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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1911)
THE SUNDAY OKEGOMAX. rOItTLAD. OCTOBER 15. 1911 ASSOCIATE JUSTICE OF SUPKEME COTJBT WHO DIED YESTERDAY BRONCHITIS FATAL QCHLOSS TO JUSTICE HARLAN BALTIMORE i V. 1 CLOTHES Death Sudden After Almos Uninterrupted Service of 34 Years on Bench. -t i :V XJV-.' Y Are made for' men rXA t " -i -,-k- W i - e -"w ) RECORD NEARLY ATTAINED Vigorous Opinion Ifad Won 'inw of "Dissenting Justice" That Confutation Follows Flag Wae lira Firm IVrlief. htum rot mt irrnrrn who m DIED IX kCBTirC J ohm Marshall Rum, Kentucky. M years ea bnch. dUd aced TS J-tkU Hay. few Toe. Ms Mra ea Wara. 4M4 a4 M. Jofca Marshall Vlra-tata. t4 years oa b.neh 414 ased io. J-h Ratledse. Seats. Carolina, alad earns y.ar as appointed, ased 1. Flne.r K Taaer. Marytaad. M yaara a bach. 4ld itM ST. aelraua P. Chaaa. Ohio. Bin year aa bahi. died asd S3. Morrteoa K. Walta. Ohio. 14 years aa Xvb. dll a4 T2. , kt.linlla W. Fuller. Illinois. 33 ysare oa avaea. died scad TT. WASHINGTON. Oct. 14. (Special.) Associate Justice John Marshall Harlan died today, aa a result of tha attack of bronchltla with which ha was seized less than a weak ago. Ma was eminent aa a Jurist, an authority upon tha Con etttntlon. and prominent In tha counclla of tha Presbyterian Church. Ha ill 71 years old. Justice Harlan aat on tha bench last Monday, whan arguments of tha An thrarlts cases Were heard. Ha waa re ported tha following day aa "slightly l:l. and Chief Justice White yesterday ' attcoraeya to consider that Jus tice Harlan was sitting In their cases. ain.ouan not physically present. 'mi iiariaa. However, waa In a much mora aerloua condition than his colleagues In tha court realised. Ie aplta his advanced aae ha was robust and ordinarily enjoyed tha . best of neaiin. Tha sadden death of Associate Jua- tlca Brewer, of the Supreme Court, who waa not only a colleague on tha bench but a close personal friend, much af fected Justice Harlan. Tw. r kllarew raalaeait. Justice Harlan came from an old and honored tiouthern family. Ha was named for tha eminent Jurist. John Marshall, who also aerved 14 years on tha Supreme Court bench. The college from which. In lSi). he waa graduated, with the degree of A. R. Center College, at I'anvtlle. Ky . la aa old and famous rraabyterlaa College, at which a rreat number of eminent Southern men re reived their early training-. He took up the study of taw at Transylvania Cnl verslty at Islington. Ky.. a few years later, and afterward was honored with the I.L. P. degree from Bowdotn. Cen ter. Princeton, and tha I'nlverstty of Pennsylvania. Two of hla five children. Richard D. and Jamea H. have attained eminence, the former aa member of the Interstate Commerce Commtaslon and the latter as the leading spirit In tha agitation for a central I'nlverslty at Washington, lather children are: John SI., of Chi cago, and tha Silases Laura and Ruth. Candidacy Oaableei Party Vale. Justice Harlan first practiced law at Frankfort. Ky, where he waa made County Judge In Kit. He waa Whig candidate for Congress In 1159. elected on the Bell ticket In 1140 and was Colonel of tha Tenth Kentucky Regi ment In tha I'nlon Army from 1141 to 1J. He waa Attorney-General of the Plate of Kentucky from 1141 to 1147. and In tha latter year took up tha prac tice of law In Louisville. Here he at tained considerable local eminence. Ha was Republican nominee for Governor of the atate In 1ITI and 1(71 and his candidacy, though falling of election, nearly doubled tha usual party vote. He took a prominent part la National Republican politics In 1HI and UT4. Hla record for service aa Associate Justice of the Supreme Court waa unique. Inasmuch aa he missed fewer than 3 daya In hla 17 years of service, only three members of the Supreme bench surpassed him In length of serv ice. Marshall, ftory and Field, and they bv only a short time. Had he lived pntll June 13. 1911. he would have surpassed all records and It waa a hope dear to hla heart that be would be able to do so. as expressed this year In one of very few Interviews he granted. Justice Harlan possessed an Inde pendent and assertive will, and evi dences of It have always been the most rhsractertstic feature of hla opinions. They were noteworthy more for their Intensity and straight forwardness thsn for any literary merits. His sense of justice gave him moral and physical courage, barked up by a big mind and a huge body Justice Harlan waa never afraid to Usent from a decision with the rest of the court lined np against him. A forci ble dissenting opinion la tha case of a Hawaiian convicted of. murder by a majority of a jury Instead of by all 11 Jurors, after tha I'nlted States had ac quired tha Islands, waa notable In point. He held then and always the belief that the Constitution follows tha flag. In the Porto Rican caaes and the others which came aa a result of the Fpanleh Amertcan War. he expressed the same opinion. Jaetteo Xetr4 aa Dlaeeater. Some of his dissenting views, such as that In the famous Income tag case, the Standard Oil caae and the to bacco caae. earned him tha title of the "dissenting Justice." Tha home life of the Jurist was typi cally and finely Southern, in the real sense of tf'at much-abused word. His residence la Washington waa an old faahioned. rambling brick house, with wlda porches and sunny rooms. Isolated f-om the rest of the city when built, but gradually encroached upon In recent years. Tha walls were literally covered with portraits of famous ' American Jurists such aa Hamilton. Jefferson and Marshall. la former daya the Justlca was a pronounced baseball fan. but had loat much cf his Interest la recent years and had transferred hla allegtanee to . golf. He mlagled hardly at all In the so cial life of tha Capital, preferring the quiet of hla study or a day oa the l:aka He waa very fond of plug chewing tobacco, and aeveral amusing tales are told In Washington about tba awapplng of plugs by Justlca Har lan and Chief Justice White. - . C - - ' i ' fa. . 1 ' ? - -. . - - i -J -frt--'i l, .' ' , V' ;V?TV-.i 1 '. - 1 ; -V : s! I . ! L V Fake, j .:X1. JUTIfB ntRLA IX Jl niCIAL robes ix portrait ad snapshot. ARNOLD HOME BUSY Brothers Admit That Dorothy Is Alive, Then Make Denial. GIRL'S RETURN RUMORED Frrparattone Are Made to Open w York House Leading to Belief That Ixng-.benl Helresa la to Receive Wdcome. NEW TORK, fk-t. 14. (PpeclaL) Admissions made by brothers of Dor othy Arnold, coupled with the prepara tions being made to reopen tha bouse at No. lot Eaat Seventy-ninth street, give credence to the belief that tha young woman, whose mysterious dis appearance last Winter waa the algnal for a world-wide eearch on tha part of. her wealthy father, has returned or la about to return to her home. It la none of tha publlc'a business where my alster la found." were the words of I. Hinckley Arnold, the younger brother, when queatloned In connection with the rumor. John W. Arnold, another brother, also said that ha had heard that hla slater was alive, but refused to diacuss tha subject. For soma daya past there has been activity In the Arnold home. House cleaners have been at work, window blinds and shutters, closed since Mr. and Mrs. Francis K. Arnold left for Munich several months ago, have been opened, and wagona have been atopplna; In front of the houaa with food sup plies. John S. Keith, attorney tor tne Ar nold family, when aeen at hla office called up John W. Arnold by telephone and aald: "John, you are quoted aa aaylng; you believed your alster waa alive. You did not say It. did you? Of course you did not." Krlth aald that Mr. Arnold answered denying that he made that statement. When Dorothy Arnold first disap peared the newapapera were requested to flod her. At that tlma she waa thought to have been kidnaped or put o death In Central Park and bar body hrown In the lake: but aa time wore on the Arnolds decided to do their own hunting for the missing girl. This determination waa reached after the Saw York police concluded that iHjrothy Arnold waa living; and would return to her fathers roof when It suited her. The activity at the Arnold boms con- lnued tonight, and there waa no one who could or would explain why the house waa being put In such perfect order snd the larder was being replen ished aa though In preparation for a feast. WRECKED CREW RESCUED 0"itlnod From First Pass ) id Melbourne to repair mage lused by storm. beery ef Wreck. Told. ti.. A . v n w . -r fefll the craft la best told In the language of Captain t Ten SOIl. WHO, m .raaaius v. reck said: -Ws sailed from the Columbia FJver October 1 and almost immediately Into neavy weainer. i ne t.w.i ked considerable and I soon notloed should. By working the pumps one hour out of every four we managed to get the water down to I J incnea ana then It began to gain rapidly. W a were making but little headway and had got about 7a miles south of the heads on morning of tne sta. wnen tne wina fted and I waa forced to put the vessel on the starboard tack. Two hours later the mate reported lirr wes pourins in ra.iit j. n pi on ran ah the ateam pump waa rlrgrd up but It failed io run prcpeny. i ue a :na was ugni and the glaaa had fallen to Z9.20 "and I decided to run for Flattery to save tha schooner. We beat along aa best wo could but we lay In almost a dead calm until Bunday morning-, when sud denly a big; sea came up that was al most a tidal wave and It waa accompa nied by one of the worst northwest galea I ever' saw. The first gust tore one of our small boats from Its lash ings and carried It overboard. Hold Half Fall of Water. "By thla time the hold waa half full of water and tha terrible seaa shifted tha cargo and all that night tha schooner lay on her beam ends. About 8 o'clock on the morning of the tU tha cabin filled and It was entirely gutted. A few minutes later the lashings part ed, the deckload above the rail was washed away and the main mast, mix sen mast and Jigger broke off and went overboard, leaving only the foremast standing. The wind waa still blowing from the northwest but was falling off. We cleared away the wreckage and patched up the donkey-engine connec tions, rigged a Jury mast aft and had the craft nearly pumped out. when on Wednesday we ran Into another (ale and the vessel filled agAln. "We could do nothing then but run before tha wind Thla morning we were in longitude 14" 4 west, latitude 155:25 north, which la about 50. miles off the mouth of the river, and were heading east-northeast when the schooner David Evans came along. Captain Sanders lay to for several hours un til the seas subsided and as we had tha lifeboat left we launched it and went on board, r left everything, excepting the clothea I have on. as did the others of the crew. The water casks and tanks were broken last Sunday, so we were without water for five days, but fortunately had a little wine in my cabin and the men were given a glass of that each day. "On Sunday night a steamer bound north lay to for several hours, but be fore daylight she left. On Monday night another steamer came along so close we could see her side lights. Wa burned flares but she paid no atten tion to us. Why. I cannot understand, for she must have seen us. The Nottingham was owned by the Globe Navigation Company, of Seattle. It Is understood she was Insured. She Is drifting not over 50 miles off shora and may be picked up soon, as tugs are aearchlng for her. SIT UP ANDTAKE NOTICE Maxwell, the OM-E.tabIlshed -Merchant Tailor, Astonishing Fash ' Ion able Dreer. In today's Oregonlan will be found an announcement from Maxwell, the old-established merchant tailor, which will astonish men who know tils re liability and hla ability as a tailor. With the season far advanced ha finds his stock too large and now offers the choice of any 127.50 to $40 suit or over coat In hla store made to order for 125. Considering that na carries the very highest grades of woolens ever pro duced by the leading mills of Great Britain. It becomes apparent that he la giving the greatest opportunity ever within the reach of men who want to wear made-to-order clothing. Tha aale will laat three days only, when It Is ex pected that hundreds of appreciative men will avail themselves of the rare treat- His establishment Is at 24 Washington, opposite the Merchants National Bank. SENTENCE IS INDEFINITE Charlea V. Hammond Sent to Peni tentiary With Hard Labor.' VANCOUVER, Wash.. Oct- 14. (Spe cial. From 10 to 0 years In tha atate penitentiary at hard labor was the sentence Imposed on Charles W. Ham mond by Judge McMaster. of the Su perior Court, today. Hammond was much pleased and waa overjoyed that he waa not given a life term. Hammond confessed to having killed Edward c. Barhydt on Bell a Mountain, May 11. ar.d buried the body In a shal low grave and went to Portland. Tha body waa not found until June 24. who find pleasure and satisfaction in dress ing as well as they possibly can. Mm who attreciate what good clothes mean to them in business ana social life. er-T L ii jney cost no more man the ordinary. On sale at the better Clothiers everywhere. To make certain of getting the Genuine Look for, the Label. I f s lit V "v.. ,- .e rsrrr e , Jf vXV Xi) 1 V h ! i vWawVwVVrraal VJ flw.al WWW. WSolesale Drapers AAAmiMtVvVW mm i U 8 i m None Warranted' Without. Special Models for all occasions in all the new weaves and colorings both in Foreign and Domestic fabrics Ask the best clothier of. your city to show you the New Models specially designed for your form of figure and yOUr Calling. To Avoid Mistakes Be Sure To Look For The Label. on sale by- Salem Woolen Mills Clothing Co. 4th and Alder Sts ei!f1riMffllaflifi N SPRDULE AT HELM San Francisco Again Southern Pacific Headquarters. several of the provinces. Whether the powers will foreclose on the securities which they hold and take over the financial administration, will depend upon the prompt success of the Man chus and these are not considered likely. The government evidently Is censor ing the Sse Chuen messages, as few details are belns; received from that quarter. POLICY IS NOT RADICAL Railroad President Says Present Pa cific Coast Staff la Efficient and That Sweeplns; Change Is Not Contemplated. - . . vmL.pn rtt 14. fSpe- cial.) William Bproule, the new pres ident of the Southern Pacific Com pany, arrived In San Francisco at noon : j . ...ma rontrol of the road. He will establish hla office in the Flood building ana win -.. . .i..r hsd of tha company. as Vlio i 1 1 t -. . r - The policy which once .more maKes Ban Francisco the headquarters of the Southern Pacific Company has re vived the Indorsement ol snippers anu he public generally on the Pacific Coast. No radical changes are con templated In the management of the Southern Paclflo In California, Presl- lent Bproule aaia. i , n . K m i -n t eoroa Of (JWIHS 1 " ... . . . . men here In San Francisco I am not coming out here to start any radical reorganisation, but. of course, in these daya of atate ana icar.i we have to proceed along a course hich will meet iranio guuuiuvu, .h. ..m time look out tor the ln- teresta of the stockholders." In returning to 8an Francisco. Mr. . v- . wt uim a A tinm. It was spruuie vwmi, " - here that, he gained hla first training .. i i U- .HAnlmt. tne raiiroaa ouenieea. himself with the Southern Pacific .. wlr Iw, 1 fi 7 mnA now aa a irn. "-'p'" cornea back 2 years later, the presi dent of the corporation. The new presiaeni ws pi i. " loneer regime of the Southern Pacific rhlch developed such well-known Ag ree aa C. P. Huntington, long the xecutlva of tire company, and later J. I, Stubbs and Julius Kruttschnltt. Mr. Sproule waa born in Ireland S3 years ago. CHINESE WARSHIP TAKEN tContlnued From First Pass.) gagement with the rebels for weeks. In the hope of conciliating; the masses or bribing; the leaders. Waiting Game la Played. It la more likely that the Govern ment will seek to permit the revolt to destroy Itself by paralysing; trade and creating; Increased disorders In prov inces which already are sorely dis tressed The military attaches here ara of the opinion that the Wuchang forts now held by the rebels are able easily to sink the gunboats. Lieutenant-Colonel Beach was to have been present at the maneuvers which are now cancelled. On his way here ha traversed the Yang-tee Klang dis trict and encountered many signs of the revolution. Tha missionaries, ha declared, did not desire to leave Wu Chang. The American Consul at Han kow, Roger 8. Greene, Insisted upon their leaving. Tha rebels, apparently, have not taken over the Hankow railway. Ac cording to Colonel Beach, the entire line la open and the service normal. except for delaya owing to the crowded trains of refugees procedlng north and troop trains procedlng south. It Is believed at the legations that the indemnity payments are bound to lapae, aa the government Is not recelv WHITE SUX IS XEW EMBLEM Rebels Expect to Win if Masses Can Bo Controlled. VICTORIA, Oct. 14. The flag of the Chinese republic, formed at the cap tured city of Wuchang on Thursday, and flown in the Chinese quarter to day, is made of a blue field with a white sun, with short radiating rays. Many Chine3e clustered about the bul letin boards where dispatches from China are displayed and mimeographed extras containing news are being passed from store to store. A private cablegram received from Hankow aald that the rebellion was expected to prove successful If the rebel forces could be controlled and prevented from Inter fering with foreigners or foreign prop erty. Dr? Sun Tat Sen, when he left here last February, had 170,000, and ar rangements were entered Into for the surreptitious shipment of arms and am munition from Paclflo Coast ports. These shipments have been going on for the past few months. In Interviews with Victoria Chinese before leaving. Dr. Sun Yat Sen said that he purposed first to educate the people of China and lay his plans slowly. He was worried regarding finances then. He counted on begin ning the uprising aj soon as the treas ury held $300,000. The capture of tha mint at Hankow and the native banks will give him many times this amount for a war fund. that Tong Fah Lung had been elected revolutionary Governor of Hu-Peh province. Japan Wil Not Interfere. TOKIO, Japan, Oct. 14. There Is reason to believe that the Tokio gov ernment will not make any move to interfere in -the . Chinese revolution situation so long as the revolutionists adequately protect Japanese citizens in the disturbed territory. Dlx Honors Ella Braman. SALEM. Or, Oct. 14. (Special.) Ella T. Braman has been named by Governor Dix as Commissioner of Ieeds for Oregon In the State of New York. XEW FLAG RAISED IX HAWAII Honolulu Hears of Rebel Election In Hn-Peh Province. HONOLULU. Oct. 14. Amid scenes of wild enthusiasm the flag of the Chinese revolutionists was raised here today In the Chinese quarter following the pub lication of reports of the progress of, the revolt. A cable message from China received today by the Chinese paper here said HIOOCSS Sarsaparilla Cures all blood humors, all erup tions, clears the complexion, creates an appetite, aids digestion, relieves that tired feeling, gives vigor and vim. If urged to buy any preparation said to be "just as good," you may be sure it is inferior, costs less to make, and yields the dealer a larger profit. Get it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Saraatabs. Stamps to $5000 Ordered. SALEM. Or, Oct, 14. (Special.) One of the largest orders of postage stamps ever placed here will be sent ,to Postmaster Farrar by Secretary Ol cott when he buys $5000 worth at once. Under a new ruling regarding requisi tions the departments made up their estimates from now to December 31 for stamps, the amounts aggregating $5000. Idaho Overwhelms Gonzaga. MOSCOW, Idaho., Oct. 14. (Special.) Idaho beat Gonzaga College here this afternoon by a score of 22 to 0. Idaho made a total yardage of 394 to Gon zaga's 169. A feature of the game was two runs of 30 and 40 yards each by Knudson of Idaho, a 60-yard run for a touchdown by E. Perkins for Idaho, and a 20-yard run by Hlllman for a touch down for Idaho. Owing to the death of my beloved wife, I am forced to sacrifice my up right piano; will sell at half price In order to get cash quick; agents need not apply. 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