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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1914)
4 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIA. PORTXA3TT. MAY 31, 1914. 50,000 'GODSPEED' QUEEN AND PARTI Mile-Long Parade Passes 1. Jhrough Lane of Cheering . Devotees of Festival. DAINTY RULER MAKES HIT "Red-Fire Accident- Nearly Tarns Occasion Into Tragedy Police Platoon Heads Procession. Party Starts Coast Tout. Queen Thelma Is on her way. About SO, 060 Portland enthusiasts Joined Friday night in starting- her and the' members of her happy party on the Joyous mission of inviting the peo ple of the whole Pacific slope to the Hose Festival week after next. The procession to the Union repot last- night afforded thousands of Port land people fheif first glimpse of the nueen. They hailed her with delight. Radiant and smiling', she tried to ac knowledge the mighty volume of plaudits that greeted her on the mile long course over which the parade moved. The festival spirit filled the air. The crowd was of unexpected propor tions. In spite of the element of roy alty that the title of "queen" seem ingly would confer upon dainty Miss Holllngsworth, she -refuses to be ac knowledged as such and maintains an Attitude of commendable democracy which the people last night could not tail to notice. Indeed, she is a gracious queen. liach of the It maidens in the royal party was the object of genuine honor last night. Accident Nearly Mars Occasion. The parade had one spectacular feature that for a time threatened to develop Into a disaster. At the head of the procession was a wooden wagon containing a great Quantity of "red fire" material. A pair of workmen fed the flames that illum inated the route of the procession brilliantly. As the wagon rounded the corner of Broadway and Yamhill street gust of wind sent a spark into the box containing the combustibles, and Instantly the entire mass was ablaze. Police officers cleared the crowd and unhitched the horses. The wagon was pulled off into Broadway and a chemi cal machine that was being paraded by the fire department soon put an end to the excitement. Sergeant Wanless and Patrolmen Wade and Mallon were first to Jump to the heads of the frightened horses. Hergeant Wanless was badly burned about his hands and face. Captain Cir jcle also suftered minor burns on his bands. Captalm Moore Leads Pageant. Immediately behind Captain Moore, who headed the proces3ion, rode H. L. Pittock, director-general of the parade, and members of his family. Mr. Pit tock was attired in his white suit, that distinguished him as a member of the Royal Kosarians. Stretching the full width of the street marched a squad of policemen, alert, for their own particular princess. Miss Estella McCarl, was a member of the royal party. The police band was the first musical organization In line. Behind them rode W. L. Daly, City Commissioner, official representative of the municipality. In the first car from the "royal gar age" rode Miss Ilollingsworth, Miss Mc Carl. Misa Barrlnger. Miss Martin and Miss Hoyt. escorted by J. Fred Larson and S. E. Vincent, of the Royal Rosarl ans. Queen la Pure White. Miss Hollingsworth. attired in a traveling suK of pure white, mounted to the top of the tonneau and, sup ported by her companions, rode grace fully and graciously through the streets in plain sight of all. Scores of rose bouquets were show ered upon her and the several prin cesses. In tact, the automobiles in which they rode were at times almost burled with them. Proudly marching behind the Queen strode 200 members of the Harriman Club, composed of employes of the O. W. R. & N. Company, the Southern Pa cific and the Portland, Eugene & East ern Railroad, which sponsored Miss Hollingsworth's candidacy. The United Artisans, nearly 300 strong, with their drill team attired In natty black and white suits, were out as escorts to Miss Leola Martin, elected by that organization. Then came a car bearing Mrs. David Campsell. chaperon for the party; Mrs. Da hi. Red Cross nurse; Mrs. W. P. Strandborg. publicity director; Phil S. Bates, business manager, and Guy W. Talbot, a Rose Festival director. Other automobiles contained C. C. Colt, president of the Festival Asso ciation: V. E. Coman, W. F. Wood ward, C. V. Cooper, Ralph W. Hoyt and other directors of the association, and George I.. Baker, amusement director, in general charge of the procession. Five Hundred Escort Ml km Husby. Nearly BOO employes of the Portland Railway, Light & Power Company made an impressive showing. Their float, represented the "Made - in - Oregon" Club, maintained - by their numbers. Miss Alice Husby, one of the princesses, was elected by this organisation. The fire department made a good showing. It was out with its band, 12 pieces of apparatus and as many fire men as, could be spared from duty. They are sending Miss Tierney, whom they elected, with the queen. A quartet of Rosurians. J.' R. Pat terson, George M. Hyland. Tom Hyslop and T. J. McCormlck. was atentive to a machine filled with fair princesses. Miss Fitzgerald. Miss Husby. Miss Mc Iver and Miss Ostervold. These girls, too. were constantly busy acknowledg ing the cheers of the crowds. I'our Companies Manor Miss Ostervold. Four uniformed companies of the Woodmen of tho World, in fine march ing form, did honor to Miss Ostervold. whom they had elected. One of the sensations of the evening was the Royal Rosarian Band. It was the first time this newly-formed or ganization had appeared for a general parade and It made a distinct "hit." Composed of master musicians and at tired In the white suits uniform with the Rosarlans regalia made a stun ning appearance, a distinct triumph. The regular Rosarian marching squad followed the band. They executed some fancy maneuvers, to the pleasure of the crowds. Commanding equal attention with those who had preceded. Miss Vigus, Miss McKinnon and Miss Tierney, who rode in the last division of tha parade, attracted loud applause. Ad Club Make Noisy Time. The Ad Club boys, happy because Miss Vigus, their candidate, was a member of the party, had a dozen au tomobiles in line, conspicuous by ban ners and the noise their occupants made. The East Sid Business Men's Club. who had elected Miss McKinnon, was represented by a machine carrying M. B. McFau, president; L. M. Lepper, If. O. Collins and C. E. Welter. Another demonstrative group was tho Progressive Business Men's Club, the organization responsible for Miss Barringer's election. Many employes of Lipman, Wolfe & Co. were out to honor Miss Mclver, whom they had elected. The Pacino telephone employes were well represented, because Miss Hoyt. one of their number, is a princess. - Cordons of police, in command of Captain Circle, maintained perfect or der along the line of march from Broadway and Madison street to the Union Depot. The march order, from start to finish, was held perfectly without mishap, other than the burning of a "red fire" wagon. Police Band Cheered. The police band came in for round after round of applause as the police drill-platoon, led by Captain Inskeep, passed through the streets. For an hour following the arrival of the party at the Union depot the three bands played a serenade and the group of 12 royal girls held a continuous re ception for their friends. Everyone was their friend. Queen Thelma, mounted on the shoul ders of her escort, threw roses to the crowd. Later she took her position on the step at tha rear end of the North ern Pacific observation car and shook hands with thousands. She had a smile and a pleasant word for all. But none of the other girls was for gotten. They all were "queens." At 9:30 the bands withdrew and the police instructed tha people to leave the station. The private car Iolanthe has been furnished by the Pullman Company for the entire trip. The first stop will be at Tacoma. this morn ing. Special Badge Gtvea Miss McCarl. Prior to the assembly at the Port land Hotel, Miss McCarl appeared at police headquarters, where she was presented with a glittering silver replioa of the regulation police star. Around the star was engraved, "Port land Police," and in the center the let tering, "Princess Estella, Lady in Wait ing." Credentials as representative of tbe police department were handed her, signed by Captains John T. Moore, C. A. Inskeep, C. E. Baty and H. A. Circle. It bore the counter signature of John Clark. Chief of Police. The police de partment also presented Miss McCarl with a aubstantial purse, which Cap tain Moore designated as "pin money." She was escorted to the Portland Ho tel rendezvous by Captain Moore, fol lowed by Captain Inskeep and a platoon of police and the police band. MISSING KNOWN HERE SALVATION ARMY LOSES I'ROMI. NENT WORKERS I9T WRECK, Officers of Portland Corps Recall Those on Empress of Ireland as Real Pioneers of Forces. Staff Captain J. W. Andrews, of the Portland Salvation Army force, knew many ot the army officers who lost their lives in the Empress of Ireland disaster, some of them intimately. He was for many years stationed in Cana dian cities, where he was associated with Commissioner Reese, his chief secretary; Colonel Maidment and others who were lost. "I knew Commander Rees 28 years ago in Toronto." said Captain Andrews last night. "He was one of the oldest officers in the army, belonging to it when it was known as the Christian Mission. He had been in charge of work In Alaska, Canada and New foundland for six years. He had also been in command of Great Britain and South Africa and had been second in command in Australia." Commissioner - Reese's wife and daughter were lost with him. Of Colonel Maidment, whose wife was lost with him. Captain Andrews said he Just had come from the West Indies, where he had been engaged in pioneer work. "Major David Creighton. of the im migration department of the army, had held important positions in Canada for 26 years," said Captain Andrews. "For the past six years he had been In charge of the Immigration department, which has brought 40,000 people to Canada In the last three years. "Staff Captain Alice Goodwin was one of the earliest to engage in army work among the French-Canadian peo ple. ' "Staff Captain Emma Hayes, of Ot tawa," said Captain Andrews, "was one of the first Salvation Army workers In British Columbia. She had served in Vancouver, Victoria and other cities of the province." V Among others of the victims known to Captain Andrews was Staff Captain Arthur Morris, who came of a Salvation Army family, his father having been one of the first workers in Great Britain. He was one of three broth ers, all in the army, one of whom was saved from the disaster. Major Frank Morris is known to Ad jutant Genge, of the Portland army, as is Major David Creighton and Brigadier Scott Potter, the latter being trade and financial secretary for the Salvation Army in Canada. Brigadier Walker, ot Toronto, is editor of the Canadian War Cry. Colonel Caskin is field secretary of the army's affairs in Canada. A Portland delegate. Adjutant Nora Hudspeth, will attend the convention. She expects to sail on the Olympic In a few days. ICEBERGS MENACE SHIPS Fogota Is Abandoned by Passengers In Lifeboats. ST. JOHNS. N. F., May SO. Icebergs and icefields have demoralized steam ship service, both trans-Atlantic and coastwise on the western coast of New Foundland. imperiling the lives of passengers and crews. The coastal steamer Fogota was reported today ashore at Musk grave harbor in Notre Dame Bay abandoned by her passengers. Fifty-five men and women left the leaking vessel In life boats to make an uncertain voyage to shore. They were landed safely. The Fogota was badly damaged and chances tor ber recovery are doubtful. With a stern tube leaking, and bearing marks of other damage sus tained in Icefields while crossing the Grand Banks, the steamer Conlngsby, bound from Antwerp for Montreal, put In here today. 300 BODIES RECOVERED Sheds at Rimouski 'Wharf Are Con verted Into Morgues. RIMOUSKI. Quebec. May 30. About 300 bodies from the Empress of Ireland lie tonight in -the sheds at the wharf here. One of the bodies is that of a woman, whose arms are clasped tightly about her child. Many are torn and bruised. Captain Kendall was downcast over the disaster to his ship when he was brought ashore here. "I wish I had gone to the bottom with her." he said. An exprera train traveling from Nice to Macon, trance, was oe&ien ny 12 minutes by an eagle which raced it over a distance SOUTH AFRICA AIDS a T NDUSTRY New Tariff Recognizing Idea of Protective Tariff Is Well Received. CHOCOLATE MEW HELPED Imported Cigarettes and Tobacco and Leather Products Pay Addi tional Sixpence Per Pern 11 d ; Ready-Made Clothes favored. CAPETOWN, Union of South Africa, May 26. (Special.) The new tariff, about to be introduced in Parliament by General Smuts, Minister of Finance, is notable, first, for the absolute rejec tion of all tariff, changes likely to In crease the cost of living, and. second, for its frank acceptance of the prin ciple that tariffs should be used for the encouragement of local Industries. The exceptional circumstances now ob taining in South Africa discount all ordinary high protection arguments The cost of living is higher than in any other civilized country. The argu ment of free traders that this Is due to the existing tariffs is not borne out by the facts. One of the chief causes of the sparsity of population is the distance between markets and the length and cost of transportation. Another cause is the high rents, those in Capetown, for example, being double those existing in Manchester, and Birmingham. This is attributed, by the Economic Commission, to local causes. High Cost Undeniable. The fact of the extremely high cost of living is, however, undeniable, and the government therefore holds that a tariff increasing it .would do more harm than good to local industries, more especially as the country cannot hope for many years yet to be independent of me importation 01 many commodities ot necessity for general utility. General Smuts takes the point ot view that free food is not an axomatic principle, but that a tariff policy de pends upon local requirements. He has therefore rejected the main recommen dations of the Culllnan Commission. which reported in favor of a general increase of protection, including the duties on wheat, flour, sugar, tea, boots, shoes, clothing and furniture. Mr! Macintosh, the chairman of the minor ity, estimated the cost of these in creases to the consumers at $5,000,000 annually. The.se were rejected whole sale by General Smuts, in view of the circumstances already referred to. The proposed increases in the duties affecting the cost of living are only trilling, and it is not unlikely that they will be abandoned. There are increased duties for revenue on plate. Jewelry, motor spirit and a few other commodities. The increase most likely to attect English exporters is that on high-class confectionery. Chocolate-Makers Helped. While it is intended chiefly for rev enue, this increase is likely to tell heavily in favor of South African choc olate-makers'. Local industries are also favored by the additional six pence per pound on imported cigarettes and man ufactured tobacco, and the Increase in the duties on leather manufactures, ex cept shoes, and on saddlery and ready- made clothing. The encouragement of local indus tries, however, ,is chiefly to be secured by reductions of the duties on raw material and partly manufactured goods. Thus the tariff indicates which infant industries the government con siders worth while fostering. The du ties are reduced on raw cocoa, amber for pipes, hair for brooms and brushes. canvas for tents and sails, saddlery and harness, furniture, dye stuffs and un refined glycerine! The tariff changes are in no way revolutionary. Except in the case ot those specially for revenue, they are generally downward in tendency, but are based on a frank recognition of the utility of tariffs for fostering home industries. The protective effect of re ducing the duty on raw material, while not changing the duty on the finished article, is equivalent to raising the duty on the finished article. The new tariff has been well received. ONLY 2 CHILDREN SAVED LITTLE GIRL SEIZES WOOD AS SHE RISES TO SURFACE. Dasghter of Solvation Leader Uncon cerned, Not Knowing Father and Mother Are Lost. QUEBEC, May 30. Only two chil dren are known to have been saved from the wreck of the Empress of Ire land. A thrilling rescue was one of these little 8-year-old Gracie Kana gan. daughter of the leader of the Sal vation Army band. Her father and mother were drowned. Gracie was not told of her loss tonight. Asked how she was saved Gracie re plied: "Oh, I saved myself." The little child was entirely uncon cerned, apparently not realizing what she had been through. No lifeboat was near when she was thrown from the Empress and she sank at once, but rose to the surface in a moment, saw a piece of wood near ber and seized It- Later she was pulled into a lifeboat. She had been benumbed to tbe point of exhaus tion by tbe cold water. IRON DAB TIED IN KNOT ORAKG-OFTAXG OF BRONX ZOO DIS COVERS HIS STRENGTH. Alt Twists Hair-Iach Stays of His Case While la Flayfal Mood aad Keep ers Plan Stroacer "Jail." NEW TOEK, May 52. AH. the big orong-outang of the Bronx Zoo, is go ing to have a new bouse with three-quarter-inch Bteel bars instead of his present one-half-inch iron stays. Following his transfer from Hagen back's in Berlin to th$ Zoo recently All passed a few sluggish days and then awoke to the fact that he has a repu tation to live up to. the reputation of being the biggest orang-outang in captivity. It became evident at once that the cage fixed up by Keeper Fred Engle holm was a misfit by several sizes. All tested his prison the other day and tied a fair imitation of a bowknot in one of the half-inch iron bars. Then he bent most of the remaining bar;. opening more or less terrifying holes.' Engleholm realizes that if All shonld get out. the grewsome tale of Edgar Allan Foe of what happened in the Rue Morgue would be uppermost in the minds of most folk, and there would he a great deal of unpleasantness. There is no danger of All's getting out before his new cage is ready. The bulk that goes with his SIS pounds cannot be squeezed through tha open ings he has made. But there is enough peril to make the keepers wary of going too close within the fence enclosing the cage. In a playful mood All, who has a nine-foot reach, measuring tbe extend ed arms across the shoulders, poked his hand through the bars, took hold of Engleholm'a Jumper and aVA a yank. The buttons yielded. The orang outang tore the garment from the man's back and Jumped with it to the big boon? in the upper regions of tbe cage, where All skins tha cat and turns giant swinge. AM's palms are nine Inches broad, and Engleholm's arms are covered with black and, blue spots where All has given him playful slaps. Engleholm has been very successful as a trainer of monkeys and apes, but All has not profited from his instruc tion. Hagenback, it is said, .got rid of the animal because he was too stupid or too intractable to learn. Until they learn his traits, the keepers will deal guardedly with All. THIEF SHOOTS HIS PAL DIFFERENCE IN LENGTH OF SEN TENCE AROUSES SUSPICION. When Friend Is Found Later Paying Attention to Sister, Row Starts Which Ends la Shooting. NEW YORK. May 26. Fred Syrop, of 66 Morton street, Brooklyn, was ar raigned in Essex Market Police Court recently, charged with shooting his former chum and law-breaking com panion. Each of the men is 21 years old. They were reared on the East Side, went to school together, and in 1910 went to the House of Refuge together -for bur glary. On July 8. 112, they were ar rested for robbing a store at 6 First street. Both were found guilty. Syrop was sentenced to a year in the penitentiary, while Reich got off with six months. This looked suspicious to Syrop. and his suspicions were not allayed by infor mation which reached him that Reich was on friendly terms with certain de tectives. When Reich got out of the peniten tiary he went over to Brooklyn to visit Syrop's family and fell in love with Syrop's sister. Rose. Syrop was not released until last February. When he got home he found Reich there, set upon him, threw him out of the house and threatened to kill him should he re turn. Reich and Syrop met recently at mid night in Allen street near Delancey. Policeman Waxman found Reich lying on the sidewalk with a bullet wound in the chest. The policeman chased Syrop and arrested him a few blocks away. The wounded Reich was taken to the Delancey-street station house. He was lying on the floor and an ambulance surgeon was examining him when the policeman walked in with Syrop. The wounded man bounded to his feet, bowled over the surgeon and a couple of policemen and kicked Syrop in the stomach. NEWLYWEDS ARE REUNITED Bride of Week Picked Prom "Wreck age by Eate on Raft. QUEBEC, May 30. A touching re union was witnessed at Rlmouski. when Mr. and Mrs. Thomas IT. Green away, of the Toronto Salvation Army, who were married about a week ago, were reunited after each had believed the other lost in the Empress of Ire land disaster. - "I was awakened by the crash," said Mrs. Greenaway, "but I was not nerv ous until I heard a steward ordering the passengers to go up on deck. There was a great rush from the cabin, and in the excitement I clung to a man who I thought was my husband. "Suddenly, on looking at my com panion. 1 discovered that he was not my husband, so I set to looking for him among those crowding the side of the ship. By that, time the ship was nearly under water. When the final lurch came I went down with the ship, but an explosion occurred and I was tossed up out of the water. "I then became unconscious. When I recovered my senses I found myself floating on a deck chair. I lay there too weak to move, but hearing voices close by managed to raise my head and saw a raft with two men on It. One of them reached out to me with a broken oar and called out 'Are you alive? I answered as loud as I could and my husband pulled me aboard with the oar." INSANE 'MANCAUSES PANIC Shots Fired- at Pedestrians From Top of Omnibus Break Windows. VIENNA. May 30. SpeciaL) A panic was caused the other day in the Rotonturmstrasse, one of the busiest thoroughfares In the center of the city, by an Insane man on top of an omnibus who suddenly began firing from two revolvers at people In the street. Other occupants of the omnibus made a wild rush for safety, and the driver went at full speed to the nearest police station. A number of policemen, armed with swords, stormed the roof ot the omni bus, but before they reached him the man shot himself dead. He turned out to be a bricklayer named Rletmaier, 23 years old. His pockets were full of cartridges, and he had J12S in bank notes. No one was hurt by his shots, but a number of shop windows were broken. LOSS OF APPETITE Most Successfully Treated by Taking Hood's SarsapariUa, Loss of appetite is accompanied by loss of vitality, which is serious. It is common In the Spring because at this time the blood is impure and Impoverished and fails to give the di gestive organs what is absolutely necessary for the proper performance of their functions. Hood's SarsapariUa. the old reliable all-the-year-round medicine. Is espe cially useful in the Spring. Get it from your druggist. By purifying and enriching the blood and giving vitality, vigor and tone, it is wonderfully suc cessful in the treatment of loss of ap petite and the other ailments that are so prevalent at this time. It is not simply a Spring medicine it is much more than that but it Is the best Spring medicine. Hood's SarsapariUa makes the rich red bloo.1 that the stomach and other digestive organs need. Get it today. Adv. PIHCHOT TOO GREAT 10AD FOR COLONEL Pennsylvania Cannot Down Medicine He Would Give State at Election. RESIDENCE IS NOT REAL People Believe Forester Is Vow but Washington Plutocrat, as He Has Lived at National Capital for Past Twenty Years. OREGON! AN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington. May 29 Fennsylvanlans in Congress, Democrats and Republicans alike, agree that Colonel Roosevelt will have his bands full this Fall trying to elect Gifford Plnchot to the United States Senate, and It is apparently the unanimous view of politicians from the Keystone State that Pinchot will run a sad third in the triangular race this year. Apparently two things operate against Pinchot: first, and foremost, the great bulk of , the Pennsylvania voters who supported Roosevelt in 1913 have returned to their old party, as was evidenced at the recent pri mary. Secondly. Pinchot is not re garded in Pennsylvania as a Pennsyl vanlan, but as a resident of Washing ton, D. C. which he is In point of fact, and Pennsylvania voters seemingly are not disposed to elect a Washington plu tocrat to represent them in the Senate. It is not surprising to politicians that the Colonel, upon his return from South America, should grow wrathy over tbe result of the Republican pri mary In Pennsylvania, which gave Senator Penrose an overwhelming in dorsement, for Roosevelt and Penrose are bitter enemies and always will be. Penrose is one of the few members of the "old guard" still in Congress, and he is one of the few survivors among those who balked Roosevelt during the later years of his term as President. In Roosevelt's opinion Penrose is everything a good politician should not be. but Roosevelt's opinion of Penrose, as well as his opinion of Pinchot, was perfectly well understood in Pennsyl vania before the primary vote was taken. Those who profess to know some thing of Pennsylvania politics venture the prediction that not even Roosevelt can materially swell the vote for Pin chot. and they seem to believe that Pinchot in November, even with, the active personal support of Roooevelt, cannot poll a larger vote, or at least a much larger vote, than he received a week ago, even though the Colonel, as he threatens, goes from one end of the state to the other appealing to Repub licans to support the former Forester. Roosevelt has been strong when ap pealing to the people for support for himself, but there have been many In stances where he has proven distress ingly weak when making appeal for some of his friends. Today the Colonel professes to be loyal to the third party and to be as bitterly opposed to the Republican party as he was in 1912. If he maintains that attitude up to No vember he will be hampered in his ap peal to Pennsylvania Republicans, and especially when he asks them to repu diate the regular Republican nominee for Senator and to support a man who not only is not a Republican, but one who never in his life turned a hand to help the Republican party in Penn sylvania. Aside from the fact that Pinchot is a radical Bull Mooser and Is bitter In his antagonism of the Republican party, his candidacy is said not to rest well with Pennsylvania, voters because he is regarded as merely a nominal resident of the state; a man who owns property there, but who lives at Wash ington City, and has lived there for the past 20 years. And this latter fact, apparently, will operate agalnst the Colonel's candidate in the Fall campaign. L-ssG There Is Fxnerf )J Skill, Knowledge and Jlj Experience tfjf required in fitting a truss. It's not a task (J for a tyro. For 49 years we have sold and' fitted trusses. It's a very large and important part of our calling. "We have for our patrons convenient rooms for this- purpose, with skilled attendants, men and women, who give to this branch of our work their entire time and attention. Our stock is, we believe, the largest on the Coast. No sale in our store is complete until the customer is WHOLLY satisfied. For Tour Convenience Well wait on you at your home at any hour to suit you. Woodard, Clarke & Co. CHEMISTS AND MANUFACTURERS. Trusses, Belts, Bandages, Surgical Elastic Stockings and Garments Phone us Marshall 4700, A 6171 Surgical Dept. ) FULL INQUIRY. DEMANDED London Papers Ask 'Why Bulkheads Failed to Prevent Sinking. LONDON. May 30. The London morn ing papers. In commenting editorially on the disaster, call foa a thorough in vestigation as to whether the bulk heads were closed, and if so, how H was that the most modern system of water tight compartments failed to keep the ship from sinking. The claim for the Empress of Ireland will be the heaviest sustained by the Lloyds underwriters since the sinking of the Titanic. BURGLAR DARE ACCEPTED Rich Youth, Suspected as 'Squealer, Robs to "Square Himself.' NEW YORK, May 26. Malvin Dun ham. 19 years old, son of rich parents, who was caught running from 108 West Ninety-fifth street with a suit case that did not belong to him, said he had committed burglary on a dare to make himself "solid" with the "Pearl Button" gang, according to the au thorities. Dunham, who lives with his parents at 230 Riverside drive, had a suitcase full of things belonging to "two men who live on the fifth floor of the Nine-ty-nfth-street address. He 'had on the shoes of one of the men. Young Dunham, according to Assist ant District Attorney Lockhart. said that a former employer had discharged him after a misunderstanding and had told members oti the Pearl Button gang that Dunham had betrayed a member. The boy was trying to re-establish himself with the gang by burglary. "Truth is stranger than fiction." "That is why I give my wife fiction. She'll barely believe that." Kansas City Journal. PROGRAMME Today, Monday, Tuesday The Two Vanrevels A Stirring Two-Part Edison Drama. MISS ESTHER SUNDQUIST Popular Violinist. A DARING- GETAWAY Blograph Drama. MISS BETTY ANDERSON Lyric Soprano. PATHE WEEKLY World's Latest Events. SOPHIE STARTS SOMETHING - A Screamingly Funny Comedy. NOTICE Mme. Othick Will Begin II Thursday, June 4th. THAT fJpSlwi this IjisUjJ . Don't Be Fooled fia MTh Vnn Ark fA vet Iff licit ww f9iv r wi a When you ask your dealer for Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey, don t let him give you fer any other. Unscrupulous merchants some- timMg fair Arlvantaarf. t tY nnrinn.iviH rirv. w uianty 01 3 Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey t t by offering imitations and substitutes of the genu- J ine Dufly'3 to make larger profits. Many even go mi i a iu unci yuu in uuik encap concoctions which they claim are just as good as Duffy's." Duffy's Is Never Sold In Bulk It is always put up in sealed bottles. Shun all im itations and insist on the genuine. There are sev eral distinguishing nointA on the genuine Dufrv hnr- tle. with which you should familiarize your sell See 4 chat the seal ovet the cork is unbroken-o-that our 1 name and monogram are blown in the bottle, and that the label bears our trade-mark of the "Old Chemist and the signature ot the Company. 6et Duffy's and Keep Wen, Sold by most druggists, grocers and dealers in sealed bottles only. 51.00. Valuable medical book let and doctor's advice free. - Tbe Dnffv Malt Whiskey Co. Rochester. N. Y. STlUL m LL"- iU VT. Vi. SSk; 7 -1 r. Packed for the Picnic iso,ii . r;. - . m. " (ll) wood caKmJ ""pACKED for the Picnic" the lilt of life outdoors is in this alliterative -- legend from the June car card of the Olympia Brewing Co. Beer is something for everybody Olympia Beer in the carton is "packed for the picnic" even more truly for the family afoot than' for the family that rides on tires. L