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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1913)
8 TTTE MOTIXTXG O-REGOXTAN. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1913. j HAZELTINE JOINS 1 DEPOSED MANAGER j Willapa Harbor Phone Official . Says Subordinate "Goat" f of Conspiracy Case. PAROLE PLAN ENDS BURNS DETECTIVE ACCUSED i 2 I Retrial of Raymond Case Asked on Ground Evidence of Detecta- phone "Framed fp" Plaintiff "Would Drop Damage Salt. SOUTH BEND. Wash., Oct. 28. (Spe cial.) Following the discharge of A. J. Peverstorff. who oad been deposed as manager of the Wlllapa Harbor Telephone Company for alleged knowl edge of the placing of a dictaphone by II. P. Murphy, a Burns detective op erative, in the office of the City Attor ney of Baymond, Wash, F. A. Hazel tine has resigned as vice-president and director of the telephone concern. At a meeting of the board of direc tors of the company on Monday, Mr. Hazeltlne, who is also editor of the South Bend Journal and a regent of the' University of Washington, assumed 'full responsibility for the actions of ijMr. Peverstorff. After tendering his (resignation, Mr. Hazeltlne Issued a 'statement as follows: ; "The placing of the dictaphone in i Mr. Welsh's office was in the interest of justice and good government, as is evidenced by his conviction for con : spiracy in bribing witnesses, as a re jsult partially of the evidence secured thereby. It had absolutely no connec tion with the telephone system and no rone charges that any telephone wires were tapped. Manager Peverstorff was ; made the goat and I refused to stand killing George Dedosklou at Medford December 2 last. Spanos and Seymour are hopeful that their sentences will be commuted to life imprisonment. Strong pressure has been brought to bear for a commutation to life im prisonment of the sentence of - Lem Woon. of Portland, sentenced to ba hanged for killing Lee Tai Hoy in Portland March 7, 1908. Governor West has announced that he will let the law take its course In the case of Oswald Hansel, sentenced to be hanged for the killing of Judge F. T. Taylor at Astoria. ASHLAND, Or., Oct. 28. (Special.) Attorneys today hare 'filed with Gov ernor West what is probably a final appeal in behalf of the condemned men, opanos and Seymour. Third -degree methods, alleged to have been made in order to extort con- Board of Control Takes Precaution Privileges of Oregon's Insane Charges Restricted. WASHINGTON CASE CAUSE made the basis of an appeal. Robbery was the motive of the crime. SUPREME REGENT OF ROYAL ARCAMUM COMING. Against Repetition of Portland Shooting by Patient and Re sultant Damage Award. fior it. He was sacruicea to appease jthe wrath of the convicted parties and ; their friends and I went out with him." The alleged dictaphone figured a - few weeks ago in the conspiracy trial of City Attorney Welsh and other of ficials of Raymond, who were com mitted on a charge of conspiracy to suborn perjury In the case of J. W. ,' Coleman, who brought suit against the ; City of Raymond for $10,000 personal ; damages. In the motion for a retrial of the ; conspiracy case, an affidavit was made tv Clerk Caton. of the Green Hotel ! that Detective Murphy bored the holes : in the walls of a room through which the alleged dictaphone wires had ' been carried, after some of the alleged : evidence had been published. A dismissal without prejudice was asked by the attorneys for Coleman, in . the damage suit, after a Jury had been ; sworn in before Judge Rice. JE- TiWVi-'-i&A- 'TV: :--: j GERMANY BUYING APPLES T Hood River Orchardist Finds Profit, able Market Abroad. ; HOOD RIVER, Or., Oct. 28. (Spe v eial.) "The German apple market is offering the best of opportunities for ; nonnwesiern apples mis year, says i August Paasch, one of the largest in 5 dividual exporters of fruits in the Northwest. He says he will sell 50 carloads of Hood River fruit in Ger I many this year. Mr. Paasch has been selling fruit abroad ever since his orchard came into bearing. He re Z cently returned from Germany and says w the demand for American boxed ap j pies is growing continually. Mr. Paasch and his sons have a tract ' of 120 acres, one of the largest bear ing orchards in the valley. He was one of the first individual growers ' to erect a packing plant and ware house, j "Our prices in the German markets this year," says Mr. Paasch, "are going to net us most satisfactory re- i turns, and I look for better results next year." , W FOES OF SALARY BILL LOSE Hood River Referendum Xot to Have Place on Ballot. (, i HOOD RIVER, Or.. Oct. 28. (Spe cial.) The efforts of a number of lo " cal citizens who circulated petitions for the referendum of the county salary 3' bill in tnis county, which made mater-'- lal increases in the salaries of all the local officials, failed to get the mea sure on the ballot for next Tuesday's !j special election. The circulators of the . petitions secured enough signatures " early in the Summer. Since then, on account of the irregularity of a num ber of the signatures, the petition has been the subject of litigation. " District Attorney Bell, of The Dalles, today advi3ed County Clerk Hanson to keep the salary referendum off the ballot. Frank B. Wlckersham. Supremo Regent Frank B. Wlckersham, of the Royal Ar canum, a prominent attorney of Harrisburg, Pa., will arrive in Portland December 3 to insti tute a grand lodge of the Royal Arcanum. The organization of the grand lodge will be effected at 10 A. M. December 4,. and in the evening of that day there will be a joint class, when can didates from the 10 subordinate councils of the state will be initiated. A banquet and an ad dress by the supreme regent will fallow -the Initiation. The . Pennsylvania Society of Portland has signified a desire to participate in the entertainment of Mr.. Wlckersham, and arrange ments will be made for a joint reception on the night of his arrival SALEM. Or.. Oct 28. (Special.) The State Board of Control, as the result of damages being awarded against the su perintendent of the Insane Asylum at Tacoma, Wash., in favor or a man wno was shot by a paroled lunatic, has is sued an order prohibiting the paroling of patients at the State Insane Asylum. There is no law in this state provia- inar for the paroling of Insane persons. land under similar circumstances the superintendent would find himself in the predicament of the Washington superintendent. After learning that a verdict of jauuu I damages had been awarded against Su perintendent Calhoun, of the asylum at Tacoma, and the mother of the man who did the shooting in favor of H. D. Emery, stage manager of a Portland theater, wounded by O. W. Pence, a paroled patient. Superintendent Stelner explained to the board that he could not afford to take chances. The order was immediately Issued. "While I think it is a backward step," said Dr. Stelner, "it is necessary foe self-protection. Conditions are the same here as in Washington. We have paroled a great many patients, and most of them have done well. Now, we are limited to discharging them, and those that show recurrent insanity will have to be returned through inquests in the various County Courts, the same as when first sent to the institution." TRIAL IS TOMORROW TKSTIMOXY AGAIXST E. E. C. VOX KLEIX HELD STROXG. Both the victim and the men impli cated were residents of Jackson County. WARRENTO N IS EAGER Despite Absence of Etliel Xewcomb, Another "Wife" Will Tell or Jewels Said to Be Stolen. Because of other business before Judge Morrow's court, the trials of E. E. C. Von Klein,-under indictment tor larceny and polygamy, will not begin until tomorrow. Deputy District At torney McGuire. who with Deputy Col lier will conduct the prosecution, said yesterday that the state is ready to proceed with the trial, and' believes he has a much stronger case now than last July, even though Miss Ethel Newcomb, principal witness for the state at the former trial, will not tes A Good Appetite Is a Glorious Thing And . Any Person Can Have a Rip Roaring One if Stuart's Dyspepsia . Tablets Are Used After Meals. The secret of appetite lies in a heal thy and normal desire for food on the part of the stomach and other digestive organs. Your digestive apparatus always wants more food when it is normal and It wants all kinds of food, too, heavy and light, sweet and sour. These qualities are needed by man's blood. and so the system craves them. This craving is appetite. The Logical Time to Buy Pianos Graves Music Co. Removal Sale This $650 Player-Piano COME HERE We want to tell you all about tne spien- "Ertr Since I Used Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets I Simply Delight In Food." The real value In Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets consists of their instant acting digestive abilities. They digest the food in the stomach very quickly, stop irritation, rest the stomach and when the nourishment of the food is taken Into the system they go with It into the blood and thus replenish the dl gestive fluids. Thousands of men and women in this country have proved, to their complete satisfaction, the great digestive and curative .values of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. One ingredient of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets is so powerful that one grain of it will digest 8000 grains of food and it will even do this in a glass tube without the aid of man's stomach. Just think what this means, when your stomach is raw and filled with hurt ful acids and alkalies. The rest it will receive will be priceless. btuart s ' Dyspepsia 1 ablets are sold by all druggists everywhere. . Obtain a box, .60 cents, today and take' a tab let after your next meal Just to prove how easily you can digest that meal. Adv. ?- - ' i St- - Y r' to 4 CLATSOP COUNTY CITY WILL tlfy' Vt,n Kle,n wlU be. Jr'ed, tlra U me cnarge vl larceny ui jcwoia o.i uc VOTE XOVEM1BEK C8. Citizens Petition for and Council Orders Election on Same Xight. Mayor Munson Absent. i THIEVES WORRY ASHLAND Cutlery, Marked T. H. Simpson, Is i Stolen From Store. ASHLAND, Or., Oct. 28. (Special.) Petty thieving, from which this com- munity has been suffering of late. Is ' developing into crime on a large scale, some phases of which come under the head of burglary. ' T. H. Simpson's hardware store was 'entered last night and $20 In cash and ' about JCO worth of pocket cutlery , stolen. Both cash registers and safe were rifled. A good share of- the cutlery has the name of the dealer lettered, on the blade, making identification easy. Provost Bros.' hardware store was broken into in like manner a tew nights since. ANLAUF ROBBERS CAUGHT Two Yontlis Plead Guilty to Rifling Oregon Postoffice. ROSEBURG. Or, Oct. 28. (Special.) Pleading guilty to a charge of larceny, Bert Jackson and Earl Smith, who yesterday robbed the postoffice at Anlaut, are in jail here tonight pend ing trial in the Federal courts. An officer will probably take them to Portland -In a few days. Both are young men, and they say they reside in Portland. MEN'S FATE IN BALANCE Governor West- Asked to Commute Sentence on Spanos and Seymour. : SALEM, Or., Oct. 28. (Special) Gov ernor West said today that he had not decided what action he would take in connection with the cases of Mike Spanos and Frank Seymour, sentenced to be hanged next Friday morning for at $3500 from Miss Newcomb, and at tho cnnplnsinn of the first trial will be tried on the polygamy count. Von Klein, according to local of ficials, has made a specialty of mar- rvine women, then stealing tneir Jew els and deserting tnem. in tae Jfaji of 1911 he married Misa Newcomb, his second wife, in San Francisco and V. , . , V. fn DnrMnnil WMln )hPV vMAjxnKjss, ur -cc za. (pe- wr living here Von Klein deserted claL) The citizens tonight, at a meet- ner He was arrested in Chicago in lng held under the auspices of the May, 1913, after he had been recog- Warrenton Deveiooment LeAcriie. de- I nized bv Miss Newcomb. clared themselves In favor of sunnort- I During the time between his de inir the recentlv-annolnted water rnm- narture from Portland until his arrest missioners in their effort to nhtnin in Chicago he is said to nave stolen water and electric nower and He-ht- A lewels valued at more than JOOO irom special election to vote a 10-mill tax Mrs. L. Temple in mnwiunee. in ei. levy to commence preliminary surveys. Louis he got jewels valued at between etc., was recommended unanimously. $7000 and $8000 from Mrs. weDer, oi This lew will nroduee ohniit $42nn. St. Louis, according to ner statements A petition for the election was signed She is now in .roruana io nuena iue fully. The petition was filed with the trial. Efforts to locate Miss Newcomb City Recorder. have been unsuccessiui. In the absence of Mayor Clara C, Council, presided over a special Coun- M SS HUDbb Utlb AL I lUlM cil meeting. An election was ordered for November 28, as the vote has to be Governor's Envoy to Washington canvassed and the county officials , T . notified before the last day of Novem- Works on lanner trees mantis ber to make the tax leeal and effective on the 1914 tax roll. - SALEM. Or., Oct. 28. (Special.) When the cost Is known bonds will Governor West today was notified by be voted to install the water svstem his secretary. Miss Fern WoDDs, wno and possibly a municipal electric power lis in Washington, D. C... that the Com- and litrht Dlant. unless the latter be- missioner-tienerai or tne Lana unice comes unnecessary bv a franchise be- has authorized the Surveyor-General ins: granted to any comoratlon will- to make a survey of the Tanner Creek lng to install a plant immediately. lands as soon as possible. A Dill con firming title to certain unpatented awnmn lands sold by tne state nas Deen S HrK M Mr-r. I,fl tHCU introduced by Senator unamDenain, WW IIb.llb.III lllkll us I I 1 I - -,,L, Tan. ttjiuv i i lv... ........ w ...u.ji.j xji oiore 11, "cuiic suddIv for the state central risn natcn daries of Town Causes Release. Hea atBon!vU1u, A .L"e,f a,,. lanner v.reeA la wihuh mo of the Federal forest, and it is aesirea ROSEBURG. Or., Oct. 28. (Special.) ta have the lands borderng on it sur- Because neither District Attorney Veved and thrown out of the reserve Brown nor the witnesses summoned by so the state may obtain title to it and tne state were able to establish the control, through riparian rlgnts, tne boundaries of the town of Sutherlin creek. It is the intention to use the satisfactorily to the court. A. B. Ridge- creek as a feeding ground for young way, William Mardin and Frank Davis salmon. were dismissed following a preliminary hearinc in the limtinA rnurt The men were accused of hunting MDQ Vim A r.HRWr- 1 Ll hS within th rnrnnrntA limit, nf Qnthor. I I S wr w w . . . . - Game Warden George M. Knox, of Cot- Native Daughter of Idnn County tage Grove. The defendants alleged Succumbs at Age of 50 nicy ncio uuiiijtis uuiaiuD ui tiie city. and n a a result nf thn falhir rt hn District Attorney to ontRhliah ihJ ALBANT. Or.. Oct. 28. (Special.) hnnnrinriBs of th tnwn th. mon na,. Mrs. Viola Corcett. native daughter of discharged. . Linn County, member, of one of the Mardin, who was one of the defend- county best Known pionoer ants, is Marshal of Sutherlin. The resident oi Oregon an ii. i.ic. other defendants are old-time resi- died hero today at ner nome, eignt dent, of the town. miles east of Albany, at the age of 50 I t at 1 M - 1.. .. 1 . I vears. one was mw wuc ui aim. u. Cornett, ex-Representative from Linn O UrtllD I htt1 TrCT klh HITCn County in the State Legislature. W-llwUa I L.O 1 1VHH I CU Mr Cornett was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Powell, who reside near Labor Commissioner Would End I Albany. She was born near this city. , T) , She is survived by her husband, her wm.,i.j 'iu. i fllther mother and the following brothers and sisters: Mrs. E. B. Cor- SALEM. Or.. Oct. 28. fSnecial.l La- nett. of Albany: Mrs. Fred Dans, of bor Commissioner Hoff declared today Madras; W. M. Powell, of Albany; Mrs. that he Intended to have an eariv ad- Sarville Vetitoe, of Milwaukee; Frank judication of the-controversy between M. Powell, deputy postmaster of Al- hm and the Board of Control regarding bany, and Lester L. -oweii, or. Airjany. the employes of state institutions wrrlf w & . nnl V i cV-i t hmira a lav Mr. Hoff plans having one of the u- liH I Sr HI tN .t I A b VtN -1 9 - W.-Si - " jci liHcuucui-B ur lureuiua ftrreaiea, ana dent may be engaged will count so many credits. CHILDREN T0 EXHIBIT Elimination Poultry Shows Will Be Held In Lane County. EUGENE, Or.. Oct. 28. (Special.) Half a dozen poultry exhibits., will be held for schoolchildren of Lane county next Saturday, preliminary to the gen eral show of the Lane County Poultry Association, November 24-28. At. the general poultry show there is to be a schoolchildren's department, with prizes aggregating $250. and it is to eliminate the birds of lesser quality that the pre liminary exhibits are to be held. Con tests win be held . at the following places, each under the direction of a member of the association: Junction City, E. M. Jackson; Cottage Grove, W. C. Conner: Creswell,- M. M. Lower; Coburg, J. S. Lusby; Spring field, ,D. W. Roof; Eugene, B. F. Keeneyi ' F. W. Corey, of New York, one of the most famous chicken fanciers of the United States, will be the judge of the genera exhibit in November. . suggests that the man try to obtain his release on a writ of habeas corpus so tne case may oe laKert to the Su preme Court at once and settled with out the expense of trying it in the lower courts. Mr. Hoff will make this suggestion to the board, which, no Counterfeiters Eecelve Six Months Each in Connty Jail. L. F. Morris, aged 26, and Ralph Fouts, aged 20, were sentenced yester doubt, will acrree to it. the Tir,rrt iiday to six months each in the County desiring an early settlement Jail after having pleaded guilty of counterfeiting before Jutige wan n tne r.if rn Suit rmt Ri-inl 1 1 1 United States District Court, la lm -aw.vw. 1 . T Inn DBBn r, n wl 41.-4 HunauuTH, or., uct. zs. (Special.) he had seldom dealt so lightly yri'ii A sale which, it is believed, has es- I anyone guilty of counterfeiting. tablished a new record in Polk County, - Morris and Fouts made a bunt $4.50 was made yesterday when a 2-months- worth of crude coins in a cabin near old veal calf brought $16.50. The most I Corvallis. where they were woriing as remarkable Incident connected with the 1 woodcutters. They said they went sale was that the mother of the calf I from Hood River to Corvallis. where was but 20 months old. The calf came I they met an experienced counterfeiter, from the ranch of J. H. Foster, on Salt I who gave them, the tools and showed Creek, I them how to use them. H. C. KENTNER IS INDICTED Prominent Southern Oregon Man Faces Embezzlement Charge. MEDFORD, Or., Oct. 28. (Special.) H. C, Kentner, one of the best-known business men in Southern Oregon, was indicted by the grand jury this after noon upon a charge of embezzlement. The amount charged in the indictment is $5000, although it is alleged a short age of $12,000 exists on the books of the firm. Kentner is out on $1000 bond and will be arraigned today. The original complaint was filed by F. E. Merrick, a partner in the depart ment store, formerly owned by cent ner. The grand jury is also investi gating a $21,000 alleged shortage in the books of ex-Sheriff Wilbur Jones. . CM S i - 1 f 1 ' ' did quality the reduced prices the $135 to $395 saving the easy terms of payment. We Are Going to Move Your opportunity for saving so much money in Piano or Player Piano buy ing not offered every year, or even every ten years. Holders of the Family Purse can get nearly double the value they can buy nearly new $350 Pianos for $195$375 Pianos for $210 or $550 88-note Player Pianos for $365 or they can buy brand new $325 Pianos for $210 Sale OA 1 C Saving QOO C $15 Cash or $37o best kind tor bo ip4DU quai PriceO'f 1 0 To You Olo 3 $10 Monthly ity for $295 etc. Other Pianos $65, $145, $185, $210 Cfol.. IX-:!, fc1 Make your selection now and pay $1 down, if you do not want to pay the full OLcilL VV liH pl payment,, and then, before delivery, you pay the balance in. cash or $o or $9, or .whatever agreement you make for the first payment, and the balance $6 monthly, etc., until the piano is paid for in full. Out-of-town buyers It is safe and satisfactory to buy one of these pianos by mail. Write us, and we will send you full description, or, if you like, ship the piano subject to your approval. We pay freight to any point in Oregon, Washington or Idaho, Buy now and have it shipped when ready. , Every piano or player piano purchased carries with it the Graves Music Co. guarantee of satisfaction, as also the usual guarantee from each manufacturer of these new musical instruments; besides, we take it in exchange within one year, allowing the full amount paid, if desired. iraves US1C U). Ill FOURTH STREET emoval Sale FOREST FUND TOLO Secretary Olcott Announces Amount of Reserve. GOVERNMENT IS DONOR YEGGMEN ARE REPORTED Work at Independence Thought to Be Done by Experts. INDEPENDENCE, Or., Oct. 28. (Special.) forcing a window in the engine-room of the Oregon Warehouse & Milling Company late Sunday night, burglars entered the office and cracked the safe. No cash Is kept In the safe and as this seemed to be all that they were after there was no loss outside of the damage done to the safe. The door had been left unlocked, as there Is nothing but papers kept In the safe. The lock of the Inside door was chiseled off and all of the drawers were pried open. All of the papers were thrown about the room and tools were left scattered around the room, HALLOWEEN SPECIAL, Royal Pumpkin Pies or Old-Fash, loned Richness. The Jtoyal Bakery & Confectionery Company has planned a tremendous treat for all lovers of the toothsome, delicious, good old-fashioned pumpkin pies the kind that brought Joy to the hearts and water to the mouths of our grandsires. They have secured the orig inal recipe the one calling for the richest of pure milk, fresh farmers' eggs and genuine juicy pumpkins. The pies will be supplied at the Mor' rison-street branch for halloween orders must be placed In advance to obviate the possibility of disappoint ment. To be safe, order today. Adv. Grants Pass Exhibit Going East. GRANTS PASS, Or., Oct. 28. (Spe cial.) The Grants Pass district ex hibit for the land show to be held in Chicago Is being packed In boxeB ready for shipment. The exhibit displays many varieties of grains and forage garnered irom various points tnrougn- out the county. Other cities of the valley will Join in the exhibit and Rogue River valley will occupy a com plete unit of space at the fair. Alan Found on Tracks. ALBANY, Or, Oct. 28. (Special.) Bruised and bleeding and with clothes torn almost from him, Fred Norwood, of Tracey, CaL, was found beside the Southern Pacific track, four miles south of Halsey, this morning. Available for Koad Work in Counties of State Is $55,950.72, on , Account of Tear 'Ending June 30, 1913. SALEM. Or.. Oct. 28. (Special.) Secretary of State Olcott today an nounced that the forest reserve fund of $55,950.73. recently received from the Federal Government for the year ena-ine- June 30 last to be used in road- building, had been apportioned among the counties as follows: Amount Foret appor- . area. tioned. Baker 496,77 $ 1.736.37 Benton suu " rfaVima. 666.883 1.978.47 Clatsop - Columbia 'VsV.Soi "'sVs'.ie Crook 1.S5S.SS9 4,745.04 Curry .... 597.007 2,084.66 Douglas 1.140,S81 S.63.79 Grant 1,?5;,:ff Harney Hood River i<i Jack.on If,'?,? Josephine i v il Klamath HU K7 unjoin Linn Malheur ,,,,. Marion 217-415 Morrow 1 ' Multnomah ivlll Polk 11.049 Sherman "Vainc Tillamook .il'tS? Umatilla Union ... 652,261 Wallowa Wanco 215,841 Washington VtVmi Wheeler -"I,!,, Yamhill , 27,623 day. Women are allowed to fish wltn out a license, but must have a license to hunt 6,766.05 1,793.29 801.42 2.471.70 2.15S.72 4.358.50 4,373.15 5,551.82 640.34 1,804.44 64 759.18 531.11 247.13 38.58 244.31 1.429.22 1.928.41 4.3H3.48 746.70 60S. 99 96.46 Total 16.028,220 55.950.72 FOUR HUNTERS ARRESTED Men Charged With Shooting Ducks From Motor-Boat. ASTORIA, Or., Oct 28. On Sunday Deputy Game Warden Larson arrested W. C. Burnonall. J. F. Bidweu. J. Goddard and Arthur Elbon at Mc-ftreE-nr'H Island, a short distance above Tongue Point, on a charge of shooting ducks from a motor-Doai. nu de fendants were brought to Astoria and each deposited $50 bail to appear for trial in Justice Court, probably tomor row. The shooting of ducks from motor hoats is reported to have been in progress in that vicinity for some time. and for several uunaays j,arson n been watching to catch possible of fenders. Yesterday he took a station on the shore near the Lovell hunting cabin, and he took the men in charge. TRACKS COVERED BY SLIDE Blockade at Windy Point Interrupts Great Northern. EVERETT. Wash., Oct. 28. The Great Northern's main transcontinen tal line over the Cascade Mountains was blocked for the second time In two weeks today by a rock slide loosened by a blast In the tunnel which the company is building at Windv Point, west of Cascade Tunnel. The rock covered the track to a depth of 25 feet for a distance of more than 150 feet and the line will be closed to traffic until late tomorrow. Overland trains from Seattle are be ing routed by way of Vancouver, Wash., and the Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway to Spokane. INDIAN PORTIA -APPEARS Seattle Woman Tires of Attorneys and Pleads Own Case. OLTMPIA, Wash., Oct. 28. (Special.) The unique spectacle of an Indian woman litigant, pleading her own case before the Wasnington Supreme Court, was afforded here today. Mrs. Clarissa A. Bailey, appealing from what she termed an unjust Btreet assessment on her property in Seattle. after a disagreement with her lawyers. secured the consent of Chief Justice Crow to a division of time between her self and her attorneys. "This is a temple of Justice . and I come here for Justice," Mrs. Bailey de clared, at the conclusion of an orderly argument, directed more to the equity than the law side of the court. Mrs. Bailey was Impressed with the idea of pleading her own case after seeing two feminine lawyers before the Supreme Court yesterday. POWER WILL BE INCREASED Oregon-Washington Corporation Is Planning Extensions. CHEHALIS, Wash., Oct 28. (Spe cial.) Extensive repairs are being made on the Wasnlngton-Oregon Cor poration's big waterpower plant on the Kalama River, near Kalama. The con cern has made an arrangement with the Veness Lumber Company at Veness to Install two steam turbines of 800 kilo watts. It is expected that these will be in service by November, when the three plants at Chehalis, Wlnlock and the Kalama River waterpower one will be connected. This will give the Wash lngton-Oregon more-power than it has ever had before tn its history. In a short time it is planned to con nect the power line to Uldgefield, in Clarke County, and later to Vancouver, Wash. Vincent Jones Sued for Divorce. Suit for divorce on the ground of cruelty was filed yesterday by Leono Jones against Vincent Jones, real es tate dealer, of Portland. Mrs. Jones asks for $6000 alimony, attorney's fees and that her maiden name, Leono Ka bat be restored. The couple were married in June, 1910. The plaintiff charges that her husband left their home in June, 1913, and has not re turned, but that his cruel treatment dated from within a year after their marriage until the time of his dosr-tion. In 1912 the trolley lines of Great Britain carried more than 3,000,000,000 passengers. This traffic was carried on 2642 miles of track and in leiis than 13,000 cars. Significant also Is the fact that whereas in 1900 there were 37.000 horses employed in hauling streetcars, in 1912 there were only 1500. COMB SAGE TEA NTO GRAY HAIR Woman Gets Hunting License. WALLA WALLA, Wash., Oct 28. (Special.) The first hunting license Issued to a woman in this county was to Mrs, . E. Hanlan, of Lamar, to- The high cost of living doesn't get any lower by low cost of clothes; cheap ness in clothes usually means inferiority rather than economy. It is one of the signs of business judgment that a rrra-n SC5 the wisdom of paying more for goods in order to get real economy. If you pay $25 for a suit of our clothes you'll get much more than the di5rrence in value, than if you buy a $12 or $15 suit. We make a special feature of the $25 price because of the -value wc know is in the suits at that price. YoaTI Tmrj anx c3oth.es at $i2 and $20 and xrp to $40 and $50; at f 2$ you'll get big value. Hart Schaffner & Marx Good Clothes Makers Darkens Beautifully and Restores Its Thickness and Lustre at Once. Common garden sago brewed Into a heavy tea, with sulphur and alcohol added, will turn gray, streaked ani faded hair beautifully dark and luxuri ant; remove every bit of dandruff, stop scalp Itching and falling hair. Mixing J.he Sage Tea and Sulphur recipe at home, though, is troublesome. An easier way Is to get the ready-to-uso tonic, costing about 50 cents a large bottle, at drug stores, known as "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem edy," thus avoiding a lot of muss. While wispy, gray, faded hair Is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractiveness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur no one can tell, be cause It does it so naturally, so evenly. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with It and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning all gray hairs have disap peared. After another application or two your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy, soft and luxuriant and you ap pear years younger. Adv. SAM'L ROSENBLATT & CO. The Home of "Hart Schaffner & Marx" Cloties, Actress Tells Secret A Well-Known Actrrna Tells Hovr She Dnrkeaed Her Gray Hair and Promoted Ita Growth With a Simple Home-Made Mixture. Miss Blanche Rose, a well - known actress, who darkened her gray hair with a simple preparation which she mixed at home, in a recent Interview at Chicago, 111., made the following statement: "Any lady or gentleman can darken their gray hair and make it soft and glossy with this simple recipe, which they can mix at home. To a half pint of water add 1 oz. of bay rum, a small box of Barbo Com pound, and Vl oz. of glycerine. These Ingredients can be bought at any drug store at very little cost. Apply to the hair twice a week until it becomes ths required shade. This will make a gray haired person look 20 years younger. It Is also fine to promote the growth of hair, relieves itching and scalp humors and Is excellent for dandruff and falling hair." Adv. 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