Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (April 6, 1914)
THE MORNING OREGOXIAX, 3IONDAY, ArRIL, G. 1D14. 'ANTIS DENY WOMEN CHICAGO WOMAN, DAUGHTER OF LATE MARK HANNA, WHO A Partial List of Business and Professional People Now in the Morgan Building jjr,xawutATa IWO YEARS TO GRANT WOMAN SUFFRAGE HELP PROHIBITION Dr. E. C. McForland DENT1STRT. S5-T Moreen Bids.. Broadway and Washington 8ta. Portland, Or. 10 A- M. to 12 M . 2 P. M to P. St. Main 2261 Residence Tabor 104 Dr. Elof T. Hedlund Dr. Dallas Lav DENTISTS. 4&a-43 Morgan Bids. Mar. hall , A 3SJI. MORGAN BUILDING WASHINGTON ST, BROADWAY AND PARK STS. LIGHT. STEAM HK AT. HOT A COLD WtTER AD JANITOr. SKKUCK AHB I.MLIUUI l. RE.VTAL CHARCIi Opponents of Suffrage Say It Is Time Sex Was Put in Its Proper Light. V, , H. F. Leonard. D. O.. M. D. 730-757 Morgan Bids CONSULTATION AND SUROERT. Office Hours lO-lz. 2-3. Phonea Offlc. Main 70. A I70O Realdencc 7MO Irving St. Marahall ail 7. Dr. H. A. Huffman DENTIST, to Morsaa Bids. ff!ca hoars to 12. 1:30 to 4. Main 3300. 'COLD FIGURES' PRESENTED 1 I i 1 X JpBlllSsr' r "' " - v;-aven,j,-.-. No Suffrage State Ever Has Been Voted Dry, One Had Gambling 4 O Years After Women Voted, Is Official Statement. WASHINGTON", April 5. (Special.) The National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage issued a statement to night declaring that suffrage and pro hibition do not go hand in hand. The statement is in part as follows: "In no state in which women hare voted on the question has state-wide prohibition ever been adopted and nine states where men alone vote have state wide prohibition. This is a statement of cold figures that cannot be contro verted. It shows how woefully the suffragists have misled many people on the liquor question. "Pasadena, Cal., for many years, in fact practically for its entire history had been a dry city. Soon after the franchise was given to women the sale of liquor was legalized. Pasadena had in 1910 2688 more women over 21 years old than men. Chance Missed In Colorado. "November 5, 1912, Colorado, the 'banner suffrage state." voted on state wide prohibition; 75.877 votes were cast for the measure and 116,744 against. If 68 per cent of the women over 21 years old in Colorado had voted for prohibition the measure would have become a. law by 6014 ma jority, without a single male vote being cast for prohibition. "Wyoming legalized gambling for about 40 years after woman had the ballot and it had neither state-wide prohibition nor local option laws. "About six years prior to the adop tion of woman suffrage In California Los Angeles voted on local option and the measure was defeated, two to one. About a month after woman had the ballot in Los Angeles the question was again voted on and the saloons won by nearly three to one. Mr. Chain Disappointed. "Eugene W. Chann. former candidate on the Prohibition ticket for President, said at Long Beach, Cal., February 15, 1914, that the support expected by Prohibitionists in California from women had not yet developed. "In the face of the active facts, it Is about time for the suffragists to give up their false claims on the subject of prohibition. These are additional proofs that the suffragists, when they have had opportunity, have done nothing to r id prohibition and a great deal to in jure it." ' . ' . V 3 SOCIETY CIRCUS PLANNED Seaside Civic Club Will Raise Money for Promotion Work. SEASIDE. Or., April 5. (Special.) Under the auspices of the Seaside Civic Improvement Club, a society circus and burlesque county fair will be held here next week for three days. One of the special features of the entertainment will be a. Better Babies' contest with prizes for the leaders In the different classes. The proceeds of the entertainment will be used in the general publicity and civic welfare promotion work of the club. The free restroom which was establ ished last year and which was so highly appreciated by Summer visitors has proved an excellent all-year attrac tion. Gymnasium apparatus has been installed in the room that was used for a nursery during the Summer and classes of boys and girls are being in structed regularly. PACIFIC DEBATERS CHOSEN Speakers Will Meet University of Puget Sound April 2 7. PACIFIC UNIVERSITY, Forest Grove, Or., April 6. (Special.) In the annual tryout last night, Howard Taylor, Samuel Grathwell, Lester Moroney and Kdward Burns were chosen to repre sent Pacific University in the debate with the University of Puget Sound April 27. Egbert Bishop and Alva Pat ten were. chosen as alternates. The question was "Resolved, That the coastwise ships of the United States should pay tho same tolls as the ships of other nations going through the Panama Canal." Two teams were chosen, as the question will be de bated at both places the same night, the home team upholding the affirmative. OLD CANDIDATES ARE OUT Competition for Recordershlp of I.Inn County Same as Before. ALBANY, Or.. April 5. (Special.) t-xactiy the same candidates who an peared on the ballots of both the Re publican and Democratic parties in the primaries for the last election for the office of Recorder of Linn County will compete again mis year. Grant Froman. of Albany, the pres ent Recorder, and Marion F. Wood of Tangent, will contest in the Republican primaries and B. M. Miller, of Halsey. will be the lone candidate for the Dem ocratic nomination. This will be the third successive election in which Fro man and Wood have competed for the Republican nomination for County Re corder. Douglas Timber Value $45,000,000, ROSEBURG, Or., April 5. (Special.) According to information received today from the Immigration Commis sion of Oregon. Douglas County leads an other counties in the state with re gard to its standing timber. The re port says Douglas County possesses about one-sixth of the timber of the state, with a value-of close to $45,000. 000, or about S8.000.000 more than its present assessed valuation. MRS. MEDILL M'CORHICK. WOMAN SETS LIMIT Two Years Given Democrats to Grant Suffrage. PARTY HELD TO ACCOUNT Pioneer Buried at Tualatin. SHERWOOD. Or.. April 5. (Special.) Mrs. S. J. Day died at the home of her son, Chester G. Day, at Finley. Wash.. March 30. aged 71 years. The body was brought to Tualatin for in terment Thursday. Mrs. Day was born in St. Genevla County. Missouri. April 22. 1843. She crossed the plains by oxteam in 1850. She wu the mother of 16. children, 12 of whom are living. Mrs. Medill McCormick, Wife of In fluential Publisher, Says Sex Will Hold Balance in Elec toral College by 1916. NEW YORK, April 5. (Special.) The suffrage cause Is to take a big leap In the next two years, according to Mrs. Medill McCormick, daughter of the lat Mark Hanna, Senator from Ohio, and for years right-hand man and political adviser of the late Pres ident McKlnley. Mrs. McCormick caused a sensation at the annual ' campaign rally of the National Woman Suffrage Association here recently, when she asserted with out qualification "that by 1916 the be lievers in woman suffrage will hold the balance of power in the electoral col lege, and the women now look to the Democrats to solve the question of equal rights, which will be brought about in the next two years.' Mrs. McCormick is the wife of Medill McCormick, of the Chicago Tribune. one or the most Influential newspapers supporting woman sufrage in the United States. The recent meeting of the suffragists was held here in Carnegie hall, and Mrs. McCormick. one of several speak ers, was cneered to the echo when she declared that the Democrats would have to answer to the women if women did not secure equal rights with men or the Nation. Mrs. McCormick practically has given up society in Chicago for the suffrage cause, and probably will continue to deny herself until the fight is won. She has money enough in her own right to oe content with devoting her time and fortune to the cause. She and her brother, Dan R. Hanna, one of the principal beneficiaries in the will of their late father, who died a million aire. Then, too, - her husband is a member of the McCormick Harvester Company family. His financial worries liKewise are few. HEALTH "CLINICS" HIT PARENTS OBJECT TO DWELLING ON ILI.S IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS. and there are numerous other supply bills awaiting action. Meantime Rep resentative Knowland, of 'California, is threatening to call up early In the week his resolution 'asking for the State De partment's correspondence with Eng land regarding tolls, which he has held up pending possible consideration of the subject by the foreign affairs com mittee tomorrow. Conservation measures are being rushed through in the House public lands committee. The committee will take up the National leasing bill Tues day with a view to revising it and re porting it to the House within a week so as to insure, if possible, action by Congress at this session. ' Woterpower Legislation Pending;. Plans for water power legislation are being laid by both the public lands committee and Interstate Commerce Commission. With the Interstate Trade Commission bill agreed upon and to be reported early this week to the House the Interstate Commerce Commission is not disposed to hasten action on the proposed measure to provide for the Federal control of railway capitaliza tion, but" the hearing may be declared closed this week, and consideration of the measure in executive session begun. All the railroad witnesses so far have agreed to the principle of regulation, but dissent from having the Federal and state commissions assume juris diction over railroad security issues. The anti-trust bills, which members of the House Judiciary committee have agreed should be consolidated and re ported as an omnibus measure to carry out the Administration views for meeting- the problems of the interlocking directorates, holding companies' trade relation and definitions of restraints of trade are marking time on the House side. Prevailing Practice "Unwise" and "Hu miliating; to Children," Says Pro teat Urging Free Medical Centers SAN FRANCISCO. April 6. (Special.) "It Is unwise to keep constantly be fore tne young ideas of illness and in firmity." "It is wrong to . spend time that should be devoted to the three R's to having doctors and nurses looking down the throats and into the ears or school children." "It is humiliating for a child to be taken from the class-room, examined by a strange nurse, and perhaps la beled 'Exceptional" or 'Defective.' " These are some of the objections to medical inspections in the public schools, made by the Parents' Rights League of America, in a letter on file in Mayor Rolph's office. The health board has no business to be doing it. is-the gist of the letter, which is signed by Mrs. Margaret B. Jewell, secretary. The president of the league Is "Mrs. C. E. Grosjean, the treasurer Mrs. C. J. Bashford, and the vice-president is Mrs. Emile Hoffman and Mrs. Sarah Smith. The protest urges that the Mayor confer with the board of health to se cure the services of the school exam iners at free medical centers, to which parents may take their children when necessary. THREE-WEEK FIGHT LIKELY (Continued From First Par.) the Republican vote against repeal in so far as that can be done. General Legislation Walts. Little general legislation Is expected in the Senate until this all-absorbing issue is decided. The House will de vote itself this week to putting through the delayed appropriation measures The legislative, executive and Judicial appropriation bill Is now pending, gen eral debate will be started probably Tuesday or Thursday on the naval bill, HIGHWAY AT DEAD STOP Ashland Protests Against County ajnoa s.unoj ASHLAND, Or., April E. (Special.) A protest signed by a number of Ash land citizens was filed yesterday with the County Court objecting to the pro posed routing of the Pacific Highway through the Billings property, on the western outskirts of the city, declaring it will deface the home grounds and ap propriate the best portion of this fine ranch at that point. Many people here take the view that the road should fol low its present course over the Farn ham hill, the grade of which can be materially lessened. Tho court was further asked to sus pend operations on the new route pend ing developments. Southern Pacific of ficials have given assurances that they would object to the new survey so far as the railway crossing is concerned. In reply to this protest the County Court is said to have decided last night to hold up all work on the Pacific High way in the vicinity of Ashland until its citizens take some definite action toward the acceptance of the route laid down by the state highway engineer and indorsed by the county authorities. "MILLIONAIRE" JOINS NAVY Inventor or Xew Machine Would Spend Time on Warship. EUGENE, Or., April 6. (Special.) Notre Dame Meyer, a man who prob ably will be worth millions within a few years, walked into the United States Navy recruiting station in Eu gene yesterday and asked for a posi tion on one of Uncle Sam's battle ships at a trivial wage. He seeks to work two or four years while his for tune Is accumulating. According to the story told, which Is believed by K. W. Wheeler, recruit ing officer, the man is an inventor. He claims to have produced a machine drill which is superior to any In use. and has arranged for its promotion by an Eastern concern. Instead of waiting idly for his in vention to make him rich, as the local officer believes it will after hearing the man's story, he has decided to spend the time in the engine rooms of an American man-of-war. and to return after a period of years to count his accumulated wealth: He left yes terday for Marc Island Navy Yard. E. W esfej; Finzer, Dentist PYORRHEA SPECIALIST. Office Hours. 9 to 13 A. If.. 1 to P. M. 7S7-738 Uoraan Bids. Phone Main TOtf. A 1708. Grandview Water Works Pays. GRAND VIEW, Wash.. April 6. (Special.) Grandview b waterworks will be self-supporting this Summer, within a year of the time they were built. There are now 92 private serv ices and application for water. One hundred is the number needed for self support. By estimates based on condi tions in other towns it was not thought that the works would be self-supporting within five years. Dr. F. Q. Freehurger DENTIST. Suite SOO-eOT Horgan Bldg. Pnor.es Offles. Main 175. Ras Tabor zeal. I IT iii 1 riaii ------ - v . . . .- r . . pp aV '' V UiiJ .-p". :3LjiiVi. ..j covers F N MET 1T T- -f r-l 1 - The moat admirably loentea office bnUdlng In Portland. No expense baa been spared B its eoaatrnrtloa and eonlnment ta Mfce it thoroughly adaptable to all office needa. Absolutely fireproof and with every known convenience for tenants. Gna and compressed nlr for use of doctor and dentists. Dr. John V. McCollom ETE. EAR. NOSE AND THROAT. Suits 333-307. Offlca Phonaa. Vain 3:30. A 1731. Rca, rhooe. Main Dr. Henry C. Fixolt DENTIST. 333 Mnrsan Building Office Hours V-12 A. M.. 2-3 P. VI. Tel. Main 330. A S73L Dr. J. H. Miller DENTIST. Suite 636-7 Morsaa Bldg. Main 8827. Millard C. Holbrook DENTIST. Moved from Medical Bldg. To 807 Morsaa Bldg. w. a. SMITH CO. Jiv 1 Tf I, v 1 1 a rjr a t and Visiting CARDS Third iloor . Nelson Neulen. M. D. Frank H. Morey. D. D. S. 503. B0. 303. Maranall SS69. Thomas Wynne W alts, M. D. DISEASES OF THE SKIN. 800-607 Morgan bldg.. Portland, Or. Main seta. Dr. Charles E. Moreland DINTIJTRT. ft&S. 858. 860 Morgan Bldg. Pnons Main SU6&, Telephones: Office. Main 87" Realdenca. Main 8278. A 8278. Houra: S A. M. to S P. M. Wednesdays and Saturdays. 8:84 A. M. to 12 M. Dr. Fred A. Reisacher DENTIST. 718 MORGAN BUILDING. Dr. Jack M. Yates DEXTIST. Suits 353. rhonea Mala i'he. a 10,8. H. M. Greene. A. D. 832 Morgan Bldg. Washington and Broadway. Office Hoars 2 to ft P. M. Main 8388. A 68S. Residence 8S3 Fiftieth St. N. E. Tabor 1084. C 1378. Farrin & Micelli ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Removed to 6? 5-636-637 Morgan Bldg. Portland, Oregon. Phone Main 1878. OENERAX PRACTICE. Dr. Martin Abelson DENTIST. 408 Morgan Bldg Phone Mala 2477. Dr. C. D. Brown DENTIST. 33S-I-8-U. faone Mam b43U. A 1131, Dr. William F. Hubbard PHTSICIAN. Suite 80S-804 Morgan Bldg. Phone Main 1418. Hours 11 to 12 A. M., 2 to ft P. M. H. L. MOODY REAL ESTATE. LOANS AND INSURANCE. 208-210 Morgan Bldg. Mala 87. DR. LEON E. SOOK Optometrist and Optician. EYESIGHT TROUBLE CORRECTED. Broken Lenses Duplicated. 4 56-7-8-9-60 Morgan Building. Evenlnga and Sundaya by Appointment. Telephonea Office: Marshall a Residence, c 1299. Dr. . W. Borders. Dr. H. P. Borders Dr. L. Bogan DENTISTS. 653-3 Morgan Bids. Phone Main 3940. FOB SPACE II TBI MORGAN BUILDING DIRECTORY. APPLY AT THE OREGONIAN BUSINESS OFFICE. John Welch Denial Depot 62 S. 681 Morgan Bldg. RES. PHONE TABOR 4278. MARSHALL 1SSS. Dr. H. N. Lacy OSTEOPATHIC PHTSICIAN AND SURGEON. SUITE 801. MORGAN BLDG. Dr. Frank L Ball DENTIST. 804-&U3 Morgan Llulluing. rhone Main -a-M. VESSEL SEEMS LOST Hope for Southern Cross, With 173 Men, Almost Gone. STORY OF BLIZZARD TOLD Roeeburg Fly Campaign to Start. ROSEBURG. Or., April 5. (Special.) At a meeting- ot the auxiliary to the Roseburg- Commercial Club last night 12 large fly trats were distributed among- the children of the city. On Monday toe swat-the-fly" campaign will begin here. Prizes have been promised. Elrtity aeroplanes were seen in flight at one uma In Spain at a meet. Sealer Will Be Officially Posted To day Vessel So Deeply Laden Slic Was Wallowing Slowly Along Coast When Last Seen. ST. JOHNS, Newfoundland, April 6. At sunset tomorrow the sealing steamer Southern Cross, mlaglng since Tuesday's blizzard, officially will be posted as lost with her 173 men. Hope for the safety of the steamer and her crew was almost abandoned today when the stricken survivors of the sealer Newfoundland told their stories of tha disaster which cost the lives of 77 of their comrades. The colony, plunged Into mourning by the greatest tragedy In Its his tory, has waited in vain, hoping that the wireless search might bring some word from the missing vessel whose loss would deprive whole settlements of their breadwinners and make more than 10,000 women and children de pendent upon charity. First hopes, based on the stoutness of the ship, faded when survivors of the New Foundland told of the two days' blizzard and the condition in which It caught the Southern Cross. Captain Martin said he parted company from her a week ago when the Southern Cross turned homeward with 17.000 seals. She was so deeply laden that all her provisions and part of the bunker coal were stored on deck so that every available space below could be filled with the catch. Captain Bartlett. of the Terra Nova, said the last he saw of her was a week ago Friday, when she was wallowing slowly down the coast. Other ships of the fleet sighted the steamer driving before the gale last Tuesday morning. By noon all but Ave of the 69 bodies of the Newfoundland s hunters brought in yesterday by tho Belleventure had Been identified. Attendants at the Greenfcll Institute, which was turned into a morgue, said that the scenps ac companying the Identification of the booics were almost beyond ehdurance. Father and Son Clasped Together. One woman found two bodies clasped so tightly In death that they could not be separated. They were her husband and son. The lad was wrapped In his father's arms, as If the man had been trying to shield him from the pitiless cold. The hand of another man was miss ing. One of the survivors who had lain helpless near the body for nearly 48 hours said his comrade, unable to stand the agony of frost bite, had sliced off the hand with his seaman's knife. A gray-haired mother, support ed by bher two daughters, passed down the long rows looking for her sons. Attention was suddenly drawn to them, when the woman fell to the floor In a faint. They had found not only the four sons, and brothers, but two cou sins among the dead. Of the thirty survivors In the hos pital, none is expected to die. but the most will never be fit for active serv ice again. Three lost both hands and feet. Five lost both feet. Right others lost a foot and 11 will lose a hand or fingers. FORMER PORTLANDER RECOVERS QUICKLY FROM SEVERE INJURY Fred M. Gilmore Feared He Would Be Dis abled Permanently Fred M. Gilmore, formerly a resident of Portland, but now of 1536 Broderlck street. San Francisco, recently met with a serious accident that threatened to leave him permanently disabled. Mr. Gilmore will be remembered as having been in the office of the late British Consul. James Laid law, for 20 years as British pro-Consul. During that period he wrote for The Sunday Ore gonian. As the result of a bad fall last June Mr. Gilmore sprained both ankles to such an extent that he despaired of ever fully recovering. That he is as well as ever now he attributes to Akoz, the radio-active medicinal mineral now being Introduced In this city at the Owl Drug Store. "Last June I severely sprained both ankles," said Mr. Gilmore in speaking of his case, "with the result that I could hardly move about. ' While suf fering great pain and distressing weak ness of the ankles, I learned of Akos about two months after ray accident. "I used the Akoz compound on my ankles with surprising results. The second application ended the pain and then the ankles gained strength so rapidly that at the end of two weeks I was able to walk without a cane. At the end of the third week I was agree ably surprised to not that my ankles were as strong as ever. "I also know of a large number of r i'RED 31. GIL3JORU. others, who have used Akoz either In ternally or externally with highly sat isfactory results for rheumatism, stom ach trouble, eczema, catarrh and other ailments.' I cannot recommend Akos too highly." This exceptional remedy ts now be ing demonstrated at the Owl Drug Store at Broadway and Washington, where further information may be had regarding this advertisement. (Jranls Pass lias Health Officer. GRANTS PASS. Or.. April 5. Spe clal.) Dr. F. D. Strieker has been ap- pointen nnun officer. The Mayor fur ther appointed a sanitary advisory board, comprising members of each ward. A marketmaMer also was pro vided for and a committee appointed to hire a fit person. Some of the large Atlantic steamers hae 1 jO firemen each. Why drink water when you can get SALEM BEER the most popular beverage on the Pacific Coast? SALEM BEER, is brewed in one of the most modern plants on the Pacific Coast. It is aged in steel glass-lined tanks. It is conveyed by modern pipe line system direct to the bottle" house, bottled under pressure and therefore never comes in contact with the air from the time it leaves the fermenting tank until the bottle is opened by the consumer. The consumer is absolutely assured a beer of ideal effervescence, snap and purity. A trial will surely convince nry one of the ex cellence of Salem Bottled Beer. The family trade of Portland is supplied by the firm of PENNEY BROS. Telephone: Bell, E. 287 Home, B-2426. 079 EAST MORRISON STREET NOT GOOD AFTER APRIL 11, 1914 ROSE FESTIVAL ASSOCIATION TOUR DE LUXE VOTING COUPON. THIS COUPON "WILL COUNT TOR PIVE VOTES For Street f!fld for five votes waea properly filled out and sent to the Tour Manager by mall or otherwise!. Room Morsaa llulldiaa, oat or before the above date. 0- ft mm You might call it ."Bottled Sun shine," For it looks so clear and bright And its always pure and wholesome. You can drink it day and night. Brewed by Henry Weinhard Brewery. Larse or Small Bottles. Phone for a case today. Phone Main 72, A-H72.