8 THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTOIUA. OREGON, WJ3PNH8DAY, JUNK 3 siaiv1 fillip VAbRLANb. DOVER, June 2. Tlic agent of the Red Star Line here states that he re ceived n dispatch from Antwerp that . the S. S. Vaderland is anchored in the hay at Riverskeldt, repairing a defect IdVflnP.fi(i Viftw nn ihfl SiaiH 1 "The Message of the OLIVE to ManisO-LIVE" SYLMAR OLIVE OIL Guaranteed absolutely pure. Made from the choicest of California Olives. Pint bottles 60c Quart bottles $1 A. V. ALLEN SOLE AGENT FOR BAKER'S BARRINGTON HALL STEEL CUT COFFEE, 40c PER CAN. PHONES-711 AND 3871 BRANCH PHONE-713 THE OLYMPIC TEAM Will Have More Collegians Than Ever Before F. KOHLER'S SPEECH (Continued from page 1) on night duty and to the public when the officers arc on day duty, saving; the city thousands of dollars in wit ness fees, work for the police judges and court attaches, wear and care of police apparatus, and cut politicians and shyster lawyers out of their rev enue. The force became thoroughly inter ested and the policy lias proved a suc cess during five months of severe trial we have given it. The arrests for the first four months of 1908 compared with 1907, were 911 to 2,158 for Janu ary; 829 to 2,257 for February; 939 to 2, 711 in March and 907 to 2,434 for April. These figures show how ar rests have decreased. Reports and complaints have diminished at a cor responding rate and officers detectives and patrolmen are able to devote more time to the pursuit of tthe habi tual criminal and crime of a serious nature. This in turn has result in driving from our city practically all of these vultures, and those remain are under such close surveillance that it is almost impossible for them to operate successfully. I believe that if this policy is prop erly and generally carried into effect h will put the American patrolman in the position he should occupy. The police can help to make the world a better place to live in. We have driven young and weak men to the haunts and association of habitual and expert criminals. We have taught them the ideals and practices of crime. We have punished we have not pre vented crime. The time has come to change all this and I believe in Cleve land we have found the way to do it. TO GUARD THE MILK TEACHERS DON'T MARRY Bat Many Leave to Take up Other Business. Government Starts Measures of Vital Importance BACILLI MENACE AVERTED Prominent Scentists and Physicians Moving in the Matter Organiza tion Perfected and Work Begun at Chicago. NEW YORK, June 2 The popular idea that women teachers leave the public schools to get married and for other reasons is not borne out by a chief inspector of the diary division, CHICAGO, June 2 Legislation against dealers who make an un scrupulous use of the label "Certified" in selling milk was urged by Dr. John W. Keer, assistant surgeon general of the public health and marine hospital service, Washington, D. C, in an ad dress before members of the Ameri can Association of Milk Commissions yesterday. Dr. Keer declared that the efforts of medical and municipal authorities to mprove the supply of milk in large cities were frustrated by many deal ers who labelled common uninspected milk as "certified". A committee was appointed by Dr. Henry L. Colt, president of the As sociation to draw up resolutions urg ing national legislation against the dealers who label impure milk "certi fied". Dr. E. C. Schroeder, superintend ent of the experiment station of the Bureau of Animal Industry, of the De partment of Agriculture, made the statement that "few human beings) wholly escape exposure to bacilli from milk". Among the other speakers were Dr. Rowland G. Freeman of New York; Prof R. A. Pearson, state commis sioner of agriculture New York. Dr. Otto Gier of Cincinnati, H, Webster study of the state board of education. A partial list compiled of the teachers who have resigned to enter upon lucrative business occupations shows that the young women who are bright enough to teach are bright enough for vastly more profitable work. Bureau of Animal Industry, Depart ment of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. Prof M. P. Ravenele of the Univer sity of Wisconsin, Dr. M. J. Rosenup, the public health and marine hospital service, Washington, D. C. Dr Alfred Friedlander of Cincinnati; Dr. J. H. The first year's salary of a school Mason Knox of Baltimore and reacher is $600 or $1.66 a day, with an H. Tuley of Louisville. annual increase of about ten cents a day until after 17 years, the maxi mum salary of $l,240-less than $22 a week-is reached. The salaries paid to women in the other city departments are greatly in excess of these, and telephone operators receive more than many school teachers, though it docs not require fourteen years of prepara tion to master the mysteries of the switchboard. Scores of former teachers are now filling much more lucrative positions in other lines of endeavor. Dr. HALSTED EXPECTED TO LEAD Experts All Over the Country Are Unanimous in the Opinion That the Games Will be the Greatest Ever Held in This Country. NEW YORK June 2.-Following the j;:and performances by athletes in the iater collegiate championships at Philadelphia Saturday, College men are predicting that the Olympic team which will represent this country in London next month will have more collegians on it than ever before. While the opinion is unanimous that the two big New York clubs, the New Athletic Club and the Irish American Athletic Club will be rep resented in the team, the athletic ex perts say they have to beat their best in order to win many events at the try-outs in Philadelphia Saturday. Among the milers, Halsted of Cor nell is expected to bo among the lead ers, but Gothamites have much faith in their man and predict thaf at the finish that Snlivan of the irish-Anicri-can A. C. holder of the national cham pionship and Fred Rodger of the New York Athletic Club would be in front of the collegian. Another event in which collegians expect to upset the plans of the Ath letic Uuhs is in the half mile run, They pick Jones of the University of Pennsylvania to beat Melvin Shepard the country's greatest middle distance man. For the sprints there is a division of opinion. New Yorkers are mute on the chances of the local men success. But they will not concede events to out of town men. In Phil adelphia every expert is an admirer of a different man. Collegians pin thei hopes on Cartmel who won both the dashes on Saturday. Others say that Reckcr, the youngster from the Uni versity of Virginia, who was recently credited with negotiating 100 yards in 9 2-5 seconds, will distance his appon ents. Kamsdell of J exas is the one sprinter nearly every athletic author lty concedes has a great chance to win. He is credited with exception ally fast time in the sprints and those who have watched him train say that he shows up well. Dan Kelly, the record holder, has to be reckoned with. Under the care of Mike Murphy he has improved wonderfully of late. The collegians claim all three places in the pole vault. Headed by Dray of Yale, they say they will beat all the best jumpers belonging to clubs in the country. But while New Yorkers admit that Dray will proba bly win the event, they say there is no other collegian in the country who will beat the club representatives. In the other events the college men are not so sanguine of success, but FALSE PREDICATE of Womankind m her machinery. Considerable tin xiety was felt here owing to rumors that the Vndertand had gone ashore or been in collision owing to fog that ' had prevailed in the English Chnn-' ml the past 36 hours. Evidently the CHUCK NATURE FOR DOLLARS steamship met with mishap after her departure from Antwerp, as she was due to sail on Saturday and was due here on Sunday, but the nature of the . mishap at present is unknown. , D'veren Plnin oc w nciioou ana IN GOOD CONDITION. James R. Keene's Famous Race Horse After His Great Victory. j NEW YORK, June 2. Following , his great victory in the Belmont Stakes at Belmont Park on Saturday, James R. Keene's Colin returned to his stable at Shecpshead Bay appar ently in good condition. His legs were wrapped in heavy bandages, sat urated with a lotion intended to re lieve, any inflammation that might have resulted from his long gallop through the mud. Dr. Rowland G. Freeman was elect ed president of the association for the coming year. Dr. Otto Gier was they claim' they have a grand chance elected secretary and Dr. Samuel Mc-!of winning all but two or three of Cahamill of Philadelphia was re-! them. Experts elected treasurer. all over the country arc unanimous in the opinion that the games will be the greatest ever held If you will make inquiry it will be a revelation to you how many sue-j in this country, cumb to kidney or bladder troubles i , 1 in one form or another. If the patient Morning Astorian delivered by car is not beyond medical aid, Foley's rier, 60 cents per month. Contains Kidney Cure will cure. It never dis- all the Associated Press reports, bc- appoints. sides all the local news. r Grand Prize, Reo Automobile, to be Given Away by MORNING ASTORIAN in Popular Contest. See Page 16 For Special Offer Next Week. Latitude of Motherhood Relegated to the Rear Chcago Sponsors It. CHICAGO. June 2.Women phy sicians took a stand advocating the right of girls to enter any profession or to engage in any business in pref erence to becoming wives and mothers tit yesterday's session of the Amerl ccau Academy of Medicine. Several men physicians read papers deploring the fact that too many wo men unscxed themselves by forsak Ti, t.,... will ..,, l. amoved K home life for industrial work ami for a day or two." said James Rowe. verted that the future of the race Colin' trainer at Shecnshead Bay. depended upon the checking of "this "until the lens have been examined wi,I' "leading evil". :..,; i f,.i cntur.i inmi-vrr tlint 1 1 hen Helen C. Putnam of Provi- h will h, all riant in the future. He ''. R- I "artled the audience by ..its evervthimr that is nlaced before " ,,w,ar'nK sl,C w" ' "Omen's him, the best sign that a horse is en-1 ""'Traces. She said: iovintr life" ! "''vcry woman has the right to de velop her best faculties, to become IN THE COTTON WORLD. j educated and to enter a business field i where she meets many men, so she nfKTnv tun.. - Th rlosi. t,f can select the father for her children the first months of the 1908 market favor home making in the public schools o which is to be the beginning of the,mr country." end of the depression in New England j Dr. Win. A. Culhertson of Boston which has hung over the cotton and said: "Cooperation of the two sexes other textile manufacturing centers ! ' t( the question o ., , , .1 . . I women in business life." since me wcvks lonownig mc iui.ui- cial disturbances last fall. Yesterday ; Dr. Wm. Jackson, of Colorado, as i serted conditions had changed during many mills, which have been on short j the last hundred years and that wo time for months, started their ma-: men should be allowed to change their chinery on full time. Some have in-; habits and occupations. creased their utput during the past! Dr. Otto Juettner of Cincinnati, week, and thus far manufacturers Ohio, said: "The lack of house employing about 35,000 persons have: and domestic servants is disrupting given notice of the abolition of short society and home life. time schedules. DOCTORS IN POLITICS. "I have no sympathy with women who work in stores or other indtist rial institutons for starvation wages when there are thousands of homes in which they can get respectable cm ploymcnt better fitting themselves for CHICAGO, June 2.-Physicians must break in politics. This was the keynote of an address on "Civic Dn- j married life. ties of the Medical Profession", dc-! "Women competing with men sim livered last night at the annual ban- ply lower the wage scale, cause t quet of the American Medical Editors lack of support by men and a tend- Association by Dr. Charles A. L. ' ency toward singleness," Rcid, formerly president of the Amcr-j Dr. George Hoxic of Kansas City, ican .Medical .Association. . seat in talking about tlic education of women, the president's cabinet with a sccrc- J declared it was a deplorable fact that taryship of the proposed department teachers in public schools received of public health, is the end conceded less wages than hod carriers. to be sought by the proposed political j ' campaign. According to Dr. Reid it! ABSENCE IS ABANDONMENT is only by representation in congress j which he described as being "water SAN FRANCISCO, June 2 In I logged with lawyers , that the mcd- j decision rendered yesterday by the ical profession can secure or prevent ( U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Judge legislation. Morrow, who wrote the decree, held , property in a mining camp must be ADMIRAL TO PRISONER. j held by actual possession, otherwise ' absence amounts to an abandonment. SAN FRANCISCO, June 2. From! The decision is in the appca from the admiral of the Salvadorean navy to Alaska Court of Wm. Gordan against prisioner, was the remarkable exper- the Ross Higgins Company and Lil iencc which befell Captain Wcntworth linn J. Ray. The action was brought H. Moore, formerly first officer of the to dispossess the defendants of a lot Pacific Mail Liner Peru, who six in Fairbanks a mining camp in Alaska. months ago accepted an offer from j the Central American Republic to HIS WORK CUT OUT. take command of its navy, consisting; of one gunboat, at a salary of $.100 a' WASHINGTON, June 2,-Sccre-month. Captain Moore, as he said, tary of the Interior Garfield will leave returned to God's country yesterday here tonight for San Francisco, in Steamer Acapulco his ideals shat- whenc he will leave on the Battleship tered, and with only the memory that Maine for Honolulu to acquaint him he was once an admiral for a few self with various questions pending in mlonths to console him. Hawaii, including coole labor. const- He attempted to re-model the naval wise trade regulations and river and season in Alaska at $26,000,000. The system of the republic but his ideas harbor improvements. When he re- prediction is made that the comimr of this stream of gold from the North will have an effect on the country similar to the manner in which the Klondyke gold materially assisted in reviving the business depressions fol lowing tthe panic of 1895. GIRLS SACRIFICE HAIR, To Renters Cashier's Hair, That Was Pulled Out By Roots. NEW YORK, June 2,-ln order that Miss Catherine Gorman, cashier in n department store in Brooklyn, may come out of the hospital with a full head of lutlr, more than 100 de partment store girls each sacrifice from a quarter to one inch of scalp with long flowing locks attached, On May 15 Miss Gorman's hair caught in a cash carrier and most of it was pulled out by the roots, Physicians at the hospital tit first suggested ,i wig as the best menus to cover the bare spot on Miss Gorman's head but she objected to this mid it was finally decided that the grafting pro cess should be tried, Her friends in the 'department store readily con sented to supply the necessary pieces of scalp. Girls with hair as nearly the color of Miss Gorman's will be the first ones to niiikc the sacrifice, but the physicians say it will be im possible to get all the hair alike so after the new scalp ha healed, they will dye the hair any color that Miss Gorman may desire. It U said it will take practically a year to complete the operation as only small portions of new scalp will be put on at n time.' As oon as one piece begins to root, another of the same size will be taken from another volunteer and so on until the opera tion is completed. IOWA BREAKS IN. DES MOINES. June 2,-To-day the political parties in Iowa will for the first time nominate their candid ates (or the November election by a state-wide primary, Among the re publicans the chief interest is in the contest between Gov, A. B. Cummins and U. S, Senator Win. B. Allison for the republican nomination for the U. S, senatorship. FOUR YEARS FOR FRAUD. SAN FRANCISCO, June 2.-Fotir years in San Qiicntin was the sent ence imposed yesterday by Judge Ogden of Oakland upon David F. Wythe, Columbia University gradu ate, former private secretary to B. Fay Mills and a house thief. He was sentenced after he had made a drama tic plea for leniency. AUTOINO IN SIBERIA. ST. PETERSBURG. June 2.-Bar-on Edward Sclieinvogel left this city yesterday for Siberia to replace F.mil io Sartori, as chauffeur of the Italian car in the New York to Paris Auto race. Sartori is returning to Milan, and the car in the meantime is being run by Henri Haaga the mechanic. Baron Sclieinvogel is a prominent Russian sportsman who has made several exploring trips to Africa. SEA SICK CHAMPION. LONDON, JunTT-W. K. Vander- bill's Sea Sick II which ran a dead heat with M. Deschampj' Quintette II, for the French Derby at Chantilly, arrived at Epson last night, The . " vwi:i.ivi iu wu m mc post :.. .1. . t.-..., r..i... i t in mc i. 'sun icruv oil JUI1C o 1 CX 11.... . f -I .IV. .1 a ... iv-iinu iciwc. lo'tiavs Detune against Sea Sick II is ten to on August Belmont's Norman III, after Temporarily giving the place to King Edward s Pcrrier, is again favorite at 100 to 15 against with Mountain Apple and Perricr close up at 7 to 1 and 15 to 2 against, respectively. GOLD FROM ALASKA. SEATTLE, June 2,-Thc Post In telligencer, after receiving reports from all points in the North, esti mates the gold output for tthe coming werc not popular and an attempt to turns to the U. S. in July he will enforce discipline resulted in his dis- spend some weeks visiting the Indian charge and imprisonment.' reservations and going over the work '- of the reclamation service. ANOTHER WORLD-GIRDLER. I ! HE WAS CORNED. SAN FRANCISCO, June 2,-Ex- tensive commerce between China and CHICAGO, June 2. Herman E various ports of the world, but more Schnabcl, aged 60 a pioneer wire matt- spccially between that country and ufacturcr of Chicago committed sui- the U. S. by the way of Sail Francisco cide yesterday by shooting himself is the object of the Laing Yuet Chin- through the head, Schnabel is said sc merchants Steamship Company, to have lost more than $50,000. the recently organized at Canton, The remnant of a lartre fortune, which he apital stock of the company is $10, once possessed, in the recent advance 000,000 and headquarters have already of com prices. This fact" is believed been opened in Canton. to have caused him to end his life. Will Cure Consumption A. A. Herren, Finch, Ark,, writes; "Foley's Honey and Tar is the best preparation for coughs, colds and lung trouble. I know that it has cured consumption in the first stages." You never heard of any one using roieys Honey and Tar and not be ing satisfied. i mi t tivk'rL,' iiifii mill iftvur fu hVh THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE HONEY and TAR mm in t'.,t I j Cures Coughs, Colda, Croup, La Grippe, Asthma, Throul and Lung Troubles. Prevents Pneumonia and Consumption vlipw packaoh T. F. 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