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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1905)
Saturday: rv: !:i::o. if. I 4 JK-' -i m i was as ar wa a. , aa ar an sb j ., . .v . .ay sai . k Good Ground Exists for Belief Th8tEnfranchiementvof Oregon; XvWotneriyviii oe oougnxm vp""njs uoM',r . Show: InMany States' Legislates r POtmc sentimenx goTrij; aXhahge. . , HlV -Oreeoi will' vot on thustlon .of mnu auffrsg In 1. UnffefHbrln A illative and referendum-, petitions ! be filed with th secretary t atte-. de ; V . mandtng the submission of the 4su to tb peopW In -beat yre lection. SThU 1 th report which persistently a.-circuJMt -Officer th - National ; Woman's Suffrag" association, -leadere. thratstwfnlsttorvery .-ected with th 7th' annual iuitw convention now In esslon In th. Klrst Congregational church refuses to b m .'tervlewed on th subject ...Ttt th per ;tstncy of the report and certain facta " that have, beea ascertained tend 7 to "Vreat,,the belief that this campaign V f to ba t ought next year.-- . .- - ;.. ' I Two Slcaiaamft Po' V H V Ia the'llcht of thla report, th two 1 jnoet algnmcSnT-utteranoea that ,hT 1 been beard at thla conventloii wiH the ..ieclaitlowticiotrtrnor ThimberlaU - Thuradar nlht, when h went on record " " umI , anrrra.n."and' th mddreaa of ' ' Mra.- Ida, Huated Harper.laat nlfh . "How ion will th day be deferred In - : Oreifont There U not an Intelligent " f man or worn.n-n-the- Ute wba-doea not admit that the enfranchlaement of : woman la "Only a queatlon of time, that - thla area body of eltlaene by far th . moat law-abiding claaa In erery com - miiM m wU educated a men. mmmmmA n . aractlcaAr every kind of . buelneear.and.M lt one-third of .-th L.fcole number .grtf-aupportlng. paying annualty blllona of dollar ia taxea. h 4ng every, ataka lntha government that 1. mi hh . hv vrY srlnctDle of reaeon; of loelcrof Xtfirttyr muat eyntually bav - vole fn public affair." - f ' . Mr Harper potet. op gracing: th Situation." She eald: - " "It la noi westward but eaatward th tar of woman a nipir tax nm -way, lf fnr wa lit the weat that It aroae. V It wa hfcr that-her ua -of polttloal freedom waa f irat an abov tn non : , ton. It la. to tb trong,ourageou ' and . progreaalve mn of the weatern tatea that the women of thla whoU . , emmtry look-for-, deliverance from the ' bnndan .of disfranchisement It . lfc these men who muat atart th ifuture . ' ' movement 'and give It auon momentum "that It will roll lrreelatlbly'on to the 1 ; very ahore of the Atlantic f ocean)' - t'i ' OoloMt Woo fee X Oomlag. If Colonel C K. 8. Wood predlcUd th ' rcomlna- of eaual riant 01 women, but T aaked them for what they wanted th -right to vote, when theyi-wnuldb - i ..wav1Jlb"'it on the political checker - (Continued from Fag On) .1 .'postponed until a new, panel could be . , drawn from which t select the Jury. H suggested to the court that th ; members ef th present -panefoj'th - most parr have beerTln Portland alnee ; h- Mttehell trial began and many of I them may have been Influenced by thl 1, talk and newspaper-discussion of thl '--, ' land fraud prosecutions. "H therefor lJ-OvedthatapewJJlWsLb.Wa- , Judge Xie Haven withheld his decision. " f Senator Thurston In opening explained "' ''- that be bad no. intention In his attaok ' . '. of -yesterday upon th prosecution of reflecting upon Mr. Heney, to whoa sblllty he paid high tribut.: "My criticism have gone to those T-ondltons'WhtcH appear in "the evldeno -r ? here, tn the. apparently remarkable man - ner tn which the whole foree, and power 4 of the prosecution before Snd during --- - . . 1 ' - . . . . . l . inis case nas stvn cwiirm upon m J ' .j.f deelred -convlcton of John H. Mitchell," t l said Senator Thurston. "I cannot un ,7 - . ' deratand, and 1 believe you cannot un . ,'1 i derstand, why It Is and It Is that th ' V proaecutloh originally planned, aa I aa Id yesterday, aaalnst th alleaed land- a i-' grabbers, the large robbers of your i iV. " i trest -timber resources has been turned J;-, .,- aatd from that and centered upon thlH k' ... ; vour publlo servant, and his associates. ,1 dq pot now understand It. snd do not W ;.' ' J hliev you understand It, and"! will throw' eorae lUht upon this- sublcel -r'-when be comes to reply." , i ...i..H made a brief resume of some of the '.-v evidence at this point, which had bein -r discussed yesterday; Then he went Int. V ;X ' discussion of the acts of th senator at the- time he wns Informe't thut - the i ipmseeutloa was connldfrlns his -.ise. , "In pesslng te a conslderiitlrn of what -rJn-man--eio;-r--saiav wren lie brought, fere to fat-e. throiigti the public .'press end other sources of Information, with the fact that he. was being purmieii .before th grand Jury. In the state of " Oregon,' and that from behind closed , doors snd the mysteries of that irrnnd Jury room, theto might come out to (he world sn accusation ngnlnst him. I would -csll your attention to thect of un licensed mati.- , T have been called upoi .to consider many, many cases in wblcli . men .charged with crime behoved in snners, snd f iDiiriwv-lmTV vtt perlencev 1 csn only say that I hnve never yet been eule to Judge in . the case -f way ne tnsn e to whether his after actions discioseaJiis guilt or his Inne- - , Aettoa ao Oriterloa. 1 Have knows men as Innocent of wren -a could b.-when Thsrged with a crime, and brought face to face with the danger of prosecution, to act In the manner that would cause ordinary ms to -place upon them the brand of guilt 1 ...nave. t '; : jV :P sltoirtlok hold themselves U 1 " ne won as honest men", and tn ' 'A n"r Pr!oc, 1 have been driven to th t . 1 1 ' enr1uiloa that It is mere prebabl that i ' i ' nBOP"t man. charged with guilt. ilj, srOI. unle en-It eireumstsnce and the ' . . ' f err At . hi feeling act more . Ilk a JiTEIection. -Li.- GREAT GAINS ARE MADE Be and IS jjapiai y ynuw. player who control present public , ftf- fair. ' r '-'m''Wl. ti mrii Inn ! In receipt Of tele gram from Samuel Compere the- great labor leaaer. wno iprw Ihat the enfranohlsmnt wUl not b dv 1 ine conTeniiun..v"'a " l..a ITkm. Union! M SMII 'tO U publlcjjind the menre eapeclally weK come. Reporta are receiv.fo irvm atate In th Union, Showing th grftwth of th equal euffrage Idea. Verrtlont tniA nf the rlarht waved mere, wnico re sulted In aecurlng for a bill for munlo Inul auffraaa all the aenatota but thre mnA within three votes of a majority the hotief.- laura MOO re, aecrewry w that 'atate, mad this report.. Which waa received With cheering, a also waa inai from M laaourL .offered -by Mrs: Alice Mulkey, state president, and whhrvaid that largely through etrorta oy equai auffralat the. legislature had adopted a law for compulsory education and on making It a felony to aell intoxicant ffA fhlnrtta. t-- r Minnesota was reported Vy Maude C Stock walls-Kentucky , by -Mary CBoMk. who stated that there the women were committed to ask only for suffrage by women who can bead nd write the Eng lish language; Kansas by Baaie r. uris hsm. nresldentt-and Kate AApllngton, eorreepondlng secretary, who tuoted the mease ce of- Theodore Roosevelt when vovernor ' of ; New XorkL . who said. call attention to th desirability of grad ually extending the sphere In which th euffrag can b exercised by women." and quoted the governor of Kansas; who Indorsed -what Roosevelt bad as Id, , alas sachusetts. by Susan S. Fessenden, re ported wonderful progrees. evinced by the large number of addition to mem bership In equsl suffrage organisations In the Mat veer.- 77 -- -.r- - The afternoon session today was de voted ,to th nwpapr phases of the work. Mrs. Harper presided In place of Mary Holland Klncald.: At I. o'clock W. 8. U'Ren spok on the Ihltlatlv and referendum. . -. TThlM ' vtU'awgvBrr' ; Rev. J. Wbltoomb Brougher, TD.- D, will, give the- Invocation -this - evening Mr. 8usl Gambell Whltehurst-jrf this city will Sing, and addressee will lx given aefoilow.r-j-TtepresenStloh." Ella 8. Stewart, Illl'nola; "The Duty of the citlsen," Judge B. A. IxweU of Fan dleton; "Suffrage end Education. An. toinett Brown Blackwell, MassAchu-setts;-MA Word From the Middle West." Msry - J. CoggeshalL Iowa;. "A Squsre 1 diction will be pronounced, by Cleanor who' had committed a crime' ndi ready end prepared t face accuaatlon. . . , , Aod after all. gentlemen of the Jum I would like to believe that you will Judge of th acta of alt men In a kindly spirit, h W r not.vry good Judge of the hearts and motives that guide th action or men. we ar apt. to be harsh, ynd w are apt to forget that there may com a lime- when w must stanrf up before th bar f'na Judg. mem ana expiaia our own actlona which we hav carefully concealed from th eyes of man, and I bellev that In every human aoul ther ought to be a' feelln to Judge a charitably and kindly th acts of ther men a w -will wish our Ood to Judg when h comes to pa upon ours. - i,. - . .. . ,- . . , , 4 , Phoebe Cary' illtU'. poem Wa r- cjiea as . what . had mora. to do- Jn In nencinr tha . speaker - toward - kindly Judgsaeat than anything Hi ihafliad' occurred in nia lli; "Judge not th working of hU brain and heart that you cannot see,- - .' Wbetlooks ta-thy dlm'eye atatnT In Ood's clear light mav be A .srsa bPBMght fl'iiu"llUrn "MrrKm'SZX field. . M .... " " ' "Wher you would faint and vleidJ , "in thla aplrlt, I ask you, gentlemen of the Jury, to take. In the consider' tton pf what JohnTM.-Mitchell did, the nuuam inai ne wa railed suddenly ber by the announcement in th news - 1 P"r Published from one end of th '"u ,u ln otner, that he was being Investigated by tb grand Jury in his I own rltv mwA kii.i . . 1 - . - "n ciunm uoors, and ...... ..,rv mi,ni come out from that wici iiiimmr an rniiirtm.n, -.ui.i. iiiisiii. 11 ui mm oeiore -the nri criminal. . . -. . Old,. Won and Aloae. , iou must remember, and T .n n aay It In order to er.llst any sympathy ...... uuim. imi au do extended to any human being who suffers, but you must remember slao. as a .fact In thla case. that this old man, when the public press announced that he wa to bejndlcted In the sta te of Oregon, wa f a feel J man. He hsd been recently at the door 01 oeeiii ine ears or its aoul must iiuvr neiim ine nuttenngs ef 'tha aneela' whifs. He waa ahuttered in hla heaJthr h was worn and fatigued by the stress or puDiio duties, he was worn and tired Dy ins deny attention to the requests 11111I demands of stltuents. fftr 'usslstance. andfor Infwr- mimon, ami lie Was nlnnv he was alon in uis little chamber of Washington, which was nis nome ne was alone, 1 nere whs no womiin-s kiss upon his lips or brow to mane the way . less hard 'ir ijnguish less keen. Then wss no little hsnd to be niacwl udoa hla Ao m"" voice 10 say. nod blesa . toil grnndps.' He was alone.- There was nob.Miy ready with a word Of kindness for his old ic.i nnd-ln his weakness, and in hla ti.i.ible he had to be his own adviser, snd a man Is his own worst ad TlieT hrs-hys. ; ; lie resented with all the eower In hla nature the Idea that the governmen was pursuing mm wim inuictment em: crlminsL charge, for he knew In" that neart or his that he had been Innocen or any guilty Intent or act aa a lit tl child, and ha felt outraged, yes. and per hsos he felt alarmed, for h did not know .lusi f xaruy wnen the question . came to mm, as to how Mr. Tanner had been conducting bis buslness-4a- Portland, or as to whether . or not .Tanner might have ging outside oeoole IrtrTSrV tee nohe lor Tanner oa th part Mitchell." . , XJvsd AWv Baspleloa. -v .11 Th speaker again dwelt upon th sen stors careful attention to the affairs of sll , hla constituents, and Uttls ragsrd for. his own. which had nmmnn- league to say once'thst he waa giving s ssvck of bl tin to ethtri that hi should ha vs a rf ceWr for til own bust ns..Tb spesker alsa reviewed Jhe fact that Mitchell bad uvea lnrOT,"."' v.ra ef whisky grab, augar tarirts. ' ,. a i..i.i.iinn nd ateamsnip jubsldtes" without b -taUt of susplcloiJ. when thousands ana nununv- -ends could, be made I a way that most men call honest; and mat ne believe that he waa eupected In a petty affair whloh-lnvolved practlcaUy Bothj Ing He recalled that h aenator had been known M a boarding-house sen ator, which meant poor, . -- position If waa impoeaioie . much cBt by ; the.. heer . genlu and untiring effort. Th speaker thought that he would not hav Acted, n,nrrnnt with such charge. ar Senator Mitchell dld.'but p. thl con- neqtlon he aaked th jury that Senator Mitchell would probably n n hav don ao had no-been , year yonngen , ' ' - r.T a Jm.im Tanner the SDeaker dismissed ss a good-nsn,7who had told-"- tth- In regard tp everything save ipm UuU,- satlon In privaf-wttn joa-g'"'. . -man; who. Jidtea. promised. -?"nne2 and who. th apeaker bopd. would get It a be had been promised by the govepn ment. -v .. .. 'i -; Bobertsoa Xa emueo. - - C Robertson- fared worse. Apolo gising for epesklng harshly of any roan. Senator Thurston al,d: v"Brlght, keen vicious Robertoon, . Th only witneas in v thla . who appeared to sees: an opportunity to stick th knlf In deeper, on hi own motion, on tb witnes stand. I reelly think that th dlatrlqt attorney tried toiexaraln that wUnesa fairly -and iniuniv. nd that hA really tried t keep bins frost the-vepeiated attempt to volunteer - teatlmony nov-asaea - w-m order that Robertson might still deeper thrust th dagger and" turn It around In Mitchell. Robertson I Brougnt up oy MHchll, treated a on. taken Into hi Inmost confidence, H his business af falra placed In Bobertaon'a hands. No, I don't blani Robertson for having been a witness before th grand Jury. I don't blame Robertaon for -having testified to aixything that. was trutbful. r ut mere are'dlfferent way qf showing treacUt try." " ? "' .-- --"r"-:" . Tb peakr analysed om dfth testimony, and act f Mr. Robertson further, and th Intimation was given in broad terms that the scrt service aawt, Tsylot, who flrsl visited Robert son, won him over and. used him there after aa a spy against his old employer, and finishing-with th witness, th speaker said:' : :. :: . -i.:..-' ':f :". . Call Bobertooa Xagrate. -r. L '"And h lid you to bellev (hat h called Senator Mitchell a liar, to his face, In his office. Lord! h never ac cused a dog of being a liar,-to its face. let, alone a senator of the He Is not th bold, defiant gladiator "he would have you believe he is: he Is th servile,- cringing office boy. I don't believe ' a word : about thf Interview there, but I Son't know how you feet about It I might, hang a man on some evidence, but I would not hang a yellow dor on bis evidence. Mitchell, you majMj-y, to be machines and not man. hav been betrayed many times in ins course of your long life by political friends, but you never. In all your life, had a messenger so false to his trust as Robertson. Whatever la the result Pf thl case, Mr. Robertaon has gone out of this courtroom to be avoided by men and shunned by decent women an of hla life.,- Ther 1 on thing tb good man and 'woman of thla land will never for gtve, and that IB treachery to friend and t an mployer.'"- " U - - ; The closing reference to Robertson waa in connection with Brutus' stab of the Caesar, and ths statement, "Ingratli tude will never h forgiven by' man. and If ther Is no other way in which it can be known, I" ask th world tn publish that thla- man Robertson is an Ingrate betrayed the' confldenc of his em and ployer and - his friend, - jnan - who is nevec-to be believed wherever he Is." , The peroration was the most eloquent effort of ths gifted speaker... ' I - hav hoped - that, - if - ther - was nothing else In this case, this Id man's great ..character for faithful perform. ahce..of publlo duty,- hi long year of devotion to the people of Oregon, his faithful, unremitting service to- his peo ple, from the highest to 1 th lowest, would stand ss a bulwark la thjs case to disarm every suspicious circum stance, and Indue you to bellev that John H. Mitchell could' pot bave been guilty of taking money unlawfully, as ha is charged . in tnis maicimeni. i runs counter to his whole life. It eem Impossible-tbat. he could keep true to the end of a long and distinguished ca reer, and there have been no more splendid careers In - th senate of tb United States thsn that 01 this jrhjldewt:eaao. H sits there today the oldest na- tov.liL.the ervlc of th United States. as. a 1. . masu klavK ehlsai-iakal AS snstisjfra oomtoUtW than Jth.rman.whqJo ever satin Oiatgrest Uody. He haafwifVTrod- say. Thank Ood! I had a people man any omn mn u.ik jruu have ever sent, or ever could hav gent em Why. ther Is not a publlo im provement In the state of Oregon but that Is silently, day and night, voicing mrmnmAm a John it. Mltohall. Everv great steamer that goes In or ut'tovefl the-bar at AStorta. oringing commerce and trade and prosperity and enriching the state of Oregon, every great steamer tha plowa her-way-up- the river and brings water navigation so much nearer the farm . that every Duanei or wheat may gain additional value, every on that plow that mighty, river in its zi feet of water, every one, as she ring her bell and toots her whist), sends to th world her thanks to John H- Mltchell. ' r. ,y . ' ' rather ef Oregon." , ; . J lie has been the father of Oregon in the eecurement of her great liberal ao- proprlatlona from- th government -of the United States. He ought to have been the- man to stand upon a pedestsl at the opening of the exposition, and have been crowned as tha Ufa' and benefactor of that great, grand fair. iieniiBmvn. in una gi me oorxuiocs of the espltol - at Waahlngton," called Statuary hall, ther Is a space set asld where every state In the union can plac two marble statues of her most dis tinguished sons after ' their' death. 1 know that Oregon had been "reserving and- justly reserving, one r these pieces for the' marble - statu of. her greatest statesman, most faithful son. Johrt H. Mitchell, and if that atatue had Deen piacea mere, there la not a states- msn who hsa ever beeicaaaocla led-. with him- in public life but would have bowed down In reverence and said. 'Oregon has oon right,' . it may be. gentlemen pf me- jury, mm juuB uennut suggested, thnthere hssvome enough out of this case, inai.tner haa been enough nf pub ' " ru."! .a nn,iiBnapsr ssaauiti ev-wtay urn nisi mare as oeen enough to cast somej-tflectlon In the minds of the pub lic upon in character of this man In his declining dsys. It may b It haa been surnclent that thla marble atatue will never nu met place, but gentlemen. It haa not Deen--sufficient so that a Jury of hla neighbor will, send btm -ttrapend the few remaining hours pf his life tn priaon. If na not Deen sufficient aa that a Jury of -hla netrhbora will hurl him from th senat of the United State as amBpualjnaiQt.,.h, noi neen surnclent to indue hla nelah bors to put th brand of sham and ln- famy upon hi brow, and leave him toe terftig under that load aa he croaees th river ana meets bis uod. ' . Aaalyie th Bvidsae. nenator Thurston .occupied a large pan 01 me session yesterday after noon with an analysis of tha Indict ment, picking flaw In th aeveraj counts. -He Insisted that ther were fulal defecta In the Instrument and al luded aarcastloally to Oliver Pa gin, who drew4C Turning to th question of th guilt -or Innocence -of, his c'"." BnT pr" Thurston aald:" : f 1 The presumption-or a mans inno cence runs with every set lie does. - In -young man: there may b' no- great presumption of Innocence, - because he may never have stood in-th light tof temptation and been OompeHed. to act honestly or dishonestly. In the life of a middle-aged man. the presumption of Innoesno ea.to on, particular act may be etronger from the fact that for many year he baa been In a poaltton where he might have done wrong If aucb bad been hla Inclination, or bad been tn bis heart and in the case of as old man - th ---preeumptlon-gvowa atlll etronger and stronger, until its acquires almost (th Irresistible fore; of an abso lul truth, that a man whoa whole Ufa, lived a It ha been In th shadow 01 what might have been temptation to weaker men that a whole life of hon esty in many affair stands almost an Irresistible presumption; that th man coulU not, late In llfe after passing through s.n-hsyears, where temptation-were -undoubtedlyl-wndWAUa. where he might, hav- made thousands and millions, yes, and hav mad them In ways that, moac men call right and proper the presumption. Is almost Ir resistible that, a, man who ha;lrved II or 19 year of a public oareer, , with out th slightest suspicion atbieplng to him that he ever took a dollar In- hla whole life wrongfully th presumption ettachee that a man. Who haa lived ytl moat In poverty. - being 4k a constant struggle to get along while performing hla public duty th presumption 1 al most Irresistible that that man, late in his life, with hi whole career behind him. and" Just sunset ahead Just sunset ahead It is almost irresistible that that man could not, m the very nature of thlnga, hav committed crime to se cure to himself in an illegal manner a few hundred dollars. Gentlemen, to my mind, that I an irresistible preeump- tkmimiHf I bad nothing else to Judge from, tn th light of all this testimony. In. tbUght of allmat la charged, la the llrht of all that la said, to m -Jon Mitchell's 40 vears of honest servloe to his country and bis sUte, In th face of temDtatlon John H. 1 Mitchell s ca reer, In which no dollar of money Ta ever attached In all his life Improperly acquired, would be enough as a eltlsen of the United States, to- create th pre- aumntlon In- my mind, almost lrrltl- bl In character, that John H. Mitchell could not, in- hla declining year, hav fallen so low hav so denied hi whole career hav - 00 departed -from v the whole moral fiber of his- honesty snd honor, aa to commit a crime In th tax you, "gentlemen, I want that presump tion to go with yo-into the Jury-room, for he la entitled to have It. . - .. - Aela to Jturors. l.u "Oh, but they say, get right down to the. fact that fa took th money, and they really ask you., gentlemen of the I ant glad that th law of civilisa tion and of thl great liberty-loving people haa provided that a Jury of men Vandd S of every man in thla country, that in the tunr-boa shall be. not only th heads and th intellect, but th hearts of men. and that men shan try men; and When I say men on th-Jury,-1 mean men who ar alive to every noble Impulse of - th human heart who oaa realise human frailty. Who are not per feet, who might not be abl to stand at the final dar before the Judgment bar and expos all th secret workings and failures of their own lives wunout ieei- ling very aadly ahoii tnelr own short- oomlnsrs. ' I am.. glad mat men' are to be tried by men human men. -Oh; gen tlemen, when I anwtiied. -it a ever am, want th men wno- iry-m o,p men: home men,- good men.- I want there to be men who com to the Jury-box ireeh from ' the tender embracea - of ...loving wlvee, and I want them to oome to the iurv-boz with the kisses of Uttle chll- flren still trembling, on their lips; and wnt them to come with human heart! I want them to com "looking for-the Rood, and not for the bad. I want them to com seeking out th theories under which they can decide that men have been honest and good, rather than to comaAooklng for ejouses to throw- shame and punishment upon their fellow-men. And I want thla Jury, after you deolde this cas, to' go out oi th courtroom, not thinking or caring what - a . partisan press may ' say,, or what prcjudloed peopl In any commu nity may aay. 1 only as 01 you on thin when vou sro out of this Jury-boa andrturnlo .youilhappyL: homes., that you can sit down ttiere ana tax your children on your knees, or If you haven't anr children . young enough xor mat. Lchance I had a chance to relieve an old man unjustly accused.'. .- . ? , "And the impression is sougnt 10 o conveyed that the administration of th United States stends her In th oersoa of tb district attorney and de mands conviction at your hands, right or wrong; and an ingenious rersrenc in that Treepect " waa mad -to Theodore Roosevelt, th president or th United states, for th Durpos. and noa other. of conveying to tbe mlnda of tbla Jury the fact hat' Theonor Kooaeveit waa waiting with bated breath Juat to hear that old John H. Mitchell was eonvlcted by a Jury of his neighbors. On behalf of tbls administration ana mat grand man. Theodore Roosevelt,' I resent that suasestlon. 1 neooore nooseveit, ss OP 1 SOaSpoKDvc-srr. FOLEY'S MO GUI1G j . strengtlieiis the uCLotiiio v biiilds-uo- the kidnevB sind iriviir- IT 10 TV70 CIZEO DC3 cr.q p1.C0 XAUEpAyi.pRyoQpMPAr?Y. The largcot and teat cccdrtmsnt "ever o.-rcd at . th: -lowest prices. . . FIFTEIEN .YEARSV EXPERIENCE tromictaQUOOM -EXhlbMohrGdoaSrQto 331 Morrison Street k honest a man aa was ever created in the lmaaa of Ood. aa fair man aa ever lived on earth, does not watt anxiously for the conviction -fit aaybody.- All h ask Is that vry man against whom aa Indictment la brought shall be put e.ns 1a fin with , a Jury of hla peer He is not th men to hop'foT otivlo Hon; h is not hoping for tn conviction of John1 H. Mitchell, a aenator of th Unltid Btatea- He t not that kind of man, and I have no doubt that that great heart of hla will respond with sstlafao tlon, yea- and with Joy. whn . Jury of Oregon cltlsens hav decided that John H. Mitchell la not guUty under th charges of this Indictment. No, no, gentlemen; do not proceed with tb con sideration or this cas ndr th thory that you ar alMnrtha-ovrnmnt of th United State. In th - prosecatlon. The govomment-hsa nothing to demand from Jurlea except that-Jurymen shall do as they wear they will do, faith fully try th Issues between th ataM and th accused.' snd a true verdict ren der according to th evidence and th law. There is nobody behind this prose cution whose wishes ughtt ' be con sidered by- yoa In Influencing your con sideration of tb testimony, not on.", TROUBLES IN FLEET' jlJmmmJ SETTLED I ..... : w-f ': V (Josraal Spedal Servlee.) . : -f , St. PeUrsburg. July 1. A . talegram from Odessa atate that th. mutineer on th Knlaa, Potmklnh bn transferrad to : other, war vassal 'and that. the governor of Odes Ja maater pf th ltutlon-.-W---4. London. July 1. A dispatch 'to th Evening Standard from Odsasa : say that th' troubles tn th flt hav bee settled... v '' '- CHINESE BOYCOTT Of. , -5 AMERICAN. GOODS EMDS 4 IJoeeaal SneeJal Berriee. '', ' Washmrton. July ! Tha Ut d- prtment has received a dispatch from Minister RockhHl at Peking announcing the oromulgatlon- by th Chines- gov erament of a decree directing all vice roy and governor of Ctnna to atop tn antt-Amerioan agitation and tb .at tempted .boycott, of .-American good Rockhlll states that- th order, waa laaued brny after-repeated and urgent representations. , . CANADIAN OAY IS " - 'HONORED AT THE FAIR This sa Canadian day" at th flr and th local Canadian aoclety received probatily0- strangei a tiom" th -other Id of th dominion line. At It o'clock brief exercise Were held in th Audi torlum. and after addresses of welcome by Dr. K. A. J. Mackensle, president of th Canadian aoclety, and President H. W. Goods, badges were dlatrlbated and th folk from Mapleleaf land proceeded to njoy th fair. ' Tunrr i itire i ncTimtrr-! -I nncc um luoi 1 1 , . . TENEMENT-HOUSE. FIRE ' " (Joarsal-flpsrlal service.) ',t ' New Tork, July 1. In a fire which destroyed an apartment house on Devo street at Brooklyn early this morning Annl Boeklin, aged zo, Arthur Bocklln, aged II, and Henry Hambl. aged 10, were burned to death and - two others seriously injured. Eight fsmllles occu pied th building and ther were many narrow .escape, i ? -i , - CUAQAnTEED t I . . .- . M r '. -1 ; df lni:rc:t:t3 c!I Are .v. V Opportunities Such as the Following Are Always to Farms, Wheat kind -Timber Xand lyoatlonsSed" a l . y ' At-i . . ......... . -. k M. . business r Chances Column. "Desk Room For Reht-See For Rent Office Rooms. -Wanted. Man to Work m FarmSee Help Wanted -, ""o'- Male ,CIumnv-,:-;.'j:;:'; :-'.:''r- f-' For Renv Half f Small Space -atWe 6aks---See ? 3;.,: Business -Chances Column,.;',.;-,..'';;, For Sale, a 40-Barrei Motor Flour ..Mi It-See Busi- .0:.; ness Chances Clumn.,-.-H v ; Lost, in Upper Albina, Heart-Shaped Pin-See Lost1 r and Fotmd.CpluniJu. iA; Wanted; Can rassera For RoadSee Agent Wanted ; Column . V 7 X'f' ' 'v".-V V; ":-' V ' ' : PefinVH Ymirfiy Womrri to Assist in Workintr Girlsr Home See - Help; Wanted j Female! Column. . FOR FURTIIEK T ,,, ,. TACdriA CC3STEQS VAHE tue egqoes Two Train Load of Sound Cit--izens Urgently Request Earth.r : r; to8hwm'Crow. .: thorny nf noonioday th ftrt ae- Uon of th thre "Watch Tacoma Grow train pulled up Fourth street and stopped near Waahtngton, - And then from out the crowded car poured Jh muHttud. -About 1 tplnut latr tha second section arrived, ".-:! .; .-. - on board th second section waa Ta coma'a "beauty: th flrat train iontalned aeveral thousanda of l chivalry. All wore Urg red ribbons, whil. around th nook o hundred at othr war red allk tie. Tb marchers carried red. whit and blu banner on which, war written th. now historic words. . "W-A-T-C-H T-A-OO-M-A O-R-O-W. At th bead ef th marchers waa th famous' Booster''. band perched on a tally-bo. . Again and again th playera IThoMurVcritGo I ;.J...;-y-"--'r.--v--.A '- '; if - yeV-V-' r ? - - ' r 'V' ' j null tzz tzi cr-ni c::i zn-':$:z rti ?! ' A H- ThurneiMtr. VIU Crssk OaJ Co., Buffalo, O , wTirttt V ! htv ben sffllcttwith kidney and bla4at troubl for years, past- ; Inggrml or stonet'with ticrucfatlnt pains. Other medicines only ; gave rHef.JAfter tsklni TO LET'S JtlDNIY CURE the result was "surprising. A few doses sterna ths brick dust, flke "n stones, ete., aodnowl htve no paiii acre amy kidneys snd I feel like s new msn. FOLEY'S KIDNEY CUEZ fits done me $ 1,000 worn, of good." . i' , Thos, V. Carter, el Asfctoro, C, feed Kidney TwDt- ' en bottle el POLEY'S KIDNTT CUXZ erected s perfect sure, snd : ks says tbers Is ss remedy fast win compere wick h. . -,.':;', - X - a " bpinEycjnin -:V-i- :f INFORMATION 5E1 I . 1 1 ,. lumnsi struck up th sloganpf Tacoms, H "Official Bootr Chorua;!' and 'a tt merry atritn rang ut, th.vjaiu Joined tn llistlly with th chorus. I Immediately upon their entrance ( th gToulida,. they took complete pose Ion. Kverywher th Watch " Tacoi drow" alga , bcajn: prominent, f thoee 1.00 boosters were everywhdre i tb am ttra. . ;. '- i ' ' I th Tacoma booth. .Waahln'' building, great pain had been tu1-' ' reeelV th delegation, -r Shortly '"' o'clock th boost era made the1rwayt their home exhibit, and filled tt ' almost th entire- lower' floof of ' hug building to overflowing. The A ministration band a truck up a Urt number., and "Watch Tacoma . gro again rang out and awoke the echoes. - P resident Henry W. Ooode. of the poaltton, in hla speech of welcome, cot pllroented the people of Tacoma up their enterprise and energy, apd ,Pr' dieted eplendld result. Congreasman l W. Cushraan and Robert IV McCormir of th Lumbermen's bank of . Tacon responded. . -. . '. - - ' -Th brry-rlrs of Puyallup vatlf had forwarded 1.00 neat little boi- of red raspberries to be given th Ti tor,:- ' ..-'v..' "V; - -. ... i i .1 i i. r i ii , i . - ' icis Aatkoay t fhsMk Tonight. . "' iBuaan B. -Anthony, haa 'accepted Invitation to apeak at th Whit Temp .tonight, r- ';' -.' I V i