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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1906)
TTTC-OREGONAILYOUlWATr " . mm m a sna, s m a m-mZ Hoostert Indorse Nebraskan for Democratic Standard Bearer W-Yr 'for the Coming Cam- . '-;v;' v'tf ; paign. ,v - iiLi.i m.-Lr to' tk Journal.)? Indlanapolt. Ind.; June 7. Following 'the lead -of Democrat la Missouri. Ar kansas od South. Dakota, the' Indians tat Democratic convention- t dotted Viniih-rBryn Democratic nominee for the presioency in Every mention of Bryan'" name brought - forth applauee. . . c . ' ' Mn thin. 1.300 delegates - and .-sa ,... Itrnutfi filled Tomlineon hall Vha the convention was called to order ... 1 A'cTnctrlhla nornln"tr-W..' . : n'Rrlen. 'chairman of the State" commit tee.- After tha- cuatoraary formailtlaa had been dltfpoaed of, Mr. - O'Brien handed the travel to Benjamin F. Shlvely of South Bend, tha permanent cnairman ef the convention. , :- , - Mr. Shlvelsr'a addreaa wu the prtncl- ' tal feature of the forenoon. 11a apoka enrouraKlnclr of the Democratic , out look In Indiana and dealt at conalderabla length -with tha leading Issues, espe--laUv- stale Inane. - When ha had eon- .tni(. "the convention appointed tha uaual commlttcea on resolutions, noml natlone, etc," and a recess was taken until afternoon to permit the committee to p rc pyejtjif j J rgPT-lT , , "" Tho' convention will nominate a full U.te ticket with tha exception of gov ernor nd lieutenant-governor, which of flcea are not to be filled thia year. . i Last night Champ Clark addreaaed tha convention on tariff reform. ...... ; -ARKANSAS IN LINE. WllUant t. ry Bathnalastlcally lav. oirai"'y "Blte'"tfoivMtIom. . ' inmMl toUnatra. ts The JoarnaLI " Ht fetHjg.-Ar.r June 7. Tto-sta4o4 Democratic convention, -amid cheers ana nthutam7Tl" night" adopted resolu tions indorsing William J. Bryan aa Democratic nominee for the presidency in HOa. Hearet aupportera endeavored to stem tha Bryan tide by requeating '" the eubmlasion of the indorsement to voters at tha next primaries, but were : ahouted down. Tha following ticket waa .. named: - .... For United States senator.- Jefferson Davis: aovernor. J. ft Little; auditor. AJ Moore; secretary of state, O, C. Lud wig; treasurer,. J. I ;Vatea; attorney - general. W. 8. Ktrby; auperlntendent of puhltc Instruction, J. J. Doyna; land, commissioner, t, I- Kauffman; argrtcul- at i i ir 1 in 1 1 1 i fills' n Timlf ass" . TU1 m 1 V-vlll IlfTl'WlJJ 171 p" " - It M esl'e' f-f - soolate justice, J. C. Beddlck; railroad commissioner. Southern , district, H. L. Hampton; northeaatern district, . J. W. ... Crocket, -; z : 1 " Stoat Saltota Bsmecrats Oamaad ITom- iaatloa'er Satosvakaav - . " " (aptrlal Dispatch te The Jtmr1.) Tank ton. S. IX, Juna 7. Tha South Dakota - Democratic ' stata convention asnld a storm of applause lact night tn dorod WUItatw Pi j an fnr Demo--' ' cratic nominee for tha presidency In 10. The- platform declares for ma . '. tiirlpa ownership of public utilities. . The following ticket wsa named: : For congress, W. J. Elder of Lawrence and S. A. Ramsey of Banborn; for gov ernor,. J. A. Stransky of Brule; for lieu- tenant-goet nor. 3mea Coffee-of -WalK , worth; for secretary of - state, Frank l-atta-trf HydeTtor "stat-sudItor, John . . Hayes f Stanley; for treasurer, C W. Martin of Grant: for attorney-general, C B. J. Harris of Tank ton; for com- mlssloner of schools and public lands, C. J. Laughlin of Lake; for superlntend " ent of public Instruction, Thomas Lyn of Clayr for railroad commissioner. B. . Ji. Lln of Minnehaha. . k i ';. . POSSIBLY-MDRE PRECINCTS ; DRY THAN THOUGHT" ; Rader Believes Official Canvas .; Will Reveal Mistakes of v 1 Election Boara. The members of. the . Anti-Saloon league are of the opinion that a good many mora precincta went for prohtbl . tion tluin were reported by the election - board and that the. official, canvasa will prove this to be a fact. A blunder in tha printing of tha bal- lota Jeft ample room for a blunder In making out the statements ef the eleo tlon butrda. Instead of the ballots in thepreclncta tewh4t4t-rolUblUi)ti was , the Issn being printed "For Prohibi tion" and AgHtnat Prohibition' they ' were printed Fut Liquor Llrnne" and - "Against Liquor- Llwnsa." . . thereby re- - versing the proposition submitted to - the voters. . Thus, in making Out tb statements careless boards might en ter the result on the wrong side of the sheet and -give a precinct a "wet" majority instead of a dry majority. "It will result In. more precincts being declared dry than are so far reported," aaid Rev. Fauf Rader today. "W can say this because in some precincta ths error was noticed In time to make out ..tha statements in correct form- and all of these precincts went dry. Other prs- . clncta, where tha majority was figured aa being against prohibition,' we bellev will be found to have: Voted tha other way. the figures being reversed." AccordTng to County TClerk Fields all such mistakes will be rectified by a going over of the tally sheets-and there need be-no reference to the ballots themselves. ' .... -:t : ; "Prohibition "was asf 1ssue"!ri IS "of the county , precincts at the let -eleo t Ion. ' eight of which. It, 80, (4, . 45, 4, 47 and 41. were , reported In the election board statements, to have gone dry. CONGRESSMEN ATTEND GORMAN'S OBSEQUIES (Jnsraal Bpeeial Srvtc.) .- "V Washington, Juna 7. On account of the " funeral of" Senstor - Oorman.' Jhe eenate did not meet today.- - Senator . orm n was wtcl -with 'the' Simplest rites: tn Oak Hill cemetery. Rev. Wsl lace Radrllf f of - the ' Presbyterian church had charge 'of the- brief cere mony at tie house. A joint committee from the senate and house attended In n tody. There- was no music and flnweia wer front relatives only. Chap lain Kdnsrd Kvritlt Jlale Of til senate aatliitii u the nryice, . DEATH TEARS VEIL OF SECRECY Double Life Revealed to Startle . ' Pious Residents of Los -' V Angeles. : .' COUPLE LIVED LONG AS - - - BROTHER AND SISTER William Croathwsite and Mrs. A. E. Torrey Keep Their Secret Until the End of Life Woman Has '.Brother Livinf ' at Mt. Tabor, Ore. ' (JoarMl Special Service.) ' Loa Angeles. June- 1'. Death hat torn tha veil of secrecy from tha live of William - Crosth walte -and Mr. ,. A. - BJ. Top-ey and revealed .'the. story of a double life that tiaa aUrtled the ploua element of I'ntvaralty, district and. act hundreds of tongues to wagging in the neighborhood , of the couple's - former horn at Magnolia avenue and Twenty fourth street. ,. Prftathwalfa mnA ' f rat Tnrir ltvi together aa brother and la tar for 1 yeara and not until tha sod of Holly wood cemetery had cloaed above the re mains did the true Story of their re lations come to light. Though in hie eighty-fifth year, Wil liam Crosth wait and Mrs. Torrey met and how "tha romance of-their Uvea be gan may never b told. Croathwalte.' who waa prosperous shipbuilder on the great lakes (4 years ago, subse quently snat financial reverses. The huahand of Mrm..Torrr waa, a captain! In the civil war. who gave up his Ufa on the battlefield. Nearly a quarter- of a century ago Croathwalte and the widow of Torrey are aaid to have come to - California. Rumor baa It that he left a wife and three sons in New York. The wife died two . yeariK ago... Thon are . J... L. Croathwalte, president of the ' Atlantic! Croathwalte . and William Croathwalte. shipbuilders, of Buffdlo. Hew To'rk," Borne time ago the old maa died. On Maech-JS Atra. -Torrey went through a rain storm to attend a religious meet ing. rrarMrra'm'er-cibThei-sBoshoea-t and when aha returned home pneumonia resulted. -, Five days later - she died. Only after they had ordered the grave dug beside that of her .,"brother" ; did friends learn the truth. Mrs. Torrey left a brother, C B. Law rence, of Mount Taber, Oregon, and a grandson, Kd ward E. Torrey, a. sergeant In troop C, Sixth United States cavalry, stationed at Fort Meade. South Dakota. OFFICIAL COUNT REVEALS ; 6000 MAJORITY Chamberlain jCarrief Multnomah County by Two Hundred T" . " and One Votes. v.'.-.T The' official count - of ' Multnomah county gives Governor Chamberlain a pluralltyofJM,JbetotaJsUlldlngi. unamoeruiln V.114. Wlthycombe soil. Jonathan Bourne's . plurality over United Statea Senator Gearln Is IMS. Bourne received S.147 votes and Gearln 7,6. '-. , I - , , ,'.-, '; Official canvaaaes are now In progress throughout the state, but there will be no Important changes In the figurea al ready" g1vernn"the 'heads 'of tickets:" Chamberlain's. majority. will. be. in. the neighborhood of l.00 and Bourn will have the popular indorsement for United Statea aenator by a similar majority. - Woman suffrage, which once came within a few hundred yote of success, la beaten thia time by about 10,000 votes. The liquor dealers' amendment to the local option law loses by about 0.000 and the Barlow road project fails by more than 7.000. All other proposi tions and meaeures submitted to the footers ef the stats have been - given large msjorlttca.-. - Of the 11 countfra that -voted 7h" pro- niunipn eignt went dry and four wet ThroW that rejected prohibition were Malheur. Polk, Morrow and Wasco. . The eotrntlee that went dry were Benton by jiv, duci uiah Vy i.inn- to. juatte 160. Tambill 20." Coos 100, Tillamook 100 and Wallowa. The figures on the waiiowa eiecttoi ported, but, it Is known that the county declared tor prohibition by a small ma jority. ', . . , . . ' - Eugene, the a county , seat of Lane, voted wet. but must go dry. Thia la because the oounty as a whole - voted for prohibition... According' to the law there can be ho wet precincts . in a dry county, and therefore the saloons of Eugene mtiat close. , '--;- ONE JUROR CAUSES ; PLAINTIFF T0 LOSE One. Juror is said to have prevented a ' verdict granting John Krell . 12,000 damagita. from Marion : county. j The Jury was' discharged last night at 10 o'clock, not being able to agree. It Is said that II of them favored a verdict of 11,000 for Krell. but the one man did not and hung the Jury. : : The case was - tried ln",hTn-i'circult court of this county on a change of venue because a Jury of Marlon county cltlsens wuuld be taxpayers on whom the payment of the damagea would fall and It waa alleged they could not hear the suit Impartially. - Krell silted damages for Injuries re eelved. In a runaway caused by driving into "a washout on the county road. His attorneys are-W,: T. Slater and W. M. Kaiser. District Attorney John H. McNary of tn third district represent ed Marion county tn the suit a new trial will be had as possible. . - - , , . soon as flANY AFFIDAVITS IN IROQUOIS FIRE CASE " (Joaraal Special gerrlea.) ' Chicago, June 7. five thousand af fidavits have been fllad by the state to sustain the contention that -Will J. Davia, manager of th ill-fated Iro quois theatre, can get a fair trial In Chicago on the charge of manslaughter tn connection with the disaster. W; C. MORRIS' CONDITION ; IS CONSIDERED SERIOUS . W. Cooper Morris, cashier of the pre gon Savings bank, whaxhse been a6ent from his post of duty for tha past ten days, on account of lllnesa, is reported worse today. . Though serious, hi can. .. ....... .. IS iiil ABODE OF FILTH Inspector Neill .Tells v House f Committee vf Horrible Con- s v v.; ditions .In Packing v' V :f-Houses.;';' ' v (Joaraal Special Srrk.) , TA'iihln.Inn Jun. - ? ThAm.. IT tllson. - the Chicago packers' represen tative, continued hia statement , today before the house agriculture- commit- teei'-Wirspn'sald" the most' Serious ob jection to the Beverldge amendment waa the placing of. the Inspection cost on . the packers.' He denied i that the packer dug the bole they are now in. The agitation, he -said, would-cut: the aala of fresh - manufactured product more than half. He predicted calamity to atock raisers on account of no mar ker. ' : ' - - Commtaaloner Nelll followed Wilson. Ha denied any expert - knowledge, but said he was qualified aa a man of av erage, intelligence; with college degFeea. Mr. Neill said 1 did not expect to find parlor conditions, but - waa careful to distinguish between necessary and un necessary dirt. ' He aaid that Dr. Dyaon. representing the packers, had asked him to- withhold his report J daya ao that the packers might adopt Nelll's sugges tion. At the expiration of 30 days Dyson wanted Neill to return and make an other Investigation and publish what be mlgui see'.tben. i ...... Another report made by the depart ment . of agriculture on - the packing bouses Is In existence. The committee wilt have It submitted. Wilson declares the- packers will not content the con stitutionality of the proposed inspection law. . ' - . NelU denled thai? any. deal with Dyson had been made. He quoted Instances t unusual., unclaanllneas "he'hsri -oha. served. Adopting Chairman . Wads- woTtn"sIan:tige, Will -saw the1 partPTasked to subscribe, ng-to ' whether an Ing-house waa a horrlble, dirty, filthy, etinklng-place."- GINERrOTRIKE"MA TIE UP SAN FRANCISCO IJeornal Special Service.) San Francisco, June 7. There Is prospect "of a general atrlke on ..tho water-front In this city. It will re sult ir tying up all building operations and- In fltagrnvtlon of commerce. The schooner owners Intend to send out three vessels this evening with., non union crews. . .,-....".. t The Oceanic Steamahlp company has served notice upon the Sailors' union at-tn4 Tn to days. The Cosmos -line 'already has a group- of - non-union Americans on the -way to this port . The unions lnvdlved are " seeking a conference today in order to learn why 4h . United.. Shipping-.. anA-Txanaporta tion association is locking out disin terested men, as the- strik only' In volves the steam schooner crews. BUILDING INSPECTOR ? WILL BE NAMED SOON Several matters of considerable Im portance will come before : the . civil service commission when It meets next Wednesday. Th result of the exam ination for- building Inspector will prob ably be then announced. If any of the applicants have received Jhe necessary grade the appointment by the executive -board will -follow- quickly.- ' . v ' " A time for the hearing of the charges made by City Engineer -Taylor against W. Pt 'LlUts, formerly a deputy in his department and who has laid' an ap peal before the commission, will also be set. This hearing la expected to be one of the most interesting of any held before the commission for a long time. WILL ASK GOVERNMENT ZTTO UNDERWRITE: BONDS . fJoo!l'rcUl Serrie.) '- ' . Ban Francisco, June 7. A committee composed 'of W. J. Bartnett, Judge W. W. Morrow. Dr. : Devlne and ex-Mayor Jamce D. Phelan left thia morning for Washington. Despite all efforts ' to keep their departure a secret it was to confer with the president on the Is suance of long term low interest bonds for San Francisco, indorsed by the' gov ernment. ; .. . ; ' INCENDIARY FIRES AT MARYSVILLE, CAL ..... , (Journal Special Sarvle.! Maryavtlle, Cel., Juna 7. Three at tempts to Are the business section of the ,clty.wera. discovered thia .morning. kerosene -being used. The' Are depart ment extinguished all with small dam age. .Officers are seeking the firebug. PORTLAND WOMAN IS NAMED FOR DIRECTOR -' Word hee reached Portland from St Paul, where the National Federation of Women's clubs Is now In, session, that Mrs. Barah A.. Evans of Portland has been put on the ticket for director by the nominating committee. '. . At the second, day's meeting of the convention now In session at St, . Paul it became evident that Oregon waa tak ing no back Seat. . A full state delega tion was present at tbe opening meet ing and tho members were among the most active in the general discussion.. The Oregon exhibit, consisting of all the notable books by Oregon authors, a large collection of Oregon wild flowers snd several useful Inventions, haa at tracted -a great deal of attention, as It Is one of the finest displays in the old capltol building. - The report of the president of ths Oregon State Federation was cheered, to the echo, and Oregon became," from then, a marked state for official favors. , , - REPORT ON RATE BILL COMES TO VOTE TUESDAY - . (jMmmj Special arica.f ... . Washington, June 7. The senate. trill take up the conference report on the rate bill Tuesday when a vote will be tnkep on a motion to recommit For aker claims that the report will be re jectrd. . . i it ei a . , Chimney. Fire. ; ' .. A chimney fire at .0f Tsmhlll atrset this' sfternoon whs responded, 4oby - (J sev-uade4A pontrol. NOT BURGLAR BUT SEARCHING CELLAR - FOR Great excitement prevailed ' in the convent of tha Misters 6t tha Immacu late Heart of Mary, tie Third street, shortly after 4 o'clock ; this morning upon the discovery that a marauder was at work ransacking; the basement of the institution. - A teleohone message to po lice headquarters brought Patrolman R. L. , Phillips to the scene poethaate. The policeman upon .Investigation found , that' a window had been pried open and he could hear the thief rum maging about the cellar. , With ' re volver In hand Pbilllpe entered the building srtd found a Chinese crouching In one corner. - He soon had the fellow securely handcuffed and took him to the city prison. It developed that the prisoner- was . demented and he was THREE SALES RECORDED OF EAST SIDE PROPERTY The east half of block 101. on Grand avenue, between Davia and Couch streets, has been purchased -sly tha D. P.', Thompson estat from Hi B. -uffy. The price paid was $14,090. The sale waa made, through the agency of Lam bert, Whltmer A Co. ' . . v v J.. N. TeaJ has bought the Quarter block at the northwest corner of Grand avenue and Davis streets from John P. Sharkey for 111,(00. A lot tOglOO at Grand avenue' and East Oak street, formerly occupied by a building that waa burned. In a recent fire, baa been sold by D. J. Malarkey, K. J. Daly and Roger B. Slnnott for t IK, 000. The name of the purchaaer Is not announced. , ; .;,;...' FOURTH CELEBRATJ0N NOW UP TO PUBLIC The Fourth of Jnly celebration ques tion ha been passed up -to the board of trade and Commercial club by Mayor Lane, who has addreaaed ' a letter to these commercial bod lea - calling their attention to the fact that ha has been asked. to take the frst atepa . toward making . arnuigmenUXor.y monster celebration.- .' .v ha jnayor.conlura JhStJtJs uj ito the people of tho. city, who win te unusually big celebration' should be at tempted this year, it Is -expected "that some action will be taken bv the board -tratte-wnit OFuineiclat-ctub Tery soon, uracimaiiT - mil . ini arrmnaemani.a must be made within 10 days. JUDGE BELLINGER'S SON " - DIES AT STr VINCENT'S n " ' i .,v . .. 'Oscaf Henry "Bellinger, son of the late Judge C B. .. Bellinger, died - at 13 o'clock last night at St. Vincent's hos pital. Funeral . arrangements - will - be announced later.. lie became ill of a severe 'cold two weeks ago and com plications set In. - He waa 44 yeara of sons and a daughter. - lie resided at Woodstock. lie waa a civil engineer and during" the previous administration waa connected with the city engineer s OfflCe. , ' .',:;' CHINESE BRING SUIT TO COLLECT DAMAGES Alleging that the Warren Construc tion - company was responsible . for a broken, water .mln.Qn- Second-AtreeC from which a stream of water poured into their grocery store, Wong Chock Way and Woung Toung have begun a suit tn the circuit court for 1160-damages. They conduct a Chlneae grocery store at 141 Second street under - the firm name of the Yuen Wa company. They allege that the water main area brokettby "workmen "Who were" tnaklnt repairs- or the pavement, St. MARY'S ACADEMY : CLASS TO GRADUATE The 1101 graduating ' class of ' Bt. Mary's academy and college will hold its commencement exercises at the academy Thursday morning, June 14. Following are the graduates: Classical oollealate class, Catherine Veronica Con' way, Helen Cordelia Btevens;Jtln demto class, -Pearl Margaret Jennings, Gcraldlne Loretto Kirk; English aca demic claae, Madge O. Imbrle, Grace Lyons, , Grace . O'NeilL. Hannah Bkelly. Lillian Ingalls. . - - MINNIE DAVIS GETS . ' ' THREE4f10NTHS IN-JAIL Minnie' Davia waa this afternoon sen tenced by Circuit Judge Sears to a SO days' term In Jail. Tha woman confessed to the theft of money and Jewelry from the heme of Abble Forney at 48 Darls street In consideration of the poor health of th accused ths charge of larceny from a dwelling, was reduced and she was permitted to plead guilty ta almnla larceny. The woman burst into tears and created a scene when sen tones was passed. ... ' ,'.': SEVERE EARTHQUAKES IN THE PHILIPPINES - (Journal Special Sre. Manila. June 7. Three slight earth quake shocks -were felt here Tuesday and Wednesdays It ls . believed they were severe in Samar. No details hsve been received. . - Ths gunboats ' Alba,' Mindanao and Malleno.' captured by Dewey, were to day sold aa Junk for 14. 005. BADLY INJURED IN : . RUNAWAY ACCIDENT Raleigh. t)rgon, waa ' driving " over a bridge near Sylvan, hie horse took fright and reared back, upsetting th rig. aUockdale . waa thrown to tho-around, and sustained a dislocated shoulder. He was taken to the Good- Samaritan hos pital for .treatment rt Barly . XorniaeT ' Fire. ' ' - A fir in th cupola of the building oocupled by the Smith A Wataon iron works at 411 Front street brought out the lire "department at 4:00 o'clock this morning in res pons to an alarm from box 114 Th flame were extlngulshsd without much difficulty and th loss is small. . " Booth Is United State Attorney. . ' r Washrngton, June 7. Hiram E. Booth was today nominated federal attorney for tbe weetern dlatrlct of Utah. -p atomarw Croes te &ondoa. ' Toklo, June 7. Baron Komurs wa today appointed ambaaaador to -London. . ;. . Fref erred Stoek Canned Ooeas. ', aiUsa Lewis' Best Brjsd, . v - HIDDEN WEALTH locked ud nendlng an investigation. Hia mania took tfie form Of searching for hidden wealth. A fw minute before ha entered the convent i he endeavored to effect an entrance to the residence at (to Third street, but waa frightened awav by aome member of the house hold. . . V'tv Two Chinese visited police headquar7 tars thia morning and Informed Captain Moore that the man In custody was Ah Keep, en route to Hongkong from Og den, Utah. He is Inaana and waa to be deported by his countrymen.- Last night be escaped from a Chlneae reataurant and had been aought all night. Ab Keep will be kept In the city prison un til arrangement are made to place him on en of the oriental liners. 1 S r. BURCH AND REISS SHOW - GIVES STREET PARADE Tbe second "circus of ths season, the Burch -Jt Reies show, struck Portland today snd for one brief half hour the mouth of the -small hoy watered as be watched the Noah's ark ills through ths Streets. . . 1 . - The email boy looked in vain for ths elephants, -and the giraffes," "and ""the lions, -and the-tigers snd other monsters of the depths of the forest, but bis eyes bulged all the time, for weren't there two funny little monkeys, a long legged kangaroo, a whole drove of cute little black bears? . He was a UtUe. In significant bear, it is true, but he must have been ferocious, or they would not have 1 hung a muxsle - on htm. Would theyf vTes, and behind the long line of circus floata, with dirty-faced drlvera, there came the. acme of tbe small boy's envy, a circus -clown with a goat ' Tha circus la due ' to show three days at Twenty-fifth and Raleigh streets. i .- ,-, in mi II aii i i 'i ADVERTISEMENT CREATES CONSIDERABLE SUSPICION Cbnslderable srfystery- surrounds the Insertion of an advertisement In a morning- paper- for-a housekeeper -a msn giving the name of Kaaton,- Bev- ami J.,, . . mAumw. I tlsement andln ..one JnaUnce a, j eungT woman waa engaged to f ill tbe posi tion. She .was toid !(LJomethsol-IP"r,a lowlni day to.ared house at the cor - ner of -- Twenty-fifth and - Johnson tr'eeTS."TTdrt arYlvlngt''TBg 'tfesl1- nated location ehe looked in vain for the place and then notified the police. It is understood thst Easton haa tried to make appointments for a. late hour at night with several of those who re sponded to hia advertisement. Tbe po lice have a description of the fellow and are making an investigation. ; NAMES OF SELLW00D " STREETS TO BE CHANGED . The puxsllng duplication of names in ' ona 'BoTttoiiof thi leaat wlU 'probably be done away with be for long, aa the pity engineer's de partment Is preparing an ordinance by which the names of a number ef atreete are changed and duplication eliminated. At tha council laat night a petition tWtte-Teiv4 asking that the namea of streets south of Hawthorns avenue be changed on thia account Thia- applies particularly ' to - Bell wood. , No new namea were -suggested, but It 4s prob able that property-owners and residents will be given a chance to atat their preference before final action ia takes by the council.. . -..iV ROYAL HAWAIIAN BAND : PAYS VISIT TO PORTLAND Royal . Hawaiian , band -haa . re turned to Portland and Portland Is do ing homage to the Royal Hawaiian band. Out In the Pacific there la stylo of music that won the heart of Portland during the fair laat aummer when the most Important musical ag gregation of the Hawaiian lalanVds waa here, and Portland has not forgotten. . The band Is under the leadership of Captain .Berger. it serenaded the news paper offices thia morning. It la big' ger and even better than It was last year during the Lewis end Clark expo sition. The Royal Hawallans will en- Bca-J4cUlnPortland at th Heillg durlng the remainder of tbe week. GIRL WIFE'S DREAM -' i' OF. HAPPINESS ENDS Without waiting for the girl's attor- ney to-raak hta- final argument, Judge Fraaer this morning announced that be would grant divorce to 16-year-old Ooldle R. Ellis from Joseph T. Elite. . rhe.girl'e story waa told yestarday and she accused her husband of such re volting practices that the Judge ordered the courtroom cleared before he would allowvher to proceed with her testimony. The charges were denied by Kills, but Judge Fraaer said this morning that he believed - every word of the-girl's evi dence - " . L. H. Crouch appeared as attorney for atrsrisiiis. ' . " NEW THEATRE WILL BE . CONSTRUCTED AT ONCE . Work wilt be begun on Portland's new 1100.000 theatre at '"once, accord ing to the statement made today by jonn v. cord ray, the lessee. J. A. Zlttle of Spokane, who la the architect of the new building, le In the city today con ferring with Mr. Cord ray with reference to the-plana. '. The theatre will be a flve-story structure, with - a- ' aaatlng capacity of 1,000, and will be located at Thirteenth and Morrison streets It will be opened for bustness-on Novem ber I, sccording to the. present plans. Mr. Cordray announces that the near theatre lsnot In the trust but will be conducted a an. Independent theatre. OREGON'S GOVERNOR - PROCLAIMS FLAG DAY ..':.!. ' t",i '..'..; j ; ' (gpedal IHapateh -to Tke Joaraal.) ' ' Salem, Or.f June 7. Governor Cham berlain haa Issued a proclamation se lecting June 14 as Flag day and recom mending that It be observed by the schools snd the 'people of Oregon in commemoration of tbe day on which the emblem waa selected by the conti nental congress In 1777. ' J . JOSEPHINE TERRANOVA ESCAPES SECOND TRIAL V - (Jearsal Special Servle.! , JNew Tork, Jun 7. District Attorney Jerome haa decided . to dlatnfsa the In dictment against Josephine Terranova on Monday. - The girl was charged with the murder of her uncle, who defiled her. f She recently was acquitted on Uis charge, of murdering her aunt, " '. . '.. ' " '.'' '' Mil IS SATISFACTORY So Says McCusker When Shut ; Out of East Third by "V?: ''" Harrlman.;'.'. : ; COUNCIL JUGGLES WITH - v BELT LINE QUESTION McCusker Arrives st Meeting Too ' Late and Finds That 'tha. Enemy Has Carried tha '.' F6rt WU1 Ba Satisfied With Union Avairaa Now. T Realising that the O. R. St N. circum vented him In the council chamber . last night. Thomas McCusker now pays that he will be satisfied with a franchise on Union avenus tcr the east side belt Una' 1 whlch he ia interested, . . As the result of the.. Joint'' committee session May II. it was decided prac tically to open "the terminals of the Harrlman lines on ths east aide by pro viding in the O. R. A N. franchise on Eaat Third atreet that cara of compet ing oompanlea should be switched any where on the eaat aide for - ft a car. C. O. Sutherland of the Harrlman at torney's office declared at the time that hia company would. not aqcept such a - franchise, but wouldprefer to let-the belt line have Eaat Third O.' R, street and and switch cars for the Southern Pacific. A. N. Will waa the only member of the gtt trie report. Since that day and , last night, "when tbe matter came before the oouncll for final action, the other els members ef the committee were induoed to sign minority report, which provided thst the O. R. A N. should switch cars at thia rate only te industries located on Eaat Third between Eaat Pine and East Milf 'streetar-Thia kept"the-'HaiTtinan (rniinwi cioseo as .invT are now,' th4,rzrfCZi terminals aa closed as they are now 1 wtjhv '" . I J!3 ,1 -f" ,Tl T. pear at the meeting until this was ovsr lng happy amllss, had left Wills heard air.atounaaers. taie or.,wos..jnq.rieg. to have tha ordinance reconsidered, but was unsuccessful. ... . i , "Aa a matter of fact' we will be as well satisfied, with Union avenue,1 said Mr. McCusker today. "Of course I don't Ilk to be beaten that way, as I always come out in the open, "but I suppose the councilmen thought they had done what ia beat under tha- circumstances. We ssked for East Third street becauae It la right In the warehouse district, but Union avenue will also be In the. whole sale and warehouse district some day, and men who have opposed us on Eeet Third street nave aaid they would help t get franchlM nw- T'ninn avenue." J STREETCARS CRASH - TOGETHER; NONE HURT By a strange coincidence, at the very minute , of the accident on the "8" line a t-Corbet t and. Olbbs etreeta, In which E. Q. Lux on lost his life Tuesday night. special ear No. 003 crashed into ear Ne. ltd of the Russell-Shaver line at Russell street and Wllllama avenue, . severely shaking np many passengers snd nearly causing several fatailtiea. - . -t As th Russell-Shaver car' reached Wklliaraa avenue the apeclat car atopped on. the north elde of the track ap parently, to allow the- other the right of way. ' There wee aome confusion of signals and a collision resulted. - The Rusaell ear was knocked off Its bear ings and -nearly tipped over. -while -th special car . suatalned - no damage. J. F. Hill and wife of 711 Williams avenus, E. Berg of H0H Rttaeell ave nue, Cecil unte or ezs wunama avenue. H. Bernard of 117 Fargo street snd Dr Frank Butcher; all passengers en th Russell car, were considerably - Jarred, but no one waa aerioualy Injured. , OAK STREET OPENING : - , IS MOVED. ON A STEP The "petition ofJohn "'B.rYeon""and others for the openiifg of Oak street from Park to Burnside, which first ap peared before the council In April, took a step forward last nignt when a reso lution was passed directing City En gineer Taylor to prepare an estimate of the coat of extending Oak atreet It ia expected that some of the property owners wnnbjftctr'ae"the "blocks te be cut through ass built up solidly with dwellings, but the officials consider thst It will mean enother artery of traffic from a district which In rapidly grow lng snd building up with buslnees struo- tures. . ' ' " .. ; STREETCAR MAN IS .' REPORTED MISSING - John S McDufTlet16X. mdwalli street, "Sellwood. haa notified the police tha his aS. Walter S. McDuffle, a conductor of the Oregon Water Power and Railway company, haa been miss ing since 0 o'clock Tuesday evening. The missing man la- IS years of age and no reason can-be assigned fty his relstives for his mysterious disappear ance.. . , , - .' ... -'-:. CALIFORNIA WOMEN ' . REFUSE ASSISTANCE (Joaraal Sperial aervlet.t ' l St. ' Paul, Minn.. June 7. Tbe Cali fornia delegatee to the Women's Fed eration of clubs succeeded In ' having the convention withdraw thd resolution appropriating II. OAS from the treasury for the rehabi 6lube. T NEW.SCH00L3UILDING-3 ; pRDERED AT DAYVILLE (apedal Dispatch te Tke I oar ail.) -Csnvon City. Or., June 7. Contract for eonatruotion of ' the ' new school building at Dayvllle was awarded to F. T. Cook of this city, ths consideration being 11,(1 for the entire building and the foundation. It la estimated that the- school building complete will cost sbout $1,000. BABCOCK TO TESTIFY V ' ON CAMPAIGN GRAFT (Jmroal Special Berries.) ' , ' V' Washington, June 7. Representative Baboock, former clsilrman . ef the Re publican congressional committee, has not been subpoenaed but will testify be fore the New York grand jury now In vtigaUng the insurance campaign com trlbuUqns, ' ' ' ' . i DIG IOGE SUIT ' - 0,1 AT LAST Pacific Mill Company of Hono lulu Sues ftiman, Poul : sen' A Co;'. v CASE WAS DELAYED ; FOR OVER FOUR YEARS Non Suit Once Granted and Decision Reversed by Supreme CourtDam- ,. agea Amounting to Hundred Fifty Five Thousand Dollars Asked.' - . After delaye of more than four years . th suit of the Pacino Mill company of Honolulu for flit. 000 damages from Iran an, Poulsen A Co. has come to trial , . in tha circuit court. ' A. jury Is being Impaneled In Judge. Clsland's court to day to hear the autt and it Is thought -the' hearing will extend through at least ' 0 daye. - ; . , .. - .-..,' - . . The-suit was begun" April. 10, 1101, -snd a long complaint alleges that In- ' man, Poulsen A Co. in 1100 desired to ' enlarge their business In Hawaii To that end It is aaid an agent waa oent to Honolulu . who Induced tha Pacino ' Mill company to 'handle, the -Portland -product In large quantltlee. to increass their capital atock from HI. 000 to , 000 and to acquire large lumbr-yard -vw .... Nquii. luniDir-jmrq t-fnctlltles" InIIawalt." It is alleged that inman. paulaen A Co. agreed to taka up 1 11,000 of th Increase In capital atock apd pay for It In Oregon pine lumber. . TheacinclllcompaijjrjilJj I afler'matfng thfa contract thay made all neceasary preparation to take rare of the greatly Increased business they expected, but that Inman. Poulsen A Co. failed. to send them any. Iumbr, and that it became necessary, in ; Oc- tober, 101. for the president of the'' Honolulu concern, Mr. Emmett May, to go to San Francisco, to.. Interview ; .Mx.; Johan-poutsenrwhO la ' aaid to" navo promised!. hat the contract would ba Xeunjw XHuaaree - JuikseV ""' ; Two vessels were loaded with lumber -and sent to Honolulu, but it is said that they refused to discharge their cargo tu trte-Parirlo Mill cuinpatiy wheir they reached .that port " Damages In the sum of 1 111.000 are alleged. The defense of Inman, Poulsen A Co. Is a general denial of the allegations. " and they allege that the Paclflo' Mill company made a proposition, saying they had auperidr facllltlea for hand ling ' lumber In Honolulu npt enjoyed 1 "byi other lumber firm a there. The da-' fens alleges " that these supposed ad vantages were fictitious. ' . -.., A motion for a nonsuit waa granted by Judge Bears of tn local circuit court " In 1101, after, hearing testimony for II dare.' An appeal naa taken to tha m. preme court, where, in l0i. Judge Bears was reversed and ths manded to the local court for rehearing. - The papers-In the casa, form a stack about two' feet high, and the Jury who - will hear the evidence face a prospect of -neerly a. full month on the ease. R.t R.-Duntwey le attorney for tha - " Pacific Mill company, and Inman. Pout- " y aen A Co. are represented by Cake St "T Caks. , : .'..- -. -t. VEKGEFUL-UIIDIES DREADFUL BURKS Comes From Washington, D..C.t to Contest Estate, Quarrels - and Is Fatally Hurt C1 (Special Wanateh to TS JaaraaLV ' Vsncouver. Wssh., June 7. Mrs. Alice Mayer, who waa fatally burned while engaged in a quarrel with her sister, Mrs. Clara Denser, - night before last. died at St Joseph's hospital last even ing. . Th body ia held at the. under taking parlors of-Hamilton A Son to" await Instructions from the dead -woman's husband, who la In Washing ton, District of Columbia. The affair which resulted In the death) of Mra. Mayer has brought to light a family quarrel of no 41 1 tie Importance..: So bitter was Mrs. Mayer, that accord- lng to the nelghbora who .were at tracted by the flames, she asked them. Lto JeCJiex go. as she , wanted to,, kill . v tara. meaning ner sisisr, iora im -died. Tble wa after she Vas so bad ly burned that death waa almost cer tain. ' Trouble arose from the .division kf the property of Mrs. Mary J. La Toy, mothar of the two women. The prop erty in queetlon is valued at 11,100 and ' was left mainly to Mrs. Denser.; Mrs. Dansers husband, it Is said, bad paid off a mortgage of 1500, -on property owned by Mre. La Voy. For this and other reasons the latter left the bulk . of her property to Mrs. Denser. This actlonso enraged Mra. Mayer-th came hare from Washington,' District . of .Columbia, to fight the case, aa she believed part of the property should go. to her. . ,..''! , ' ',.';.' '. FULTON SUPPORTS ; ' PILES' AMENDMENT' .. . .. .-,.-'-?.,. r--. - w - (Joarasl Special- 8erviea.tr ,; , '. s Washington, June 7.--Senator Fulton made an earnest half-hour speech in ; the senate In support of Senator Plies" smendment excepting common carriers f rom-wnlng - lumbering - plants, - vSen-.- ator Bailey of Taxes opposed - the amendment - and -engaged with Fulton . and Piles In a sharp colloquy . on the question. .Fulton Insisted that If the . amendment should not be sdopted the lumbering Industry In Oregon snd Washing Von, wIirbe"T6aaTy . crippled.; X. vote on - the amendment waa not , reached. :;v , ' - . ' . ' ',..-.' DOUMA OBSERVES : ' EMPRr-SS' BIRTHDAY, '" " ' - t i -'i. ' . ..... , ... ;,i (Josraal Special Serrie ) - St. Petersburg. Jun 7. The douma today. observed the birthday of the em-4 press by adjourning until tomorrow, ' CBUCA08 SB AIM OA LOTS, CkicifO, Jna 7. Orals car loU Car. Urane. Cat. I SIS ions. Whut ...... S I aao 12T ....... is! - Ba a -' Shi' rHtht-s Corn Oata j..... 130 Wbnt vara today: . Mlnseapnll IS. 13. Itar ao; Mlnaeapoll iUT, Dolotk S. rerelgs Ceffe Markate. nirre, Jnn T. Coffee nm-hansed to- U Hamlmrg aiu-bansen: Bin. rervlpta, S.SO0 baaa, market ateadr, prices M vn: sastfl, rs barely tteady. relpta, I2.WO bat, starlet nrire M oows. sref enreel' Btoek Oanaed Oooda. AUts LewU' Best Brand, - ' - : ,. .''..