Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1905)
.4 :' II THE - OREGOTFDAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY.- EVENING; JUNT 23' 1905. i1 , . ! 4 VETERANS MARCH TO " STRAINS OF "DIXIE" Four Thousand Grand Army Men Pasi in Review. Before Great Throng and Hear Cheers That Bring Back Memoriee of . Another in" Washington Years Ago. . WOMAN'S RELIEF CORPS MEMBERS JOIN IN EXERCISES Patriotic Speeches Stir the Heroes at Armory, Where Orators Re . - -. mind Them That They Still Owe a Duty to Their Court- iyT"T try in Guarding It Against Corporation Greed, -ri: : . With hKiti.ilop rtn0 -rl.iled vet- ih. atiwota of " Portland this m - and hrJ tha 'cheer of thousands of rltiiens who pve the defenders t th union agreeilng that.muat hava made them think of . thief first review that 'followed the endln of the, war". The Tialttna" steprTioweverr waa - hot-notlct-. able when the band atrurk up "Yankee imiuilf " for then the oldoldlere' eyea Ithted With that fire which ;W-4hre4 when the bugle caiica tnrxuu .nm way back in the ..'J$(UAnd. hen a. fife and drum corps, composed of. three vet erana. added Ha Inspiring sounds to ht general acclaim, there-waajacheer mjn,the ranks- of the veterana them aelvea. and those who had grown some what careless of keeping perfect time oulrkly ..obeyed an imaginary order to mark tlme, right dress, forward " inarch." Then . the Inspiring atralna of Dixie" buret on the air, and the vet varan remembered that the war waa ever, and. the people ; renewed their ..".cheered for them, and Jlmore)jPor the united country. - ' 'yr It waa the march arranged by General Owen Summers, marahal of the day.for the membera of the Grand Army ana j :Womu'i Belief corpe-. ;The jtrana gathered from every northweetern atate. and aome there were who had crossed the conUnentnd who could not. resist the temptation to Join their old com radea and tramp to the army tunes , played by the band of the Third Infantry regiment, Oregon. National Guard, and ' that of Pe Ceprio. Comrades KM Met Before; Jl' -"What waa your regiment, comrade "said each one to hiamarchlng compan ion, and often When the answer waa given therewaaa,"hearjy"Ble- you., comrade, we were In the battle of Got-, tyeburg together. In theame brigade." - Forming - oirTYamhtir street, eaat or Third, they marched north to Stark, to Fourth, to Washington, to iTtf th, to Morrlaon, to- Blxtbr, to Waahlngton, ta Tenth-and then to' the armory They arched In columns of foura. Many membera of the Woman'i Relief corpa were Jn-the line. , . - in- the -armory-tor an hmirand half the ?veteraiulwltBteried to " eloquent speech! that crjated the history of the civil war and descanted upon tha atatua of the republic today, 40 year-after .the close of that- atruggle. Captain J. P. Shaw presided and Introduced Judge H.' Korthup to give the address of. welcome for the -department tt Ore-KOnJudaorthunlold,-awld aoU dlers that, brave - aa-they were, when they "marched against the enemies Of the'unlon, they had been equally as s lant since that' tiro In defending the he Joes that attack in time, of peace, HeatorTrtoaje7jiL R..rrrKrt.'cmnander-of tha Con- .federite forces; . . . ' The audience aroae Aa the Third reg iment band faaycd-iirhe-fitrEpftng1ed Banner" and' scores - of Xlaga.were waved. ' " ; : . - Tz.Btimn and Soar. . . "IrsTMiimllton aah'g "lV$l y" Amenjea," and When-a nv-Blg-X a Jie -- Soldierx- ?nd many . veteran wiped the teara Crtra-ifria ftlrrowd cheek as the tendei aentlment -Of the latter aong brought them back to the dayg of the- war. . B. O.' Coagrova of Pomeroy fn re npnnae for the department, of Washing ton, arouaed tha old aoldlera when he apoke of the deacendantg of the -Confederate general, Robert K. Xee. and those of the I'nlon general,-V. 8. Grant, marching aide by aide In the Spanish war to uphold tha banner of the' repub lic,. ..... ; ...... . . .:.L "The country need you now aa much as In 11." said he. "for commerclHllsm. haa Kken hold of the affaire of the na tton,and the lssuea-growing therefrom must be met by you as were met the Issues of Iftl. .Trusts formed for pri vate enda must be taught to respect the law." And, too, comrades: we must stand by auch - men aa President Uoaevlt,j Governor Folk' of -Mlaaourl, and. every man elected to office who takes -the po sition assumed by auch patrlota, until once again shall be supreme the man dateg of thC people as embodied in stat ute.. " u. . : "Ns mrh forganlaatlonjr. ahall . ,b greater than the government," ex clalme4.thefipeaker Ja,- lmpaaaloned manner, and thereat the thnuaanda of old apldlera cheered until the rafters weeJvlbrant with the noise. " Mrs. Clublne sang "Columbia, the Gem of -the Ocean," and -was Joined by the .veterans, and then C. F. Drake of Idaho responded for his department,- and waa -hewWyapplauded i hetook his old comrades backward Into the 'exciting days of tha war and recounted the glo ries won on the field or "ftattlew-. TheT exercise endedr'WlthAmerlca played" by the band, and the veterans disbanded, later to go to the exjvjlon grounds , wnere .tneir . urana Army badges were accepted as tickets of ad' mission,. ' " ' . .' No need to fear audden attacks of cholera Infantum dysentery,.dlarrhoea r. MiimmAr nnmnlalnt. If vmt hava T t Fowler'a Extract -of. Wild i&trjwberry .11 in, iiuiji tim cnaac - WAS DRUMMER BOY IN FEDERAL ARMY (BpirrUlinpt'k te Thf Jours il.)' - -Oregon City, June 23. T. E. Julls, who waa elected department commander of- the. O. A. R. at the meeting of the encampment yesterday, entered the serv ice of the federal army as .a drummer In Company I, Klghth Illinois Infantry, lie was In the entire war and waa with Hherman on the famous march to the aea. ; Mr. UUla ha been' a resldenT'ofr Oregon 14 year, andt resides In Jackson county, where he has a beautiful home and ranch. -He was inthe banking buslnesa before, .he retired from active pursuits. - " BLOODY ATROCITIES IN TRANS-CAUCASIA dutrages - Against Armenians irPontinuer-Many Are Killed 1 -'and Country Devastated. - ant lnteresin himself In havlni tfi"e taney j)td reported adversely by the i: It y engineer But theydld et It out nf the way." thundered the dletrlnt at torney, "and by doing o estsbllshea that., there was a motive which might actuate aome one to secure actron such a the atate haa proved waa taken by the defendant In this case: "Let me offer an explanation for this whole -business Councilman .. Rumelln tried, to Induce Elltntt to accept money feJr an adverse report, on-the-Maney bid. KHIott refused. Rurrtelln was angry and determined that he would get revenge on r&Illott and Scgglnrlntroduced the reso lution for investigating the Tanner creek seweijand thua got-even with-the. man he wanted to buy and .who would not aell himself. - . . Bexnelia's Zffort to Oat Swan. r " '"' A man is never so com Jortable in his life as he is in, -a lighti weU-fitting; Outing Suit. .Don't think any kind of a fit will do. Summer clothes ought to fit as well .as your- dress suit. - ."v " : "t: - t . Why not have the best? We have. For Saturday We Offer Outing Suits. Speciarat. . . . . r.7. . . . Business Suits. - Special at.....,....,, Dress-Up Suits. Special at. ... . , . . . , Negligee Shirts, . . . . . .85 Panama Hats . ,,. .5.00 Royal. Blue Shoes. ..$3.50 Boys-Wool Suits. , Special at. f, Boys Wash Suits. Special at nwa C fr r i TT.t. 'ait We give Firecrackers FREE with Each Purchase i " : Wear. . Java Straw Hats'. Washable VestT.. Thin Underwearj :. 87.35 S 10.00 914.00 ; ,,S1.25 .... 50f 82.85 , . . .65 ..;i25 :: of Boys' GcttsJufm-Proj)' ;" EVERYTHING FOR MEN AND BOYS 166-168 Third St., near Morrison TTng and a number of village are now surrounaea oy Kurds and Tartars Five tnouaana coseaeks have- beerr sent f rom Baku to aid in suppressing the Insurg ents, who number nearly 40,000. . . . f. iurnml Bicllil 8-vles.) TStZ reteraburg.. June ;2.3. News . nf outragea against the Armenians In the fcrlvajv dUtrict-of -Trans-Caucasla, was received today, which ahow th4 largo section of the country has been com pletely devastated and that houses have been destroyed and property and cattle carried off by soldiers. "At Bad am lu, too Christiana and their priests were forcibly converted to Ialamllm and their church transformed: into a mosque, At Djagrakh the women were outraged and It men beheaded In . the presence of their wives and chlldr Tht. atrocities are the result of the s; cret protection afforded by the authori ties to certain lenders,' en. ex cellent ground for propagation - of Is-lamlsm-ln the brutality of theTocal Tar- tar population. , . anua or insurgents '-recently sucked and burned tour Armenian - - villages. Subsefjuently. they-surrounded and at tacked Owllanoraschau, ut "Were ts- pulaed with 100 loss. In the attack on KhaouloundlaJi 900 men were lost by majnuurjenis. Tn II11"1"- "r ri rtsil FROM FOUR BITS A DAY :T0 ONE HUNDRED A WEEK (oeratl Bpeelal Swvlee.) New York, June 23. From a cheap Coney Island dance hallwhefe she was singing for 60 cents a nlgHCrto ay yic-: torla roof , garden in Manhattan at a salary to begin with ojf $109 a weejt, la the remarkable experience of Flossie Crane, a Brooklyn young woman, whoJ is said to possess remarkable baritone voice that is" expticted to create a- sen sation. - I The roof garden manager who discov ered this vocal marvel Is noted for springing sensations snd at times the sensations are more grotesque than ar tlstin. Whether Miss Crane's voice or the notoriety ettendlng her -Jump from Coney island to liroadway will be the stronger factor In any of the success shu may attain, remains to be- ien. At flrat the young woman was reluctgntto accept the dazxllng offer, .tjut succumbed later when equipped with a suitable stage wardrobe by the roof garden man ager. Her Broadway debut Is to take place at an early date, MINERS OF UNION COMBINE QUIT WORK "(Ipeelsl DUpstrk to Tb Iiwrasl.) Baker City, Or., June 28. Fourteen mUiers arrived -here ..last night on foot from the Union Combine mine, where they, had atrock. They walked 70 miles. They allege that the company did not. compijwiththecon,toPt.JULwaes, board and hours. The mine is left with out min.-- i : r FATE WITH THE JURY - . (Continued from rage One. ) ' "Mr. Itumelln haa suffered from pro longed - attack by the newspapers. " shouted Mr. Wood, "particularly by the Dertiocratlo Journal. " and then he m.ade a statement that was calculated to make th circulation manager gnash hia teeth, when -lie asserted that no one paid, any attention to what The Journal said, any way. In proof of which he brought into the case the $10,000 libel suit that lias been atarted by Mr. Wood for Mr. Rum ottn agiilust The Journal, and aald that when the .cuiH. came Into court, he "would ahow the yellow rag the differ ence between red Inking a' man's charac ter and proving facts;"-' And. Wen came the expose of . the - rottenness of the present municipal administration, which he declared had been virtually a mess of. corruption, .with . the Tannert,creek scwei the mgst damning incident that was -recorded against itr-L--r "'"" ' ' . Motive for AUsd Bribery. flvery witness for the state waa dis credited, and Mr. ' Wood averred ' that the case resolved Itself into a question beLwcn KHIott and Kumcllji, and the jury was to choose . whichever one seemed to them, entitled to credencfc- In speaking of the question of a mo tive for getting the Maney bid out of way, ..Mr. Manning, in. closing, aald; cfense has tried to destroy a motive-whlet-cwntrld ""account "for the not v, lefeelai "llcw rSme this man Rumelln to know there waa anything Wrong with the Tanner creek acwerT Kia not he know nnd had not he been a party to the whole rotten" "administration-of affairs, and la not.Jhis. then, an explanation why -he offered that resolution? 'I tell you that-Rumelin knew. U about the rottenneaa -- of - city affaire, and had known It all the time. .He knew the inside factrand 'got even' with El liott for refusing to become part of the corrupt -wing cf the government which this man Rumelln belonged." MrMannlng - cited the testimony of City Engineer Waner,-who had atated on the witness etand-ffiat he believed that with good, luck Maney could hjy-ei gotten out even, at $53,121 for the Drioge, and that at $5(1. Jl 5 Butler could with (.good Juck have made a profit of $5,000. "Here was the $5,000 to which Kuma- lln referred, wheti he tried -to buy . El llotfg advene repult on ther-Maney trtdrr the Intention being -to make the real profits on the; contract from the extras, which have Been shown by"Clty Engineer WAnxer to have hmounted to $1,000," said the district attorney. LARGE SHIPMENT-has just arrived comprising an excellent line of the very v V AMERICAN GIRL ELOPES ; WITH A FRENCH PRINCE tloarnal v8pecUl Berries.) ' '"! 'J!ew VorK, June z3- A JoufnaTf pecTa from Paris aya the sensational romah'ce of1 "Miss" Beatrice "Wlnans of Baltimore and Newport, and Princede Bearn et Chain Is, ; culminated yesterday In Jk aecret marrlagewby the mayor of the seventh GRAND JURY SLOW-IN --INDICTING BEEF-TRUST (Jouraal Hpeclsl terflee.) . Chicago, June 23. The federal grand Jury Investigating the beef trusnd- joumed this morning until Monday. - No indictments were returned. The Jury Is expected' to complete Its work next week. It is believed that a number- of true bills will be found. 'II TWO SHIPS ARESUNK IN " 1 COLLISION AT DETROIT (Joornst llpselsl iervtee.) : " -Detroit. June J The steamers City of Rome and L.indoji collided In the St. Clair river, opposite Taahmoo park, this morning. - Both sunk. , Two members of the crew of the Llndon, the cook and his wife, were drowned. Qrear Battlefields Russian War ' Comi4etlon of the great, Siberian Rail road to Portland.' 1 . (,. Free . Excursion r During .June Cut this out; it will not appear again. The hearer la entitled to a free round trip ticket, if accompanied by two per sona paying regular aamisejor-a cents each. The largest and most expensive at- trsrtlon. The only one at Bt. Iuls re moved in Its entirety te s-ortiana Enjoyable. arUstio, rUd.r educa- .ab floni at iiiiidlssniieiit. ' Iiitldentally de Dearn avoided; a duej, with Prince Heiy -de Sairnn by dropping his tltl"When "the cererfkmr-vai - performea. TrlnceJIoly de Bagan asserted that he was the only Frenchman living who had a rls-hl to the title of Prince de ChaHfls, and threatened if de Bearn made use of thnt tltie-. when the marriage ceremony was performed that he would challenge him to a duel. De Beam evi dently notified the police that de Bagan Intended ltrterferlng-with , the marriage and demanded that he be arreated If he made a disturbance. De Bagan went to the race unusually early, avoiding four detefHv who were asalgned to find him.-- ' - - . ' ... BUTCHER PRESIDENT DENIES GRAFT STORY - rr (ionrmii BpecUi BVrlcO . rhlcaeo. June 23 Michael Donnelly, president of the butcJSers' union and leader of the stockyards' strike, was a witness before the grand Jury-today In the labor graft investigation. Donnelly was unable to tell the Jury wno as saulted him at the meeting three years ago after he opposed the plan of strike settlement offered by John insooiL ft. E. Mof felt ef t he fears Roebuck company and E. Felsenthall, a buslnesa msn, declared iney naa no snowieage of the use of money ,r- In strike settle ments. . . . ALEXIEFF RELIEVED. r,"iHnnr.rt frra.g ;e One.) 21 with heavy loss. An attack by a Russian detachment on the helghta at Nan Chendsy on the "same day was also repulsed an'd thenemy pursued. Other wise the situation la unchanged. - ' If o Money for the Affarr- (Jourssl Hperlil gcrvles.) Berlin, June 23. It Is reported that Rusala has aeked sevr&lJ)anksfor a loan and that Bruasela. and other cajJ tala have been aoundedon the same subject All the requests were declined it is - stated except under the guar antee Jhat the war shall be ended In the very near future. -. - - DENIES NICHOLWAS I THE UST SURVIVER (Hpsetil Mapatefe to The Jnarnal.l Helena, Mont., June 23. James MaaonV a "contraetor-itvlng hr Helena,- denies today's New f York dispatch that Thorns s Nlchol, who died yesterday, wag the last survivor of the famous Perry expedition. Mr. Mason" has papersl te show that he was a member of-he expedition headed by the noted admiral which .visited Japan 55 years ago. Mr Mason enjoys- good health despite hit age. He iias lived hers many years. KAISER'S YACHT. WINS. - RACE IN STRONG GALE . i, . ... L r- (Journal Special gerTlee.)" Klel. Jan. 21. The principal race In the Kiel regatta between the emperor's yacht Meteor and the Hamburg atarted today In a gale. Emperer William was aboard the Meteor lylng)n the deck, en veloped In oil aklna. The- kaiser's yacht finished first by on minute. - .-" best goods to' be found for the money, in full : and three-quarter sizes all prices. The very latest effects inbrass and bronze cheaper ones 1 prettily painted. They are everlasting, strong and very ornamental. 1 To introduce them we will, quote for a limitedvtime a rate ofiOc Down aiid 50c a Weekr This is your bpportimityrto furnish your sleeping apartments - at low cost and very easy terms. Formerly New York Fnrnitnre Co, 1(84-186 FIRST . ; - . " EXTRA ; ( wC S caps r- i ,Sl ' JForutwitliyourJui5t- yer'-Economy-J Jars, for sale by all dealers in this city at 20c PER DOZEN -m. Fit All Sizes of Economy Jars " tiiVtv,()f- " DON'T FAIL TO SEE OUR PRACTICAL DEMONSTRATIONS " Of preserving fresh fish, meats, soups, . jellies, jams, vegetables,' fruits, ttel, every "'day at the Economy'" jar Booth of. the, Kerr Glass Mfg. Co. In the Agricultural building, WorlrTs" Fair, Portland, Oregon. A booklet of recipes given free to all in quirers. ' - V,-' : i ---'- ""-T - Wadhams & Kerr Bros. ' ! - r Distributing Agents P ORT LA N D, OREO ON TRAIL OPENING HAS B E EN POSTPONED A WEEK '. Tba-- formal opening of ! thg TrVo, scheduled for tomorrow, has been post poned until July. 1. This action la due to the extension In time (or giving aay tha stack of dollars. It waa cor sldered better that both event shoulf Uke pla on th am sUK . Knlclter Tes, my wife won ths flht. but the credit. belongs to the spirit of her anoeators. - BockrToa den't ay. , Knlcker -Tea, her mother was. wlUi