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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 28, 1907)
TIIS Or.HCOIJ SUNDAY , JOURNAL', PORTLAND. SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1807. Lsg: a Day ':V ':;;;. ! For a Suit of Clothes ROOSEVELT GPiLlE PICTURE TO BE PRESEUTED TO THE PRESIDE!! T :t mmmr vM .Cents . i - w ; : mm .V.-'Vf. JL. " T If it . I - 7 III WlUXUJ . , ; , ; ; Goodwin's Picture of Roosevelt " Game' Ordered by Oregonlans " for the President. GAME BIRDS ARE V v HIS FAVORITE SUBJECT Wtf at Artist Paint Fruit With Sum Fidelity to DtU That Huh tend LarlshM on Hla Plctnrea of tha oaat It month thar has Joornad In Portland an arUat, whoa fancy runa to Kama and flan, with now , and than a portrait, mo piororaa cnann " and dellht tha portainan's my and hara found thair way to tha walla at soma f tha moot, notad oonnolaaaura la 'tha ooontry. . R. La Barra Ooodwln'a work may ba : found tn tha aotnaa of auoh man aa tha ' ' lata Oorvornora Flowar and Robtnaon af Now York, Ooremor Leunaborry of Con ' naetlent, tha lata Bonatora Haarat of t California and Alrar of Mlchtcan, and - Barroy W. HIlnbotham and Commla t alonor-Oanaral Pack of Chicago. Bna '' , tor Loland Stanford parehaaad Oood- - win' famona "Fox on tha Old Door and nlm an ordor for aoToral otbar ' ploturoa. - - ; Mr. Goodwin la now dolnc work in thto elty ha Tint- rooalred ordara from aararal prominent famlllea, and wntla : ha palnta ho lira at tha Hotel Portland with hla wlfa, who paints fruit with tha oama oonaummata skill - and dallcata ; touch that ha am ploys la putting a bird : or a fish on eanraa, .-. " " Tha Tloorrlt Oama Plotura," ana of tha best of Goodwin's productions. Is to parehaaad by rsatdants or Oregon anavreantea 10 am pnwucnu . iu Dalntlnsr represents' tha door 'from , Roosevelfa cabin In North Dakota; lean ' Ing msainat tha door Is tha old fowllns ' pleea that was owned and used by Oen , oral Phil Sheridan while a resident of ; Oregon, and hanging from a nail In the dopr Is a string of game kilted by the artist while hunting on Columbia slough. Mr. Goodwin has a world-wide repa , tatton as a painter of game and game ' birds. The chief eharaoterlstle of hla work la tone and quality of color with - absolute accuracy of anatomical struo ' tore wealth of detail, without hard- nets. - Bines coming to Portland Mr. '.Goodwin haa painted portraits of two y'of Oregon's best known oltltens, Colonel ;' I U Hawkins snd Judge C. B. Bellln- gor. The portrait of Colonel Hawktna will adorn the walla of the city hall, while that of Judge Bellinger la for the J Vnlted States courtroom In the govern--' ment building. He Is also a painter :' of irory miniatures. Mr. Goodwin Is sn ardent sportsman. . 'When not painting ha la hunting. His ,;' home Is In Chicago,; where- he haa a " studio.' In the Fine - Arts building on MlrMiran bouleTard, which Is a highly resting phtee and a rendeivoua for sportamen as well as artists. OFFICERS M'MINNVILLE : . ASSOCIATED STUDENTS ("peHal Ttptrh to The Jrniroil.) McMinnvlUe CoUege, April . 2t.At the annual elcotlon of officers of the As sociated students the following - were chosen: O. I..- Tilbury, ', president; Mls Ztlpha Galloway, '01. vlce-prenl-dent; Mia Grace Henderson,' '01, secre- tary; Profesaor E. Northup, treasurer; eommltteemen-at-large. - Mine " Donna Griffith snd L. K. Tilbury, both '; Theodore E. Anderson, '0i, editor of the p.evlewi Mlaa Anna Andrew, 'OS, asnlst. ent editor; J R..- Rlrhardeon. 'OH, , change editor; Ml My Gulnman. 'U, )niel editor. The ftrt seven of theoe officer cnmpone the exerutlve commit tee, which aorrn tha affairs of the goc!et.l aturlflnts. t - i i h i. m ' -. a y w w m m m .t - t -. a. W J a ON JEROME'S RETURN I ' ' ; v i ill I tnnwuui 'aiwnn f 1 voun 1 .1 .1 ITflTl TtTlTmi nirmi LABOR OUTLOOK IS PEACEABLE Only Disturbing Element In La- f bor World Is President's : ; ; C Characterization. 1 TO INVITE ROOSEVELT.; . TOT JUSTIFY , HIMSELF Will Ask . President to BpesJc . to Catherine of Unions at Chicago Deba, Darrow, Blitchell and Gom- pers Will Speak: J - rpabltaben preaj by Special Uaaed Wtre. Chicago, April 37. Not a cloud mars tha labor outlook at tha time whan tha situation hitherto had been fraught With menace af strikes of tha .building trades and , actual. - strike of Journey men's anions. 'President FlUpa trick of tha Federation of Labor today Issued an optimistic statement felicitating labor on the unusual tranquillity which char acterise the local . situation. ' ,. j He calls t.ttentlon to a ; dlHtnrblng factor In the national affairs of the un ions and declares-that la the Moyer Hay wood-Pettibon trials tha labor in tereets will be protected to tha utmost extent. ' Ha Is hopeful that tha "cauee sr7 ,-etlce n1 humanity-will triumph and the end of the trial will be the vindication of men who are marked for sacrifice by. the enemies of their class." Tha structural Iron works, cab and carriage "Mrlvers," bridge men, gaa fit ters, drain layera and truck drivers are demanding Increasee In pay and Im proved working condition. In no case doeo there seem to be the probability of a itrme. j no most aerioue situation Is the iron workers' demand of. a flat Increase from M 80 to IS a. day.- This Is too slight a difference to Justify ap prehension that the employers and men 111 not compromise. .. The Moyer-Haywood-Pettlbona aglta t!.n Is being organised Into a strons- entlmeht agalnat Prealdent Rooeevelt, who, lnbor leaders declare, has departed from hla policy of "fair play" because of mistaken views snd misinformation. On May 1. Moyer day, radical speeches . .1 r r-e-r-r - .-k.-eZr,-w. .. Si i v- JCr . - I MotiUtlon of nearlr half nllHoa dol- : .-., . Jivvci.', ujcuiVflc . .ja v. ivr ., II ' x2 vi-. fZllUV JTZ? Mil V - III ltrnt STTTtr: win ' ba mads by . leaders af - national fame. - . .-; - v.--. - ' President Rooeevelt will ba invited te appear here and Justify bis- recant ut terances that Moyer and Haywood are "undeslrat a oUlsena," Eugene Debs. Clarence - Darrow, John Mitchell and Bamuel Oo racers- have been Invited to address the same meeting. - G. ) T. Franckel, chairman of tha labor organi satlons Joint committee for the defenaa of Moyer and Haywood and Pettlbone, la organising a campaign olub of ""un desirable citlsens." I-,;-, - ' PROHIBITION CONTEST' .: . : v WON BY E. L JONES rSaeelel Ptosateh t Tbe JesraeL) . Dallaa, ; Or., " April 1 7. Bl I. Jonas of Albany college, winner of last rear's state oratorloal contest, .won first piaoa In the stats prohibition oratorloal eon test, held here last night. His subject was "The Principles of Clttsenshlp." Miss Lillian McVlcars of Portland, who Is attending Dallaa college aa winner of The Journal scholarship oontest, re ceived second prise. Her subject was "Reserve Forces.''; Other orators were Miss Andrews of McMinnvlUe college, who. spoke on "America for Freedom," and .Mr. WaedV-of Philomath, whose subject waa 'The Perpetuity .of Our Na tKn." - - - . . . President Coleman of Willamette ant- verelty.I.- H. Amos of Portland and H. H. Gill of Chicago, were Judgea on de livery. Rev. Clarence True Wilson, and Rev; EJ. Ii. House of Portland ana Rev. W. B. Holllngshead of Eugene marked on eomaosiuon ana tnougnu a large audience was present at tha oontest and college enthusiasm ran high. . LIFE RECORD OF ONE' : - OF DAYTON'S PIONEERS poetal Dispatch te Tie Jesraal.) Dftyton, Or., April J7. Mrs. Sarah Carolina Phillips, who died at her home here last Sunday, waa born in Burry county. North Carolina, in. It 11. and was married ' to Thorn Hutchena In 183' at- New 1 Salem. North Carolina. To tbera were born, sixteen children. fifteen - of them, living . ts manhood or womanhood. Living at the present time are nine children, 1 1 grandchildren and 4t great grandchildren. In ltl they fled ro Indiana because of tha war. traveling by night and hiding by day. L They moved to Iowa In 13(3, earns to Newberg, .Oregon..'' In" If 7t snd moved to Dayton In 1133. " A son, W. B. Hut- rbens, reeldea-at Elm Ira, Oregon; Tyre Hutchena lives In Idaho; Elijah Dayton snd Hamilton - Hutchens at Newberg; Mrs. W. M. Bond at Stafford, Kansas; Mrs. W. P, Rnddlck at Colorado. Texas, and J. R. Uutobens and Mrs. J. P. Dorsey south af Dayton. eSha was a member sf Friends' church for aver thirty years. Tha funeral servloes were held In the Methodist Episcopal church Monday. Tha sermon was preached by Mrs. Edwards' of Newberg. Tha re mains wars laid away In Brookslde cemetery bealda the husband, who died la 1IS4. Five sona,-ons daughter-and many other relatives were present at tbe services. . Mrs. Phillips was a ond oousla o- President McKlnley, TWO CELEBRATIONS IN -: V; A DAY AT, WILLAMETTE ' (gpeebl mspateh ts Tse - Joeraal.) ' Salem, Or, April 37 While : tha glory of tha victory, over Whitman ool tega la tha debate waa being celebrated. President John H. Coleman at ehapet exerciaee announoed that a friend of the university had mads a glf of 31.800 to ba used for improvements and put ting In place tha aid Gray home, which waa recently purchased by tha trustees to ba used for a school of mueto. The building will be erected on tha weat part of tha campua, midway- between Lausanne hall and tha College of Medi cine. .The donor. r waa William W. Brown, of Paulina, Oregon,, who Is a strong friend of the "Old Methodist" school and who ts said to bs planning larger gifts to the college. . The an nouncement of the gift wss . tha sign for added demonstrations on the part of ths student body. : .. ,t . BUSINESS GROWS AND i -: S0 MUST BUILDINGS ntpeelal naeatek te The Jesraal.l Chehalla, Wssh., April 37. Harms A Lawrence, a well known hardware firm, expect to begin at once tha erection of a building for, the accommodation of their growing business. Brick or con Crete will be used and the building, which. will ba 10 by 130 feet and will front on - both ' Market street snd Pa ri flo avenue, will coat about 818.000. The change Is necessitated at once on seoount of the fact that tha room now occupied by Harma eV Lawrence la want ed by tha bank of Coffman, Dobson A Co. for the enlargement of tha quarters of that Institution. , A Hustling Oandidate., A.buay buatnea man for a busy busi ness city Fred T. Merrill for Portland and Portland for Fred T. Merrill. A booster and never an obstructionist. For ths people and the taxpayers, not afraid to aay and da ' For good streets snd a cleaner city. If you believe In him, vote for htm for councilman at targe. Ha will need no "Hsney" Investigation before or alter, ,y FORMER MAYOR TELLS IT ALL Jostah Qulney, Former Mayor of Boston Hopes for Immunity ' From Prosecution. SENSATIONS EXPECTED ON JEROME'S RETURN Prosecutlna; Attorns Has Confes sions From Douglass and Dennett, Charged With Stealing Halt Million From Trust Company. (PaMlaHre Free by gpeeUI Leases' Wwe.) New York, April 31. District Attor ney Jerome this evening departed for his country home . In Lakevlew, Con necticut, with full statements from both William O. Douglass and Oliver M. Dennett, toe first charged with tha peculation of nearly half a million dol lars In bonds from tha Treat Company of America and ths latter with having received tha bonds that Douglass took. When Jerome returns to town Mondsy morning sensational developments are confidently expected. Jerome will sora para these two ata laments, which are tha result of many tedious hours of "sweating" of ths two men, and prac tically amount to confessions. Hs also has tha statement of Joelah Qulney, former mayor of Boston, and a Democratic leader In Masaachueeetta Qulney ts ths man who waa asked by Dennett to act aa attorney for a friend who had become involved In peculations amounting to 31.000.000. Dennett hopes by his confession to get Immunity from the prosecution. - - George J. Hennessy, his counsel, said thla evening that It waa by hla advice that Dennett had made the confession, It was the rule wnsn he waa con nected with ths district attorney's office to give Immunity to any peraon who aided t ie public prosecutor, and that ha showed the rule waa ettll tn force. Tha first Idea af tbs real magnitude of tha trust robbery was disclosed by the statement made in Boston by ax- Mayor Qulney. of Boston. - Dennett told Qulney, . Uie statement says, that tL- 000.009 worth of bonds had been stolen. From this it would appear that Doug lass had Intended to make off with that amount, but., had not been able to get Die nana on ii. - It Is now thought that tha oblect In swelling ths amount to auch large fig urea waa to hold tha hidden loot as a club over ths officials of tha trust com pany to make them abandon prosecu tion. '".; y-, f ; ; , !.,-, . ... IT ISNT WHAT WE DO Bnt the War Wo Do It That Counts With Illustrations by Muffleby. "A win man has said that It Isn't what we do that counts, but the way wa do It; and how true that is," said Mr. Muffleby, "and In how many wsyel "I heard a man earing; only yesterday of another that we both knew that this man didn't go around knocking every thing, but was always cheerful, and I couldn't - help thinking how true that was of him. and of bow It helped him. and how it helped everybody around him. ' .... 1 - :v - "He la an able chap, thla man. and prosperous; he can do things, and still with hlro. as It Is with so many or na. It Isn't aa much what he does that counts, as It Is the-wsy he does it. People cotton, to him snd use to aeai with him, and he's getting on. - - 'And as to all the various relations of ltfs! Isn't a little favor graciously bestowed upon us by a man who Is giv ing us all he can more grateful to us than a big one given grudgingly or with an 111 grace? Sure nougn. Why. the wsy we do It can me dull things turn gay. turn a trolley cur Into an automobile anfl'nne a e- enir or homely board hospitable and, I Of course, when you get a suit of clothes made by a responsible tailor, you expect that . it will wear welL : Ours do, at any rate. But, . take a $20.00 suit for Instance. , It will last you two seasons. A season is seveivmonths. ' That's about $1.45 per month. ThatVlestf than 5 cents a day. ;Now, we ask you, is it hot worth while to spend 5 cents a day, on the average, and get a good suit, tailor made, than to spend less than that and get a shoddy 1 suit that will not last? . . A Good Suit Is a Good Investment We know of several instances where a man who purchased and wore a good suit of clothes so impressed his business acquaint ances with his prosperity that he found entree into exclusive' financial circles and 'made good" by "putting up a good front.'' We know lots of men who never think of negotiating a big deal unless they are scru . pulously dressed. - They deem it an essential stock in trade. It actually pays well to dress well. There's only one way to do it. Pa tronize a good tailor. - It Is That ECind of a Fellow We Wish to -Tdk With Regardless of what your friends may tell . you about indifference in dress, you know it . is a good maxim to .of big deals, when much, you hear it frequently said that, now adays, it is difficult to distinguish between a bookkeeper and a multi-millionaire, from the standpoint of the kind of clothes they wear. ; Why is it? . Because everybody dresses well. The moral of the whole thing is, select good goods, have them made into the proper styles, have it done by a responsible tailor I ! j4 ' eiCM am ItrrlA VaTTtH - mi4r(inf aa f4 f Ve a MMa4 CUeVU VeVAW fTUV nw gUM SUibVW 40U CUlVJi finish.- You'll be all right then; otherwise, you will not. We'll take the right kind of care of you. , . Grant Phtgley. Manager tag. I have eaten dinners of tha sim plest foods that were more aeiigninu far than othere of the grandest, because of ths finer grace wltn wnion wie sira- nlaa. n1rnw WSS BSrVaded. ' "We are so apt to go wrong about that, for Instance; to think that wa can't compete with people or a ww tlmea mors means, and so not . try. wkii'i the ussf we say. , We cant do anything with what we've got,?, why should ws try to do anything! ,- x worse mistake it would ' be lm possible to make. Let us net think 111 of ourselves, or of our hospitality. True, a mackerel is not a shad, nor Is stone china fine porcelain; but la that any reason why we ehouldn't make the best of whst we have and put a smiling face on HT --v " '- ' - - , "And ours may la truth bs tha more enjoyable entertainment. - A generous welcome will make v mackerel salmon and turn stons china Into , ware of Sevres, In ths taste snd fancy of the guest. One need not have tapestried walla If hie hearth fire burn bright. T nu all take heart! In- whatever we may do It is not what we do but the way wa do It that counts!- , . Mm. Braant'g Vision. Tha nomination of Mrs. Beaant by tbe late Colonel Olcott to the presidency of tha Theoeophlcal society waa not re ceived with unanimous approval, and Mrs. Benant, aaya the Calcutta r.mpire. has written to the breeches of the society- an account of the vision which brought about her nomination. "When I waa alttlns." he eays, "with the president the evening lef-r the Visible srpearance t the t1eeil mun ters tn their dying eervsnt, to til I ' m nsme tn" as his sucee r m we m asking t'r p-ii to exr-re- ' -ir v ! t i . matter, i t- o y -. . . t re i I v i 1 ! 1 1 ' i dress well. ' In these days personality counts for so OOiixj take up this burden and carry It "The colonel said: 1 have my mes saga; have you anythlngr Tea.' I said. What is Itr 1 will tell you when you have announoed yours." s 'Then he said he would wait till the morning and see if ha received anything further. ' I then wrote down what ha A been said to me, sealed It. and locked It away. Two daye before the master had told ma that hs would tell Colonel Olcott whom to nominate.) In the morning tbe colonel was clear that he waa ordered to nominate me. but he waa confused about subaldlarv detail. I advised him to wait till all was elenr. aa eome of tha details aeemed to r to be impracticable. Xn the evening of the next dav t . aaked me to sit with him assln a -ask them to speak. 1 refused. . hsd my answer, and I could not rror ask again, and I went downstair. "Then took place the menr- borne wltneee to by the col-m.i s t t two frlende, aa already ' l - t i In the Theoaophlst' f..r i , . r . "He sent for me and t- ' l r-1 had occurred, while hla fn-- '. . . writing it down In another r 'n. I then informed him of ! t I ir j. had been t-.hl. , "Tbe written arrnrnt boret-l his er-ok'n s---ou. i - t , maater hlmeeif corf.rm-1 It t- i aame ntjht aa I sat in rn- ,- . 1 Slotfirtv T' rrn Julca Verne r u tr n t.- f iji tlle enl t'- ' : ' y. I . ! ! t - ! ' V