RABBI STEPHEN S. WISE Diccucccp Subjects cN He -4 GOOD EVENING Journal Circulation THE .WEATHER. Yesterday Fair tonight and Saturday ; north , erly wind. "'.'. ... :W; VOL, V. NO. 225. PORTLANDS OREGON. FRIDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER ; 23, 1906. TWENTY PAGES, PRICE TWO CENTS. ow rauvs iwd nwi lANbg, riVK OEM! msm life - -7- !-11 1 r .11. .. ' . . 1. 1 , ; . ' ; TEDDY 0BECTS TO u.ii zm i x ut fc semmn JU I LU I Ul i n n 1 1 rV n n n if rin ' - o aim mm 1 San Francisco Execu tive. Back Tfom Eu - rope 7- Enemies Are Denounced -: t, ' Uoarmal llpecUl tW.) :;: - New 1 York, .Nov. JJ The steamer - Patricia with Mayor Bchmlta of Han Francisco was sighted oft Firs island at ft o'clock-thla morning. The vessel reached quarantine at a o clock. Quart era ' had been reserved for' Mayor Bchmlta at the Waldorf-Astoria. - i - truth In the changes. sgalnst blm and that he Intends to batten to Saa Fran ' Cisco to clear hla name. .. .' The Sews of the Indictment against I. him In JSslo. Francisco wi( broken by the Mniunir m n CI the mavor. UDOn hla scanning a bunch ' of clippings ton - talnlug- newa of the indictments , Mr. Bchmlta said: - .- --;.'-, : av j-esraoa wsiesgs. , '"It la a political revenge, an un- sorepulous,- venoms ua,-political "-charge. tllla of truth in any one of the ohargea. They t are the dirty weapons of dirty Mlinolana and you can. bet that I WUi loae cot time la aeulna back to fiaa Franolaoo and having It -out with the newa la very sudden I am not greatly ' surprised at the action of my enemies, ' The party I had. in the defeat of Die. trlct Attorney Laogdon la well known. I fought him to the beat of my ability, friends have retaliated." . , Benin lis aaia mat nil rip rtaa nu ' been taken for a rest to recover from - hla ahattered nerves as a result of the trenuoua ssnoaiaTV-and that ha had thing. Hs continued: --Oowftt am Xaqulry. . t "I intended to remain abroad until ' Deoember. I expected to reach Baa Francisco abou the firat of the year. My friends bad planned a big reception. When 1 heard - the charges that ware being made I decided to hurry back to , face my accusers. I intended to have an inquiry when I got hack an Inquiry ' Bchmlta and wife went directly to the Waldorf-Astoria, where they- wilt re main a day or two, meantime conferring with a number of friends, who met him .here. - The party. will then start for Ban Francisco. Bchmlta will - probably - not be sub jeeted to the humiliation of aa arrest. When the Patricia docked In Uoboken. : Herbejrt Bchmlta. brother of Mayor Bchmlta. M. J. Walhelmer and Private ; Becretarv Keen greeted the - traveler. The party entered automobiles and hur ried to the hotel. . No effort was made ' to arrest the mayor, though two men. : supposed to bo Ssa Francisco offlcers. who had called at the customs office ,T early, followed Bchmlta . closely . in a GOT WEEKLY GRAFT row Sumdred and Forty XKliars a .Week raid to Ooadttctla Brra. ' (loarael peetal genke. . ' Ban Francisco. Nov. at tienaatlonal : evidence waa given before the grand j Jury by the proprietors of the notorious v resort at Til Pacific street.' which re : veaJe the fact that 1440 waa paid week ly by there to a rlty official for the i privilege of conducting the dive in do-- Samoa of tae law .and that la.eslte. ,of (Continued on Pago Two.) f eeee rree! s SKIDOO TOR YOU A Beautiful. Stick Pin This offer good one . wccV only 23 PREFERS LOVER TO LUCRE FOR M WOES " 8Y HETTY GREEN Richest Woman Financier Cele brates Her Seventy-Second Birthday-Pre'dict$7rhat1 Na tion Is on the Verge of Great Revolution. . , , . Peaisel gperlal garrleat . Boston, Nov. ;JI. Mra."Hey'areen, the richest woman in America, yester day celebrated her seventy-second birth day. 8ha la spending the winter In Boa ton, residing at a boarding-bouse'' in Rowland street, Roxbury, with her daughter. Her object In coming hero Is to secure a tenant for a house of hers that has Ions been vacant. ... . . Mrs. Green predicts that the nation la on the verge of airrea.rtOirtlcartap heaval. that may end In' revolution If the power of the moneyed classes la not curbed. She blames tfqata aa be ing the cause of the present popular discontent and asserts that, when the people "understand how thslr chances of making a living are being tak,n. away by the monopolies, popular revolution will follow.- . -' . ' v . Jn addition to securing a tenant for her house, Mrs. Green is occupied with several lawsuits in Boston. Bat law suits never worry ner. When they have been disposed of she probably will go to Texas to- spend the remainder of the winter. She has f vast Interests In Texas and moreover her eon, E. H. R. Green, lives there." and Ned," 'as sh fondly calls him. Is the Idol of her heart. rree ! WITH allHelp Wanted Ads either male or fernale-and all ads that go under the "Lost and Found" column The Journal will give a beautiful stickpin free I - If you are not an employer of labor or have not lost or found anything re cently, ask father; mother brother or sister . for . a Journal " Want Ad. Father 'may need a tniri,mother--may need a-girl, or even that big brother may.be looking for help of some kind. - '. ... ' - . : ; Journal rates are-5c. pef line." No ads taken for less than 15c. , Count six words to the. line- a.' . " a" r' r m-r Prince- Ebcrwyn and ' rfia Humble : , ...Fiancee.' ," . . PRINCE LOSES I FOR POOR GIRL Kaiser Indignant at Degradation of Noble Blood ' by Proposed Marriage of Prince Eberwyn to Fanny Koch, Daughter of Shop-Keeper of Berlin. (Joerasl Seeclal Serriee.) Berlin. . Nov. II. No- sooner Is the Prince Albrecht . and Dancer Marie 8ulssrs scandal out of. the way than ths - emperor- la - enraged - and - Berlin amused by another affair of the royal heart In which a prince of .the realm do libera telyi, proposes to forfeit a million a , year by marrying a tradesman's daughter. Strenuous punishment Is contemplated by the kslser for youths who degrade the royal houses of ths empire. , , t - " The announcement is mads that Prince Eberwyn of Benthelmstelnfurt Is engaged to Fanny Koch, ths daughter of a shopkeeper. The kslser st a family council requested that ths ll.000.oao a year inheritance left the prince bo for feited In case he did not "behave,' snd cancel the engagement. The young prince replied that he chofle love to wealth snd will have te make his own living after hla marriage, MONTANA POSTMASTER -v COMMITS SUICIDE V J (keerlal Ptepetca w The lmtl) Nov. It. Nell aallston. lont Dougherty, postmaster and a prominent merchant in thla city, has committed eulclde by shooting. Us whs II years old and Is survived by his wife, two sons and a daughter.. - i - 1LLI0I A YEAR Pearyinrf Grewfleturn From Perilous Trip to the larthest Point Toward the Pole Met at1 Sydney; by Wife and Friends and Accorded Recep r. tion by Natives' Failed to Find North Pole but Made Best Record of Any to Date. (Journal Spaclst Service.) Sydney, N. &. Nor. Commander Robert B. Peary, hla ship krfd crew ar rived from the farthest north this morn ing. Mrs. Peary was the trst to greet thj explorer, who waa tendered a re ception by the natives snd his friends from ths Cnited States. Peary went-farther north than any man ever did hefore, but ne has-failed to reach the north pole. Peary brings to America, the honor of holding ths record of the "farthest north" and to himself the credit of having performed what will probably be balled by the entire world, when the complete, story Is known, as the most wonderful feat of Arctic exploring in history. ; . West Fartksse STorta. Peary, In 102, want to It degrees IT minutes north.- Thla time he pushed hla way to IT degrees minutes, boat ing hla own record by I degrees tl minutes, . and - leading the Duke of Abrusal by.iaoout 10 miles, the Italian expedition. reaenmg degrees' st misuses. Z. . Commander Peary's Polar steamship, the- Roosevelt, left New Tork on. her long Journey In search Of the north pole Julv 1. l0ft. f- ' The Roosevelt was built In Mains and oatne down to New Tork, whers she wss refitted before starting. The vessel, for which funds were furnished . by ths Peary Arctic club of New Tork, was de signed by Naval Arohltect William B. Wlnant particularly for Arctic explora tion. She cost about 1100,00. The RooseveU "Eaa a cHW of 10 lueiii under Captain Bartlett. , . . , ' i Hardships Bnoouateved. ' Ths greatest hardships - were (en countered during the two months, from February 12. when he left the Roose velt, frosen In at Cape Sheridan, to April 11. when he planted his flag on the summit of an tee pinnacle In lati tude IT degrees, I minutss north. On ths . way back provisions were nearly gone, and Peary ana hla companions, blind from ths glare of the snow and from the Ice particles that' a steady gals, drove Into thslr faces, fought thslr way back to the ship. COW SWALLOWS WATCH KEEPS IT RUB FOR 7 YEARS IS STOMACH Respiration Kept It Wound Up ""AirtheTimeandMt Loses- - Just Three Minutes. . (Special Dispatch te Tse JmtuI) . Kelso, wash Nov. ll.tKor years Axel Olson's watch reposed la the stomach of a cow. It kept running au that time. And la the seven years It lost Just three minutes! Axel says ha la telling ths truth, and ha has ths watch to show for It. He's a rancher on the upper Coweeman. and ho came to Kelso yesterday with a re markable tale. , One day seven years ago a playful young calf found Axel's coat and vest hanging on a post' In his barnyard. The calf didn't" coma from Harhnar but the vest looked palatable so it chewed away at ths garment until ths pocket was cut through and the watch slipped down its throat. Then the calf Inno cently sauntered away and Axel couldn't find hla watch. He didn't notice the telltale marks on the vest snd supposed It was stolen. . - - The calf grew Into a matronly mUch cow. and still the watch stared In lis stomach. Lsst week Axel slsns-nterea ths cow who hsd outlived her usefulness. A glitter In her stomach caught hla eye. It was his watch! Hs wss stlU mors surprised to see that the minute hand was running as if nothing had happened. The time piece was really unharmed, though the esse wss tarnished. Ha accounts for the phenomenon by saving . that the watch was a stem winder- and lodged In the respiratory tubes. Every time the calf breathed the stem turned and Um wat waa-kept wun4up all thc seven years. - SAYS GOD TOLD HIM , . TO SCOURGE BY FIRE Now Tork. Nov. U. Walter Finney, who ' says Ood commissioned him to scourge the people by Are. wss arretted today, suspected of causing the scores of incendiary tree In 'this city recently. PREDICTS. A -'11 -"!".. .- ''(.' ' " '11 vV-'-" - li . . ; - y:: : I ; )' 1 -Meiijr n..!!;!!. p-w.wm. EIGHT DIVORCES III FORTY-FIVE r.lINUTES TODAY Judge Cantenbein Cuts Marital Ties. Faster Than Clergymen Could Tie Them No Mar riage - Licenses to - Offset the - Decrees. .' I :i , Eight decrees of divorce were granted la 4 minutes by juage Qentenbeln In the wtate circuit' court thla morning, each trial requiring a little less than alx mtnutea. Seven 1 of ths decrees were granted On the ground of deser tion, and one because of cruelty. At the marriage ' license desk In County Clerk Fields' office downstairs Deputy "Cupid- Rose sst and waited In vain all morning for a request for a license. None came to him. None of the divorces were contested, and only the two necessary wltneeses were ex amined In each case. Deputy District Attorney Ous C. Moaer waa preaent rep resents f the state. Because his mother-in-law told his wlfs Of a number of things that he was supposed to hare done before their mar rUga, Wt K-HIf gins' Wlfg left hint snd went home to her mother. Such Is ths testimony given by Hlgglns before Judge Gantenbeln in the stats circuit cour' this morning at Una-trial of his suit for a divorce. Biggins said that when his wife heard the alleged story of his oast record she rwaxed exceedingly angry, and whan lie went some one night he found she had gone. He went to his mother-in-law's house to rind her, ho said, but waa re fused admission, and was Informed that bis wife would not return to aim. Asked If It Was Trae. ' ' "Were ths things your mother-in-law said about you truer - Hlgglns waa asked by his attorney. "They were partly true and partly exaggerated." be aald. . '"My wife's mother never liked me anyway." Hlggtna stated that he married at Los Angeles In December, lift, and that his wife deserted him In June, lfoa. J. C. Moreland appeared as his attorney. Hlgglns waa allowed a decree of di vorce. - Frances T. Roberts said that her hus band, Horace O. Roberts, wsnted her to support him snd when she refused left her Id December, 1101. They were mar ried at Kinsley, Kansas, In March. llftO. Mrs. Roberts wss allowed a divorce. Attorney. Oeorge F. "Martin appeared for her.. -'t . REVOLUTION n F1"iincicflln Jh World. SOCIETY LEADER OF CHICAGO SET IS IN PORTLAND Mrs. . Potter Palmer, With Real j LJvej! Prince and ' Princess In Her Party, Arrives and Leaves ' Her Private Car . for Drive Through City. , ... Mrs. Potter Palmer, who ."leads so ciety on Lake Shore Drive, In tho north end of Chicago and runs the, Palmer ho tel on State street, on ths sooth side, arrived in Portland this morning after a week's tiring" holdup In Seattle be cause of ths floods prevailing In the Sound country. She travels In a pri vets car and la accompanied by the Prince and Princess Csntaxuna. her son snd his wlfs, Mr. . snd Mrs. Honors (Continued on Pegs Two. eeeeeeeseeeeeeeeee f. ' -Thisls Go d dMeMS i I The circulation of last Sunday's Journal was the greatest ta Ita his tory: mors copies were printed, dlllvered at homes, bought on news stands, trains snd on ths streets than over before. This is Interesting to you snd very encouraging-to ua. It ahows that what we are trying to " do to make The Hunday Journal the best paper in the west has- ths hearty support of the people of the Oregon- country. ' The Best features that can be found appear In The tof Fashions and Health and Beauty Hints are written by experts! the "Workers" department is contributed by people who labor with hand snd brain; the color pages tell stories of human and immediate Interest; the T games, tales and puaxtea for boys and girls are by people who know how X to Interest ths little ones. . Of course, Th Sunday Journal's I Comic Section Is the Best t In ths west; The Journsl had Its etiolcs of all the finest funnies, snd popularity of Its humor pages proves that It chose wisely, la every e department of current matters Ths Sunday Journal leads. . It prints . air the news that's worth knowing; drama, art. music and literature ars leading features this week Is the second letters by. r , . Dr. Stephen t P f Nlf T I IlLUIULII I UinrrJ Qftnifni t LIaIsI 1 1 UlllvJ WVIIUIUI IV I IVIV4 Onto- Job Until He Is Ready to; Leave Executive's Chair (Jeeraal Special Barries., ' ' Washington, Nov. It. The strenuous lion would fain lie down with the Ms Too . Iamb, - la ths strange goaalp on Washington Hps. comlnsr from sources close to - the administration. After fighting almost to- a finish snd praotio ally for a knockout the vulpine senator from New Tork, President Roosevelt doesn't seem to want much when hs asks Mr. Piatt will he please just ksep that position and look perfectly natural until hla term expires, March 4, 1100. Terms Xxplrs Same Bevy. aa on authority. President Roosevelt hopee may prove a moot merciful one for him, this expiry falls on the self same day as that on whloh hla own term ss president of ths United States nceurt. It Is known to be ths hop of ths president te-servo his -- state - and. . his country la ths senate-- - Thomas C Platt'a domestic' troubles, baring apparently laid the last straw atop of his burden of bodily Infirmities snd political discomfitures. Jtois possible resignation threatens President. Rooee velt's program. Am .nMAitnMil mmrilmr f h 1 1 nh tf resignation seems to have been re solved upon by ths senator on January . i. Should It be tendered at once. OerC erner Hlgglns, with whom Piatt I. at mortal enmity, would, of course, fill the) pi ice jwuhoaa.of hialrlends. This, shsll not enjoy; hence he withholds his resignation until the Inauguration of -Hughes as governor and the convening of ths state. then elect a successor to fill his expired term. And her Is ths menace to Theodora Roosevelt's senatorial ambition. Let the legislature of New York elect ae matter whom so long as the) place) Is) not held by Piatt, It must bo bold by a man who In ambition at least will b the peer of Roosevelt himself, and be would have two long and busy years la which to frame up a second tana as his own successor. Piatt, being an utter impossibility, would be entirely harmless: hence th deslrs of the president that Piatt may slther not choose tev resign- after-all that he may bo induced to hold tbe place till 1000, n matter bow xaeny an ti-square deal votes bo may sasS meanwhile. ALABAMA ENFORCING NEW JIM CROW LAW (Josraal Soeelal SarvJee.) ' Montgomery. Ala-, Nov. 1. Tnw Imvm requiting street car companies to fur nish separata cars, labeled, for negroes and whites, went Into effect todsy. Tho local company has refused te obey snd ths systsm Is tisd up on account of the crews being under arrest ror running cars without the- "Jim Crow" alga. Gen eral Manager Ragland and ether offi ce ra have also been arrested. eeeeeeee Sunday Journal. The woman's psges r i Its society record Is up to o': discussed br expert. Amn the In ths series of liier.etli: 1 (Continued on Page Two.), ' , . ' . . . ' -j ..... . ... !;, .. .1 -A ... r,,r.