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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1905)
THE' SDOTAT OBE.G0NIA2?, 'PORTLAND, .MARCH 26. 1905.- RFTER FAT JOB! Senator Fulton Has Calls From Aspirants. THOSE WHO SEEK PLAGES Heceiversfiip arid Registership to Be FUled. S3000-A-YEARLUMS SOUGHT Secretary Hitchcock tyst Yet Ready to Receive Recommendations, So Appointments Will Not Be Made Just Now. Senator Fulton's door was the bourne of many patriots yesterday. Two fat jobs, each paying .53000 a year, the receivership and the registersmp or the Roseburg Land Office, are at the disposal of the Senator. The lncumbonts, J. O. Booth and J. T. bridges, now suspended, are soon to be removed by Secretary Hitch cock. , When the callers knocked the Senator hastened to throw wide the portal unto. Xhem. No. they did not want the jobs for themselves, but for their friends, un less, of course, their friends thought as much of them as they did of their friends, in which case 53000 a year would cot scare them away. "Rap, tap," said the door. x Two of the gentlemen who would ac cept the jobs hud audience" with the Sen ator J. M. Hansbrough, of Roseburg, for mer Representative to tho Legislature, and B. L. Eddy, of Tillamook, also a former Representative. Both were stal wart adherents of Fulton in the Sena torial battle of 1903. "I'm in the fight, all right," quoth Mr. Hansbrough. "They've got to beat me to show me. I'm that kind of MiESOUrlan. Am I receiving encouragement? Well, I'm receiving about everything else but encouragement But I'm not weak kneed." Up in room 201 the Senator was talking of matters and things. Not Ready to Name Appointees. I den't know when the new appoint ments will be .made," he was saying. Be fore I left Washington I had anj intcr vlew with Secretary Hitchcock, who told me that he was not yet ready for recom mendations, but would ask for them when the time came." By this Secretary Hitchcock meant he would ask Senator Fulton for recom mendations. And the Secretary's iwrds indicated that he would .not Jong .delay. The woods are full of aspirants for the two positions, and two of the foremost are J. SL Hansbrough and T. M. Dimmick. the latter boing a resident of Marehflcld and an ex-Stato Senator. Both were big spokes in Sonator Fulton's wheel ot for tune in the last Legislature. So was B. L. Eddy. "Mr. Eddy would no doubts make a gdod officer in. the "Land Office," said the Senator, when the Tillamook man's name was mentioned. "Senator Dimmick Is a- very worthy man,",spoke Senator Fulton of that aspirant. List of Aspirants. Among the other recipients of bo or boomlets are the -following: Charles. Pearce, of Ashland; pro prietor .of a fruit-canning: plant. .JT. S. Cochran, of Medford, Insurance agent" Gus 2ewbury, exCounty School Su perintendent and ex-County Clerk at Jackson. R. U. McClanahan, of Goldendalc, to bacco merchant. D. H. Jackson, of Jackson, member of the Lotver House of tho Legislature. N. L. JJorregan, of Medford, principal of the public schools. S. L. Moorhead of Junction City, chief clerk, of the' State Senate, news paper man. J. M. Shelleyj of Eugene, ex-Representative to the Legislature, miller. S. M. Yoran, of Eugp;, shoe mer chant and prominent member of the G. A.-R. D. R. Shambrook, of Roseburg; cx County Clerk, business man, color ser geant of Second Oregon Volunteers. F. B. Hamlin, of Roseburg, County School Superintendent. Lieutenant of Second Oregon Volunteers. B. F. Mulkcy, of Ashland, president of Ashland Normal School, ex-State Senatdr. GB. Jackson, of Roseburg, lawyer. Gdorge Dimmick. of Roseburg, 'broth er of T. M. Dimmick, of MarshHeld. George A. Waggoner, of Corvallls. author of a series of stories of Old Oregdn. pioneer of 1S52, member of Oregpn Railroad Commission, now abol ished. George W. Riddle, of Riddle, Doug las County, farmer, pioneer, twice a member of the Lower House of the Leg islature, member of the Lewis and Clark Fair Commission. Ira B. Riddle, of Riddle, ex-member of the Lower House of the Legislature. In the foregoing are 20 names, yet they 'are not all, for others have not come out of hiding. Senator Fulton said that he would not remonstrate further against mov ing the Land Office at Oregon City to Portland, because the Secretary of the Interior and the President evldently had made up their minds for the change. "As a matter of fact" ald Senator Fulton, "the only persons who are seeking to move the Land Office are the special agents sent out from Washington." BOARD ORDERS IT Devlin Tells Story of Return of Check, BRIDGE SCANDAL DEVELOPS House Robbed In Early Evening. Not content with confining his opera tions to the dead of night, when people are resting, a burglar entered the resi dence of John A. Abbott, at 230 Hooker street, about 8 o'clock last evening, and stole U0 in money and a gold watch val ued at $30. At the time of the robbery Mr. Abbott was sitting in the parlor entertaining company. The burglar was not seen, as the robbery was not known until Mr. AB bot went to his room. He had not been absentfrom his apartment for more than an hour. It is presumed the burglar entered the house through the back door, which was unlocked, otrthat he climbed the back porch, entering the window. At the time of tho-robbery the house was brilliantly lighted, and it seems almost impossible that a man could have entered the house without being seen. U. S. Marshal Matthews Back. United States Marshal W. F. Matthews returned yesterday from San Francisco, where he went to assist his deputy. James Wilson, in escorting a number of Chinese who were under sentence of deportation by the Federal Court. Everett Company's . Tender Went Back Some Two' Days After the Executive Board Took Its Final Action. City Auditor T. C Devlin yesterday ex onerated himself from implication in the Front-street bridge scandal. It had been alleged that he returned the check of de posit of tho Pacific Construction Com pany, of Everett before- .the .Executive Board had taken action "upon it, but be has produced proof that he did not return the check until two days' after the Board had taken final action. When the bid of the Everett company was recalled, and the contact let to the next highest bidder, the Pacific Construc tion Company, of SanfFrancisco. on Au gust 5, 1504, a "representative of the Ever-' ett company called for the check of de posit, but Mr. Devlin asserts that he re fused to hand over the check until he had an order to that effect, which was given him on August 10, the occasion of a special meeting of the Executive Board. Considerable confusion was caused on the point of checks handed over to the Everett company. At the time that Dev lin sent back the certified deposit check the Everett company received one for nearly the same amount, this one being ZXK Instead of 53500, paid to it it is al leged, as Its price for withdrawing its bid and allowing the Pacific Construction Company, of San Francisco, to obtain the contract In some peculiar manner the orginal bids called for only 500 yards of concrete, while the amount really needed In the construction of the bridge is more than 1500. Ae this concrete will cost the city $9.78 a yard, the bridge will cost in the end about jfo.OCO, though it was supposed to be plashed to cost only 155,000 or JG0.OOX It is now believed that a considerable scandal will develop from the suit which Hoffman Bros., contractors, haj begun against J. R. Bowles, George F. Heusner and others, because they agreed to do their class of work for a yard, while the city was to pay $9.75, giving a profit of $10,000 In the subletting of the contract. Huffman Bros, have asked that City Audi tor Devlin and City Treasurer Werleln be enjoined from paying warrants for $3500 to the company which sublet to them the contract It is even hinted that not only that sum will not be paid, but that the whole amount will be held back. District Attorney Manning has promised the Tax payers' League that he will pipsecute the investigations in the case to the end, and find on whom lies the blame of the appar ent fraud in the letting of the contract COURTESY 0HLY TOR "LADIES" Chicago Professor Hits weak Spot In Manners-, of Men. NEW YORK. March 25. At the first public, meeting of the New Tork Asso ciation for Houbohold Research. Charles R. Hendorson. u. professor-of sociology In the University of Chicago, .declared that nowadays only "ladles" are treated with chivalry. "Why is It," asked the professor, "that chivalry 13 dead among us? It" is because the .ydutlr were taught to be courteous only to ladies, not to all women. The man who Is courteous to ladies only and not to the girls iuthe streets is oWy halt civilized. He Is a gentleman only because it suits his pleasure to be courteous. B.ut until men treat the poor - working girl with as much re-, spect as they do their friends in the ballroom.- we will have, no real gen tlemen. "The relation of the household worker is closer to her employer than that of any other class ot employe. Fpr1 the woman who works in the house is In -a way a member of the family,-and. while she is engaged for a definite. 3um to dd certain work, yet, there, ir a moral side to the relation thai makes It more than just an Industrial prob lem. It is ."v contract between human belngsT'The wage-earner1 sells hex; serr: vice, sells her Intelligence and psycho logical sense and this Is what -makes this particular phase of the industrial problem so difficult for there are some" things that can't be bought un der the wage system." OILED HIGHWAYS ARE FAVORED Automobile-Drivers Will Work for -Good Roads About Portland. Oiled roads are to be made about Portland. The movement comes in the wake of. the automobile, which 'de mands the smoothest surface possible on .which to travel. Half a dozen of tho leading autoists hae taken up the matter and they intend to see It through before Summer. One road is to be experimented upon. It will probably be the St Helens road, as far as the county line, 18 miles be low the end of the road at Thurznan street Other drives' have been talked of, especially the Riverside Drive, and that will probably also be oiled, though uot immediately. The hill- roads are good enough with tho macadam, but the level roads are sure to get dusty and filled with loose stones in the Sum mer time, and to avoid these detriments to good and comfortable travel the two river roads will be oiled and rolled, so that they will be as smooth as as phalt and perfectly clean.' The St Heldns road has been chosen, primarily as it leads out past the Fair grounds, affording one of tho best views of the Exposition as a whole. Moreover), the enthusiasts who are b'e hlnd the movement are sure they can obtain sufficient money to oil the whole IS miles without difficulty from among their own friends and fellow-autumo-bile men. A portion of the road, probably the middle, will be oiled to the width of 30 or 60 feet The cost at most will not be more than $2000. The county, the enthusiasts believe, should be willing to make the outlay, but if it is not, they will do it themselves. Lewis Rus sell, J. C. Ainswortb,, EI C Jargensen and H. Wcmme have all agreed to give $100 apiece towards the enterprise, and they aro the only ones who have been asked, so far. While the automobile drivers are in terested mainly in one or two good speedways. Judge Webster is elabor ating plans for making general im provements on all the county roads. There is a fair basis on which to work now, and if he is able to work out a system by which good macadamizing rock can be obtained readily nnd the roads kept constantly in repair, all the leading thoroughfares ot the county will be in excellent condition this Summer. How the Stomach and Kidneys ! on the Inside Nerves Depend day raedical science becomes Slmplic- Law Asked to Say He Is Dead. LA. PORTE. Ind., March 25. A petition to have an alleged murdered man legally dead was filed today at tho La Porte Circuit Court Fifteen years ago William CrawfOrd. a, native of La Porte, was a, wealthy cattleowner in Wyoming. He disappeared January 2S. 1S93. authorities Every more simple and more certain. ty and certainty go hand in hand. For science has- learned that while there- are many diseases, yet there are but few real causes of disease. That is, there are many names by which we knows aches and pains and disorders. But most of these ailments spriag from a common cause! For instance, Indigestion, sour stomach, heartburn, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles diabetes, Brlght's disease and other kidney disorders heart troubles, liver troubles, bowel troubles, nervous ness, fretfulness, sleeplessness, irritabil ity all of these ailments are due to a sin gle cause. Painful, disagreeable and dan gerous though they be, they afe not sep arate diseases and they arc not to be treated as such. They are meroly out-, ward signs of inward trouble nerve' trouble. Understand, first, that we have two en tirely separate- nerve systems. When we walk, or talk or act, we call into play a certain set of nerves nerves which obey our mental commands. That Is why the arm -can be raised, or the mouth opened, or the eye shut at the slightest desire. That Is why your fingers candciicately pick up a pin one moment and hold a heavy hammer the next. But these are not the nerves we are to consider here There is another set of nerves which manages and governs and actuates the heart and the stomach, the' kidneys and theiiver and all of te vital functions. You cannot control these nerves. By no supreme effort of mind can you xnake your heart stop or start nor can you even make it vary by a single beat a minute. And so with the stomach and the liver and the kidneys and the bowels they are automatic they do their work at a cer tain set speed whether you are awake or asleep whether you want them to or not It Is on these inside nerves that life and health depends. So long as these nerves perform their proper duties, we are well and strong. When they fall, we know Jt by the inevitable symptoms stomach, heart. liverv kidney troubles. And these troubles have no other origin, ever, than in these, same nerves. For the stomach, the heart the liver, the .kidneys, have no power of their own. no sf-controL They owe their every ImputocK to the inside nerves. Tho nerves are the masters. The organs their slaves. These automatic nerves are sometimes called the "sympathetic" nerws. This name is given them because ofHhe close bond of. sympathy which exists- between all branches. This explains why stom ach trouble often develops into heart trouble why indigestion brings- on nerv qflsaess why diseases become complicat ed. It explains,. toot why ordinary "medi cal treatments are wrong why medicine so frequently falls. For, despite the discoveries ot plence. the common remedies of the day are de sighed to treat the organ, not the nejjye the symptom instead of the cause. Don't you, though you may not know medicine at all, see that this is wrong? That It- is mere patchwork? That while tho suffering organ Is enjoying Its tem- My Free Dollar Offer Any sick one who has not tried my remedy Dr. Shoop's Restorative may have a Full Dol lar's Worth Free. I ask no deposit, no reference, no security. There is nothing to pay, either now or later. I will send you ait order on your druggist which he will accept In full payment for a regular, standard size Dollar bottle. And he will send the bill to me C. I. Shoop, M. D. porary relief, the nerve that is really sick may be getting worse and worse? Does this not explain to you why relapse so frequently follows a supposed cure? Does this not account for theuncertalntics of medicine? ilore than 0 years ago this thought carse to me: "If life and health depend upon perfect heart action, upon proper stomach, diges tioni upon correct kidney filtering, why does not life itself depend upon these life Epverning power nerve theso inside nerves." I realized, too, that all aliments which result from one cause may, of course, be cured by one remedy. I resolved not to doctor the organs, but to treat the one nerve system which operates them all. For those who treat only the symptoms need a different remedy for each. Such treatments are only palliative; the results do not last A cure can never come In disease of the stomach, heart, liver or kidneys until the Inside nerve power is restored. When that is -done. Nature re moves the symptoms. There is no need of doctoring them. My remedy now known by Druggists everywhere, as Dr. Shoop's Restorative is the result of a quarter century of en deavor along this very line. It does not dose the organ or deaden tho pale but it does go at once to the nerve the inside nerve the power nerve and builds It up and strengthens and makes it well. There is no mystery no miracle. I can explain my treatment to you as easily as I can tell you why Cold freezes water and whv Wat melts lr -?for do I claim a. discovery. For every detail ot niy treat ment Is based on truths so fundamental that none- can deny them. And every in gredient of my medicine is as old as the hlllo It grows on. I simply applied the truths and combined the ingredients Into a remedy that Is practically certain. In more than a million homes my rem edy is now known, and relied upon, let you may not have heard of It- So I make this offer to you. a strapger, that every possible excuse for doubt - may be re moved. Send no money make.' no prom isetake no risk. Simply write and -ask. If you have never tried my remedy, I will send you an order on your druggist for a full dollar bottle not a sample, but the regular standard bottle he keeps con stantly on his shelves. The druggist will require no conditions. He will Accept .my order as cheerfully &9 though your dol lar lay before him. He will send the bill to me. Will you accept this opportunity t learn at my expense absolutely how to. be. rld forever of all forma of nervousness to be rid not only of the trouble; but of the very cause which produced It? Write today. For a free oroer for Boole I on Dyspepsia, a full dollar bottle Book 2 on the Heart. you must address Dr. Boole 3 on the Kidneys. Shoop'. Box Key 7175, Book for "Wojen. Racine. Wis. State Book5.for Hen. which book you want. Book 6 on RheumatUm Mild coses are often cured by a single bot tle. I"or sale at r ort thousand drus stores Dr. Shoop's Restorative at Evanston, Wyo., and his relatives and friends being convinced he had been lured away and murdered by enemies. Proof was lacking and . the body was never found, Jlrs. Hanna Crawford, mother of the missing man, died here this week, leaving a large estate. In order to settle the estate, git Is" necessary to -have her son declare! legally dead. x Linn Is Against Appropriation. ALBANY, Or.. March 23.-(SpeciaL)-At a mass" meeting held in. the. linn County Courthouse, In this city, this afternoon the referendum movement against the ap propriations bill of the last Legislature was indorsed, and preparations were be gun for a general and systematic circula tion ot petitions requesting a vote on the bill in this 3ounty. Hon. J. J. Whitney was chairman of the meeting and' C. H. Walker was secretary. A committee, con sisting of Sonator SI. A. Miller. J. W. Cusick. J. S. Morgan, C. H. Walker and M. B. Case, was appointed to have gen eral charge of the circulation of petitions, the work to commence at once. i I. j u t 4j i MY BROTHER SAID: As an introduction, the,OESGON IMPORTING COMPANY (0. 1. 0.) will, on Monday, March 27, our opening day, starting at 8 A. M. and continuing until 10 P. M., sell direct from the barrels in our window, in plain view of the purchaser, one full quart of unadulterated Whiskey, made in the month of May, 1881, at One Dollar a full quart. (One quart only to be sold to each purchaser.) This Whiskey is full 24 years old, and as a medicinal Whiskey can not be surpassed in quality. Every family that can afford it should have a quart of this RAEE OLD GOODS in the house, in case of need, and EVERY PHYSICIAN IN PORTLAND should-avail himself of this opportunity to get a liquor they can recommend tb y ' their patients for purity and healthgiving vigor. You cannot buy it after 10 P. M., Monday March 27, for that price, as we only have a limited amount of 1881 Whiskey, but AT ANY TIME YOIT CAN GET A BIG, PULL QTL&RT oOld Crow, W. H. McBrayer N (Cedar Brook), Overholt Rye, Mount Vernon Rye, Dougherty, Guckenheimer, Monogram, Hermitage, Gibson's, Cyrus Wilson and the peer of them all 0. 1. C. Rye or Bourbon . For $1.00, a Big, Pull Quart . . . - i We also carry a full line of Table Wines, Port, Sherry, An gelica, Muscatel, Tokay, Claret, Zinfandel, Reisling, Malaga, Madeira. All high-grade standard Table Wines at Twenty-Five Cents a big, full quart. Imported Blackberry Cordial (the best) One Dollar a big, full quart. You can get cheaper Blackberry, but not so good. Paxton's Rye Malt Gin, One Dollar a big full quart. This Gin is the pure extraction of the juniper berry, and we recommend it highly to connoisseurs. Our own importations will save you the middle man's profits on all imported goods, as we buy direct from the producers Our motto vill be: Value for cash; cash for value. Remember, the 1881 WHISKEY, made in the Spring of 1881, and built to fit the taste. One Dollar a big, full quart,! for this date only. We neither rectify nor compound. . s ' v - Oregon Imp Registered Distillery, No. 76, ; u Lincoln County, Kentucky, Eighth District. Vineyard, Sierra Campo, California'. ortin THE BIG FAMILY LIQUOR Telephone 38Q 1 g Compiiiif store 1 . '.-.-r-::: lis wm strife i i