THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1910. MOTHER AND SON TO FACE MURDER TRIALS Formal Charges to Be Filed Today in Bryan Case. VICTIM'S BODY ANALYZED Several Thousand Dollars Found in Deposit Box Belonging to Mrs. eniitz Home Is Searched. EEATTLR, Wash.. Oct. 23. fSpe cial.) William Fay Kaly, 22, and hla mother, Mrs. Anna Ealy Nemitz, will be formally charged with the murder of Mrs. Elizabeth Bryan of Puyal'iup, whose body was found last Monday at Jones point. Mount Baker Park, by Captain of Detectives Charles Tennant in the morning, according to a statement made by him tonight. "The case has not been as satisfac tory as I would have had it." Captain Tennant said; "but I believe we have obtained sufficient evidence on which to charge both with the murder of Airs. Bryan." Captain Tennant refused to discuss the nature of the evidence obtained by him. but it is believed that it Is based principally on the movements of mother and son Sunday nipht. the nisht of the murder, and Monday, and the finding of the several thou sand dollars in the safe'deposit box belonging: to them. Mrs. Bryan was robbed of $4500 by the person who murdereJ her. Jlcmili Home Searched. Ealy continued his self-possession In the face of sharp interrogations by the detectives and Mrs. Nemitz' at titude is described as being some what defiant. The Nemitz home was searched twice today on secret search war rants obtained by the detective cap tain and Deputy Prosecuting Attor ney T. H. Patterson. Harry Nemitz, the husband, said that nothing was taken from the house following the search. Tennant and Patterson de clined to discuss what they searched for or what they obtained. Meanwhile, out at the University of Washington, Professor William Jjehn, chemist, was at work in his laboratory making an analysis of the contents of the murdered woman's Btomach to determine if she had been poisoned or drugged. Slayer Method Not Known. Since the body of Mrs. Bryan was found Monday morning, detectives have been uncertain, they admit, as to the exact method used by the slay er. They have maintained a theory that she may have been drugged with a motive of robbery, and that she was struck in the face and then strangled only when the drug failed to render her entirely unconscious. The police are said to have estab lished, through a bellboy at tha Plaza hotel, where Mrs. Bryan registered Saturday afternoon, the fact that she g-ot Ealy on the telephone Saturday evening, and that he later visited her at the hotel. Detectives working in Puyallup have revealed some interesting but not especially pertinent facts regarding Mrs. Bryan and Ealy. Mrs. Bryan had for years possessed an uncanny fear of violence at the hands of men. This queer sidelight on the grue some tragedy was disclosed today by the mother of George W. Bryan, hus band of the murdered woman. Woman's Fear Recalled. "She always imagined and feared that men were following her," said Mrs. Bryan. "Whenever she went out alone at night, on returning home she would say she had been followed bv a man." Bryan's mother is the authority for the statement that her daughter-in- law's troubles began when she left Puyallup for Seattle last July, taking her infant daughter with her, lor five weeks' vis-it with friends. At the end of the five weeks, Mrs. Bryan says, her daughter-in-law re turned home dissatisfied and dis contented with her lot a vivacious young woman doomed to the quiet, insipid life of a small town, when she yearned for bright lights, the aters, gay friends and a good time, One day the early part of October, Mrs. Bryan said, the younger woman went to Seattle again; when she came back she is said to have treated her husband with distant coolness, which grew more frigid day by day unti on October 10 they agreed to sep arate. bers and regular patroits of the club. The Sporting club occupied an al most palatial house on the fashionable Hohenzollern strasse. When the mili tary police descended on the club arrested its president. Count ti di Mombello. who. when Dut ial before a military court, ex plained, rather falterinelv. that he had been elevated to his high office only to attract aristocratic patronage. Further testimony disclosed that Po lice President Richter of Charlotten burg. a suburb of Berlin, and Police President von Salm of Lichtenberg, another suburb, and von Salm's two sons have been accustomed to pursue fickle fortune at the Sporting club. So even the civil police are not safe from Noske's determined raids. The notorious "Foxtrot club," which occupied an admiral's mansion, has also fallen a victim to Noske's cru sade. To capture it he employed a large force of military police and the highest strategy. Among the many "guests" arrested, those who protest ed loudest declared they were army officers, but had only visiting cards to prove their claim. Under martial law the lid is being clamped so tightly on Berlin that even perfectly harmless social clubs and associations have been warned that they must close promptly at 11:30 P. M. else the military police will in vade them. SKY BRIGHTENS FOR SEVERAL DEMOCRATS President's Illness Counted as His Elimination. McADOO CANDIDACY LEADS SPEEDING IS CONDEMNED FAST DRIVE FROM ASTORIA TO PORTLAND PROTESTED. Attorney-General Informs District Attorney Evans Highways Are for Public Use. SALEM, Or.. Oct. 23. (Special.) Conversion of the public roads of Oregon into speedways . by careless and dangerous automobile drivers is condemned in a lettei prepared today by Attorney-General Brown and ad dressed to District-Attorneys Walter Evans of Multnomah county. Glen R. Metsker of Columbia county . and asper J. Barrett of Clatsop county. The attorney-general's communication makes special mention of the recent peed record set by Forrest Bradley Mount Scott, who drove an auto- obile from Astoria to Portland, a istance of 105 miles, in two hours nd 21 minutes. "Complaint has been made to this ffice that the highway between Portland and Astoria has been made speedway on which automobile dealers are endeavoring to hang up record for their cars, says the at torney-general's letter, "and in so oing flagrantly violate a criminal aw or this state. The specific instance complained of is the alleged unlawful speeding upon the highway between Astoria and Portland by Forrest Bradley of Mount Scott at the Wheel, accom panied by George V. Adams, sales man for the C. L. Boss Auto company. While no direct evidence has been furnished to this office in support the alleged violation of the speed aw. an account of the unlawful peeding of the parties appeared in The Oregonian under date of October No doubt witnesses can be had the violation , of the law by the arttes named. 'The state.of Oregon is being bond- d for millions of dollars to provide lghways for the public and no man, whether he rides in an automobile not, has any right to make travel over such highways dangerous." Ex-Soldiers Made Citizens. SALEM, Or., Oct. 23. (Special.) Jacob Fuhrer, William James Bone nd Trgyve Petterson Heiderstrom. all f whom served in the United States forces in the war with Germany, to day were admitted as citizens in the Marlon county circuit court. Ten ther applications for citizenship also were considered by the court. OPERA CDSTLY IN BERLIN PRICES FAR ABOVE THOSE OF HOHEXZOLLERX DAYS. Jvoske's Attempt to Moderate Ei cesses of Xight Life Bring Out Amusing Incidents. (Copyright by the New York World. Pub liehed by Arrangement.) BERLIN, Oct. 23. (Special Cable. Old-time lovers of music have th idea that opera will not flourish under sl democracy unless, indeed, the op eratic soil is well sown with money The very recent premier of Han Pfitzner s "Palestrina was pro claimed beforehand as the greatest musical event since Parsifal. The re suit was a tremendous demand for tickets. The state opera charged fou times as much for admission as d the royal opera on like occasions. One does not care to pay fourfold in order to be democratic and drop th w-ord "royal" from a temple of music. At the first performance opera go ers paid $25 for a box seat and $1 for an orchestra seat, something un precedented even in the Hohenzol lerns' most artistic days. The price provoked howls of protest, includin the complaint that war profiteers oc cupied the best seats. There was another novelty on the first night that did not make fo democracy. Those who patronized th buffet had to piry a dollar for a sand wich. If they indulged in edibles fo which knives, forks and plates are needed, they had to hand over a sub stantial deposit to assure the return of the silverware and china. It was explained that the royal opera sus tained heavy losses in such table fur nishings and that the state opera does not intend to be mulcted In that man ner. But is it democratic to suspect that a citizen is capable of carrying away a souvenir? American first-nighters pronounced "Palestrina" to be excessively long winded and featureless and could see no future for it on Broadway. Some amusing incidents attend Min ister of Defense Noske's attempts to moderate the excesses of niftht life here. For example his soldiers re cently raided the Sporting club, main tained by a very fast gambling clique. Berlin was astonished to learn that two ot her police chiefs were mem- Centenary School Opens Today." LA GRANDE, Or., Oct. 23. (Spe cial.) The Centenary school of in struction conducted by the Methodist church will convene here tomorrow with pastors from eastern Oregon and Idaho in attendance. Several speak ers of national reputation will con duct the instructions. Booth's for buttons, hemstitching. 10c yd.; no delay. .823 Morgan bldg. Adv. A. Mitchell Palmer and Senator Pomerene Known- to Be In Field for 192 0 Nomination. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU Washington, Oct. 23. It being prac tically settled that President Wilson, by reason of th break in his health, will not be a candidate for a third term, there is a very perceptible awakening on the part of democratic candidates. Subterranean efforts In behalf of the McAdoo candidacy are 'being car ried on actively, while two other can didates are more openly in the field. One of these is A. Mitchell Palmer, attorney-general, and the other is Senator Atlee Pomerene of Ohio. - The Pomerene candidacy is being pro moted by the organization of, Pome rene clubs in many states, while Palmer is depending on a tour of 22 states, about to be started, to famil iarize tne democratic party of the na tion with his qualifications.. The success of Palmer depends largely on the success of his fight on profiteers, which up to, this time has not been an emphatic success. He has made all the noise Vfa wide-awake candidate, but has not achieved as much in bringing down prices as might be expected of a first-class attorney-general. Pomerene'a Issue Bolshevism. Pomerene. as told in these dis patches before, has chosen to make the issue on bolshevism, and among politicians he is regarded as more farseeing than his two rivals because of the general suspicion that radical ism is to be the big issue on which the next campaign will turn. But the McAdoo candidacy is the most powerful of all because of the firm political groundwork which he was able to lay while secretary of the treasury and director-general of rail roads. This candidacy is suffering, however, from the attacks that are being made upon it quietly within the party by certain . democrats who charge that Mr. McAdoo is trying to capitalize his relationship to the pres ent W hite House occupant and to use the administrative machinery to make himself his father-in-iaw's successor. Barney Baruch, who qualified as financial adviser to the peace com mission in Paris by selling short on the New York stock exchange in De- cembeV, 1916, and cleaning up approx imately 1435.000 in one day, is the head and shoulders of the McAdoo boom and, although not an old war horse in politics, he is admittedly about the best thing to be had in the shape of a campaign manager.' To begin with, he has money and he has friends. W ith his money he has been making more friends, as evidenced by the very lavish entertaining he has been doing in Washington since the industrial conference has been in ses- sio. Baruch Works Day and TVIght. He labors hard in the conference during the day to bring labor end cap ital together and at night devotes his time to bringing himself and some of the most potent men in the democratic party together. Such efforts are-like ly to land the nomination for the presidency for Mr. McAdoo, notwith standing the fact that other candi dates choose to make their contest on issues. There is no sentiment about Baruch. He is a speculator in stocks. He cares nothing about what is back of the stock or what its par value may be a year hence. With him it is what it is worth for immediate returns. He does business on intuition and not on is sues, as, for example, on the occasion when he cleaned up the $135,000 on the stock exchange. Intuition told him that Mr. - Wilson was going to send a note to Germany the next day ;;:yf ft y.' : : "'"T Clothes do not make the man, but these clothes were made for men What do you wish, sir? Style? Quality? Character? Service? Satisfaction? Each and every one of these characteristics of cor rect apparel is evident in these overcoats and suits for man and his brothers." Let me point them out to you! Overcoats and Suits $25 to $90 rr-r 4611 Sellm Morrison Street at Fourtrv 31 V E- 9M which would do great things to the stock market. Nobody else knew it. He bought short, and look what hap pened. Intuition is a great animal. He sees in McAdoo a winner for the nomination and he is for Mc Ado and he is not sparing anything to see that McAdoo's boom keeps moving. The charge already has been made that the democratic national committee is using the $2,000,000 cam paign fund already collected to pro mote the McAdoo candidacy, but this probably is not fair. Men high- in the organization, however. Jo no-, conceal their own personal interest in the former secretary of the treas ury and they expect him to be nom-irt-ted. McAdoo's Record Known. His nomination will make th is- sue clear, whether he ever makes a political declaration between now and convention time or not. He I on record as favoring government own ership of railroads and all that is lacking Is for him to say whether he indorses the Plumb plan. The 're publican party is Just as strongly committed against government own ership, so the voter can easily take his choice and know what he is getting. Attorney-General Palmer is a be- .wixt and ' between candidate. At least that is the construction placed on his recent criticism of the Poin dexter resolution to force him to de port radical aliens. His utterances in this connection make it appear that he is at least seeking not to offend the radically inclined within hi own party, while making a fairly good record In the prosecution of rtdicalr in other directions Read The Oregonian classified ads. -"A look over this most complete stock of winter underwear both two-piece and union suits. $2.50 to $20 a suit every reliable make vassar, cooper, sterling:, gr. and m., p. q. a., rich mond and american hosiery, in lisle, wool and silk. inni icliel COMING TOMORROW CONSTANCE TALMADGE IN men's furnisher and hatter exclusive but not expensive 331 Washington st., near b roadway "A TEMPERAMENTAL WIFE A peppy play about wives and stenogs. ' Stenographers want men of their own and not some other woman's man. If your wife is "from Missouri," bring her to see Constance. HER FIRST FIRST NATIONAL PICTURE it LAST TIMES TODAY 'UP IN ALF'S PLACE" Mack Sennett Comedy SIX FEET FOUR" The All-American Play. The Best Bill in Town! Popular New Player Rolls For Your Halloween Dance 9786 Mammy O'Mine (Fox Trot) ..$1.00 895 Hawaiian Lullaby (Waltz) $1.01) 9877 Give Me a Smile and a Kiss (One-Step) J?1.00 764 Kentucky Dreams (Waltz) ..$1.2." 9890 The Hand That Rocked .My Cradle Rules My Heart (Fox Trot) $1.00 890 Roses at Twilight (Waltz) $1.00 9889 Someone (Fox Trot) $1.00 880 Daddy Long Legs (Waltz) $1.00 873 Cairo (Fox Trot) $1.25 9878 Weeping Willow Lane (Waltz) $1.00 894 Some Beautiful Morning (Fox Trot) $1.2." 9862 Your Eyes Have Told Me So (Waltz Ballad) $1.25 874 Turkestan (One Step) $1.00 881 When the Preacher Makes You Mine (Fox Trot)$1.00 Drop in and have us play your favorites for you or "phone us and we will send them to your home. If unable to call or telephone, sign and send this ad, check thus (X). Name Address MORRISON ST. AT BROADWAY MASON AND HAMLIN PIANOS - PLAYERS n MUSIC sniu mr ALKINM ACHINESl t50RDSJ SAM JOU, UCIAMUTO, LOS MCLS 0. SAM DUE SO Housewives! Listen! Flour will draiin aharlly SI prr bbl. frrl mtr In making thia mxrmrnt lirrmr mlllcra are pnylns; 4I- a buahrl premlmm for nhril. We are atlll arllins OUR FLOUR 40c Lower Than Jobbers' Prices BUY PLENTY OF" fLOl'R A"D BUY IT SOW FLOUR! FLOUR! WHITE ROSE FLOl'R Fine family, 49-Ib. sacks, per bbl..Sll.n3 Sack WlilTK riflSE FLOrR 98-lb. sacks, per bbl. $11.25, sack. 5.TO WHITK BOSK KI.OI K 24V;-lb. sacks, per eack 1.30 Sll'KRIUK FANCY FATKNT FLO I II -49-lb. sacks, per bbl. 12. lO Per sack 3.05 OLIVES Pitted Green Olives, bulk, per fcal. S2 quart SO Ripe Olives. nart cans. doz. 9-il ea. 35. 3 for.Sl.OO Ripe Olives, t-oz. cans, doz. $1.35. 2 for 25 CHERRIES Sour Red Pitted Pie Cher ries. No. 2Vis cans, doz.$4.00 Each 35. 3 for l.OU PINEAPPLE JTICE Concenterated Pinebrosia brand, gals.. $2.75. pts. 50e APPLES AT A VERY LOW PRICE TO CLEAN IP Fancy Klna; Applea, Q-f OST per box V A--J MISCELLANEOUS Robinson's Pure Imported Scotch Oatmeal. 2-lb. cans SO. 5-lb. cans. . . .$1.75 Imported Liver Paste Puree De Foil Truffee. dot 84.50, per can.... 40 Cross & Blackwell Chow Chow, pints, each $1.00 TOILET ARTICLES Jerg-en's T a 1 c u nr. Powder. large cans Woodbury's Shaving- St eacn 17C Woodbury's Dental Cream, each 17 CORN MEAL, YELLOW OR Will i K 18-lb. sack $2.85 9-lb. sack 60c COCOA Hershey's Cocoa. bulk, per lb 3S NO RELIEF CRIMSON-CRIMSON-CRIMSON CRIMSON CRIMSON CRIMSON CRIMSON CRIMSON CRIMSON CRIMSON CRIMSON CRIMSON USE PLENTY SYRUP CONNER A CO. SYRUPS LOW PRICES RAMBLER Marshmallow Syrup, 10a, each RAMBLER Marshmallow Syrup, 5s, each RAMBLER Marshmallow Syrup, 2Hs, each RAMBLER Marshmallow Syrup, 5-graI. jackets, ea. RAMBLER Marshmallow Syrup, 2-gaL jackets, ea. RAMBLER Cane and Maple Syrup. No. 10. each RAMBLER Cane and Maple Syrup. No. 5. each RAMBLER Cane and Maple Syrup No. 2,,i, each RAMBLER Cane atld Maple Syrup. 5-sal. jackets.. RAMBLER Golden Syrup. 5-sal. jackets, each RAMBLER Golden Syrup, 2-gal. jackets, each RAMBLER Bonnie Pure Cane Syrup, 10s. each.... RAMBLER Bonnie Pure Cane Syrup, 5s. each..... RAMBLER Bonnie Pure Cane Syrup, 2 "4", each $1.35 70 50 6.50 3.25 1.70 85 55 7.25 5.85 2.75 1.50 85 ' SOC MILK JUNO COFFEE 46c Per Pound r IMPORTANT ! OUT-OF-TOWN PEOPLE TAKE PARTICULAR NOTICE. All mall nrilrra will be filled care fully anil promptly at thrae love prleea. Send um your K rttrr r y Mat of arroeerien wanlrii. UpwIUqnotf you our lonnt nkulraale prion. jwder. 12 I Bticks. a- Libby's Milk, 4S larpe tins in case, per doz. 1.75 per case $7.00 Libby's Milk. 72 small tins in case, per doz. Wl-i per case ti.KO Federal Milk. 48 larKe tins in case, per doz. 1.75" per cae... .i0 Carnation Milk, 48 large tins in case, special, doz. l.75( case. 7.00 COFFEE, BY MAIL At Wholesale Prices A Coffee Wltb a Guarantee Satlafac tion or Your .Money Dark. We -will deliver free of chance fo your nenrest ahlpplnsr point or by parrel pout, Jono Coffee at 4Ae per pound, wltb the t-ruarantee tbat if thla Coffee ia not aatinfartory. we will refund the full . . amount of the pnrehaae price. E. C. BURNS COMPANY 208-210 Third St Between Taylor and Salmon Special Mall Order Service Write for Monthly Price l.lt Member til-eater Portland AaNorlntion WholcKalera to Private Famlllea. Hotela ami Hratauranta 1'bone Main !. A-IUH. inn 103.2