 1V119. X. u-"- "i .. - - Mr. and Mrs. Rx B. Caswell, Mr- and Mrs. J. L. Sterrett, Mr. ana airs. j. . Creath, Mr. and Mrs. F. F. Stonerod, Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Letter. C. S. Jack son, F. M. Lacey, Mr. and Mrs. v. D, Crosby. F. C. Sharkey. L. R. McGee, M, Barbour, C. R. Hall, G. W. Bruce, O. D. Jones. WHALE CARCASSES MENACE Fatal WVecks Feared in Collisions With Dead Sea Animals. nn i mmi V TtT V. t IB fH nt I Tl DCjAIliJCi " - Louis Knaflisch, of the power schooner Bender Brothers, which arrived from Bethel, Alaska, today, said that car casses OI WJimca ... -' - o and Akutan Harbor are a menace to navigation. ' ' Whales were slaughtered by hundreds in Behrlng Sea this year. Captain Knaflisch says and the carcasses wero set adrift after the oil had been taken. There were nearly 200 carcasses in murk 11. i I The Best Place to Buy a Piano When QUALITY Is the Chief Consideration The careless purchaser of a piano buys only for today. The intelligent pur- UBeAliSieCo.'S store THE QUALITY THOUGHT IS Upi PERMOST. No matter what price you. pay for a piano, you are entitled to the maximum degree of quality. The tone, the grade of material, the character of workmanship are matters that the average layman cannot judge accurately. Yet they have the most important relation to the future satisfaction of the pur chaser. It is a case where the seller must be trusted to know that every factor 1S Clumsiness of The Wiley B. Allen Co. is founded upon the broad principle that no large success can be expected unless confidence is deservedand abso lute satisfaction follows each individual sale. The Wiley B. Allen Co.'s line of pianos and player -pianos is not only the strongest but one of the largest to be found anywhere. Choose your favorite SSnt amoSg these famous makes: MASON & HAMLIN, HARDMAN, PACRD, LUDWIG, KRAKAUER, HARRINGTON, PRICE & TEEPLE, HENSEL and others. This week we offer at very low prices a . large, number of used pianos of celebrated makes. EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS IF DESIRED. Talking Machines and Records Akutan Harbor and 100 adrift In Bering Sea when the Bender Brothers sailed. They average loo tons in weigm aim might sink a small schooner in col- 11SThe Bender Brothers brought $10,000 in gold and a valuable shipment of furs from the Kuskokwim River district. Woman Hurt In Car Crash. Thrown to the floor of a Sunnyslde streetcar early last night when the car on which she was riding collided with a North and South Portland car ajjg MB y te- -nil r i & v Hrft J ' .r GhlTUY is far above any other beverage of its kind. If you've never served it in your home, begin doinp: very healthful or the ramily and very refreshing when the nerves are mind and body taste and good? Just try it Very economical D. GHIRARDELLI CO. piS?fe issf Sfc fiTs-st'sT IB t ii r s isn s mi SEVENTH AND MORRISON STREETS at Third and Morrison streets. Miss Lydla Miller, of 1209 East Yamhill street, was badly bruised about the head and body. The accident is sup posed to have occurred through a mis take in signals among the streetcar crews. She was taken to her home in the Red Cross ambulance and attended by Dr. H. F. Leonard. Minimum Wage Bill Indorsed. At the regular meeting of the Cen tral Labor Council last night in Labor Temple, the proposed' minimum wage bill, as suggested by the Consumers' IS The actual difference between the sun and earth varies at different times of the vesr. but on the average it is ninety-three million miles. TtiTiTmarvelona distance is better understood, perhaps, when it is pointed out that it would take a train, running and sixty-five years to accomplish the distance. In the opinion of many so at-once. Its for every member on ease and the tired. Does it Pianos an! Flayer Pianos i if iiisur League, was approved. On this sub ject the council will be addressed by Father O JHara at its next, meeuns. The matter of indorsing candidates for different state and county offices was discussed at length two hours and it resulted in the Indorsement of Fitz gerald, for Sheriff, and a postponement was agreed upon until the next meet ing for consideration of the other nom inees. Paderewski's choice the famous Weber piano sold only by Kohler & Chase. 375 Washington at West Park." THE SUNS? forty miles an hour about two hundred , With the a,pparanr of th ! ri( of Intrenting In ..rni-Kiion' will tin f,nht rnm th nnnrr. "K'h.m'i tb connection T" There inn t any. Yb are limp. 7 adopting this form of swiver-tir-:n in the bnpe that in ao'iiiiun iu caning iiiro- kiuu m uMr prcuucb, lb win be a tourcr of Interrat to all who read it. Cocoa