0 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL; PORTLAND. .. SUNDAY. MORNING, JUNE 23, 1C07. AIDS TO HEALTH, STRENGTH AND HAPPINESS FOR EVERl HOME Eye Glasses and Spectacles That fit 'the eyes, ' ' which nature re quires. We make treasonable tific and aatisfac: ' tory aervire. Our Optical . Depart inent is located on the ground floor. " ; : We Do Not Treat Diseases of the Eye v Artificial Glass Eyes 2,000 to select from. Can fit any shade, size or condition. Eyes sent on selection to out of town customers. t Instep. Supports -... .r SSSSSJI . 3. " Ours will cure' lameness. ; caused by flat foot. Easy to ' ; wear, rives instant relief.' Price per pair........ $1.50. h m l l it .1 J t.1 money uats. u uicj uuu il neip. tlAT iOQT W1THAACJIBUPI1M For the Forest, Mountain and Sea . ANEROID BAROMETERS, MAGNIFYINQ GLASSES, COMPASSES, SMOKED GLASSES, POCKET MEDICAL CASES. EYE SHADES. A New Stock ot Veterinary and Dairymen's . Dental and Surgical Instruments and Supplies; Floats, For ceps, Catheters, Thermometers, Milking Tubes, Trocars. , Impregnators. Elastic Stockings Anklets Wristlet? Knee Caps Hand-woven from pure para rub ber and spun silk; nothing so good, to cure sprains, ' strains, : weak joints or enlarged (varicose) veins.' Send for self-measurement' blank. nice list ... : -a ... tt .v.: '.. Wristlets, silk ...'.T.iM.fl-OO Anklets ... ......... .......2.00 Knee Caps ...... J. f2.00 Garter Legging t 7.,7 .77.7 .7 f 2.0d Garter Ike 1)3.00 , Knee Hose ............... f 5.00 Thigh Hose 7 fio.00 JPrkes Include Postage '' t ' ',1, ;'', "W 's Va t i ' ' . J9 r.-- - .MJW.'VNMtaWKV.N. M fMk.u-Matx.' rZ-A V.-7 :: M Postal : JL "o i . , ' fill T II stipation ana Kinarea iroupics. Sold on approval money back if 'not helped. Sent by. mail to any - address on receipt of price, f 3.00, : MS 7-.: V LU. ''' Abdominal Belts ; Obealtv Belta.' Elaatla . Bnndavit, Appndlclti Helta. Poat Operative . . Pandacea, Lumbiro Delta, Stomach Warm , i r. Linen Mesh Ware for aummr uaa. W ' can flt anr ens and . guarantee aatlafaotlon. ' ' 1 Ire you usf a I7e Deaf? Try one : of our many devices; Lon don Hearing Horni Audiphones, Con versation Tubes, Ar tificial Ear Drums. All hearing appliances' reTiold on "apprwaV money back i ; - ; . -r not helped. . ,, Laboratory Apparatus-Test Tubes ,' Graduates, .'Funnels, Beakers, Pipettes, Burettes, ' Tubing, . ' Microscopes,' Stains, Slides 'and ..Accessories. OPEN SUNDAYS FROM ' 10 A. M. TO 2 P. M. W00DARD, CLMKE & COMPANY Do your ordering by Phone, Private Exchange 11, we Want Your Monthly Accounts. Free Delivery or Home A11S9; 100 Salesmen to Fill Your Orders 1 : in City. Canadian Money'' Taken at 'Full Value Invalid Chairs and Crutches z Rentef or, , Vtvei ..ThermometersL.jSelf. ' Registering, $1.00. . Accident 'and Sudden Emergency Out Jits, for travelers, and those isolated from surgical and Inedical aid; made up to suit your needs.. . . ; , : , , Trusses for the Ruptured The only store on this coast with private flttlna-rooma and skilled fit- . tera (men and women), who thor oughly understand our biulneaa, we ai b rated tbla branch - of re sole arents for the eel-, FACTI8 PAD TRUSS. v We uarintee to properly and aatialao orlly flt any rupture, or money back; bend us Il.tO with body measure ment and we'll aend you . a Truss whloh : will flt u Mr as an 'old shoe and hold the rupture. - JUST RECEIVED: A complete line of Galvanic and Faradio Electric Batteries . for' physicians and surgeons and specialties. And our fa mous rWoodlark" Home-Med ical Apparatus full set ol electrodes, foot plates, . cords, all in a mahogany i box. handsomely finished with full directions for use...... f 5.00 Every family should have one of these 'batteries. Nothing so efficacious in the treatment of nervous troubles, headaches, neuralgia and rheumatism. No liquids to spill or corrode. Teaching the Young Indian to Speak English y IS ACCUSED OF SLAYING SPOUSE CAR STRIKERS FIGHT BATTLE WITH POLICE V Case Very Similar to Aggie Believed Two Rioters Are Dead at San Francisco as. Re- Myers Murder Develops in Oklahoma, suit of Attempt to Carry Out Plot for. Series of Three Assaults Upon Non-Union Men. J. R. MEADOWS IS VICTIM OF PLOTTERS (Baarat News by Loacest teiaed Wire.? San Francisco, Juno St. A bloody battle between the police and eight men who attempted to board a, Chutea-bound I Believed Wife of Dead Man Aided car tonight for the purpose of beating i . - -' 1P the non-union oonauotor ano mow- Rudolph Tegeler and Mrs. Nor Uan. toofcv nlace on Fulton street op- Kclth In Putting ner Husband poslte the park about :80 o'clock. Be fll kr2ra Atl both aldeB. It uus or uxe way. u Relieved thaftwo of the men who attempted to boara tne car. were kiubo. The nolle are searching the brush (Heant Kwt br Loot tit Utatd Wli.) Phma.-A th. main wr arrtaUd tnd Ok I a ho m ft. CitT Juna S2.-A caha vtrr (locked ud In the ootlce atatlon. They almllar to the famoua murder ca.e of or;-S! Aggie jayera- nag aeveiocea in UKia-!.. , th. mwimim inndutov and mo. homa, Mra, 3. B. Meadowa, Rudolph I torman, J. F. Ashley and J. C Patter-titii- Kir i..',i.'ium 1 eon. were badly Injured and were taken .-,-..., .. . hoep tal The police are Nora Keith, a trained hurae. are under hA the membeM of the arrest charged with the murder of J. R. I gang who escaped into the darkness of Meadowa, a construction superintendent L""h' rteVJ?rt4 t S FfliS of the Pioneer Telegraph A Telephone Si the ponce in tne rignt. Aunougn mey were fired uoon oolnt blank by the eight men, they escaped injury. linen nan in aquaa empuea ni revolver at the gang. Desperate Mot. ' . - . . Tha. nnlfna bIiv that thla attack was one of three ' deliberately planned I company. fB i ; Meadowa dlsapceared from hla "house on the night of June 4, with the ex- prsaea purpose or ; going to , Caottol Hill, a southern suburb of Oklahoma. wiiyr on business. He failed to anmr at hla office the fallowing morning or i uw lunowing morning ana tne -orricials Line ot Indian Boys Attending School on Umatilla ReBervatlon.Photo by Moorehouse. By Lulu R. Lorenr. EROM the earliest colonial times, from the days of Elliott and Fere Marquette to the present, the Christian bodies of the country . have manifested great interest In the Indian. ! Early in the field, devoted missionaries pushed on with the pio neers, and frequently in advance, in their earnest, self-saerif Icing devotion " to the cause of spreading the gospel among the Indiana With the bible and the school book they dotted the west with churches and mission schools, from which the beginning of civilisation ' reached the savage Indian, , Frequently taking their lives in their V bands, they braved the rigors of nprth- era winters and the burning deserts of the southwest in fervent seal for the cause they represented. After the government began serious!' and intelligently to develop the worl of civilizing and educating the Indians ome of the religious bodies gradually dropped out of the ranka of educatora , : and devoted their . efforts and funds - ' more strictly to the preaching i and 1 ; teaching of the gospel. A namber, however, remained in the field and la ' bored earnestly among the young in " schools, which were usually auxiliaries of the particular church supporting them. Thee schools are valuable, as alstants in uplifting the Indian race. y On the Umatilla Reservation. On the TJmatllla reservation in Ore i gon there are now two schools a gov ernment school, which Is attended by ' from 0 to 100 Indian children yearly, ' and the Catholic Mission school,' which ' la attended by from . 40 to , 60 Indian children1. The schools have terms of eight months, and the government school has eignt insiruciors, ana tne ' mission school usually has as many, i From both these schools a number of students are annually being sentjto the big Indian schools Carlisle, Haskell and Chilocco. . , . -Teaching the young Indian child to peak English is essentially the first ; step in his training, and special atten tion has been directed in the different echoota to giving him a working knowl-d-e of the language in the shortest possible time. This is neing done, oy teaching objectively. ' Agricultural and industrial training are also practiced, uh as carpentry. Hewing, cooking, etc. Thus many of the Indian children have all the advantages ,vi wiiiie ,uuu. ;; Adoption of Reservation System. ' As the west developed the reservation viitem became more and more a neces sity from tho huroantarian and police . standpoints. By gradually confining; the roving band of Indians te limited area vat terrltorlea were added to the publie domain, and the tide of immigra tion poured in .In an irresistible wave from the east,' Culture and refinement followed in the biased trails of pioneers. And of late years Indian reservations tutve been surrounded by sturdy .white i R II - ' - I II H mhi v.-iv.'"-", , ra m It 'Y "i K - i"' nil INii -.. ........ n .4 V. SLtll t7 I'll VSt - ., - illl H I I t -f Zt.W .1 id -'Ji'l i' I'll ii 8 III II , v. -T ' v,s -"WBV' 1 II II I I jasSMii ' " '-f -iJt w. JTv-. . I II II I rZISLillZ illlll Indiana Whn Hsta Ttnin AttAndl-nr (Rrhnnl nrnannit forth PlrttirA Man.' I 'f.' ...... .. i V. '. . fit W If AnMllAt... !.. " K l v.. :.. .: f. i cltlsens, and encompassed by lines of railroads, two uecaaes ago tne great majority of agepciew were situated in remote sections'. They were .distant from railroads and telegraph, - In 1882 congress tardily , recognised the importance of educating the young Indian in me waya 01 civilisation oy the appropriation of $135,000. This meagre sum was gradually increaaed until the last appropriation was $5,000, 000. . Effort has been made to give the Indian "a white man's chance. 'V While many may fall to attain a high degree of culture and refinement, the whole will not discredit the earnest desires of the friends of the American-Indian. DISAGREEMENT IN , DR. FULLER CASE Tried for Manslaughter at .Baker City His AUeged Victim' Was" Mrs. Dave Cover. car men who run the nlsht cars. ' They claim to have proof of a desperate plot which involves several well-known men. (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) Baker City, Or., June zz. The case against Dr, Roy Fuller, charged with manslaughter, which had occupied the circuit court since its convening on June 14, , resulted in a disagreement af- tor a deliberation of a dav and a. nla'ht. Dr. Fuller. Dr. Myers and Dave Oover Meadow8 ever since his marriage six . TllTVl.r iT .4 7 iu " ' years ago, and that he is an old lover wesv ju.iui vu iuw , wua icr an. Meadowa, navmg courted ner separate . charge or manslaughter ! oerora ner marriage to Meaaows. . mfi, meaaowa hub au atong main tained a verv Indifferent and nuanlrlniia attitude regarding the disappearance of ner huband ana rrom the first refused to see- newsDaoer reoortera and other callers. When called from her bed and ar rested this mornlna she was not in tne least, agitated, and when asked by the Dollca If she had expected to be arrested aald: "After the way you folks have hounded' me for tne past two , week 1 am not surprised at anything." The three suspects have been given into ine cuaioay 01 me county autnori tien.by. the police. It is expected by the authorities that Tegeler will make a complete confession within the next is nours. Of the COmDanV. Wllhltll to rnnilllf him I Damn., tn .Hnn.l. In Inn nnninlnn 1 loiepiiuneu 10 mm noma ana nis wue re portea tin absence. . VoUoe Take TralL Hla absence on June S. with nut vnrd from him aroused the suspicions of the telephone officials who called upon the police to search for him. A search was Degun Dy tne police in which the detect ive force finally took a hand and num erous clues were followed as ionar they held hope, No , tangible clue was struck until yesterday when Chief of Police Charles Post received a letter addressed to Mrs. Myers of Elk City. Oklahoma, from an unxnown source, xms letter reierrea to Mrs. Meyers as "mother" and re- f erred In an obscure way to the mur- aer or Meaaows ana tne mace or Duriai. following tnis clew. ... Chief Post traced the origin of the letter to Ru- dolph ; Tegeler, who claimed, that the letter had been sent to him to Tie coded ana manea 10 mra, piyers. Find Meadows' Body. The police took Teaeler in hand and alter lour hours' "sweating" he finally consented to ehow the police where Meadows'' body ' was burled, but main tained his own Innocence of the crime. Meadows' body was found a short distance west of St. Mary s academy on Capitol hill in a shallow and hastily made grave. A bullet . wound In the center of the forehead and one In the left breast, and a fracture of the skull, apparently' mad with a heavy stick, told the tale of brutal murder. The fea tures wore so decomDosed . that ldenti flcatlop was-posslble Only by the cloth- inir. wmcn were laentinea oositiveiv as those worn by Meadows when last seen. It Is claimed that Tegeler had been mixed up in the domestic affairs of against Dr. Fuller, which case was tried first . The attorneys for the state were Lorn ax and Anderson; for the de fense, Hyde, Rand, Cochran and Strayer. The charge was that Dr. Fuller, as sisted by Dri Myers, caused the death of Mrs. Dave Qover by - means of a' criminal operation, last September. The Oovers lived In Eagle Valley, near Richland. Oover was charged with manslaughter with the others. 1 1 m 1 1 n 11 11 1 1 1 ii,. ,. Good Location for a Doctor, From the Youth's Companion. Two young physicians were exchang ing news for the first time since their graduation rrom tne medical school,. " "I was surprised when I heard you'd settled at Beech Hill," said one to the other, laughing.- "I've always heard it spoken of as such a healthy suburb. I wondered if you'd . find any patients there." 4 'My dear man. said his classmate. earneatly, "It is a healthy suburb, but it's 'also the stronghold of football; every family has its. automobile, and there never was such a place before for giving children's parties. - I'm -doing splendidly, thank you." . . Behold! ' " ; From the Kansas City Journal. Colonel" Rf van la arlvinar the nraaent and future fenerations an InsDirfna: ex ample of how to. arrow old arracefullv 1 la pursuit of the. nresldeacy. . NORWEGIAN OFFICERS VISIT WASHINGTON (Beartt News by Loosest Leased If lie.) Washington, June it. Captain Dahl, commander T of the Harald Haarfage, and several of his ranking officers were the guests of the secretary of the tiavy today In a trip to Mount Vernon and the . tomb of Washington. Secretary Metcalf was unable to escort his guests and Lieutenant-Commander Trout acted host in hls stead. . Others in the party beside the Norwegian officers were Mr. Skybak, secretary of the lega tion; Lieutenant-Commander .. Hough, Major Neville of the United States ma rine corps, Captain Oaterhaus and Lieu tenant Cronan. - The party lunched at the Wlllard upon their return to Wash ina-ton and tonight were the guests 4f M. Hauge, the Norwegian minister, at ainner. . Partridge Dashes Into Car. From the St. Paul Dispatch. While the Duluth, South Shore A At lan tic passenger train was bowling along at the rate of 40 miles an hour, near Sanborn, a partridge flying- at full speed dashed through the car window, breaking a double thickness of glass. The bird feu - dead on the floor. A traveling man seated in the place by the window was covered with shattered glass, but escaped serious Injury. A man sitting in the seat behind him was struck bv a piece of the flying glass and an artery in the rear part of his neck was eut. RAILROAD TO FIGHT NEW TWO-CENT LAW (Publishers Press "by, Special based Wh.) Lincoln, NebJ June S8.-FoIlowlng the lead of the TJnlon Pacific railway, the Burlington and Rock Island sys tems today filed motions seeking the removal to the federal -courts of all the state's injunction suits - against Ne braska railroads. The attorney general seeks, te 5 prevent, by v. Injunction, the railroads from violating the two-cent rare and freight rate taws., it - is an nounced that the Chicago & North western railroad will not fight the nei taws. . k GETS M'KINLEY WEALTH . nvfMaKAiua pAfant lol Iv-Iasv efc. TP A iSm a ehev fiitve C1ts t v kiiu jMMbva v vhw mmii "uti 1 s uesvej read with great Interest the reports of the marvelous work of Mr. Brennan in applying the . gyroscope . to railroads. You will, I, am sure, - pardon ie for pointing, but isn't that what a certain personage appertaining to the White House' has been trying : to : do? And lant Mr. Brennan s apparatus an In fringement? ,' f On -the other hand, do you consider that the application of said gyroscope to the certain personage would tend to Increase his ability to maintain a more perfect balance?. ; Wilmington, Mey 11., H. P. For Better or AVorse. From Harper's Weekly. A Baltimore woman who had- a 'per fect treasure of a cook was horrified recently when Maggie came to her say- ing; " ' 1 ' Plase. mum, I'm givin ye a wane s notice." "Why, Maggie!" exclaimed the lady of the house, ''this Is a surprise! -Aren't you satisfied nerer Do . you nope to better yourself V "Well. 00 "mum, responded Maggie. Tia not exactly that. The fact la, mum, I'm gom- to get married." '.' r -.. . '' - : W ' 3. Riblin of Halaev has Utilised six acres of land and the sheds of an abandoned tile factory, and converted It Into one of the most auocessful poul try yards in Oregon says the -Salem Journal, He has 600 hens (no males) and at an expense last year of .1400 he turned off $990 cash, besides con siderable In the way of living. He buys yearling hens at SO cents each, and keeps them laying until they are -old and fat. and then sells them dressed. r" ' w-f-snmi-iiJMii mniJiiunRii ,iuii su,isJiaii I: 7 'r mm' -:i:ff;':Wte:';'t-iit:; i . Mrs. Mabel HcKlnley Baer, favor ite' niece of the president; ' whose picture here appears, will no longer have to appear in vaudeville unless she so desires. 1 . 8he , will 1 receive' about 1130,000 from the estate ot the late President McKinley. " ' . A week ago the police learned that I there were to be tnree attaexs. una was to be made opposite the affiliated colleges, one at the Panhandle and the third near the Chutes. Captains Qlee son and Colby have had plain clothes men stationed secretly at these points tor several days. - ' . It was 8:80 o'clock tonight When the Silent police squad near the. Chutes saw , eight men leap eut from the bresh and attempt to board a passing car; They jumped out into the light and balled upon the men to halt, Instead six of the crowd turned and cursed at the po lice, at the same time drawing their revolvers and yelling for the detectives to stand back. - Are Well Armed. Two others of the' gang boarder! the car. Each of them carried a loaded piece of gas pipe. One rushed at the mnlnrmin mil thn Ather 'at the Win. ductor, beating the non-unfon men about tne neaatwun tne aenaiy weapons. . The oollce saw this -and charged upon the gang. Suddenly., one of the eight opened fire on the police. The . rest followed quickly and emptied their f uns. They were not 10 feet away at At the first Shot the gang turned and ran toward the protecting bushes in the cark. The notice fired after them and ran in on them. - Schmidt, Kyle and Peterson were captured and disarmed. Aa the men darted. Into, the .darkness of the trees, two of them were seen to fall. The police believe that they were shot -1 A foroe was put to work early this morning hunting for the bodies. 4"- ' -"-7 "U,-. V."'.' ! ' ' I .r'. ' ' ' . -; 'l ;