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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1914)
MORXTXG OREGOXTAN, MONDAY, JULY 6. 19- TTTE S ATTEMPT MADE TO AMBUSH PHVSiCl Jhree Shots Fired at Doctor in . Whose Office Woman Pa tient Was Killed. SHERIFF BLAMES WOMAN Xassau County Official Promises Ar rest Within Week Detectives Theorize on Conspiracy With Revenge Motive. FREEPORT, N. Y., July 5. Dr. Edwin Carman. In whose office Mrs. Louiae Bailey was murdered last Tuesday, was shot at three times tonight as he drove In his automobile through the town or Baldwin, near here. None of the bul lets struck him. The doctor was on his way home from Rockville Center, where he had been to attend a patient. Dr. Carman told the police that as he passed through Rockville Center he saw an actor he knew whom he Invited to ride home with him. When they were a short distance outside the town they heard an .explosion and thought one of the tires had given way. Doctor Sees Mu and Bicycle. The doctor said he stopped the car and had started to get out, when he heard a shot and, looking around, saw a. man standing beside a bicycle point ing a revolver at him. As he Jumped back In the car, he said, he heard an other bullet sing by his head, but opened the throttle and was soon out of range. A search was Immediately begun for the man with the bicycle, although the police suggested that Dr. Carman might be mistaken. Sufficient evidence has been discov ered to warrant the arrest of a woman for the murder of Mrs. Bailey, accord ing to Sheriff Pitt, of Nassau County, who announced that the woman posi tively would be taken into custody by the end of the week. The Sheriff added that the evidence in his possession would not be presented at the Inquest. "Wife's Slater Recalled. When the Inquest is resumed Mrs. Ida Powell, sister of Mrs. Florence Conklln Carman, wife of the physician, will be recalled to the stand. Mrs. Car man and Mrs. Powell both denied they were on the front porch at all last Tuesday night. Now, Coroner Nor ton says, he understands Mrs. Powell has "refreshed" her memory and re members she was sitting on the porch. Mrs. Piatt Conklln, Mrs. Carman's mother. Is too ill to testify at the in quest, so the Coroner will visit the Carman home tomorrow with a sten ographer and take down her story. Detectives said tonight that one of their number had discovered a clew which led him to believe that the mur der of Mrs. Bailey was the result of a conspiracy hatched by three women living in a nearby village. The motive, the detectives say, was revenge. This clew was discredited by the county au thorities. Aim MlMedf Says Detective. The womon, the detectives said, were trying to kill the doctor and shot Mrs. Bailey by mistake. There is a possibility that Mrs. Car man may be recalled to the stand. Dr. Carman told the authorities tonight he feared some persons might secrete a ,38-caliber revolver with one exploded cartridge on his property. A guard was placed on all sides of the house. The body of Mrs; Bailey was burled today In the family plot In Greenlleld Cemetery, near Hempstead. YEGG MEN DISREGARD NOTE Amateur Thieves Enter Department ( Store and Try to Crack Safe. Disregarding the notice "Don't dam age this door; there is nothing inside." amateur yeggmen Bome time Saturday night tried to blow open the vault of the Kennard fc Adams department store at 639 Wlllams avenue.- Tbelr vain efforts were revealed yesterday morning when Captain of Detectives Baty and Detective Golts made some According to the detectives, the yeggmen were amateurs. They did not bring any tools, but ransacked the store and found a meat saw and an ax. They ..J . - r ff th knnh nn thA com bination lock. Failing In this, they battered It off with the ax. This left a small hole In the door. Into this hole they poured a little giant powder, . T. - nn tnn nf It H T"l d lit the fuse. The explosion hardly shook the door. whose real name Is said to be AuspentI, who was in the flat at the time of the explosion and whose escape from death is consldesed wonderful. He was in the hands of the police a short time after the explosion, but before the real nature of the case was learned he was released. Anarchists Conduct Funeral. Alexander Berkman, anarchist and associate with Emma Goldman In the publication of Mother Earth, an an archistic paper, who was questioned at length yesterday, said tonight that none of the dead men was a member of the I. W. W, and that the agitation they had conducted was In behalf of the striking miners in Colorado. He said a member of the anarchistic or ganization was already making plans to hold an impressive public funeral on Saturday afternoon. A nartv of svmDathizers. Including Berkmanfl will go to Tarrytown to morrow, he said, to attend the inais. Kn tmiiHiial precautions to guard the Tarrytown courtrooms have been taken. John D. Rockefeller went to cnurcn today at Pocantico Hills. He motored to church but lnslstetd on walking back to his estate, accompanied only by his superintendent. There were no I. W. W. agitators about the place to- da.y. 7 KIDDIES MAKE HIT NOVEL SOWa AND DANCES ACT IS BEADLINKR AT EMPRESS. Bert Savoy and James Brennan Furnish Comedy Stunts Ice Skate Dancers Please Other on Good BUI. TMe-ht Aawn from the flies droD seven big red hearts onto the Empress stage when headline-act time draws 'round. In the curve of each heart sits a pretty little girl. In the middle heart a youth balances himself and starts the singing. They dance, too. None of the names are on tne pro- . T, nm'm th nltv for credit giuimv a.i v . i " should go to three girls in particular. One is a wee lass, with bobbed hair, a huge bow adorning It, and a throaty voice that we could listen to forever 1 -v.. --,rla hof o-mr little lauehl wuou .no o r and offers confidences about berseli. She sings end pirouettes on ow i"u toes. . ...... Another girl puts her neaa out oi hole In the tent and sings "Off With the Old Love" in a beautiful soprano, high and sweet. Then the little mad caps dash out. clad In old-fashioned ruffles and make a Maypole about the youth. One other girl, witn ions has an exquisite voice, flexible and soft in tone. .... This act is unusually artistic, nar mnnious in. coloring and pleasingly spectacular. Bert savoy ana jb ji - .v ,.,.. nr,i.h of the show. One of .1 j . ,fflAa himftAlf inrtO a LIIOIIl UI1IBB xu. cerise gown, tops it with a golden wig and a, dizzy Depiumpu uu, laughs long. Incidentally his laugh is of the contagious variety and whenever he opens his race ana puts uu to help cover the laugh, the audience is set cackling. The other chap teeas on rc-, wnpihit" he calls the cerise one. They tell new stories. Maud Ronalr, pretty and saucy, with Joe Ward, a comedian, present "Ocean .-. v. - nf o-nv hndlnaze ex- changed by a man and a maid at the beach. A realistic arop uuuninoa effect, with wild waves dashing and a long pier stretching way out in the distance. . . . - nf iBgnnfnir that nrob- in Via AvtAnsively copied till l y niu ..v.. - - since if entails great expense and an especial education in m . " . . . -j n T-i a rhvn two &rile men and a graceful girl skater. They use ice skates ana wonaruua . op tions and figures they out The Ar gentine Tango" and other novel steps are done. . Opening the bill are the two Todd Nards, who are clever athletes, and keep busy every minute. FILMS FEAR FUTURE BUSINESS MEN FORESEE BEING GOBBLED BT JAPAN. PORTLAND BOY IS DROWNED aMaaaaw Allen Kohertson Loses Life Trying to Svrfm In Oswego lake. ATtrrr'ST rn'7 O- Tn 1 v K ffine- clal.) Allen Robertson, ager 15, son of i t..iii. u.rl.tt Tw!itff.fniirth and East Davis streets, Portland, was drowned while trying to learn now to ...(. In "lowao-A 1 n If Tl A V ORWACTk. tO- O V. 111. 1 1 1 V. " O " . " 1 w - D , day. The body was recovered six min utes after the boy went down In eight Jeet of water. Three pulrootors were rushed there from Portland but an hour's efforts to revive him failed. U-IIK.m T aamfln fifAfl 14. WSJI With the lad at the time and hundreds were With his mother and stepfather young noDenson wcui. vatuiiuis trip to Oswego Lake yesterday. His stepfather Is employed by a printing company in roruanu. FOREIGN MARKET WANTED ITnderwood Favors Indirect Subsi dies to American Shipping. -v-nr vni) w Tulir K Tjlncrimin&tlon In favor of American shipping In cus toms and canal tolls, rather than In direct subsidies, was advocated by Representative Oscar W. Underwood, of Alabama, in an address in Brooklyn Saturday. tv.. .mMam pnnfrnfiHnff the CQQH try, he said, is over-production in most Industries, ana lorcigu iuuibib uu,i be found for the excess oi production. BOMB " MADEF0R JOHN D (Continued From F1rt Pg.) wire ready for connection. The authorities believe that the owner of this hand was in the act of making, an electric connection tor one oi mo bombs and a battery when the explo sion killed him. A general alarm was set out today SCANDAL ATTENDS IMPERIAL FUNERAL Reception of Bodies Said to Have Been Marked by Irreverent Scenes. DUCHESS' FRIENDS ANGRY Emphasis Laid on "Inferior Birth" leaves Scar Prearranged Cere mony Is T7pset by Violent Thunderstorm. VIENNA. July 5. Now that the bod ies of the murdered Archduke Francis Ferdinand and his wife, the Duchess of Hohenberg, repose beneath the castle chapel at Artstetten, a bitter contro versy is raging over the manner in which the funeral was conducted. Mod erate opinion inclines to the belief that the court officials made the ceremonial too painfully correct, while the friends of the Duchess are Indignant at the emphasis laid on her Inferior birth. According to reports in the leading Vienna papers, the reception of the bodies at Poechlarn, across the Danube, was attended by scandalous proceed ings. A violent thunder storm upset all the prearranged ceremony and the coffins were hurriedly carried to the waiting-room of the station, where they were placed on- the stone-paved floor and remained there two hours or more. Roles of Behavior Violated. Meanwhile the volunteer firemen, who were supposed to be assisting the local gendarmes In controlling the ar rangements, were drinking beer and eating sausages, while the more im portant officials strolled about smoking cigars in close proximity to the coffin containing the body of the late heir to the throne. The torrential rain drove everybody Into the waiting-room and, says one account, "all the ordinary rules of be havior seemed te have been forgotten and the scene might be described as resembling the turmoil and noise of a country fair." Clergy Kept Waiting. The coffins were brought to Poech larn in two freight cars, coupled to gether. The interior was draped with black cloth. The personal suite of the Archduke and the Duchess, exhausted by the fatigue of the three previous days, refused to leave the sleeping cars and the clergy In attendance to bless the bodies were kept waiting for their appearance. It Is charged that but for the inter vention of the Emperor the body of the Ducrress would not have been permit ted In the Hofburg chapel, but would have been conveyed alone direct from the station to the Artstetten. BOY RIDES TRICK PONY C. REED DOES ONE OF MANY STUNTS AT ELKS' RODEO. Affairs at Standstill Under Policy of American Governor, While Native Politicians Role. eiV TTPiANCISCO. July 6. (Special.) "Ail hot to nieces." Is the comment of Captain F. B. Helm, ex-chief of the bureau of navigation of the Phillp- ntr.Pi. Binnakinir of the Island govern ment since President Wilson sent Francis Burton Harrison to Manila to direct the Filipino destinies. Captain Tj.im whn la now a business man at Manila, reached San Francisco today on the Manchuria. "The new Commission is rapiaiy un doing everything that has been accom niiaho In tha Islands, under the Amer ican Government heretofore," said Captain Helm. "Harrison nimseii alienated practically all the Americans by a policy of deferring entirely to the Filipinos. He Is now trying to recover his stanaing witn nis lenow tuuuwj men but with small success, "u. nitinii nnthlne- with tha Fili pinos. He let it be understood that he owed his appointment to Senor yueson, tK. Truininrt Halee-fl.! a. an announce- mant viith AtHBriiRted the Americans, and vmade him in Filipino eyes a smaller man than wueson. . "Business Is at a standstill, bo great is the uncertainty about the future that nn na narca take a risk. Wealthy Filipinos are sending their money to France, to be prepared if anything happens. Filipino business men fear greatly that the United States will turn the Islands loose to snm tor themselves. They believe that when that happens Japan will gobble the Dhlllnnlnaa Th hl1fllnfflS TT1 PT1- hOW- evercare not influential in the face of the activity or tne ponucos. "S.lf.rfitr.rnmBiit bv the FlliDlnos is -iaiAitiia Tt fnaAnanrlanca 'were granted, each island would have a separate government witnin a year. TOLEDO T0J5ET RAILROAD? Unloading Survey Outfit Revives Rumor Milwaukee Will Build. CENTRALIA, Wash., July 6. (Spe cial.) The unloading at Winlock of a lot of supplies, horses and a complete camping outfit, such as a surveying . t.iA r H hsa rAiiarl To ledo, Central Lewis County's thriving metropolis, to do siureu. vj nuvvuDi It has been asserted repeatedly that the Mllwauaee is aooui id uunu jmu the copper mining district around Mount St. Helens, the ..ne to extend frnm Castle Rock through Toledo. Ther is much speculation as to whether the present crew is to work on i ... m i . a nr mftVa a. rMUrVB7 Of that part already laid out between Mor Bucking Contest, Wild Horsa and Chariot Races Make Last Day of Celebration Success. JCLAMATH FALLS, Or., July - 6. (Special.) The weather continued good throughout the third and last day of the Elks' Rodeo and all the events scheduled took place on time. The at tendance was not Quite so large as on the second day, only a few farmers at tending. While the wild horse race was one of the most attractive features of each day's programme, the interest centered in the various horses rataher than, in the winners. Some of the mounts bucked until the race was completed. The chariot race was won by Uskey, of Dairy, Or.: the roping contest by Ray Pickett, of Mount Dome, Cal.: the bull dogging by Jim Massey, of Snyder, Tex.; the potato race by Liskey's team, two races out of three; the bucking contest by Earl Simpson, of Los Ange les. The Invincible bull was ridden by Chandler. Charles Reed, of Malln. aged 16, rode Baby Pelican, the trick pony. This Rodeo has exceeded those pre .iji.i. it in Anrh ri&v's attendance, in v. n..fantinn Vt arrangements for the accommodation of visitors and the handling of the events. Credit is flue a.. AnA t aticaIp.r. for han dling the events and to the local com mittee for other arrangements. ILL LUCK LAID TO STONE Idaho Woman Blames Misfortunes to Relic Taken From Bombay Temple. t na iMnr.T.U!a .Tulir E -CiSneclal.l tii ,-hf.h hfla fnllnwed Mrs. Edith UB " " " Parker Karrach, of Silver jj ans. xaano, a i nAO ..lativAB for ttir n v vears. is attributed by her to a small, smooth cobra stone wnicn sne inaiscrsouj iw from a temple in Bomoay, x.usi muu, i n vAr -i.ihnnrl Kha racTretn now. that she failed to heed the warning given by her parsee nurse. I was lniormea oy zuy n m no LUa.v it. - . tinner iu-iuck Lr nil v nnv thorn." said Mrs." Karrach. "I did not believe It. une morning x went to a temple with her. While she ..-.vim. t tnnk nnfl of the stones from a casket under the High Priest's chair. .... T "area tn AmArla IfiA 111- , Aiici w - ' - i wVii.h nrmBrcnMv I had brought down upon my head entered into my domestic Hie. I nave anown oi cases. TRAIN ROBBERS CONFESS (Continued From First Pa.) stopped the two men ne hardly sus pected they were the men wanted. He would not have held the men at all but in answer to the query: "Do you know Hugh Whitney?" Stoner replied, "He is my cousin." Manning Not New to Crime. Meadors says he only met Manning about three or four months ago. while Stoner says he has known him for many years. They said Manning had been suspected of being Implicated in several holdup Jobs but had never been connected up with any of them. They say they knew what they were going to do when they left Cokeville about three weeks ago, but that they did not know where they would attempt to pull off the job. They say they left Cokeville two or three days ahead of Manning and met him at Pocatello, Idaho. From there they came to Baker and then to Uma tilla. They considered attempting hold ing up a train in the vicinity of Uma tilla for several days, but later aban doned this and came to Pendleton. They remained here three days and then went to La Grande. Meadors Denies Shooting. These men say Manning finally de cided on Kamela as the point where they should board the train. They also say that Manning made all the arrange ments for the holdup, getting the dyna mite and making all other prepara tions. Meadors. who held the sack into which contributions of the passengers was dumped, says he is 30 years of age. Stoner is 28. "I never fired a shot," said Meadors when asked if be wounded Deputy Sheriff McDuffy. "I was Just in front of Manning: when the first. shot was fired." Stoner Not Wonnded. T turned and asked Manning if he was shot. Tea, open the door,' was his reply. As he fell over he handed me one of his guns and I beat It. I did not know that any one but Man ning had been shot, for though Man ning turned half way round and com menced shooting, it looked to me like his guns were pointed too low to hit any one. I ran up ahead to the express car, where Stoner was, and yelled for him to come. I did not say that I was wounded, for none of the bullets touched me." 'That is him, all right That is Char ley Manning," said F. W. Stoffers, Man ning's brother-in-law, who arrived late today from Cokeville, Wyo., for the purpose of identifying the dead robber. After examining the tatoo marks on the arm, he continued: There can be no mistake. I have known Manning for eight or ten years. He is my sis ter's husband. He is between .30 and 35 years of age. 'He left home about three weeks ago. telling his wife he was going to Ne vada, and we supposed he was there. His one fault was gambling. I do not know whether he has any liivng rela tives or not. I know he had been in Colorado when he was a boy." Stoner Well Knoirn. 'I have known Clarence Stoner all his life. My mother attended his mother when he was born and I have known him ever since. He has always been a good, straightforward boy. He never played cards or drank. Never was in any kind or trouble, ana ne is the last fellow in the world I would expect to be mixed up in an affair of this kind. 'I am not sure I know this man Meadors. though I may recognize him when I see him. The name is familiar to me." Stoffers has telegraphed his sister that the dead man is her husband and she has asked that the body be sent to Cokeville for burial. Neither Meadors nor Stoner has the appearance of criminals. Stoner espe cially is boyish looking and tears al most came to his eyes when he spoke of his mother and sister. Manning Resembles Wnitney. According: to Stoffers, Mrs. Stoffers was the first to suspect that the dead robber was their brother-in-law. She recoenized Manning from the pub lished description. Then, when Mrs. Manning told them that Hugh wnit ney had given Manning his watch their fears were further conrirmea. 'Yes. Manning and Hugh wnitney were close personal friends," Stoffers said, in answer to a question. "Too close for Manning's good. I believe Whitney, by his tales of Buccessrul ex ploits, inspired Manning to undertake this lob. Whitney ana manning aiso looked much alike and I can easily un derstand how there would be some con fusion In their identity." STRAW VOTE IS WEIGHED Business Men Didn't Understand Subject. Believes "Dry" Worker. The maloritv vote cast against pro hibition bv members of the Portland Chamber of Commerce In their recent straw ballot was attributed to an imrr- foct understanding of the sunject on their Dart by F. S. Kegan in his aa dress at the Taylor-street emouisi Church yesterday afternoon. Mr. Regan declared that, contrary to the prevailing belief among business men. prohibition does not hamper business. He said that in Rockford, since it went dry, manufacturing enter- nrlii fi-nnlovintr 17.000 men, and rep rpspntine an investment of about $50,- 000,000, can be Doasted. roruana, on the other hand, he declared, with a population three times as great as tj i- Vila hnma rltv has onlv iwjvniuiu) u.u ------- - j about $35,000,000 invested In manufac turing, and employs only 16,000 men. The meeting was under the auspices of the "Out-to-Wln" Prohibition com mittee. time either of us was ever under ar Meadors says both his parents are dead. Stoner says his mother and sis ter are living at Asotin, Wash. Both ,n cmoTit th entire day in the moun tains with Sheriff Taylor and Special Agent Wood, of the O.-W. R. & N., picking up the loot taken from the train at the time of the roooerys When arrested at Hilgard. 17 miles . . - ...na nf tTnn rftbhprv. Meadors L 1 U III llio -i v- went down to the creek to get a drink and placed the largo diamond under a stone in the water. Later, when he found the officer was going to take them into La Grande, he dropped the smaller ring along the railroad track. These two rings, the guns and all the plunder taken irom ino tpn tym pany and passengers, were recovered today. t.. ..tiMnai wra hidden in four dlf ferent places several miles apart, so that tne worn ot piun "v ...j A Ua anflra Aav When Deputjr; Sheriff Batohelor C. E. HOLLID AY CO. 355 Alder Street, Corner of Park CLEARANCE OF SUMMER DRESSES (Of the Better Class) All Lingerie, Cotton Crepe, Voile, Lineu and Ratine Dresses. ONE-HALF PRICE $10.50 $12.50 $15.00 $18.50 $25.00 $30.00 Dresses Dresses Dresses Dresses Dresses Dresses now 5 5.25 now $ 6.25 now $ 7.50 now $ 9.25 now $12.50 now $15.00 These Dresses are different from the cotton Dresses usually shown. Inspection will convince you. CUMBERS ARE BACK 14 Members of Y. M. C. A. Party Say Mt. Hood Idea!. MAZAMAS MAKE PICTURE Friendly Fleece of Clouds Minimizes Kays of Son Without Injuring View Remarkable Landscape V Over Two 6tatee Seen. If... . n n 11 1 11 IT (llB Vftlirth of J 111 V OH Mount Hood under glorious circum stances, 14 memoers oi iue iuuus Men's Christian Association returned to Portland yesterday at 4:30 P. M. It marked the ninth annual Independence day ascent of the mountain by the association. Included in the party, under tne ai rection of A. M. Grilley. physical direc tor, were: E. H. Bullivant, Raymond -I-.- uomv shnnt. J. c. Clark. C. N. Clark, Ed Larson, R. J. Davidson, John P. Trant, J. P. Plagemann. F. H. Fleming, F. R. Maney ana trim d-hic. Leaving Portland Thursday evening, the party went by rail to Hood River, where it spent the night En route to Cloud Cap Inn it took the train to ca...t.aa ttiB 10 miles f rom there to Cloud Cap Inn. Dinner was secured at Rogers inn. Summit Reached at 120 P. M. With Mark Wygant as guide, the party left Cloud Cap Inn Saturday at -n a -bjt -.gchlnir thn summit from the north 'side at 1:20 P. M. Here the members registered their names in the Mazama boek Deiore aeecenun8 mo south side under the guidance of Ed Myers. Government Camp was reached at 4 P. M. f u .v.. ,'nj.'Bi.n.tai fif the moun tain I have made in as many years I i ....a aaan rnn gmnw in uhlldi tun- x! nn tnr .nmfortable traveling." said r,.atni Orlllev last night. 1 ne on RELIEF FROF For baby's comfort- Adv. Santlseptlo Lotloa. ii .nnitinnn nf deDressed vitality tend to disturb tne processes ui uns tion. There is not a disturbed condi tion of life that may not aneci. uibc tion. tt- nrt1trNt!nn Are so com i OW auoco .. "o - mon as thin, weak blood. It affects ji.. nf4 a nncA the srreat Drocesses of nutrition. Not only Is the action of the gastric and intestinal gianas diminished, but the muscular action of the stomach is weakened, isotnmg win more promptly restore the digestive efficiency than gooa rea oioou. out It the normal activity of the stom 1 1 - (MnnB.IMa Thin, pale people who complain or Indigestion must improve the condition i- - . i t t. ftmi rallof Thn most oi meir ui""" ...... . - active blood-b'illder In such cases is Dr. Williams' Pink Pius, rney mane rich, red blood which quickly restores the digestive organs to their proper .i--.-- . v. fi.Dt .1 c 1 1 1 1 la hiimrer. The dyspeptio who has hated the sight and Bmell oi iooa now iuu to meal time with pleasuraoie anticipa tion. Care now in the selection and quantity of food will put the patient well on the road to health. A diet book, What to Eat and How to Eat,' will be sent free on request by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. All druggists sell Dr. Williams Pink Pills. Adv. was ideal and the mountains showed up splendidly most of the time. "There were some clouds over the mountains, making it unnecessary for us to paint our faces as a protection against the sun. However, the clouds were so high that they did not obstruct our view to any great extent. lieneath them we could see Mount Adams, Mount Ranter and Mount St. Helens In one direction and Mount Jefferson, Three Sisters and Broken Top In an other We could see the Olympic range plainly, as well as the Hood River Val ley and Eastern Oregon and Washing ton. There appeared to be a fire at or near Kalama, Wash. Because of the intervening fog we could not see i ori- land and the lower Columbia. Hood River Party la Met. "We met another party that also had come from Hood River and had climbed the north side of the mountain. It In cluded Mr. and Mrs. Otto E. Krausse. Miss Helen Krausse and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ixickley. of Portland: and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph II. Albert. Dr. an J Mrs. John Griffith and Paul Wallace, of Salem. "The 100 Masamss clirnhlng ths mountain yesterday made a wonderful moving picture." Mr. Grilley snd his varty did not sea the red fire that h liKhte.! on the mountain on the nleht of the Fourth, bft they say that Ed Myers, the giild on the south side, took two men wllti him to set off the Illumination. Returning, we walked to Khmlixloni dron Tavern, stopping thero for ln day dinner, and took automobiles ft Portland, reaching home aliout 1..10 o'clock." The Mazama party was under UiS. leadership of Mint Ann lHlllngcr. GOLDEN DALE. Wash-, July S (Spa clal.) County School Superintendent Anderson reports that out of 117 pupils who took the final elahth trade " -anilnatlona In Klickitat County. 110 passed. In the Goldendale grammar achool II out or a riaee or i I""'". NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Incorporated in 1835 Assets, $66,168,702 Surplus, $4,986,246 HORACE MECKLEM, General Agent 330-331 Northwestern Bank Building Twenty-Four Hours I ilB- You can cross the Swiss Alps in cicht jjbP .1 ! ' X.J By Special Request f "T. -?-vA V 1 AffaYn Thi" Week ' ' ffM ; ZxJ MISS UBOWA FRANCIS SyMi f KT': J''f MISS VETA FLORJENZ. . Vf 82 in Their New Paris Hesi- r :.: 'dr "'tCH tatlon Walts and Other- W,, .1N .i '. ;l.&"r&2:&...tt New Novelty Dances. tltm.r J J Lafayette Cowan, Tenor. 'm ' I At Dinner and After the w A 'i 'J rv"'y Theater f T f - Special 50c Business Jf r"5 ' TJ ' s v f. , - Men's Luncheon. f Tys C coolent Grille In Portlands ry: Air. mm. X. t. Vm Mount Sif Donald 7? jdnadianRocIdes Eight Hours i 4 ft .T hours. You can't cross the Canadian Rockies in less than twenty-four. The CanadianPacific Railway the world's p-eatest transportation sys tem, is the only railroad straight tnrouen the heart of the Canadian Rockies. See without side trips the magnificent scen ery which Edward Whymper, of Mat terhom fame, has so aptly described as ''Fifty Switzerlands in One." In the best "spot" Banff, LaVe Louiac, Field, Glacier, Balfour Canadian Pacific hotels pro vide the last word in luxuriout comfort. Everything Canadian Pacific StaiidarJ-Bone letter For furthar particulars call or wiita for Booklet No. 1 F. B. Johnifm. . Art. r. Dep Maltnoniab Hotel, fortiaad, Oregoa. t. , vl 'it i 6 p 0 o o a o o o o b O 0 0 Q O flWJ D O O O An Eastern Trip to Remember From Chicago to New York on the Pennsylvania Limited leaving Chicago 5:30 every evening over Pennsyevania Lines Horseshoe Curve, the Juniata and Susque hanna Rivers and other scenic attractions viewed from the spacious observation plat form are a pleasing panorama next day. ALL-STEEL through trains leave Chicago daily via Pittsburgh to Washington and New York. Far full Particulars rerard nr fara. tram service. Pullman reservations, ttc. apply to Local Tidui Agents. Or nddrnt J. 5. CAMPBELL Agent Railway ExcHangt Jtttildtu? PORTf.4n. ORhKO.V 0 o o o 0 V 0 0 o o p Q o for, (as arrest cf MicAaei i Murphy, I ton and xoieao.