THE SrTJTD AY ' OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, MAY 17, 1908. METHODISTSWIMt PROMINENT BISHOPS OF THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL, CHURCH NOW IN SESSION AT BALTIMORE .:S.:.. r t. ! ' v. PROHIBITIONPLANK ill!!! ; AC! I ! Conference Will Probably De mand That Republicans Make Liquor an Issue. 1 4 x We are offering EVERY DAY in the year the two greatest Clothing Spe cials in the United States. At STRONG FACTOR IN PARTY Church AVil Also Prune Expenses anil May Decline to Amend the Amusement Regulations as Desired by Bishops. That the Methodist Episcopal Church, assembled in Reneral conference at Bal timore, will pass resolutions demanding a strong temperance plank in the plat form of the Republican party. Is the principal feature contained in a letter re ceived by a Portland pastor yesterday, from a high source of authority. The writer, who has held for 40 years one of the chief positions in the church, de clares that there is a very strong senti ment among the ministerial and lay del egates at the quadrennial session to is sue an urgent appeal to the National con vention of the party, soon to be held in Chicago, to come out firmly for the abo lition of the liquor traffic. It is pointed out that the Methodist Episcopal Church has long been a Re publican stronshold and is, therefore, a factor to toe reckoned with in the affairs of the party. At the general conference, now in session in Baltimore, for example, there are three Methodists attending as delegates, each of whom' is the Governor of a state. These are Governor Buchtel, of Colorado; Governor Hoch, of Kansas, and Governor Hanley, of Indiana. There are also many delegates who hold politi cal offices of the highest order, includ ing members of Congress, members of the Supreme Courts of various states and others equally prominent. Bishop Luther B. Wilson, one of the most conspicuous personages at the gen eral conference session, is also a Repub lican, and is president of the National Anti-Saloon League. This organization, it is held by Methodists in general, is the most effective fighter in the field enlisted under the banner of temperance, and, ac cording to the authority referred to above, is quite likely to be indorsed by the gen eral conference. Topics Before the Conference. At ' present, the most absorbing topics of discussion in tho general conference, according to the advices received here yesterday, are temperance, the election of bit; hops and the "worldly amusement" problem. There is also great interest among the delegates as to administrative policy, and, as already published, there is strong sentiment against the election of more than enough bishops to perform the actual work as it is now outlined. Ttiere are indications, it is stated, that a negro bishop, the first in the history of the church, will be elected, to take charge in the colored conferences. All Indications, it is said, point to the overwhelming defeat of the recommenda tion of the Board of Bishops, in the epis copal address, for an amendment to para graph 248, governing members of the de nomination relative to "worldly amuse ments." It is asserted that the senti ment of the delegates, especially the lay men, and in fact, the sentiment from all over the country, as shown at the gen eral conference, is strictly opposed to any change whatever in this matter. Many petitions, one Bigned by 6000 persons, have been sent in to the con ference for consideration, asking tha the discipline be left as it is in re spect to amusements. A petition of this nature was forwarded to the dele grates from the Oregon Conference by Sunnyslde Chapter of' the Epworth League, bearing about 1000 names, signed from all over the conference. Favor Policy or Economy. Conservative action as to the num ber of officers to be allowed each of the benevolent societies, and action look ing to the strict enforcement of the policy of oconomy adopted by the last general conference, is predicted. It is said that the administration of the home and foreign missionary boards during the past four years, under a consolidation plan, has proved disappointing. . As was revealed when the board of home missions and church extension mot in Portland last Novem ber, that department of the church bad far exceeded in expenditures the funds intended for it, and its officers were told by several of the bishops in at tendance at the time that extrava gance must be stopped. This resulted in the decision to cut down by one-half the sum expended yearly for publics tion work, and it is announced at Baltt more that further pruning is in store for this and other branches of tho church. Kconomy, agressiveness and a firmer stand than ever on temperance, it is said, are the controlling senti ments at the general conference. Interest attaches throughout all Methodism and the religious world in general to the election of the bishops and other high officers of the church. Including editors of the various of ficial publications, publishing agents, secretaries of the various benevolent organisations and the general secretary of the Kpworth League. Balloting for the election of bishops is scheduled to begin this week. probably about Wednesday, and will continue daily un til the required number is chosen. PERS0NALMENTI0N. A. H. Maegly. wife and family, leave Monday morning for a trip to Chicago. 111. Mr. and Mrs. Willard M. Conkiin re turned Tuesday from San Francisco, where they were visiting Mrs. Conklin's parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Best. Mrs. Best returned with them, but left Tues day evening for Spokane to visit her daughter. Mrs. J. A. Kerr, who is ill. Hon. Gilbert L. King, of Ontario. Or. a member of the last Legislature, at. tended the recent convention as dele gate from Malheur and left for home last evening, after buying considerable mate rial for a residence he is about to build In Ontario. Mr. King was accompanied by Mrs. King, who is now In Columbia City, visiting their daughter, Mrs. Carl Arnold. E. J. Daly has just returned from a trip to San Francisco, Los Angeles, S.m Diego and Old Mexico. He reports that business conditions are in mucn better shape in Portland than in any of the other three cities. "Prices in Los Ange les." said he, "are very much hisner than in Portland. In talking with liff Angeles Investors who also have holdings in Port land, they expressed the wisn thai ail their holdings were in Portland. Port land Is way behind Ixs Angeles, houever. tot rhPFti"'"" o buildings, street iio- David H. Moore. Resilient Bit hop for Oregon. ViSv J -J - joss. GoodselL Who . Read Kplscopal Address. provements, lighting, etc. There is no good reason why Portland should be so far behind Los Angeles in improvements when we have a much better city and bet ter climate. All we need is th3 enter prise and the spirit." CHICAGO, May 16. (Special.) The following Northwestern people reg istered at Chicago hotels today: Audi torium Annex, K. S. Parker, George F. West and wife, Portland; Great North ern, Cecil Hawlcy, Salem, Or.; William Hyde Stalker, Ed Andrews, Medford, Or. MARY J. HAMILTON DEAD Aged and Honored Pioneer of Ore gon Passes Away. Mrs. Mary J. Hamilton, an aged and honored pioneer, widow of Samuel M. Hamilton, of Cascades, Wash., died at "her home, 853 Howard street, Ports mouth, yesterday morning at 4 o'clock. Her deach was caused by pneumonia. Her age was 85 years, 5 months and 16 days. Mrs. Hamilton was a remark able woman of the pioneer type, of sterling character and ability and help ful to all who came in contact with The I.ate Mrs. Mary J. Hamilton. her. She retained all her faculties to the last, being: able even to direcc her household affairs. She was born in the State of New York, near New Tork City, December 2. 1822. When a child her parents moved with her to Illinois, settling near the town of Neauvoo, where at the ape of 17 she met and married Samuel M. Hamilton. In 1S50 with their children, Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton started 6n the long; journey to Oregon, with a little band of friends and neighbors. They reached this state in October, 1850, and settled on a donation claim on what was named by Lewis and Clark. Strandberg Island, where they reared to macurity eight children, and by their industry acquired a competency. Both were influential pioneers and well known up and down the Columbia River for their hospitality. Mr. Hamil ton died in 1889. and was buried on the old homestead at Cascades. Mrs. Hamilton Is survived by the fol lowing children: Mrs. Lois A. McDon ald. Mrs. Lorzia A. Jones. Mrs. Thomas Moffett, Mrs. V. J. Sherman, all of Portland, and W. J. Hamilton, of Cas cades, Wash. She lived on the coid home place until a few years ago. when sho purchased a home on the Peninsula. The funeral will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock from Dunning's undertaking chapel, 414 Kast Alder street. Interment will be at Cascades. HAVE CONFIDENCE IN 0'DAY There is no more important office than that of Circuit Judge. There is no politics in this office. The present incumbent. Judge O'Day, is conceded to be eminently fitted for the position. He is no experiment. He has the confidence of both the bar and the public, and should be re-elected. With 2.O00.00A freifrht c&rs in use in thfe country the daily cry, the hourly cry is "Mor can, more cars." New cars are put In Fervid "'"nt belor the paint on them tll::fe8illillllllilllil I , fa, jf jx. j, t liitlllBpil I t - ,ju 1 1 ir'T T"ff i The I.ate Mrs. Mary J. Hamilton, t Henry "V. Warren, Senior Active Bixhop. William Fnuer McDowell, Resident Bishop at Chicago. Regents Explain Needs of Uni versity of Oregon. MAKE REPORT TO PUBLIC If Appropriation Fails to Carry at June Election Institution May Be Vorced to Close Doors. Expenses Exceed Income. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, Or., May 16. (SpWal.) An official state ment of the finances of the university, to gether with estimates of expenditures un der the proposed continuing appropriation. has just been made by the board of regents. The statement is addressed to the people and bears the signature of every member of the board. It is made in response to numerous inquiries that have been mads concerning the plans which have been made for the expenditure of the proposed appropriation, the re gents being of the belief that the people should know just how the financial af fairs of the university are conducted. The text of the statement Is as follows: New Buildings Needed. Since 1901, tho university has depended for its resources upon the annual appropriation of $47,500. carried by the act of that year, together with the interest on the university fund, incidental fees, and interest on the Villaxd fund, amounting to' about .$10,000 a year, and special appropriations from time to time. The act of 1901 was intended, with the revenues from other sources, pri marily to cover the necessary current ex penses at' the time of its adoption.- It has been necessary to supplement the amount thereof, from time to time, by special ap propriations, that of 1905 being $G1500. The purpose of the bill now pending is to mersre In one act all appropriations. The amount thereof is based cn careful, and what is be lieved to be, conservative estimates, and in the opinion of the Regents is necessary to bring the university up to and maintain it at the standard of efficiency, which the edu cational interests of the state require. The bare cost of maintenance is now approxi mately $75,000 a year. Additional instruct ors are needed in several of the depart ments, which will brine the amount for maintenance to $S.".000 or $90,000 a year. The library, which touches all departments alike, will require an annual expenditure of at least $10,000 a year, for some years, to bring it to thae proper standard of effi ciency. Provision should be made Immediate ly for the accommodation of the women of the university by furnishing; and heating the present cottage and by the construction of additional cottages or a general dormi tory. This, it is estimated, will take about $50,000. New . buildings are needed for class, laboratory and recitation purposes, at a cost of approximately $75,000. The heat ing, power and water plant must be en larged, at an expense of $10,000 or $1S,000 to meet the demands upon it for heating. Irrigating and fire protection. As soon as funds are available, the campus should be enlarged, to meet present and future needs, by acquiring additional grounds by pur chase, if a satisfactory price can be ob tained, and If not, by condemnation.- Board Without Funds. Thesa several items -will cost from $125. OOO to $150,000. and together with others, developing with the growth of the univer sity will absorb the entire amount carried by the present bill, and all additional reve nues, over and above the expenses of math-, ten a nee. for a number of years to come. This covers, in a general way. the needs of the university as we see it. and the use to be made of the proposed appropriation. There is another matter which should be alluded to. The invoking of the referen dum has restricted the university. since January 1, 10O7, to the annual amount ap propriated by the act of lt01. and about $10,000 a year from other sources, making a total of about $60,000 a year, which has been inadequate to pay the expenses. The deficiency last year was met by the board postponing all improvements, purchase of furniture, additional apparatus, and the like, and by part of the faculty voluntarily fore going their salaries for the last quarter of the year, relying on the approval of the pending bill or subsequent appropriation by the Legislature for their payment. The salaries and incidental expenses for the pres ent scholastic year will amount to at least $50,000. to meet which there is an appro priation of $47.SOO, interest on land fund, estimated at $5000, Interest on Villard fund. $22i0. or total of $54,700. At the close of the present scholastic year the university will, therefore, be practically without funds and as the law absolutely prohibits the Re gents or faculty from pledging the faith of the state for the university, in excess of the Income for the current year. H Is not ap , parent how It will be able to open it doora 1 ERE MONEY GOES leather B. Wilson, President Antl- Saloon League. Jobn,H. Hamilton, Resident Bishop for California. next - Pall If the pending appropriation Is defeated. We may add that the Regents receive no compensation whatever for their services, but realizing, in the discharge of their duties In administration of the university, they are but servants of the people, they present th facts, for the consideration and final deter mination of the voters, without arfcument I Respectfully submitted. y NEHEMIAH L. BUTLER, . JAMliS W. HAMILTON, CYRUS A. IXHPH, WILLIAM SMITH, FREDERICK V. HOLMAN, R. S. BEAN. .1. C. AINSWORTH, MILTON A. MILLER, SAMSON H. FRIENDLY, Board of Regents. WILL CONTEST NEARS END Last Testimony in Behalf of Mrs. Stevens Is Heard. Conclusion of the George T. Myers will case is now near at hand. Final testi mony in the case was heard yesterday on behalf of Georgia Frances Stevens, daughter of Mr. Myers, who is seeking to break his will on the grounds that he was not of sound mind when -he left the bulk of his big estate to his son, George T. Myers, Jr., and cut her off with $20,000. Yesterday's testimony was given by Drs. W. T. Williamson and J. Allen Gil bert, in the capacity of alienists. They had no personal knowledge of this case, but in answer to hypothetical questions were inclined to the belief that Mr. My ers might not have been of sound mind in fancying that his daughter had plotted with a doctor to kill Mrs. Myeis when she was fatally ill. The -. hypothetical questions aaked the two doctors in the County Court yesterday morning referred to Mr. Myers' attitude towards his daughter prior to his death, and embodied the evidence which has been brought out by Mrs. Stevens In her efforts to break the will and share in the $300,000 estate more fully. Briefs will be .submitted in the case shortly and final arguments will be heard June 22 and 23, each side having a full day for the presentation of its case. No further testimony will be heard, both sides having rested. Peter Rickmers Is Doomed. NEW YORK," May 16. Hope has been abandoned of savins- the hull of Let Us Consider Glands For a Moment. From the Standpoint Pathology. of Clinical In the treatment of diseases, in ternal secretions are the governors of the entire body. Without the gland secretions we cannot live. A lack of the secretions of one or more glands brings on some chronic or acute dis ease. An over-sufficiency of the gland secretions or a perversion of same will produce a chronic or acute condition. All diseases, acute or chronic, can come from the three above causes only; think of it; there is the beginning and end of our sufferings, no . matter what our malady may be. Consult - Collier's Weekly of April 25, 1908, see what it says about curing; ourselves. Today I am speaking from fifteen years of in vestigation of the glandular system, and I am positive that the internal se cretions are the preservators of life, for when we , make dwarf children grow by its use, when we administer it to the insane, when we give it to the hopeless case of myxoedema, when we remove goitres, when we restore spas tic and other paralysis, when we take off or put on flesh as the case may be, when we correct circulation, assimila tion, nutrition, constipation, nerve star vation and fat starvation, remove the trouble peculiar to women by the use of the different gland ax ft-acts, as it is administered in their trinities and mul tiples thereof, and the patient uses nothing; else, that is proof positive that if you want a pumpkin it te necessary for you to plant a pwmpkln seed, is it not? Our laboratory is situated in Kansas City, Mo., where we procure the glands of four to six thousand sheep a day and extract the different elements from the many different glands of the body, and put them 'up for medicinal use. One of our many distributing points Is situated in Portland, Or., 705 Dekum bidg. We send out free of charge our Blue Book, a scientific treat ise on Glandular Extracts, answer any question by mail; our physlcion diag noses your case, all free of charge. If not able to call at office, write and we will mail you question blank. Address VAN VLECK GLAND EXTRACTS. 205 rtekum Bids. i WHEN I0D SEE IT IN OUR MOY the big German steel ship, the Peter Rickmers. which ran ashore on Jones Beach two weeks ago, and from which her crew of 30 men and about 60 shore workers barely escaped with their lives when a second storm a week ago drove the ship higher on the sands. The heavy seas have been pounding over the wreck ever since that time, and there is now little worth saving abaut her. Captain Bachman, who was the last man to leave his ship and who, since then, has stayed with the life savers of Jones Inlet, hoping against hope that his ship might be saved, left yesterday. There Is still some of the oil, with which the ship was loaded, in the water-filled hulk, and this will probably be brought ashore. Grand excursion to Delaura Beach. See ad on page 11. section 3. Do You Want To Go Housekeeping? AND IS YOUR READY CASH LIMITED? Look at This Great Offer Covell's 3-Room Outfit ' . $10.00 Down $7.SO Monthly AH articles are substantial, good and satisfactory Iron Bed, Spring, Mattress, Dresser, Stand, Rocker, Chair, Room-Rug, Lace Cur tains'for bedroom, Sideboard, Round Extension Table, Six Dining Chairs, Room-Rug, Lace Curtains for diningroom, Cook Stove, Household Treasure, Two Kitchen Chairs for kitchen. Free! Free1 Free! Free! With this outfit we give absolutely FREE a 52-piece White English Semi-Porcelain Dinner Set. And with every $25.00 purchase, whether cash or installment, we give FREE A Beautiful Mahogany Cobbler -Seat Arm Rocker GOVEL WE TRUST we show hundreds of Suits the equal of any suit sold elsewhere in the city at $15 Guaranteed in every way Your money refunded if not satisfac tory. At we show Suits, that are marked in up town store windows at $20 to $25. Gome in and make us prove it. ER IRELAND'S FIRM FRIEND Banneriuan Ready to Leave Sick-Bed for Home Rule. LONDON, May 16. John Redmond, writing in the Nation, tells a touching story of the late Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman's determination on behalf of home rule in Ireland. The last time he visited the House of CommonB, Sir Henry told Mr. Redmond that It was his Intention himself to wind up the approaching home rule debate. The next day the Premier was stricken with the illness that eventually proved fatal. The debate was fixed for Feb ruary 17. and as Mr. BIrrell, Chief Secretary for Ireland, also was indis posed. Mr. Redmond asked Mr. Asquith, as actinsr leader in the House, to post YOU FOR ANYTHING LI AD IT'S SO Third and Oak First and Yamhill pone the debate. Mr. Asquith declined, but Sir Henry, hearing of this, sent word that unless the debate was post poned he had made up his mind, what ever the cost, to leave his bed and go to the House of Commons and par ticipate in the discussion. Thereupon, Mr. Redmond says, Mr. Asquith yielded and postponed the debate to March 30, The Dalles Gets Commandery. THE DALLES, May 16. Frank Mil ler, Grand Commander of Knights Templar of the state of Oregon, has recently granted a dispensation by vir tue of which a commandery to be known as Columbia Commandery will be established in The Dalles within the next 30 days. Bprinsr styles Vianan anoes fit Rosenthal FURNITURE CO. 184-186 FIRST ST. AT ANY TIME