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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1912)
- v If 1 5 i: 1 1 . - , y ... - -AV 'f-A.-v- - - .',vk- 4- ---f-rv - lb-1 - - - ir'- " j; r - t'- ' 111 l ' 3 A. Ill 111 f t. ' .". U ' ) ill ill 7 "4 x ,j & - ill' Hi 4v rw m HI 111 '.Y i' iTT v,- ?4 ill u JT j I VV; - till HI S IV i ; ;v 1 ill 111 J' -t','. If.'SflM - ' "v '1 III ' . 1, sV l -J, iQr' -pCi . : - ' XSlJJfei Till J ii it srf? - , y ) !ir --I it 'P iv ; hi 111 : ---a - ii it , - vti V if W rfeiS l 1 , - ' ' H j-zsr w ' ? s; ." - :'. ' yniccd II , I" ' -H twrence. Mass. Th trouble at Law- ' I If I' I ' ' , . ' " 11 rwrt has been srow!n- more serious. if '",! jf f " hO - II Recently S. 3. Ettor and his lleuten- II! y jl, , -' 5 , ' - - , . . . : II ant, Qlovannlttt. were arrested on a I If ' s ' li" " - ' i.' . f . II charge of being- Implicated In oauslny I II " f ' ; Bt - VvH'- ' J 11 th death of Anna Toperto, I i ' I 'J-'" i 1 1' . 4 V -" i I i i f , i ; "S rf-vtrJ is . ', I rt ' LV" ' - v.; J- .i'' - ' V V; - 11 Ktnir George had great sport hunting I tUJ!4jLM iTTTffm 'I.I 4 ' - T ' I ' FV--r , ' V? , V 11 big fame In India after the, Durbar. I IL jsimmvi 1 JiJUJ I I i HT T?i I 7 ' T . IU V-'V T i -. ' s '. - B The at hunted from the back of I 15 ' 'i'U-jLif f 1, r' ' ' f ' i jr . A--. f'v- 'trf..i b .mini '"' ' 11 elephants and himself brought down I I; Tfl . 1 2?. -,,, if V ' ?f WH " ' .' ' -.41 -o-of the finest specimens. If - ' r VVrhU " c srr' - . - -. i.;v-vH- th?xs 0w p.r.r iu! 1 TTteri r1t1l4 '- ' S .- ' - - ,., '.t.,r "fl -ll has arrived In the United Btates for a I I; "'" - vVS'r " V r 1 ':-,J 7 ' ' ' T. -vT -J--i-ll semi-annual visit. He says the work I :". -.-jf ; 'r :",.r-rs-S . ilfl . A - " rC-- f- ' V X II la In different stages of development I ; - . ""l --i I I T-JU . ' V V- .' . ;- V - ?S w-.' -- 1 1 M different points, but the whole I ' '1.11 - ?1V i i . -- i s. 1 "'a . ' . " i t B H ibH NEW TORK. Fe. 17. .pclal.) rred K. Law, a boas steeplejack, dropped from the top of the Statue of Liberty In New Tork harbor yeetrrday. and. buoyed by a parachute. mnd a safe landlnc. Mr. Law was tolng out a parachute which Is Intend ed for the ue of aeronauts, steeple climbers and others whose occupation Is dangerous. The drop was about 111 feet. It was mad safely, though Law rtx-elTM a bump as he land'd. The hobos have been coming to town In Cincinnati -wrr in rn ajid some ia bas. and all of them on the bump ers of ra!lrt cars. It Is a rold V in ter, and at tuls s.job th.e Viry WU- Ilea usually hike tor the South. But there Is uncertainty on the road, and where the "convention' of unwilling workers Is hold there Is always sure to bei a handout. So (00 of the never labor got to Cincinnati somehow and pasved sundry resolutions and fleeted J. tads How their chief. How Is known as th "millionaire hobo." In fart ha ia not even well off; but h hes a wealthy mother who was the daughter of tha late James H. Kad. and slie helps hint with food and clothing. One of Portugal's sea fighters reached New York yesterday. S'-im waa the little cruiser KpublUa. Had no guns been peeplng from her ports no ens would have suspected that she was a warship. The) Republics was built In 18SJ. and has spent most of her years on the Chin station. 8he Is rated as a third-class cruiser, and la by no means a good representative of the navy of Portugal. Phe was formerly the Queen Amelia, but at the. dethronement of King Manuel her name was changed to the Republics- Phe carries four six Inch guns, six machin and ill quick firing guns. Hhe will stay In New Tork for el;ht days and will then go to Providence. Halifax and the Asores, where her mission Is to visit the Portu uest colontos. e William T. Haywood, ex-president of the Western Federation of Miners, has been addressing the mill strikers at ENGLISH SCHOOLS SATISFY Peerage Not Inclined to Sond Son to American Academies. LONDON. Feb. 11. (Special.) There Is no Inclination among the peerage to follow the example of Lord Tanker vllle, whose son, Lord Ossulston, has been sent to a private school at Boston. The old tradition still clings, even where the mother Is American. Bo the youthful heirs to titles are back to Eton and Harrow. Their rank avails them little, however, for no titles are used at Eton, where W. W, As ter's two sons, young Anthony Drexel and Marshall Field's two grandsons were educated. Prince Oeorge of Teck, who Is now at Kton "fagging" for G. F. Freeman Thomas. Is simply called 'Teck" by his school fellows. Just as the present Duke of Westminster was known by his subsidiary title of "Belgrava" when at school. In fact a good deal of good, natured fun has been poked at Lord Tankervllle for his preference for a trans-Atlantic seminary .and during tha last few days the phrase "Is hs going to Boston V has been laughingly ex changed by parents when discussing their boys' scholastic careers. Eton and Harrow ax Just as much I fed; I t " " - Tl,rj I I l . , ... - I - '" -r -'Jr' 'l "rr ' II tf''..C : )y ' "--": " " . . ' &fl I '"-'''"'ssssa,JW1 tl.,w I S Txasasjaaa f I institutions as Covent Garden Opera, and how strongly that Is entrenched Oscar Hammerstein has now learned. London Consumes Much Water. LONDON, Feb. IT. (Special.) L.on don consumed the enormous total of 223,3,884 gallons of water every day last year. This means that each of the seven million-odd persons in the me tropolis used 31.5T gallons a day, and that at each house 204.14 gallons were disposed of In the same period. The water delivered by the Metropolitan Water Board is derived from the riv ers Thames and Lea, from gravel beds In the Thames Valley, from Chadwell Springs, in the Lea Valley, and from wells in the chalk and green sand for mations. The average supply delivered from the Thames during the year was 139,853.411 gallons, from the Lea 52,. 734,937 trallons, from springs and wells 40,887,435 gallons, and from ponds at Hampstead and Hlghgate for non-domestic purposes 61,671 gallons. Shakespeare Exhibit Planned. LONDON. Feb. 17. (Special.) Ar rangements are In progress for the holding- of a Shakespeare exhibition at Earl's Court next Summer, and it Is hoped that it will help in practical fashion the scheme for the building: of a Shakespeare memorial theater. The originator of tha scheme ia Mrs. George Cornwallis-West, mother of Winston Churchill, A replica of the Globe play house is to be built in the Empress Hall at Earl's Court. The village of Stratford-on-Avon, with its streets and houses will be reproduced, as well as Shakespeare's house and Ann Hatha way's cottage. In the Becluded Western Garden there will be a Shakespeare club. t