xnis SUJNJJA OKEGOxMAN, FOBTLAM), MARCH 38, 1909. 3 PICTURES BY ALERT PHOTOGR APHFR .S ILLUSTRATING SOME OF WEEK'S EVENTS Jimmy Coffroth, who every now and then is aoing things to stir up the tender loin, had his latest argument the other 500,000 IN 1912 day with Cherlie Genus, known in Cali- T fornia as an old-timer among the - ball players. Just what was the difficulty no body knows, but it Is supposed that both men had imbibed a bit too muchJ In consequence, so it is charged. Coffroth either cut Geggus or bit him on the cheek. Geggus was hurried to the baths. For a short time It was thought he was suffering from blood poisoning, and sev eral of his friends tried to locate coffroth. Later Geggus turned up In good shape, and now the incident is looked unnn an The MGar1aa Way. A Ceatrast I The Old Way Compared with the "Garlaad Way. j closed. Coffroth has had a number of j sessions of this nature the last few I months. II Plan already has the sanction of the fac- J I I ulty and President David Starr Jordan. I i - . f 1U . J5 p-A It (V t .vcy; i til J : riri v,v- )18 i -!fl vil NEW TORK. March. 27.-(Special.) The state police or constabulary of Pennsylvania will have plenty to do If the . anthracite miners go on strike April 1. This force was organized a few year ago under act of the Iesislature especially for the purpose of keeping or der In the coal regions. Before the force was authorized It was difficult to keep order anyng the foreigners, who for the most part constitute th workers in the coal Melds. Attempts to use posses or ganized by. the local peace officers were almost always futile. There was toe much politics Indirectly involved. The peace officers held elective positions. Be sides1, the members of the posses too often were friends of. the peace-disturbers. It was not until the state police was or ganized that'there was any assurance of order In the coal regions. P. VS'eston. the veteran pedestrian, Gambling Craze Gets a Jolt by New Laws in Bay City Slot Machines to Come Under Ban, and Racing Is Already in IMre Straits. Gas Investigation and Politics Make Gossip. BY HARRY B. SMITH. SAN FRANCISCO. Cal., March 27. (Special.) The California Legisla ture is after the slot machines. A bill hs already parsed the Uoue of Repre sentatives orohibitlng the use of slot machines for gambling or betting, and. is o stringent that it makes it a misde meanor for a person or firm to buy, sell or have In possession a slot machine. The slot-machine craze has reached the acute stage in San Francisco. It is no longer a question of winning cigars, but gambling proposition out and out. In fact, there are hundreds of so-called ci gar stores scattered over the city where but a few of the poorest makes of cigars are kept, and the winnings paid in coin. On these machines, there are paid what are known as "specials.11 For cer tain high hands, the winners are paid o many cigars in tvade. These cigars are represented by checks, and there is always an accommodating person just within reach who is willing to buy the checks back for cash. This man. of course, represents the cigar merchant, but takes his station outside the counter. my that, legally, he is acting within the law. Many of the cigar man keep eight and ten machines going day and night, so Wrong is the desire to keep on gambling. Th police have tried to cope with the vU. but have been unable to accomplish anything as yet, and a new law Is needed that -will give them some authority. In fact, all sorts of gambling seems to be a craze with the average San Fran ciscan. Every cigar store is. as well, a place where you can make a bet on the races. Any contribution, from 25 cents up. w-ill be accepted by the cigar-store poolrooms. The racetrack, naturally, has been againp f this thing, but they haven't ben able to stamp it out. A clerk or sny man who wants to make a bet on the races and simply can't get away to go to the track, telephones his cigar i"tore or walks Into the place and says that he wants to place 50 cents or tl as the case may be. on a certain horse. That's all there is to it. The poolroom agent makes a record of the bet. but ni paper Is passed between the player and the bet taker. If the horse wins, he comes back and gets his monpv. This, of course, is not a new custom in the city, but one that is to be drplnred. It has educated all sorts of people to the betting habit. Even women are fiends on racetrack gambling, through the me dium of the cigar stand, and no one knows Just how much money is wagered every day the racetrack is open at Emeryville-. The latest gambling story is to the ef fect that a systematic effort to organize the gambling interests in Chinatown is being made by two wealthy Chinese, who propose to operate a string of gambling houses and lottery games in this city. Secret meetings have been held and the promoters of the syndicate are endeavoring to secure from the local gamblers an initial subscription of JS5.(KW with which they propose to secure per mission to operate their games on a large scale. The toiling gas meter i-just now the subject of a rigid investigation by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. The trouble started as far back as January, when the gas bills commenced to run enormously high. AU over the city there were complaints that the bills had dou bled. The public declared that while it had protested to the Gas Company, the only reply was a threat to remove the meters, if there were more protests. Con sequently, the daily newspapers, appre ciating that it would be a popular cause, started booming the cry for investiga tion. The matter came before the Su pervisors, and the demands were so in sistent that the two experts, under the pay of the city, have been delegated to look for the cause. It is promised that there will be some relief for the users of gas In San Francisco, and in the meantime. the residents are holding tight and doing the best thev can. The Gamma Kta Kappa, a high school fraternity, which has chapters in practi cally all of the high schools along the Pacific Coast, thinks it has found a way to get around the law passed by the Legislature abolishing secret societies in California high schools. The graduates of the high schools will be the active mem bers of the fraternity. The boys In the schools will simply be pledged to their fraternity and initiated upon graduation or leaving the school for good. In this way the fraternity will be a graduate or ganization in a way. bnt It will not have to disband; as seemed likely after the law makers took matters into their own hands. It is quite possible that the other fraternities and sororities in the state, of which there, are quite a number, will fol low the same course. Chinatown, or at least part of China town, is- In uniform. Included In this list are the juvenile members of the Oriental part of San Francisco. So far there are exactly 164 of these uniformed young Chi namen, and the occasion of the outilt is due to- thcir enrollment as pupils in the Imperial Chinese public school, an insti tution for the Instruction of Chinese, which has been opened in Stockton street. The school is under the supervision of the Consul-Genera 1 and the Six Compa nies, and as it was established with Chi nese money and will be maintained in the same way. it was thought appropri ate to have some distinguishing feature about the Institution. The Imperial Chi nese school was organized at the time of the first trouble with the Japanese over - school matters. The Chinese at once decided that they would prefer their own school to that of the whites, and promptly collected their money for that purpose. English and all the branches that are taught in the public schools of this country are taught to the young Chinamen. - A wedding of interest to Oregon people occurred this last week in San Francisro. when Miss Zita Webster, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James S. Webster, was TiiJ celebrated his cist birthday on March 15 by starting from New York for a tramp to San Francisco. He expects to arrive in 100 days. He carries a letter from Postmaster Morgan, of New York. Miss Muriel "White will be married soon to a German army officer, and the event will bring to the French capita, where her father is the United States Ambas sador, a party of "German army officers. who undoubtedly will attend the wedding in full uniform. The appearance of a German army uniform on the streets of Paris may lead to complications, and the police are already considering measures to prevent a demonstration. Pedro Koias, who has been selected as the first Minister of Venezuela to the United States under the new administra tion, is one of the patriot enemies of Castro who lived m exile for many years. Before the deposing of Cactro, Rojas was a resident of New York. He returned as one of the shipload of exiles which sailed from this city shortly after the new President had been installed. He is re garded as one of the ablest diplomats in Venezuela. Senor Gil-Borges will be his Secretary of Legation. to Wilson Hughes Jewett. of Gardiner. Or., at the home of her parents. The young couple met last Summer when the Webeters were staying at their country home in San Rafael, and Jewett was a student at Mount Tamalpals Military Academy. Following their wedding, they left for their honeymoon In the southern part of California. They will return in a few weeks and then proceed to Gardiner, where Mr. Jewett Is interested with his father in the lumber business. The men students at Stanford Univer sity have decided to co-operate more with the faculty than in the past. To that end, at a recent mass meeting, the con stitution of a "University Conference of Leland Stanford Junior University'1 was agreed upon, which established practical ly the first form of student control on the campus. The plan was broached by a committee of seniors and adopted with out a murmur of dissent. The plan calls for the election of undergraduates from the two upper classes, who shall repre sent the different departments of the university. These representatives will confer w-ith the faculty and have, much to do with matters of discipline. The Another Cozy Bungalow With an Exceptionally Good Floor Arrangement By H. A. Eymann. Loj Antfelea, Cal. THERH are many small families that require only a few rooms . in the home, but desire these 'rooms to "be of good, size and to such,, the house here ' illustrated will appeal. . A sixroom nouse such as this is not frequently met, as usually In planning a small house the rooms, for reasons of economy are also made small. The bun galow here illustrated is not an expensive one, considering that it stands about 32 feet by 60 feet on the ground and has a living room 17 feet by 20 feet; a dining room IS feet square, large bedroom, a cozy den with seat and built-in book cases, six cloteots, not including the kitch en and dining-room closets" and cupboards. - As here shown, the house is constructed almost entirely of wjood and should cost complete about J2000. It has been built with broken stone porch front and chim ney, hardwood floors, etc., for ?2S0O. Among Its many taking features are the old-fashioned china closets in the dining room on either side of a wide double win dow with seat and locker: the lavatory and coat closet, opening between the den and the front bedroom; the very complete and convenient cabinet kitchen; the bath room opening from both bedrooms and hall; two linen closets, one in the bath room and one at the end of the hall, etc. The living room has beamed ceiling and" broad mantel and fireplace: the dining room has high paneled wainscot w-ith plate-ahelf, etc. It would be difficult indeed to arrange five or six rooms more conveniently, and this house will prove most attractive in side and outside. The inside plaster has a rough carpet-float finish and is tinted in various shades except the walls below the chair rail in kitchen and bathroom, which are smooth white, enameled and ruled off to imitate tiles. The house from which the illustration was made was stained a dark red with very dark brown trimming and a dark green shingle roof. For the benefit of its readers. The Ore gonlan has arranged that any inquiries or correspondence relating to bungalow Even wich attorneys engaged to break the Baldwin will, the probability is that no contest will take place; not at least between the widow and daugh ters. Illegitimate children may come to the front to plunge the estate Into litigation, but the heirs to whom the bulk of the estate was bequeathed are not disposed to engage In a contest with the widow, partially because it would tangle up the property for sev eral years and also because they be lieve the widow is entitled to consid- j eration. The will as far as the widow is con cerned. Is regarded by men wh6 were well acquainted with the deceased as a sardonic jest. For. say they, he must have known that Mrs. Baldwin would not accept a small legacy, and it must have been his desire to figure In post mortem litigation. Baldwin had a very keen appetite for the law. He hated to pay a bill without a fight in court. Ho resisted claims that he knew to be just, and -when asked once why he did so. replied that lie couldn't be sure he owed money until the court ren dered Judgment. Once upon a time he borrowed money from his lawyer to pay a Judgment, and then the lawyer had to sue him to recover the bor rowed coin. ' The Democrats bid fair to have an amusing if not a red-hot campaign among themselves this- year. Harry Flannery, a saloonman, by the way, who defeated Frank J. Sullivan for the nomination of Presidential Elector, and subsequently led Jimmy Phelan in the vote for that ticket in San FranciBoo, is out to get Gavin McNab's scalp as Bourbon boss in this neck of the woods." Flannery is reported to have planned a campaign that will involve the ex penditure of at least $20,000 of his own good coin. That will mean a complete organization by districts. Flannery is acting in concert with P. H.- McCarthy, the latter desiring the labor nomination for Mayor again. In cidentally, he would not object to the indorsement of the Flannery wing of Democracy. The new aspirant for boss ship is quite active in holding confer ences daily with leading local states men. He is reported to nave had a conference with Superior Judge Caba niss and endeavored to induce the lat ter to become a candidate for Mayor. Cabaniss has proved himself a great vote-getter, but his aspirations run along judicial lines and he has declined the somewhat doubtful honor. , Flannery has expressed as Ills per sonal -opinion that Dr. Leland, the present Coroner, is too light timber for the Mayoralty, and has gone in search of someone else. In fact. Flannery is reported to be negotiating with his once political adversary. Frank J. Sul livan, and may induce him to serve.- If so. the pair can be fepended upon to give Phelan and Rudolph Spreckels a hard fight. Sullivan is "sore" at Broth-er-lii-Law Phelan, because he was re moved as attorney for the Mutual Sav ings Bank, of- which Phelan is a strong factor, and consequently he is itching for a fight. In certain circles there is consider able glee expressed over the fact that while Roosevelt has gone his way, Ben jamin Ide Wheeler, president of the University of California, has been cast in the discard, as far as being an as sistant to the Executive of the United States is concerned. It is declared by those who do not fancy the sometimes dictatorial stands of Wheeler that for the last seven years he has come to be known in Washington as the Third Sen ator from .California. It is said that at the White House he was always consulted privately in regard to Federal appointments and policies affecting the Pacific Coast. Moreover.- so it is alleged, he was a confidential emissary of Roosevelt in the politics of California, a sort of private smelling committee or secret service agent, to find out things to be whispered in the President's ear. Now it is different. His services are to be dispensed with. His position is abolished. Therefore the president of the state university will not be re quired to run to Washington three or four times a year to tell the President of the United States all about it. Getting Whisky Into Trouble. ' Exchange. It is high time whisky was in trouble. for many years it has been making troupie ror otner people. i i. : : ii building directed to Mr. H. A. Eymann 403 Chamber of Commerce. Tn iniu will receive detailed replies without any wnaisoever. Si "mjMs im 1 j B i-txie It ' Ii jsp" 1 y The of cooking with gas allows you to stand erect, naturally and comfortably - " iL, dal5er in lighting is entirely ' removed bv the "GARLAND" SAFETY LIGHTER furnished with every "Garland Gas Range.. . . The popularity and. wonderful success of the Garland Gas Range is due, in part,, to its perfect cooking qualities. We are showing toany stvlcs and designs in our stove department hi the basement. . , . . "GARLAND" INDEPENDENT GAS WATER HEATERS are made with a heavy double cop per coil and heat the water quick ly. The most efficient and strong est water heater ever produced. OUR LINE OF FIREPLACE GOODS consisting of Andirons, Fire Sets, Fire Screens, Spark Guards, Brass Coal Hods. etc.. etc.. is nr to datp in both design and finish, and our x prices are rignt. HONEYMAN HARDWARE CO. COR. FOURTH AND ALDER STREETS, PORTLAND, OR. Second Tingle Treatise on Cakes BY LIIjIAX TINGLE. . (Cake Lesson Xo. 2. PROPORTIONS of ingredients it is not possible to give an absolutely exact proportion ol the various in gredients that will always be true of all cakes; but there are general principles to be observed in all cake receipts, and any one with a knowledge of these gen eral principles - and "type" cakes can usually recognize a "type" recipe wen though disguised in fractional quantities, and, with a little practice, can distinguish in print as well as in the mouth, a good cake from a poor one. An English editor's wife once made an amusing confession to me. Her husband had allowed her to try her hand on the "Woman's Column." -Asked how she was I getting on she replied naively. "splendUP ly. thank you. Tou know I do know how to dress every one admits that, so I write mostly about clothes. And, for a change, when I can't think of anything else, I write: 'Here in a perfectly delicious cake which I tasted at Lady So-and-So's the other day,' and I fling together some su gar and butter and eggs and flour and things you do put those Into cake, don't you? and say 'mix in the usual way, bake in a moderate oven and decorate with any pretty frosting." But I'm sorry for any woman who tries to make those 'de licious cakes,' for I never made one in my life and scarcely ever eat cake, any way, one has to. consider one's hips these days, l.ut I know there are women who are always clamoring for new cake re cipes, so I try to give them what fhey want. You must admit the novelty and originality of mine." She gave me some specimens to read. They looked plausible enough to the cas ual eye, though no one but a novice would have attempted to follow them. The novice would probably say things about "bad luck," and give the product decent burial in the garbage pail, away from the scornful eyes of her friends and family. Standard proportions for a few "type" cakes will be given in a future lesson. The types tend, of course, to shade one into another, but in general the following will be found true of good recipes tor cakes containing shortening. Cakes That Take Shortening. 1- Not more butter than one-third the volume of flour, except in rich pound cakes, where one-half may be used. 2. From one-half to two-thirds the volume of flour in sugar; with a general tendency towards increase of sugar with diminished butter, until in cakes where no butter is used, you reach the point of having equal volumes of flour and sugar, as in rich sponge and angel cakes. In dealing with recipes by weight it should oe remembered that eqoal bulks of gran ulated (not powdered) sugar and of but ter weigh about the .same; and that an equal bulk of sifted flour is about half the weight of either, as shown bv the table: - 2 cum solid butter 1 pound. 2 cups granulated sugar l pound. 2 cups OR-Rs 1 pound. 4 cups sifted flour 1 pound.. 3. The liquid is usually about half the volume of flour. Kggs and butter each being teckoned as having ha if -value as' "liquid;" since the butter melts in the oven, and the eggs stiffen. Hence the "plainer" the cake, as to butter and eggs, the more milk or water is called for, the stiffer the batter will be when mixed, and the more baking powder, or its equi valent will be required. In the rich old fashioned "pound cake," where the rula called for "a pound of everything." no baking powder at all was used, and no liquid, except the butter and eggs and the "wineglassful of brandy" which was added for flavor and to improve the cake's keeping properties. As a rule the richer the '-ake, the more it improves with keeping and the more difficult it is. in most families, to keep it, while most of the plainer types need to be fresh in some cases almost warm, in order to be palatable. The student of cake-making will do well to" make a sort of table of the recipes she knows, reducing each to a common base, as, say, "to every -cup of flour" and noting the relaltve propor tions of each ingredient and how they follow the rules laid- down. She should also note the change of character due "Garland" Way to increase of butter or sugar in the tex ture of the cake. As regards baking powder, or it s equivalents, it will be noted that for a mixture where the proportion of egg to flour is more than one to every cup (by measure, as 1:4; by weight, as 1:2) not more than one level teaspoon of baking powder should be required, the amount decreasing until in pound cake (as 1:2 by measure or as 1:1 by weight) the bak ing powder disappears entirely, or in creasing, as t'he cake becomes plainer, until in an egglcss. or almost eggless, cake, two leved teaspoons of baking powder will be called for with every cup of flour. Too much baking powder makes a coarse-grained, quickly drying cake. As for baking powder substitutes, a good rule to remember is the following: (a) three to four level teaspoons baking pow der are equal in Ieavenin power to one level teaspoon soda, with sufficient acid to neutralize it. 6- One teaspoon soda may be completely neutralized by two teaspoons cream of tartar, or one teaspoon tartaric acid, or two cups sour milk, or one cup molasses. This is only, of course, approximately, not absolutely true, since the chemical changes take place in 'definite proportions by weight, and we use unscientific meas urements and ingredients of varying purity. But it is a good working guide and enables us to see how and when we may substitute in a recipe. Making Ginger-Bread. Take, for instance, a ginger-break re cipe calling for one cup molasses and one cup sour milk to two and one-half cups flour. It is obvious that one and one-half teaspoons oda should be about right for this. Suppose we use water Instead of sour milk, then we should slightly scant the measure (since sour milk, like blood, is thicker than water) and while using the same amount of soda, we should Bdd one teaspoon creart of tartar to take the place of the acid in one cud sour milk. Or, if we had no cream -of tartar handy w-j could nse one teaspoon soda for tli molasses, and an amount of baking pow der equivalent to one-half teaspoon soda plus one teaspoon tream of tartar, i e from one and one-half to two teaspoons according to kind and quality of baking powder. Or, ngrqn. if we had only half-sour milk. Dollar Treatment Free to Men Proves the Ouro-BUTCOSTS YOU NOTHING We want to prove to your own perfect satisfaction that yon can be cared sot simply fixed up a bit or made to feel a little better bnt tured renewed in vim .... ... . NOW-ST.ES0 MONEYr Dr. Joseph Lister Co., F-IM-22 Fifth Ave., Chicago. : I am troubled with..... , Please send me. absolutely free, your full dollar treatment for same, and also your book which, bells how men can treat themselves successfully at home. Nm Address P. O. or half-sour whey, we could 'use that with the original amount of soda and one-half teaspoonful cream of tartar to make up the lacking acid. Thi3. of course, also explains the changes necessary in substituting sour milk for sweet milk (or vice versa) in any rejipe. In using sour cream we must take into account the shortening as well a3 the acid properties-of the eream . Almost endless varieties of.cake ca: De produced from the same proportioned mixture by varying the f iavortng. coloi and shape. And. of course, still more by varying the frosting and decoration. TOLSTOI MUSEUM FORMED Russians Get Permission to Honor National Philosopher. : ST. PETERSBURG, March 2T.-(Spe-cial.)-The St. Petersburg authorities have recently granted " permission to., a committee of well-known Russians. In cluding Professor M. Kovalevsky Pro fessor Miliukoff, the great artist, Rcn.' fw.J I toJ society for the es tablishment of a Tolstoi museum. 'V. sub-committee has now been formed, presided over by M. A. Stakhovitch, the well-known member of the first Douma. to organize an exhibition which should serve as a model for the museum in tended by the soelp ty. .... The scheme for this exhibition pro vides for four sections, each under the presidency of competent authorities to contain the following: 1." artistic repre sentations -of the-great writer in paint ing, sculpture, photography, drawing and even caricature; 2, biography: 3. litera ture a) Tolstoi's works. MSS.. letters autographs, and so forth: (b) Russian and. foreign books and articles on Tol stoi, bibliography and criticism andi translations; (c) the recent jubilee litera ture about Tolstoi, including artcle portraits, illustrations, etc.; and 4, Tdl--StS'1.&nd the Russitn orimarv school The success of the exhibition is practi cally guaranteed by the promise of the Countess Tolstoi to lend the great bib liographical and biographical collection of asnaya Polyana. as well as by the, similar promise of the Moscow Historical Museum. - . ana vigor, i nis proof of cure one full dollar's worth we gladly give you free free of cost, charge or obligation to you of any kind whatsoever. If yon suffer from any man-wsaken ing ailment, such as lack of power or nervous debility, or any kidney, bladder. . stomach or liver complaint, or any form of blood poison, constitutional or organic disease, write us today, telling tis in a few words what ails you. and at once. free of charge, we will send you ONE FULL DOLLAR'S worth of a specially . prescribed and personally prepared rem edy for your particular ailment, which will PROVE to you without it costing you one penny that you can be cured quickly and completely. . When you write just fill in the space h e l o w . that is all. and at the same time, also free, sealed and prepaid, we ti i i , . F y"" uooa on men s ailments Cd . Writ. ............... (Kuii your .Umaot) .. State.