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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1909)
THE SUJJDA.Y OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, OCTOBER 1, 1909. . n r-, . ; : ; : GAYNQR IGNORING HEARST'S CHARGES Only Stamps Accusations as Lies and Bellowings of Editor. STETSON TAKES STUMP Kx-Tartiirr .f Grovrr Cleveland Sp. aks for Baiinard Sujs Ivins' story on Juilr ' Tr,,c "Yel low Khl" at Advantage. XCT1 Y'.KK, Oct. lC-William It. Uny nor, Jrriioeriiti- nomine for Mayor of New Y.rk. r,',)if. in Brooklyn tonlfclit. di vide his tunc h'.n heaptnif rldicuio on W-illlara R. H-arst, and touching upon Riunirlpnl i.ues. Oito T. Pannarrt, the Republican nom inee, delivered a s.-ries of addraoa in New York pr-r. He confined himself to a general attack on Tammany Hall and an outline of what he expect to do If lectd. Hearst did not ppeak tonight. Gaynor s referenre to Hearst were along llr.es he has touched upon btfore. namely, the editor a attempts to obtain the Pres idential nomination, Ms race for Gover nor of this state with Tammany's In dorsement, and the conduct of his news papers. Dnrn'l Answer Charges. As in his former speeches, the Judge did not attempt to answer the charges that have bien made asainst him. stamp ing them as becomings and lira that did not deserve, a reply. William M. Ivinw. who ran for Mayor Bgainst Hearst und McCicllun our yuars ago on the. Republican ticket, but who is now supporting Hearst, Issued a state ment tonight denying that he acted as an emissary from Illehard Croker, former Tammany leader, to Henry George, in George's first campaign for Mayor of this city, offering Mr. Gforge to withdraw from tiie campaign. Met son Hacks Uaniiard. Francis 1 Stetson, at one time law partner of Grover Cleveland. Issued a statement tonight in support of Bannard's candidacy, but at the same time praising Hearst and criticising Gaynor. "In the controversy between Mr. Hearst and Judge Gaynor.'1 he said, "the editor appears to be at a rreat advantage over the Judge. The charges of Mr. Ivins against Judge Gaynor assuredly would never have been made by so responsible a man as Mr. Ivins againet so prominent a. man as Mr. Gaynor. If Mr. Ivins had not conclusive evidence as to the truth ' of his charges." BOOKMAKERS NOT PCNISHEO Judge Gainer's Interpretation of Betting: Law S Lands. NEW YORK, Oct. 16. Accepting the p Jaw as laid down by Judge Gaynor In his ' now famous olf decision. Magistrate Kiley today discharged 17 bookmakers who were arrested last week in the raid on tli e Jamaica racetrack at Jamaica, L. I. Red'" McMahon. Orlando Jones, and other well-known figures on the turf were among the prisoners. The magis trate decided that the Gaynor decision holding that the registering and recording of a bet is not a crime applied to this cases before him. KIGGINS BALKS COUNCIL Court Sustains, Vancouver Executive on Technicality. VANCOUVER. Wash.. Oct. (Spe cial.) The writ of mandate asked for bv Rector & Daly, contractors, to compel , Mayor J- P. Klgglns to sign street Im provement contracts aggregating $71,000. was denied today by Judge W. W. 51c Ciedie of the Superior Court. The work " of improving by grading, graveling and laying sidewalk, nearly Si) blocks of streets will be delayed Indefinitely, prob ably until next Summer. Bids were opened for the work several months ago, and the Council unantmous : ly voted to award the contracts for seven streets to Rector & Daly. The Mayor, i though he had signed the ordinance, re ! fused to sign the contracts and refused j to return them to the Council with expla 1 nations for his acUon. His reply to the I people was that the price was too high. In his answer to the writ of mandata, i tho Mayor's attorney stated that thers wert several errors In the proceedings of the Council. In his findings of fact and conclusions of law. Judge McCredie stated In sub ; stance that the Council did not acquire ! Jurisdiction to order the Improvements by ; reason of the defective proceedings and 1 that the law covering local improvements ' had not been complied with In all points. MANY IMMIGRANTS HURT Their Train Smashed by Collision on Canadian Pacific.' TORONTO. Ont., Ott. IS. A special Canadian Pacific Railway emigrant train crashed Into a freight train near Sun- bury, Ont., today, demolishing one or tne coaches and tossing foul others Into the ditch. It is said 25 passengers were in. Jured and that two are missing. The company's official statement de clares that only one passenger was slightly Injured. ARMY DEFEATED BY YALE West Point Goes Down Before Old Ell, 17 to 0. WEaT POINT. X. Y.. Oct. 16. The Army lost to Yale today, 17 to 0. The cadets by hard play held the score down to nothing to nothing In the first half, but In the second they were over whelmingly defeated. CONVICTS WOUND DEPUTY (Concluded on P 2 ) guards, near the store at Buena Vista. He was looklnc for the superintendent, snd the warden, who was eating. I started to lead him to the eating-house when I noticed three men pass along the opposite side or the street. I in quired of men in tnat vicinity If they knew the men. and was assured they p were three town men on their way to i do some farm work. "Doubting this statement, I asked aosa toi follow with. me. and we took after them. They walked on out of town, and we followed them over a culvert about 300 yards from the city. They were standing: in a path at the side of the road. As I approached I hailed them and shouted: 'Hello, boys; I want to speak to you.' Forty Shots Are Exchanged. "I had scarcely uttered the words when they opened fire, all shooting at once. Ross dropped behind a culvert, but I stood In the middle of the road exposed. I shot back with my revolver and Ross did the same. 'W hen I had emptied the revolver. I started sheot Ing with the rifle. I think I was hit by the first volley. "About 40 shots were exchanged.' ac cording to the boys who came running from the town. The men Jumped over the fence and started toward the river, away from Buena Vista. When the bovs came up from town. 1 turned and saw Sheriff Grant, of Polk County, and then suddenly know I was wounded, dropping to the ground." FARMERS SLEEP OX ARMS Concerted Attack Will Ro .Made on Convict at Daylight. Latest reports are that all five of the escaped convicts are together in the timber and that they have the two au tomatic revolvers stolen from tho guards at Salem and also one rifle. It is believed the convicts crossed the river in a stolen boat near Sidney Land ing on the Cattlin & I. inn ranch ou the west side, and turned south from there. When the encounter with Johnson and the other deputies occurred, the outlaws fled nortli Into the timber as the nearest available shelter, and are now trying to make their way down the river. There are numerous boats along the river, and if the convicts succeed in eluding their pursuers to night, they will undoubtedly steal a boat and make their way down stream. Anticipating some such move, the offi cers have taken every precaution to capture the outlaws at all the river towns. GIRL KILLED B FRiTGH CHAVFFEUR-S EVIDENCE CAUSE OF DOCTOR'S ARREST. bays Fritch Cut Up Maybelle Mill man's Body, Sacked and Threw It in Creek. DETROIT, Oct. 16. Based on the statements made by Joseph TV. Leach, his chauffeur, a warrant was Issued today charging Dr. George A. Fritch with manslaughter In connection with the death of Miss Maybelle Millman, the young girl whose dismembered body was recently found in Ecorse Creek. Dr. Fritch was rearrested Thursday night. Prosecutor Van Zile and Cap tain McDonnell have outlined part of the statements made by Leach. "Dr. Fritch was alone when he dis sected the body and placed the pieces In three sacks," said Captain McDon nell, telling of Leach's revelations. "Then he telephone Leach, whom he had known for 13 years, and told htm to be on hand at 10 o'clock that night with an automobile. The doctor, while Impressing him with the necessity of secrecy, did not tell him what was afoot. "They drove at once to Dr. Fritch's garage. Here the doctor untied the sacks and hurriedly stuffed bricks into them. Then they sped at once to Ec orse Creek and the doctor tossed the weighted bags into the water. When the last splash assured him that they had been disposed of. he ordered Leach to hasten back to the city." CHIEF IN SOLOMON ROLE Takes Child From Both Parents, 'Who Contend for Him. LOS ANG-EX.ES. Oct. (Special.) Austin P. Young, after coming all the way from Gloucester. Mass., to forcibly take his little son from the mother, was foiled when waiting with the child at the Santa Fo station to board a train for the East. A few minutes later he was at the police station, facing Chief Dishman. who, Solomonlike, coolly announced a de termination to take the child from both parents until the courts decide who shall have him. The mother agreed, but the father tried In vain to persuade Dishman to give him the boy. Young is a millionaire wlxjlesale nab tlealer at Gloucester. , They were divorced a year ago. Mrs. Young agreed not to oppose the suit for divorce, on condition that he allow her to retain the child. The court awarded the custody of the boy to his father. Mrs. Young brought the boy to Los Angelea. Late last evening the father called at the home. When the door was opened the child was caught up by his father, who fled. Mrr. Young, attracted by the boy's screams, rushed to rescue her son. The police caught him. , s TEMPERANCE RALLY iS ON Seventeen Churches to Hold Special Meetings in Bellingham. BELLINGIIAAI, Wash., Oct. 1. (Spe cial.) Seventeen churches of this city are to be given over tomorrow to tem perance orators, and the day will close with a monster mass meeting at the y. M. C A. building, led by Boyd H. Doty, head of the State Anti-Saloon League. The occasion is the celebration by the Ministerial Association of Anti-Saloon League dfy, and it Is, -n Its real sig nificance, a move in the local option fight to be waged in the city next Spring. The sermons and addresses will take up every phase of the liquor Question. Pastors from Spokane, Seattle, as well as local ministers, will speak, and many temperance leaders of the state have been asked to lend their aid toward making the day a success- BANK GUARANTY ENJOINED Nebraska's New Law May Not Be Enforced. LINCOLN, Neh., Oct 16. The Nebraska State Banking Board is permanently en Joined from enforcing the bank guaranty act passed by the last Legislature by a decree entered in the Federal Court to day. The syllabus says that the enforced guaranty Is a violation of the 14th amend ment to the Federal Constitution which says that property shall not be taken without due process of law. St. Johns Farmer Dies. VANCOUVER, Wash., Oct. 16. (Spe cial.) John Berlongia, aged 42, for 12 years a farmer at St- Johns. Wash., Clark County, died yesterday of tu berculosis, from which he had been a sufferer for seven years. He was a native of Michigan, and when a young man, located In Clark County. pecial Values at $20. and US! ilim mm liiisi 3 V 3 : At any price you choose we guarantee the highest value possible for the money. But we'd like to have you S3e, particularly, the values we offer at $20 and $25. We're making sort of a feature of this ; the prices are av erage, not too high for most well-dressed men, not too low to cause doubt as to quality among those who are used to paying more, and we know that at ?20 and 25 we're offering the finest suits and overcoats ever produced at the price. A wealth of choice fabrics, in all new models, both suits and overcoats. . . Another thing: we make a special point of fitting odd-sized mon, little men, big men, tall thin men, short chunk)T fellows; we've got the goods. Higher Priced Clothes mmmw . - For richness of fabric and materials, for high fashion, for perfect tailor ing, our suits and overcoats at $30, $35, $40 are beyond question the highest art' productions in clothes. "We make such goods a prominent feature; we sell a great many of them tonen who want the best possible clothes. It's a big stock of them, not just a few for show or to talk about. They're Hart Schaffner & Marx best work. Extra Values at $15 We appreciate the fact that there are lots of men who want to deal with a store like this but don't want to spend more than $15 for a suit or over coat. They'll find they can't do better than by coming here. We have a special line of fine suits and overcoats at $15, pure wool, that are made right and fit right. They're wonderful values at $15; you'll pay mora elsewhere for such clothes. This Store Is the Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes it Nit r ' -" 'i "-"" ""' -' " ' - ':f' CfifjrijUJ lie fcy SU"c tc Mao John B. Stetson Hats. Manhattan Shirts. SAMT NBLATT & CO, CORNER THIRD AND MORRISON STREETS EX-HUSBAND HELD Woman Pulled Through Win dow Blames H. Squires. DIVORCED 19 YEARS AGO Mrs. Jay Kimball Says He Clioked Her Boys Fire at Assailant as He I'lecs Horsemnn Supplies Bonds. tj....,.,' cinir.w a w11-known lurfman. accused of pulling Sirs. Jay Kimball, his former wife, from a window, hurling her ... ,. nn hA9Titir Vmr vai ar- W I . . "J civut.u " . ' retted by Constable Wugner yesterday afternoon near tne uouniry uud b un.. where tho accused man naa a .. .. , . w..-u. T4 -nrndt released from the County Jail laet nlunt under M00 bonds. Squires denies all knowledge -or me as sault on the woman, laying he did not even know where she lived. Shortly after S o'clock yesterday morn ing neighbors in the vicinity ol the home r -vrr t.iv Kimball. Suuirea 'former wife, at 7M Minnesota avenue, were aroused by five pistol snoif ana mo n - arnmnn T-TlirrvlniT to t hft ..ihtuin found Mrs. Kimball on the ground beneath her bedroom window. on tho first Iloor OI ner nunin. uiu her stood Harry Squires-Miller, her 19-year-old son, and Iaird Aghby. a eom- panion of his own age. Both held smok ing revolvers, from which they had sent bullets whiraing after tho unknown as- DIVORCEO 19 TEARS AGO, SHK SAYS FORMER IIl'S BAND MAULED AND CHOKED HER. j . t 5 r . t Ptwvt? f . ' 'V' ' '"'y"'"' - v''.'' : i; T IF 3 ' - ' 5 ; jl I I' I I " 'i -,""" ' & i Sirs. Jay Kimball, Ex-M'ife of Harry Squires. A Sallow, Pimply Or "Muddy" Complexion Is Easily Gotten Rid Of When Constitutional, Instead of Local, Treatment Is Taken. Every woman strives to acquire and preserve a clear, faultless, rose-and-lily complexion. This is apparently the height of the feminine ambition. No moro fallacious epigram was over penned than the one which says that "beauty Is only skin deep"; and no greater mistake can possibly bo made in endeavoring to gain a clear, pretty complexion, entirely free from pimples, blackheads and other skin blemishes, than tho use of cosmetics, powders, lemon juice, cold cream, electric mas sage, and various other treatments, which aim at the complexion alone, and have no effect whatever on tho blood, or on tho general system. Whenever you see a person with a clear, flawless complexion, you may bo assured that its perfection depends, not on the local application of the many fad treatments on the market, but ex clusively upon a pure, wholesome con dition of the blood, and upon its active, vigorous circulation through tho kln. It is the blood which gives the akin its rosy color, and, although electric massage and other local treatments may draw tho blood temporarily to the surface of tho skin. It cannot keep it there. Only a strong circulation can do that. When tho blood becomes Impov erished and the circulation sluggish, the complexion, as a natural sequence, becomes sallow or "muddy," and pim ples, blacqheads, "liver spots" and other skin troubles put in their ap pearance. One box of STUART'S CALCIUM WAFERS, which are taken internally, will do the complexion more good than all the cosmetics, beauty powders, cold creams, electric or manual massage, will do In a lifetime. These powerful little wafers cure because they strike at the root of the trouble. They purify and renovate the blood so completely that the complexion cannot do other wiso than become clear, flawless and free from all skin blemishes. Besides relieving the system of every particle of impurity, and thereby cut ting oft the source of the skin dis eases, they also build up the blood, greatly increasing the number of red corpuscles in its current, and invigorat ing, strengthening und tmprovlug the circulation so decidedly that in" a won derfully brief period tho cheeks be come rosy, the complexion clear, the eyes brlRht, and the whole system glows with renewed life and vigor. Secure a package of this blood cleaning, complexion-clearing and sys-tem-renovatlnsr remedy, at you drug gist for 60c a box, and begin the treat ment at once. Also send us your nams and address and free sample package will be sent you. Address F A. Stuart Co.. 175 Stuart Bids:., Marshall, Michigan. Wailant of Mrs. Kimball as be Jumped over a backyard fence. , Upon the arrival of the police, Mrs. Kimball told the story of her plight. She stated that after her son and Ashby had finished a lunch she pre pared for them after their return from work at 1:30 o'clock in the morning, she got ready to retire. Disrobing, she stepped to the open bedroom window to remove a screen and close a win dow. 'An Instant later she was in the . mm who had climbed from tho yard, about six feet below. The assailant, she said, dragged her through tho window and she fell heav ily to tho ground. She positively identified her assailant as Squires, her former husband, who, she said, pounced upon her, clutched her about the throat while he knelt upon her, and said: "I've got you now, damn you!" Her screams for assistance attracted her son and young Ashby. After secur ing revolvers, Ashby dashed outside through a door, while young Miller ran to the window through- which his mother had been drawn. The assailant fled, and as ho escaped over a fence the youths fired after him. . Evidently the bullets missed their mark and the mysterious assailant was soon lost to sight. A physician, after a thorough examination of her Injuries, found Mrs. Kimball suffering from a number of contusions about the throat and Jay Kimball, an express messenger for Wells-Fargo, husband of the wo man, swore to a complaint yesterday charging Squires with assault with at tempt to kill. Squires and the present Mrs. Kimball were married 23 years ago and were divorced 19 years ago at La Grande, Or. Squires married again and is tho possessor of a home and considerable property at Rose City Park. At the County Jail last night Squires said: "I am an innocent victim of Mrs. Kimball's whims. I don't under stand why she should trump up such a charge against me. I was in bed at my home in Rose City Park at the time she asserts I tried to kill her. THREATS ON LIFE ALLEGED W. H. Moody Arrested on Complaint of Divorced Wife. W. H. Moody, a millwright residing at 71 Bast Twenty-second street, was ar rested last night on a warrant sworn to by his divorced wife charging him with attempt to kill. Moody and the woman have been separated for several years. She allege that Moody incessantly threatened her life as well as that of her son, who Is a chauffeur for a local taxicab concern. The apex was reached one night last week, it is said, when Moody sought an interview "with her and. her refusal to meet his demands resulted in his threats against her life. Ho was released on (260 bail. Rurapean manufacturers make very small pianos of light wulnlit for transportation Into the Interior of Brazil by mule-hark. Toathacha Gisiti fttoi toothteh wtartbrr tbpr ii cTity or not- VtYer dri np or lo IrriiKtil. Kji It In thehonw frmereticip. Imi tations uunt do las work. GET DEXT TOOTHACHE CTM. A t .11 A mirirlitA. 1ft ClU. Of bT mail. 1 Dent's Com Gum 'ITti E9 - npti-r . pn nM Mirk l A Mi Affair. A QUESTION OF GRAVE DOUBT (If You Do Not Care What Kind of Clothes You Buy, Read no Further.) Wool is high and clothes are dear yet you are of fered suits at $15.00, say. Now it may perhaps be done, but it is a question of grave doubt if clothes worthy of a man's wear can be made and put on the market at a profit for that price. odtiv Our clothes for you to see and try on are blfcWN- BLOGH make and the lowest price we charge is $20.00. Yet the difference in fit, in style, in workmanship and in durability is far more to you than $5.00. Will you examine and try on? SUITS AND OVERCOATS $20.00 to $50.00 WASHINGTON AT FIFTH