It THE SUNDAY OREUO'IAN, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 20, 1907. T Receiver Loses Deposits Made After Bank Closed. DEPOSITORS WIN POINT Fourteen Who Joined In Suit Will Be Repaid Under Order Made by the Court in Savings Bank Case. Fourteen .depositors of the defunct Oregon Savings & Trust Company will get at least part of their deposits back. Under an order Issued in the State Circuit Court yesterday afternoon all depositors who put money in the bank after 3 P. M. of the last day of busi ness, August 20, are entitled to re ceive the full amount of such deposits. Receiver Devlin accordingly will make the payments in full. The receiver did not formally resist payment of .these claims. After en deavoring to get the depositors to ac cept telephone bonds in lieu of cash and' falling in that undertaking, the bank's receiver suggested that the case be taken into court in order to afford authorization for payment of the claims. This was done yesterday aft ernoon when Judge Gantenbein heard the facts In the case from Max G. Cohen, attorney for depositors, and promptly caused the issuance of the necessary order. The court's order is as follows: Upon reading and filing the petition of 1 P. Cud worth; Donnue bankruptcy account bv W. L. Palmer; Metzger & Co.; R. Becker: William P. C. Krull; Henry Kroll; Mrs. J. G. Crombill; Mrs. M. A. Mclntyre: L. B. French; Frank Berktold, by J. I.. .Spencer: Oriental Im porting Company: Mrs. T. Marshall; Mrs. Rose Wlesenback and Llllie H. Keep, by Max G. Cohen, attorney for said petitioners, and It satisfactorily ap pearing therefrom that Thomas C. Dev lin has been appointed as receiver there in by order of this court, and that the said defendant, Oregon Trust & Savings Bank, has certain deposits and savings accepted by It after the suspension of business of said bank, and that the said receiver therein has placed such sums of money so accepted apart from all other funds as belonslng to the petitioners herein; Therefore. It is hereby ordered, that Thomas C. Divlln, as receiver of the defendant Oregon Trust & Savings Bank, he au thorized and directed to pay over to the petitioners herein the amounts due each of said petitioners, as set forth in said petition. The list of those who will profit by the order and the amounts each will re ceive, follow: L. P. Cudworth, J10; Donnue Bankruptcy Account by W. L. Palmer, $100; Metzger & Co., 100; R. Becker, $185.93; William F. C. Krull, 781 Everett street, $63.70; Henry Kroll, $50: Mrs. J. G. Crombill, $150; Mrs. M. A. Mclntyre. $3.42; U B. French, $27.88: Frank Berktold by J. U Spen cer, $20; Oriental Importing Company, $37.41; Mrs. T. Marshall, $40; Mrs. Rose Wlesenback. $140; Llllie H. Kemp, 165 North Fourteenth street, $35. KALKOFEX IS FOUND GUILTY Ex-Member of Fire Department Con victed on Statutory Charge. John Kalkofen, a member of the Port land Fire Department, was placed on trial and found guilty before Circuit Judge Ftazer yesterday afternoon on a charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor child. Kalkofen is the fireman who was tried on a similar charge a few weeks ago and released by the jury in the case. At the time Judge Frazer scored the jurors. The authorities decided to take up a fresh count of t ie charge against the fellow, knowing him to be guilty. The girl in the new case Is but 15 years old. Her testimony against the fireman was conclusive. In arguing the case before the jury. Deputy District Attorney Moser aid it was only out of consideration of Kalko fen's aged mother, his wife and little baby that a felony charge was not urged against him. The case was given into the hands of the Jury late In the after tDoon and a verdict was returned prompt ly. The convicted man's ball was at once Increased from $500 to $1000, and in default of this he was locked up in the County Jail, pending sentence. STITT CAN'T FORGIVE HER Sues for Divorce From Wife Whose Friend He Suspected. W. O. Stitt, the watchman who ap plied to the Municipal Court on Thursday for aij order restraining John Kaichner from escorting Mrs. Stitt to theaters, made a second appeal to the law yes terday, this time for a divorce. While the dove of peace seemed to have perched over the Stitt doorway following the Po lice Court proceedings, the head of the family must have reconsidered his grant of forgiveness of Thursday. The petition for a divorce was filed with the State Circuit Court yesterday fore noon. Stitt sets out in his complaint that his wife has taken to visiting shows on an average of four times a week and that she Is neglectful of household duties. Reference to her fondness for Kaichner is made, although this is not the basis of the complaint. The couple were married May 10, 1893, : and have three children, for whose custody Stitt asks. Kays Contract Was Broken. The H. W. Lemce Company was made defendant in a suit to recover $2500 on al leged breach of contract In the Circuit Court yesterday afternoon. The com plainant is J. M.. Healy. who claims the amount due on an assignment of option to valuable real property. SURVEYS IN GOLD BELT Senator Bourne Will Urge Govern ment to Continue Investigations. Prominent citizens of Oregon, notably Governor Chamberlain, Mayor Harry Lane, W. M. Ladd. F. M. Batchelor, R. W. Hoyt and others Interested in the de velopment of Oregon's mining resources, have requested that the United States Government continue Its investigations, so well begun by Profensor Lindgren, of the United States Geological Survey. It has been said that these investigations are to be completed at an early date, for as Professor Lindgren says in his prelimin ary report: "Four months is a short time to examine such an extensive territory, such a wealth of mineral deposits. . . . This report is only preliminary, recon- nuisance work. ... It has not been possi ble to visit an tne mines and prospects." The following letter Just received by F. M. Batchelor indicates that the much desired report, which will do a great deal toward? establishing Oregon In her right ful place among the richest gold produc ing states, will in tho near future be perfected: UNITED STATES SENATE, Washing ton. D. (J., Oct oner a, lwr. ir. M. Batch elor, Esq., 215 Couch Building, Portland, Or., Dear Mr. Batchelor: I have received MUST ft TRAINS HIS OWN BLOODHOUNDS DETECTIVE ANDY VAUGHN HAS PAIR OF PROMISING DOGS FROM KENTUCKY V7 iJ n " I i K ' -J V s tit " IK' i.; 'i?v SPOKANE Is not the only town in the Northwest that can boast of blood hounds, for Detective Andrew Vaughn has a pair of young hounds that give great promise. Seek and Find were bred in old Kentucky, and although they are your letter of September 26, and in re ply will say that I intend to have a per sonal conference with the Director of the Geological ' Survey at an early date, and renew my request that attention be given the auriferous gravel deposits f Baker County, when he comes to make up his programme of work for the coming sea son. If I find that it is necessary to make a further showing to him in this matter, I will communicate with you and point out wherein you can be of assistance. Thanking you for again calling this matter to my attention, I am, very truly yours, J. BOURNE. Jr. ELK HERD IS CUT DOWN Open Season Proves Disastrous to Antlered Herd In Blue Mountains. GRANITE, Or., Oct. 19. (Special.) The ripen season for hunting elk,- which has Just closed, has proved quite successrui from the sportsman's point of view, but has been equally disastrous to the elk. For a number of years 30 elk have been ranging on the headwaters of the Orand Ronde and North Fork of the John Day River, and with the opening of the elk season hunters flocked to that locality, each equipped to get the portion allowed to him by law. At least 10 of the animals are known to have been killed during the season. And the others have been scat tered over the mountains . till scarcely any trace can be found of them. Bookkeeper Gone; Cash Short. TACOMA, Wash.. Oct. 19. (Special.) L. A. Silverton. a 22-year-old book keeper for the Naylor Lumber Com pany, of South Prairie, is missing and the company checks have been found to be forged to the amount of $175. This is all that has been discovered so far, as the forgeries have been so clev er as to almost defy deteotlon. MAN AND WIFE FOR MR. AJffD MRS. JAMES C. SMITH, OF ABERDEEN. ABERDEEN, Wash., Oct. 19. (Special.) After having traveled to gether over a great deal of the United States and having met with many vicissitudes in the- way of change of fortune, Mr. and Mrs. James C. Smith will on Monday, October 21 celebrate in a neat cot tage in North Aberdeen the fiftieth anniversary of their marriage, which took place In Mount Pleasant, Henry County, Iowa, October 31, 1857. Of this union 13 children were born, nine of whom are living, and there are 23 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. James C. Smith was born In Indiana, April 14, 1836, and Sophia Jane Evans, his wife. In Vermillion County, Illinois, November 8, 1839. They have lived plain, unassuming lives, and after having crossed the plains eight times, twice with ox teams, and paving resided In various cities, this worthy couple has settled in the- northern section of this city. Mr. Smith has been a member of the Masonic fraternity for 31 years. He rarely smokes and never was Intoxicated. With the exception of a son who died at the age of 19, all of the children are married and livo In cities almost at the four corners of the North American continent. The children are: Mrs. Eva Goffl. San Francisco; Mrs. Gullema Sesh, Tacoma; Mrs. Bessie Pach, Aberdeen; Mrs. Ida Moss, Los Angeles; Mrs. Mary Vaughan, Omaha; James Harlan Smith, Odessa, Wash.; Mrs. Jennie Gerhard, Portland; S. B. Smith. Omaha; B. E. Smith, Aber deen. The celebration of the golden wedding will be informal. ' Mr. and Mrs. Smith will receive their Invited friends and neighbors from 8 to 1 o'clock Monday evening, and after the expression of congratulations refreshments will be served. ?wwjwwwwBs?sissiy-pyirmmM'mw.Mm.myiMiyp jmmm'iiiimauimm0wxF!ss ' 2 tf jp.mi BLOODHOUNDS OWNED BY IETECTI'K ANDREW only seven months old, they can take a trail that is several hours old and run the man to earth. Detective Vaughn is training the dogs himself and he Is well pleased with them. He is just waiting for some crime to be committed, so that he can make use of BLOCK TRUNK LIE Harriman Hurries His Survey ors Into Central Oregon. OLD TACTICS FOLLOWED Party Leaving Shaniko in Automo biles Will Spy Out Routes and Hold Strategic Points Against the Rival Railroad. Equipped with automobiles for crossing the stretch of Interior Oregon from Shaniko to Klamath Falls, a party of en gineers and surveyors, carrying Held in struments and camping outfits, were hustled away on a special train from Portland last night over the O. R. & N. by General Manager O'Brien. Their orders are to cross the state ' from north to south, with the supposed purpose of spying out the strategic points and hold ing them against the Oregon Trunk Line, the independent railroad that announces Its intention to build up te Deschutes River from its mouth to Madras and on to Lakeview. Officials of the Harriman interests' are reticent as to the purposes of the ex I pedltion, which was kept secret. But the HALF A CENTURY tr-s ivvs i VAUGHN. his hounds. The other day the hounds were sent upon a trail four -hours old and after tracking the man for several miles, over the hills back of the City Park, the dogs Anally came to a halt under a tree, and to Detective Vaughn's surprise, the man was hiding among the branches. object of the trip seems to be to run counter to the Oregon Trunk, the only railroad that now threatens to enter the Harriman preserves, as Central Oregon has come to be known. The Harriman people contested the right of the Oregon Trunk to build a railroad up the Des chutes canyon from the mouth of that river 100 miles to the big level plain of Central Oregon. Danger threatened the Harriman interests wtien the - Oregon Trunk entered the Deschutes canyon and the legal department was put in motion to head off the threatened invasion. This failed, for the Oregon Trunk is now pos sessed of rights as far up the Deschutes as the mouth of White riven a distance of 45 mile9. Lest the Oregon Trunk continue its tri umphant progress through the Btate, ilans for which are under way, the Harrl- , lan people apparently feel it necessary to I ?tay the procession as soon as possible, This is doubtless the object of the expedi tion Just sent into the Interior. From Desciiutes the party will travel by automobile to Madras and Bend, and engineers will gro over the Upper Deschutes Valley, seeking the most practical route for a railroad and point ing out the only .feasible line for the purpose. That these strategic points will be secured by the Harriman in terests and that these engineers will be busy In the interior for some time is taken for granted. Although Harriman interests cannot see their way clear to spend money in building roads into Central Oregon (it present, as says Mr. Harriman him- His Cigar Doesn't Taste Right And Yet It Is the Same He Was Smoking With So Much Relish After Dinner, Last Night; Out of the Very Same Box, Too. IT ISN'T THE CIliAK ITS THE STOMACH Every smoker has experienced this peculiar condition of the stomach and liver, the result usually of imperfect digestion of food. And the blame is usually put on the cigar and not where It belongs. Such men are usually high livers, hard workers mentally, living under high pressure and high draught, and it doesn't take a great deal to disorder the stomach or render the liver torpid. They should make It a practice to use some tried and reliable remedy like Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, that will aid Nature and not force It and will take care of the sudden attacks of acute indigestion. Tlte use of these tablets is not to be confounded with the patent medicine habit. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are not a patent medicine, but are com posed of the vary elements which na ture - provides the healthy stomach to do the work of digestion pepsin, diastase, golden seal, etc. There Is no secret In their preparation they are absolutely pure and therefore all the world UBes them. ' 1 No matter how disordered the stom ach may be, it will right itself if given the chance. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets digest food where the stomach can't, give the abused stomach and Intes tines a rest, and offer renewed strength to the worn out glands and muscles. Brain workers can rely on Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, no matter how tense the strain. AH druggists carry them in the fifty cent packages,' or if you prefer a free trial package can be had by sending your name and1 address to day. F. A.- Stuart Company, 160 Stuaft Building, Marshall, Mich, self, in view ofthe condition of the money market, the Oregon managers apparently have carte blanche when it comes to blocking other projects into that territory. This has been dem onstrated any number of times. The danger that 'the Oregon Trunk may become a Hill line at any time lends inducement to the Harriman' people to forestall the only live oppo sition project that openly plans to in vade Oregon from the north, east or west. HOLDS ANNUAL ELECTION Juvenile Improvement Association Also Reviews Work of Year. At a meeting of the Juvenile Improve ment Association, held last night In de partment No. 1 of the State Circuit Court, the following officers were elected: Judge A. L. Frazer, president: Mrs. H. K. Mc- Arthur, vice-president; Miss E. Norcross, secretary; Norman Thome, treasurer. Several matters of Importance in con nection with the work of the association were brought before the meeting. Judge Frazer urged the necessity of having deputy probation officers in each district. Also, the advisability of having friends among the business men of the city for the boys who are on probation, and the same course to apply to girls who are on probation and who need the protec tion and interest of some woman friend. The question of an amendment to the school law permitting school buildings to be .used for playgrounds, presented by Mrs. M. R. Trumbull and Miss Dlmmlck was favorably received and carefully considered. It was also decided that members of the association shall use their best jefforts in enforcing the child-labor law. by reporting all violations of the act which come under tbelr observation. Miss Sallie Beck, of Boston, gave an Interesting account of the work of the Vacation Home at the seashore near Bos ton, which Is maintained for the purpose of affording vacations to school girls, factory-workers and servant-girls from the city. STOLE ELECTRIC CURRENT Lee Ling, Chinese Gambler, Charged With Wire-Tapping. - Lee Ling, said to be the proprietor of a Chinese gambling-house at 133 Second street, was arrested by Deputy Sheriff Llllis and Policeman Quinton at 10 o'clock last night and was lodged In the County Jail. Captain Slover, commanding police headquarters, refused to book the pris oner, and for that reason Lee Ling was turned over to Sheriff Stevens. A charge of larceny was placed against Lee and he was not admitted to bail because the charge is a felony. Lee Ling Is charged with tapping the wires of the Portland Railway, Light & Power Company, which Is a crime, pun ishable by Imprisonment In the peniten tiary of from six months to one year. - It Is said that this crime Is prevalent In Chinatown, and the company's officials are determined to put a stop to It. The Chinese were angry over the ar rest, and as Policeman Quinton was Specialist J. J. O'Keefe v NOW LOCATED AT 324 Goodnough Building This well-known Cancer Specialist, better known as "PORTLAND'S SUCCESSFUL CANCER CURER," who has had such jemarkable success' in treating and absolutely curing the most hopeless forms of can cer, has obtained permanent quarters in Portland at the above address. Prof. O'Keefe not only claims to have made many wonderful cures of this dread disease, but has pos itive proof and evidence of several cases that will convince the most skeptical. For instance, J. E. Lam born, 1114 Salmon street, who had consulted various specialists in Los Angeles, Chicago and St. Louis, all giving him up, came to Prof. O'Keefe several months ago, apparently a hopeless case; suffering with a form of the disease termed as stone cancer of the neck., The patient, as far as the cancer is concerned, is practically cured, and with the proper care and attention would today be a well man. i c J f - v " t I,: u vi Q t , ' S" ., - I ' i .;i - . -f ' t'tifiwMiitiw ' i -iiii i nn Tiinami'i -i ,,m' mid i nrm" T-TMnmn 1 NOTARY STEELE. Any person suffering with any form of cancer' should not neglect to be prompt in having it thor oughly and properly attended to. There is no other disease known to the medical world where so much skill and careful attention is demanded.- Prof. O'Keefe 's reputation as a specialist has long been established and he ,is ever ready to go thoroughly into all the claims of the many fortunate patients he has turned away as cured. Don't put off consulting him, even though others may have failed. pecialist J. J. O'Keefe Opposite the Postoffice OVERCOATS For Everyday and Dress Occasions at Portland's "Greater Store for Men" Their faultless appearance has popu larized them; this APPEARANCE of perfect tailoring and modish new styles is the result of underlying princi ples of correctness. It is as evident in the serviceable long overcoats for con stant wear as in those for full dress occasions. It's the sum total of supe rior materials, expert workmanship, and style artists' designing. All the season's buter garments at the lowest prices com mensurate with quality. The "Cambridge Correct Clothes" brand is as popular in business suits as in overcoats. Every line complete. Sole Agents for DUNLAP HATS 289-291 WASHINGTON STREET taking Lee Ling- out to a patrol wagon through a long, dark hallway an uniden tified Chinese leaped out and struck the officer. The smallest bone in the human body is contained in the drum of the ear. A Group of Cured Cancer Sufferers NCRSE O'KEEFE. MRS. HART. Office Hours: 10 to 12, 2 to 5; Evenings, 7 to 8 Portland's Successful Cancer Curer 324 Goodnough Building Fifth and Yamhill Streets tw CAMBRIDGE jp& COWECT CLOTtlEJ iFJfi Since 1800, when the Grand Army of the Republic had 409,408 members enrolled. Its numerical strength has been cut down al most one-half. There are only about 212.000 comrades now. The losses by death run up to 9000 or 10,000 a year. There Is practically no chance to gain recruits. PROF. O'KEEFE. MRS. VIERANIE. MKd. HK.VDEKSOX. Third Floor Take Elevator