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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 15, 1913)
n 7 THE MORNING OREGONIAN. . WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 15, 1913. TOURIST RATES UP If you only knew what pleasure FOR ALTERATIONS Victor-Victrola brings into your home, you Plan to Make Round-Trip Summer Tickets Apply Daily Divides Officials. wouldn't be without one for a si PRESENT SYSTEM ABUSED the 1 1 nsrie oav North Pacific Coast Passenger As sociation Fails to Reach Agree ment and ' Question Will Be Fought Out at Seattle. Whether round trip Summer tourist rates from pofnts in the Northwest to the East shall apply only on certain specified dates as in previous years or whether such tickets shall be sold every day during the toutlst season was the subject of an all-day conference of representatives of the North Pacific Coast Passenger Association in Fort land yesterday. The meeting; which was held in the office of John M. Scott, general pas senger agent of the Southern Pacific, adjourned last night without coming to an agreement. The question will be taken up at an adjourned session in Seattle on Friday, January 24. Present System Abused. Many arguments were advanced in favor of daily sales of tourist tickets. Those who held to this idea declared that the traveling public abuses the present system so that the effect of limiting the aale days is nullified. As the tickets allow a 15-day stop over anywhere on the going Journey people who are unable to start on the date that the coupon spertfies, board , the train, ride to Vancouver, where they . "stop over" and return to Portland on the streetcar. Then, when they are ready to resume their Journey, they go ' to Vancouver and board Che regular east-bound train just the same as If ; they had "stopped over" at Vancou ver all the time. Those who travel on the O.-W. R. & N. line travel, for the same purpose to East Portland or to Troutdale. Interference la Feared. So some of the passenger men think they might Juet as well withdraw the rule limiting the same dates so long as the rule doesn't "work" anyway. Those who oppose the daily sales do so on the ground that they will inter fere with the nine-month tickets which are on sale through the entire year and which take a rate appreciably lower than the sum of the single trip tickets in each direction, east and west. It is probable, that when the asso ciation takes up the question at Seattle next week that the present system will be continued. General baggage, agents of several lines In the Northwest also met with the passenger men to prepare uniform rules of handling baggage. Among the details that they had to consider was the new rule of the Transcontinental Passenger requiring all dogs handled in baggage cars to be muzzled. Northwest Well Represented Those in attendance were: John M. Scott, general passenger agent Southern Pacific; William McMurray, general passenger agent O.-W. R. & N. Company; Waldo G. Paine, traffic manager Spo kane & Inland Empire, Spokane; W. D. Skinner, traffic manager North Bank and Hill lines in Oregon; C. W. Mel drum, of Seattle, assistant general pas senger agent Great Northern; A. C Martin, assistant general passenger agent O.-W. R. & N. Company; A. D. Charlton, assistant general passenger agent Northern Pacific; W. C. Wilkes, assistant general freight and passenger agent North Bank Road and Hill lines in Oregon; H. J. McGuire, of Vancou ver, B. C, district baggage agent Can adian Pacific Railway; A. J. McCarthy, of Seattle, chief clerk passenger de partment Chicago Milwaukee & St. Paul ; H. F. Alexander, of Tacoma, pres ident Alaska Steamship Company; Frank R. Johnson, general agent pas senger department Canadian Pacific: J. IT. Burgls. of Seattle, general agent pas senger department Grand Trunk sys tem; George L. Williams, chief clerk passenger department North Bank Road and Hill lines in Oregon; W. E. Duperow, of Vancouver, B. C, general agent passenger department Canadian Pacific; George W. Andrews, of Seattle, general agent passenger department Pacific Coast Steamship Company; J. H. O'Neill, of Seattle, district passenger agent O.-W.. R. & N. Company; P. J. Collins, general, baggage agent O.-W. R. & N. Company; J. A. Ormandy, chief clerk passenger department Southern Pacific; George J. Mohler. of Spokane, general freight and passenger agent Idaho & Washington Northern; Allen Jackson, of Spokane, district baggage agent Great Northern, and E. C. Rob bins, chief clerk passenger department Northern Pacific. I ljllllllllllltUIllll.llWUIJIMPIWW.lll.IHIHIB.IUI'n Any Victor dealer in any city in the world will gladly play any music you wish to hear. Victor-Victrolas $15 to $200 Victors, $10 to $100 Victor Talking Machine Company Camden, N. J. JOINT PUBLICITY BODY AIM Commercial Clnb and Chamber of Commerce to Work Together. Plans that have been pending for some time for an organization of the publicity work of the Chamber of Com merce and the Portland Commercial Club to be carried on jointly in future, matured yesterday when the board of governors of the Commercial Club gave its indorsement to the plan. The trustees of -the Chamber of Commerce Indorsed it at their last monthly busi ness meeting. The new plan calls for the establish ment of a Joint comlttee of 15 repre senting the two organizations, which shall have full control of the details of the publicity and promotion work carried on under their auspices. Seven of these committeemen will be appoint ed from the Commercial Club and seven from the Chamber of Commerce, and the 15th member of the Joint com mittee will be chosen by the 14 ap. polntees. Full details of the plans of proced ure will not be made until the com mittee has been organized. A. H. Averlll. president of the Chamber of Commerce, will make his general com mittee appointments next week, and probably will name the representatives from that organization upon the joint publicity committee at that time. The appointments from the Commercial Club will be made after the coming annual election. NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION. Notice Is hereby given that the part nership heretofore existing between Lewis M. Head and Chas. U Weldler under the name and style of Lewis M. Head Co.. has been dissolved by mutual consent, said Chas. L. Weldler retiring therefrom. LEWIS. M. HEAD. CHAS. L. WEIDLER. Jan. 14. 1913. Tr. Bamuel "Wilson, pastor First Conirre rstlonal Church. Washington, D. C, Is a cumin of Presldeat-oioot Thomas Wood-ro- Wilson. t Some day you will surely own a Victrola why not enjoy its pleas ures now? With prices ranging from $15 to $200 you cannot afford to be with out one in your home. I It will bring to you all the popular songs of the day, all the old ballads of long ago, all the beautiful hymns and sacred numbers, and the very songs and arias that have made the greatest artists famous the world over. Is it not wonderful when you think of it that you can sit com fortably in your own home and hear this music and these great artists? You want one of these marvelous Victrolas you need it. Q Visit our Victor Department today, where you will find a large and well-kept stock. Competent and courteous assist ants will aid you m making your selection. f Any Victrola sold on easy terms. Steinway and Other Pianos !' I fl IS Victor-Vktrola X, $75 ' Mahogany or oak Si II Morrison at Sixth Morrison at Sixth Apollo and Cecilian Player Pianos ftW'!WrVWMi(!iin!!!fllH! uiiiiiifianMiGimmiianiiiiKjeiHiKif tiiinnMiMBtwminMMmii TRAINS MOVE AGAIN Railroads Make New Paths Through Cascade Snows. MILD WEATHER GIVES AID Linos Attempt to Resume Schedule as Crews Finish. Four Days' Task or Clearing Tracks Snow Is Deepest In Fifteen Tears. SEATTLE, "Wash., Jan. 14. The Mil waukee Railroad, after struggling with the snow since last Saturday, cleared its tracks across the Cascade Moun tains late today and Is again moving trains. Th r.rpa t "Vnrthem nromises to re sume the operation of its mountain di vision tomorrow morning- iuo m ern Pacific has gained a complete vic tory over the drifts and slides and trains are moving regularly. Today was the kindest that the rail road men have experienced In several weeks. No snow fell and the tempera ture was mild. Near the coast of West- .1.11 (hera wm sunshine. but the torecast is for rain tonight, ex tending pernapa into mo muuu mluio There is more snow on the ground In Western Washington now than at any time In the pas.t 15 years. Some Damage to Fruit Reported. WOODLAND. Wash.. Jan. 14. Spe cial.) After a steady downpour of rain all day yesterday it turned Into a fine, wet snow some time in the night, and this morning there was full two Inches on the ground and telegraph and tele phone wires had a heavy coating and some damage resulted on the up-river lines. There was also some damage to fruit and other trees, as the snow stuck to "everything it touched. WIFE DESERTER TO FIGHT Buffalo Man Sajs He Couldn't Live With Spouse. "Her mother couldn't live with her." and neither could I," said E. G. Arnold, a manufacturing jeweler, when arrest ed yesterday by Detective Hawley. tn a charge of deserting his wife in Buffalo, N. Y. He announced that he would fight extradition rather than return to the complainant woman. Pending advices from Buffalo he is held a prisoner on the top floor of the City Jail. A vindictive note from Mrs. Arnold to the city detectives, was the first request they had to hunt Arnold out With no description. Detective Hawley found him living tn an apartment house on Ella street and he admitted being the man wanted. Meanwhile tele graphic advices were received from the Buffalo police that he had been indicted and that an officer would be sent after him. DOCK FACILITIES STUDIED Portland Railroad Mao Completes Inspection of Eastern Waterfronts. Dorsey B. Smith, general agent in Portland for the passenger department of the Grand Trunk system, has re turned from an extended visit to the principal cities of the East, where he studied dock conditions so that he may be informed on that subject following the opening of the Panama Canal. He expects much passenger business between Portland and the various Eastern ports by water after the canal Is completed. He visited every ship ping port between Baltimore and Mon treal and made a close study of pas senger docks at each point. Mr. Smith also traveled over a por tion of the newly constructed Grand Trunk Pacific railway which Is being built to Prince Rupert, B. C, where it will have connection with ocean liners. The job will be finished before the end of the year, he says. Officer Again in Portland. For the third time In three weeks Sergeant W. M. Fyffe. of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police .of Canada, passed through Portland Monday night en route to Edmonton with a prisoner. On the last occasion, he arrived here from Oakland with a negro by the name of Mitchell, wanted on a $50,000 fraud charge. When here Fyffe received word that another man, wanted by the Can adian government, had been arrested in Los Angeles. Leaving his prisoner here. Sergeant Fyffe went South and took charge of his prisoner, Fred Hopfe, alias Campbell, alias Ray, alias Berry. Hopfe had been under $2000 bonds. He had been hunted for three months. Cottage Grove Team Victorious. COTTAGE GROVE. Or.. Jan. 14. (Special.) In a hotly-contested game between Oakland and the local team Saturday evening, the latter team won by a score of 41 to 39. POLICE WAR ON VICE Disorderly Classes Driven to Residence Sections. MANY PERSONS ARRESTED Activity of Officials Declared to Have Made Condition of Per sons Sought Harder and Forced Them to Rob. With "morality" cases in Municipal Court emanating both from the police and the Sheriff, and with little effort made to conceal the fact that there is a spirit of emulation between the two peace agencies, indications are favor able to a sudden access of activity in this line, following several months of extreme dullness, during which the brunt of keeping the city pure rested on the shoulders of Governor West's special agents, now virtually out of commission. In court yesterday the Sheriff was represented by two prisoners, a man J PANTAGES THEATER HAS CLEVER SEXTETTE OF DANCERS j 1 THIS WEEK. I VS aV Jm avi v ENGLISH POJfiT BALLET SEXT OUT BY NED WATBCRN. Direct from London by way of New Tork are the six clever little dancers who make up the English pony ballet sent out to head Pan tages bill this week. The act is one of the celebrated Ned Wayburn's and the fifth of a series of headline dancing acts he has sent this season. The novelty of the offering lies in the perfection of the dancing and the unity the dancers observe. The costumes are pretty and pleasing In color har mony. The sextet has a series of dances, but in all of them is main tained the standard of perfection for which the English ballet corps is noted. The finale of the act is a musical novelty with each of the alx girls playing xylophones made of their headdresses. and a woman, caught in a raid at First and Clay streets. They were con victed, fined $40 each and gave notice of appeal. The police countered with a raid on the place of "Big Henry" Gallet, formerly kept by Pete Bruno, "king of the tenderloin," at Second and Everett streets, where 13 men and three women were arrested. While It Is not admitted that any thought of Sheriff Word caused the raid, It Is believed that he has had an eye on this place and that the police "beat him to it." Record Clerk Circle ac counted for more than $2500 bail money deposited by Gallett for the release of himself and companions. Trials of the captives were set over. Residence Districts Invaded. Announcement of Sheriff Word that he Is going to take a hand in clear ing the city of parasites, undoubtedly has acted as a spur to the police, who have been resting on their oars ever since the sudden spurt taken as a result of Governor West's visitation. While not avowed, the attitude of the city police has been one of hands-off in favor of the Governor's agents, who, until the first of the year, were a only persons making any sort of a showing in raiding disorderly places. The present condition of the vice business is novel In the history of the city. Scores of houses which for de cades have retained an unsavory repu tation are now abandoned or occupied by Japanese, Chinese or other aliens. Lodging-houses which formerly har bored Immoral women with greater or less degree of secrecy have bowed to the activities of the police, the ,vice commission and the tin-plate ordinance. Yet it Is obvious to any pedestrian that the number of disorderly women has not decreased. Many of them have gone to the residence districts and many have gone to the more obscure lodging-houses. The very center of the old district, centering around the one time . notorious Paris House, shelters scores .of the unfortunates, who . rely upon an outer ring of .volunteer sen tinels and a complicated system of sig nals and getaways to evade the some what languid efforts of the police. The activity of last Summer has made harder their condition and has driven them to robbery. Never in the history of the city has there been so much complaint of men being robbed in obscure resorts as in tae last few months. Professional paraiiHea Fewer. Professional parasites of the class of which there were many representa tives here formerly are now much fewer, thanks to two years' strict en forcement of the Federal white slave statute, but the business of living upon the unfortunate women Is in the hands of amateurs,' who may be seen by dozens along Sixth street and in other places. "We have substituted a closed sewer for an open one." is the expression by which Chief of Police Slover estimates the results of his department's work. Albany Selects Salem Man. ALBANY, Or.. Jan. 14. (Special.) Assistant Physical Director Wellborn, of the Salem Young Men's Christian Association, has been selected as physi cal director of the recently formed association In Albany. The Alco Club which the new association secured as its home in this city, is now being remodeled under the direction of Deloi Foster, who will be managing secre tary of the association and will be ready for openine: soon. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey la the greatest Strength Builder and Tonic Stimulant known to medicine. It is wonderfully effective as an aid to .digestion, to nourish the body, stimulate the circulation of the blood and give strength and & elasticity to the hi uautDO. XL (in sists in keeping the entire system in a normal. healthy condi tion and stops the inroads of disease and old age. It is a family medicine that no medicine chest should be with out. Get a bottle today and have it on hand ready for emergencies. The genuine Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is sold in SEALED BOT TLES ONLY, by druggists, grocers and dealers at $1.00 a large bottle. Write our doctors for free medical advice and free illustrated medical booklet. Address The Duffj Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, I.T. BABY A SIGHT WITH ECZEMA Mother Thought He Couldn't Be Worse. Renlnol Acted Like a Charm. Newark. N. J., Sept. 6, 1912. "I wish you could have seen my baby before I started to use Reslnol Soap and Iteslnol Ointment, and see him now. He is now one year old, and the eczema started when he was about a month old. I was ashamed to let anyone see him, his little head was a sight. I thought he would never have any hair on his head at all. I used . remedies for about five months. 'HAIR-AGAIN" Much attention has been given to the effect and not enough to the cause of loss of hair. Tonics and various hair restoratives are beneficial, but we must go tartner ana consider the form ation and srrowth of th hair. The fat cells should be the first considera tion ; to restore them to the natural vigor Is necessary to produce a new srrowth and to do this, stimulation. combined with a good scalp food is the primary step. "Hair-A-Galn," a purely medicinal non-injurious germ iciae wicn me proper metnoa or appli cation, will positively prevent any fur ther loss of hair and promote a new growth. Information and appoint ments by phone. Marshall 2007. Miss George, 203 Royal bldg. BOWELS SLUGGISH. STOMACH SOUR, GASSY, UPSET? CASCARETS GREAT! That awful soreness, belching of acid and foul gases; that pain in the pit of the stomach, the heartburn, nervousness, nausea, bloating after eating, feeling of fullness, dizziness and sick headache, means jour" stomach Is full of sour bile your liver is torpid your bowels constipated. It isn't your stomach's fault it Isn't indigestion its biliousness and constipation. Try Caa carets; they Immediately sweeten the stomach, remove the sour undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste matter from the bowels. Then your stomach trouble is ended. A Caicaret tonight straightens you out by morning. "Then I thought I would try Resinol Soap and Ointment. I thought the child couldn't be any worse! I got the samples all right, and I tell you they acted like a charm. I used Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment for about two months. I saw a change from the first application. Now he is as pretty as a picture, and his hair has come in beautiful and curly." (Signed) Mrs. M. Whiteley, 797 Hunterdon street. Is your little one suffering from any such distressing trouble? Then how can you fail to profit by Mrs. White ley's experience? Even In such a ter rible, stubborn case. Reslnol brought prompt relief. It Is ready to do as much for you. Resinol Ointment and Soap are sold By all druggists, or you can try them free by writing for sam ples to Dept. 8-T, Reslnol Chem. Co., Baltimore, Md. Wherever You Live at your leading drug store on a guarantee to return your money if it does not satisfy you or you can be supplied with this delicious cod liver and iron body builder and strength creator for old peo ple, delicate children and all weak, run-down persons on the same terms by Woodard, Clarke & Co., Druggists, Portland, Or. Look for the Vinol Sign mmmmmffl 10 GentS. Never grips or -jjclcen. f CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEPS BreUcltoD. Clear vour head. StonahT normal nasal discharges. Relieve your ca tarrbal deafness, sore throat and iuielna' Get a 25c or 50c tube ol Kondon's, the origi nal Hnu senDiue v.aiarrnei JCijy. All arug- kibib ecu itur cm fee tor you or order direct. Sample FREE. KONOON MFO. CO MINNEAPOLIS. MINN. . T106.0