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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1916)
the aroRXTxo ottfoontan. Tuesday, juxe g, ioig. OREGON DELEGATES TWO PROMINENT FIGURES SNAPPED AT CHICAGO. GOHTESTSOISPOSED ff I0E30X Store Opens Daily Store Closes Daily SHARE THEIR SEATS ut- bYUurmiitt o D o at 8:30 A. M. Saturdays at 9 A. BL Pacific Phone: Marshall 50SO at 5:30 P. M. - Saturdays at 6 P. BL flome Phone: A 2112 Republicans and Moose Invite Each Other to Take Part Seats in Convention Refused 3 Delegations From Dis trict of Columbia. The Most in Value, the Best in Quality o D o in Convention, WELCOME TO THE HOSE CITY ALL LOUISANANS SEATED I HUGHES SPEECH AWAITED Carnival Visitors-? Herafui?Jersstor 6 P 2 Colonel Is Reported Likely to With draw In Favor of Hughes If Latter Announces Stand for Adequate Preparedness. CONVENTION HALU Chicago. June K. (Special.) "Love feast" Is the prop er term to apply to the conference to day between the Republican and the Progressive delegations from Orgon They are all for harmony, and lots of it. When the Republican delegation met this morning. National Committeeman Ralph E. Williams suggested, and the Oregon delegation agreed, that the Pro gressive delegates should receive seats Id the Republican convention, as alter nates, along with those of the defeated candidates who are In the city. In turn, the Progressives went the Repub licans one better, and through National Committeeman Williams invited the Republican delegation to sit as full fledged delegates in the Progressive convention. Mr. Williams received five Progressive delegate tickets and badges to be distributed among the Republi cans. "Progressives Would Accept Hughea Dr. H. W. Coo and A. B. Clark, two of the Progressives now here, are in a most genial frame of mind; they are looking forward to a reunion of the Republican and Progressive forces. Mr. Clark, speaking tonight of the situa tion, said the Progressives could and would accept Hughes if he will make a satisfactory declaration of his stand on the big issues advocated by Colonel Roosevelt. If Hughes will make such a declaration, Mr. Clark believes the Progressive convention will indorse his nomination and adjourn. But the dec laration, he said, is regarded by Pro frresslves as essential to their indorse irvent and support. Mr. Clark said that, personally, he would gladly support Hughes if he makes the- all-essential declaration, or if someone authorized to speak for him will declare Hughes' position. It was the opinion of Dr. Coe and Mr. Clark that Hughes must declare himself in advance of nomination else the Pro gressives will surely nominate Roose velt. Roosevelt Withdrawal Possible. "What will the Progressives do If Hughes is nominated but makes no declaration until he formally accepts the Republican nomination, probably a month hence?" was asked. "That." replied Mr. Clark, "will be entirely up to the Progressive nominee. It will be for him to say whether or not he will withdraw and support Hughes." This statement from Mr. Clark is in line with the prevailing understanding of the Progressive attitude generally. But it also is strongly hinted that though the Progressives may nominate Roosevelt, they, under the Colonel's leadership,' will unite with the Repub , licans in support of Hughes if Hughes comes out strongly for preparedness. and for the upholding of American rights. Colonel Roosevelt, it is said by Progressives of prominence, if nomi nated by the Progressive convention, will withdraw and declare for Hughes if the Hughes speech of acceptance is satisfactory to him. Vote for Webster Insisted On. Charlie Lockwood, of Portland, ap peared on the scene today. He is an interested onlooker. When the Oregon delegation met to organize this morning, the suggestion was advanced that a resolution be adopted declaring it the purpose of the delegates to overlook the fact that one William Grant Webster, of Chicago, had received Oregon's indorsement for the Vice-Presidential nomination. The idea was suggested in view of the fact that Webster and his candidacy are not taken seriously, and that the Oregon delegation would make itself ridiculous by presenting his name In a city where he is known as a perpetual candidate. Clarence Hotchkiss, however, raised instant objection, declaring he intended to vote for Webster and carry out his . instructions, no matter how Webster might be regarded in his native city. Albert Abraham also indicated his pur pose to vote for Webster. In view of the dissension, the formal resolution was not presented. I I " I X I I 111 ill V f i 111 I - - ' ! f '- ' i ' ' ' j HE-,' " " ' I j ''' 1 1 ill i - ,n f ,f i - A fry S ' Half Vote Granted Each Woman Suffragists and Preparedness ' Advocates Will Be Heard, Says Chairman Hilles. u o Farmers Will Organize. THE DALLES, June 5. (Special.) The farmers in the Pleasant Ridge district are planning to form a Farm ers' Union. At a meeting last Saturday night 11 farmers were present and sig ninea tneir intention or forming an organization. Supreme Court to Meet J nne 1 2. WASHINGTON, June 5. The Supreme Court adjourned today until June 12, which will probably be the last deci sion day until October. HOW TO GET RID OF CATARRH If you have catarrh, catarrhal deafness, or head noises go to your druggist and get 1 oz. Par mint (double strength), take this home, add to it M pint of hot water and 4 oz. of granulated sugar. Take 1 tablespoonful 4 times a day. This will often bring quick re lief from the distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing becomes easy and the mucous stop dropping into the throat. It is easy to make, tastes pleas ant and costs little. Every one who has catarrh should give this treatment a trial. You will probably find it just what you need. ROYAL CANTON RESTAURANT Open 9 A. M. Until S A. H. American and Chinese Dishes. Special Sunday Chicken Dinner with 1 Cream 35c Special Lunch 15c and up From 11 A. M. to 8 P. M. Cnft Drinks. Private Booth for Ladies 8''2-354 Alder Street, Corner Park, Portland. O n CHICAGO. June . ino ntvuuv. National Committee sojourner o'clock tonight after disposing of 62 contests for seats In tho convention. During the last four hours of ths es inn which continued four days, the most Interesting decisions wers made. They Included the following Refusal to place on the temporary roll of the convention any memoers of the three contesting' delegations from tha District of Columbia. Seating of both delegations from Louisiana, each member with half sote and reauestlng the delegation 10 jelect Armand Romain. of ivew Orleans, National committeeman in the place of Victor Loisel. Decision that the committee member -e aske-d to receive aeiegauons irom he suffrage convention and conference xnd from preparedness organizations. By formal motion the national com- nittee went on record In favor of pub ic hearings on preparedness and wom an suffrage, the hearings to be held In he convention hall with the commit tee on resolutions occupying the plat form seats of the National Committee. Chairman Charles D. Hilles brought up . the Question of granting public hearings by announcing that many re- i m quests had been made for an oppor- I U tunity to present various subjects to I O the resolutions committee, It is inevitable that the resolutions committee will hear some delegations, particularly those organizations that are urging preparedness and those sup porting: woman suffrage." salu Sir. Hilles. "I think this committee should request the committee on resolutions to srive public hearings on these questions two hours after the adjournment of the convention Wednesday. The proper place for these hearings would be the convention hall, where all the publicity possible can be given Photos by Underwood. Top Jamfi D. Reynolds. Secretary Republican National Committee. Below Frank Hitchcock, Self -Appointed Booster of Hnsb.es Boom PRE-CONVENTION SNAPSHOTS o o Beautiful, Well-SIade, Underpriced UndLeirm-iisliiii An Annual Stock-Reducing Sale Offering Savings of 25ff to 50 Unlimited choice from smart, well-made Undermus- lins in style, materials and trimmings to suit every taste. Prices are reduced as follows: Q For Choice From Lace and Embroidery Trimmed Skirts, tf - . r r J Gowns and Envelope Chemise, Worth to p l.UU QQftFor Choice From Dozens of Styles Envelope Chemise, en O J Gowns and Skirts, Selling; Regularly to p 1 .OU Cl- -J r For Choice From a Splendid Lot of High-Grade Envelope d ! 7c Cp J. X X Chemise, Skirts and Gowns, Worth to P A O Qit l.Qor Choice From Envelope Chemise, Gowns and Skirts Cq vPJLt7of the Finest Materials Sold Regularly to p.&.OU At 19c Choice From Corset Covers and Drawers, Worth to 33c At 50c Choice From Corset Covers and Drawers, Worth to 85c. At 95c Choice From Combination Suits, All Styles, Vals. $1.75. 47 for Combination Suits in Sizes 34 and 36 Only Regular Values to $1.25 o D o o D o Q o D o T. R. URGED BY GERMAN DEMOCRAT TELLS COI.O!nEI. TEC TONS ARE HIS FRIENDS. Women's, Children's Pumps Notwithstanding the advance in footwear factory prices, we were fortunate in securing several styles in Women's and Children's Pumps at considerable less than regular. Included are Mary Janes 2-strap and 3-bar models, in all sizes well-known and re liable makes priced for this sale as follows: Entry Independent. If Not Nominat ed by Republicans, Advocated by Wisconsin Man. i Children's Pumps, sizes 2 to 5, on sale tQQ only .''C Children s Pumps, sizes 5 to 8. nfi1 OC sale at tf Children's Pumps, sizes Misses Pumps, in sizes 11 i to 2, on 1 QQ sale at p 1 .OZ7 Women's and Misses' New Wash Dresses 6.50 Every day entrancingly pretty NEW frocks and furbelows are making their bow to the public at this store and never before has our price su premacy stood out so prominently as this season iat this price we are showing charming styles in sport effects, fancy models in stripe voile, floral voile, stripe Palm Beach and other CJ? Efl dainty materials. All sizes, 16 to 44. J)" Particularly Dainty Styles in Women's Suits at All Prices From $1.00 $3.9S. D o o D o of flour, delivered to a. consignee at Port Arthur a few days' before the out break of the Russo-Japanese, war. wlth- OTSTER BAY. N. T, June 6, Colonel out receivg payment contrary lo London Dailies Have Staff Men at Chicago to Send 50 or 75 Words a Day. "Uncle Joe" Cannon Says Republicans Could Do Worse Than Nominate Him Pacifists See Light. - CHICAGO. June 5. (Special.) Two of the great London dailies have sent staff men to the Republican convention, to cover special features in connection with the service they secure through New York and Chicago con nections. The expenses of these men, aside from the transportation over and back, will run about 20 a day each. One of them sends an average of 60 words and the other, evidently a plunger, loads down the cable with io words every night. If their papers do not go broke, they will repeat this per formance at tbe St. Louis convention. One of the features of the convention is furnished by a local German daily paper, which has two Irish reporters writing the report of the proceedings in English. After the space is filled the stories end with fine disregard of what comes after that time. mere is little "over set" on a German paper. It Is strictly verboten. . . "Uncle Joe" Cannon, always the most picturesque figure of the Republican National Convention, arrived today, his big black cigar tilted at an especially truculent and devilish angle.' After skirmishing around for some tickets for his friends and shaking hands with something less than a million peo'ple. he gave utterance to this sentiment: "I don t know whom the convention will nominate, but It could do a d d sight worse than to pick me." Edward Randolph Wood, who came to Chicago from Pennsylvania to urge pacifism and who might have been induced to run for f resident on a peace platform, is a changed man. He witnessed the great preparedness pa rade and it altered his views radically. Now he Is strong for preparedness and a standing army of 250,000 and a naval programme that will make this country second among the world powers. He speedily discovered that a peace propa ganda has -slim picking in Chicago, especially at this time. William Jen nit.tfs Brvan, who is here in the ca pacity of a reporter, discovers the same fact frequently. Four years ago Bryan was good for tremendous applause whenever he appeared and he was quoted daily. Now his paid column is all that appears. painting by E. Edouard Scott will presented to the home. be Rampant for Fairbanks and shouting not only for naval preparedness, but for the speedy upbuilding of an Ameri can merchant marine, Newton W. Gil bert, of Manila, former Vice-Governor of the Philippines, has reached Chicago to sit as a delegate in the Republican roundup. We came over on a Japanese liner." asserted this Republican of the Orient. Since the Administration at Washing ton hauled down our flag on the ocean trade routes that is the only way ex cept by three British ships that pas sengers and trade can cross the Pacific. 'What a spectacle - we present as a Nation, with nothing but Japanese and British ships to connect us with our island possessions." ELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it 25c at all druggists. The radiant Mary Garden arrived to. day in a great flutter of enthusiasm for Roosevelt, who, she insists, is man of destiny; a leader -not to be questioned, but followed. She said "You know I've been working In the very inferno of France for the last six months or more. Well, every soldier for whom I have been buying wooden arms and legs, every foreigner tells me that if we only had T. R. in Washing' ton things would be different. If we had had him there we would have bad no Lusitania disaster, no Sussex com plications." Isaiah T. Montgomery, slave and body servant of Jefferson Davis during the Civil War, late founder of the city of Mound Bayou. Miss., and now a dele' gate to the Republican National con vention, and George L. Knox, founder of the Freeman, will be guests of honor at a reception tomorrow night at the Phyllis Wheatley Home, at which Roosevelt made public today a letter he received from W. F. Zierath, counsellor of the State Medical Society of Wlscon sin, in which the latterr who said he was of German descent and a Demo crat, urged the Colonel, If not nominat ed by the Republicans, to be standard bearer of an independent' party an American party." Zierath said he bad never voted for Colonel Roosevelt, but hoped to have that pleasure, adding: "Your firm stand against the hyphen is not going to lose you votes. "You observe my name is German, Zierath's letter read In part. "I have Teutonic blood in my veins and am glad and proud of It, but for all that I am an American. "If you. or anyone else, believe that American-born Germans of this coun try, acting through any German-American Alliance, are the spokesman of the Americans of German descent in this country, I want to say that they are sadly misinformed or malicious liars. Americans of Uerman descent are going to vote for you and. take it from me, even they will be surprised at the vote for you in their own communl ties." Colonel Roosevelt. In his reply to Mr. Zierath, said: . "I am certain that the great bulk of Americans of German descent feel as you say they feel, and that is as straight-out Americans. Ericsson Monument Approved. WASHINGTON. June 5. President Wilson today approved a movement to have Congress appropriate 100.000 for a monument to John Ericsson, the in ventor of the Monitor. Brakeman Wins $10,000 Suit.' WASHINGTON. June 5. Reaffirming judgment of $10,000 obtained in the Texas courts by William Wagner, a, brakeman on the San Antonio & Aran sas Pass Railway, for injuries re ceived while operating a coupler, the Supreme Court held the only negligence necessary to sustain recovery under the Federal employers liability law is proof, of a -violation, of the . Federal safety appliance laws. An interesting phase of the harmony programme of Progressives and the Republicans of Oregon was disclosed during the day. The 10 Republican delegates to the convention in the Coliseum have appointed 10 Progres sives, five of whom are Progressive delegates, as their alternates. The five Progressive delegates have duplicated this courtesy and appointed five of the Republican delegates as their alter nates. This co-operation Is further amplified in the appointment of Charles W. Ackerson. a Progressive delegate, as deputy sergeant-at-arms In the Repub lican convention. One electrical comDanv at Kcliwi.rt(irtv. N. Y.. has 18.000 employes on the roll at th presont time more than ever before In the history of the company and it Is likely more bands m-111 be needed. DEAD MAN'S COAT PILLOW Body of Duluth Captain Is Found Not Far From His Home. . DTJX.TJTH. June 6 The body of Cap tain Duncan J. Clow, president of the Clow & Nicholson Transportation Com pany of Duluth, was found today notl far from his home at Fond du Lao. There was' a bullet wound near the heart. Captain Clow's coat, rolled into a pillow, was under his head. The heel of bis right shoe rested near the trigger of his deer gun. Captain Clow was 61 years old. and well known through his connection with lake transportation. Seattle Bank Wins War Claim. WASHINGTON. June 5. The Na tional Bank of Commerce of Seattle to dav won its case in the Supreme Court against the Russo-Chinese Bank of Petrograd for payment on a shipload Did You Notice the Big 1 r A KvT ON Broadway Yesterday? WHERE DID YOU SEE IT? ASK YOUR FRIENDS Evan a Kmg canft dictate wha& you should like or not like XT it bo happened that F&timas were originally "Made and blend ed for tbe King of Wbatiz" would that fact prove that yoa were going to like Fatimaa best? It would not. A man's taste Is hl3 own. A cigarette that might delight some old potentate's palate would not necessarily please you, That's why wo loar&FatLooma op to your tasto. But there is something mors than good taste that is mighty important to you. No matter how jood-tasting a cigarette may he it can only be the SENSIBLE cigarette for you if it is comfortable, too. Its pure tobacco must be cool and coznfortoblo to your throat at all times. And it must leave you feeling fine and fit at the end of a hard-smoking day. Will it do all that? Then, it is the eenmUJa ciga rette for YOU, There are thousands and thou sands of men who believe that Fatixna is the most sensible cigarette there is. Try them yourself, You may discover as these thousands of other men have -that Fatimns have just the coot, meCow tasto that you've been longing for in a cigarette. Yon may find that Fatimaa have the land of mildness which allows you to smoko of them than you might of other cigarettes. Yoo may find that Fatimaa ofTer you a little more satisfac tion in every pun" than you ever before found in any other ciga rette. Buy your trial package of Fatimaa end test them today. i I i ; I . k v.- t li-mmrt d tk Grand Pn at tk Ptt-. . f JTX M J 'DistBKOvtfy Individual JL 'for yJPy jig A Sensible CI D