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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1908)
,) , ,' . .'I , V ,r : THE--OREGON. DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY "EVaWWft JANUARY, V 1S08. .. r ' ' KUBEUKRESENTS INFERENCE ' THAY HE IS OF GYPSY ORIGIN UNIO COR. "tJNION AVE AND EjBURNSIDE AND BURNSIDE Onr lniMMi la dua to 'uniform blgh- rrode wOrfc At reasonable prices. Nervous People GEVURTZ BROS. And those afflicted with heart weaK neaa can now have their teeth extracted, filled and brldgeworlc applied -lthout the least pain or danger. : X, (: . PAINLESS EXTRACTION . ,.S .50 S3 KARAT CROWNS .,..... 5.00 BRIDGE WORK 5,00 OUR BEST RUBBER PLATE. . 8.00 The East Side, is, proud of its stores, its progress and its people.' Here inthis beautiful store everything is new, and yet w: are sacrificing to a, degree even greater than' clearance our magnificent stocks. It's to1 establish urselves in the minds ar memories of our patrons. v. Don't feel jt your; duty to spend money wherever you go-we want you to feel; that this gram i, bigf store is a part of the East Sideas much so as the highways.- We want you to come we want that you should feel ut ' j homeTv-It is our own pleasure and yours, we ask, in showing you about these value-laden floors. 'r 1- - w v ; I, ' 1 1.1. : : . , . . . . ... 4 v 11 ;i;t a u ci n u m d . t I lilt ULU UlUAULL I ... - - v:','v , THEBIO , . CHICAGO DENTISTS ' ' ,ii,; ... 1 1. nil 11 .fr ii 1 11 f; '1 i 1 ... . Jan iKatiil., e Peud to JeniM t)-t tat, orltM i(.Te t.ie BtaUiiiCuE I vl.fcl he was of Oypsy , parentage. '. Hp is , not a Bo hemian! and although of bumble birth, Is not aahimed of hla country or parents.--.-. V fc . - "The Romany peopljcame from Asia BOO , or 0 years agp,f he said, "and overran Hungary and Bohemia and have i roamed about these cfuotrlen ever since. I do not fhlnk that, (by chance, or oth- prwlse, thpsff Romany people, who aro . the true Gipsy typef have ver Inter married With people of consequence 3r become associated with the aristocracy of either Hungary Or Bohemia. They are to these countries what the Indians are to America as a; social or civilized factor; but Indians were aborigines, or original settlers, while the Gypsies of Bohemia were invaders -of the wander ing type and ave sothlng to do .wltl) Sil'l, THEN DIES Death in Awful Form Comes to Mountain'MaiJ Car- I . Her in Idaho.v - . ' J (United Pwss ttt vtrs.$"'"" ' Boise, .Idaho, Jan. ,1 WfUle attempt ing to carry the mall from Atlanta, to i Ilocky Bar In -Elmore , county, George eSflfrr was f rosea to death. He left VT chrintmnm dav and his body has iP found on " a -mountain-trail. It Jhis first trip over the mountains a mail carrier, jih milling iravtl tmnOBnihle. aicKinney apparenuy .. irauiwom th3 snow for two days and nights. He had been dead 14 hours when his body was found. y - McKInney was 88 yeara old. He came from Oregon last spring. )NEW YORK EAETH IS FiLLED WITH GARNETS : (Specttl DIrtch to The Jourwl.) New Tork, Jan. I. Ralph E. Morgan, young English mineralogist, who Is stopping at US East Fifty-second Btreet, was walking up Sixth avenue a, fw days ago.: Passing the sybiaytcB.vi-J tlon at Thirty-third sveeii.ne iatm,tt the treat nile of rock thai. a&Tbeen re moved, and then sudden picked up ope. J "a real ararneLVriie exclaimed. "V Investigation uroved that the rock were filled with garnets. Morgan I learned that . rocks and; efcrth. 'ttw from the subway excavation hiva jsten d umned at SheeDshead TAyt so he went there.- He found that the rocks were mm day in filled with re lea schist, in which the gar- nets are deposited. He, gathered several good specimens. He says there are mil- fions of garnets In the rock under New York, hut, as the stones are not of f f much value it would not pay to mine - for them. - .1 1 George F. Kuns, minerallst for Tlf- y Tan y, aavs he rouna a garnet specimen that weighed 16 pounds -at Thirty-fifth 1 , street and Tentn avenue a year ago. ILs)(E); Finds us still making medicines, which our family had been doing for more than half a century. It is our business to make medicines; and we congratu late ourselves, .at the beginning of another year, that our painstaking efforts to make the best medicines have been, from the firstrewarded by an appreciative public. tV Always pure, safe and beneficial, no changes have been 'necessary in Hood's Sarsaparilla or any of our other medi cines to comply with the Pure Food and Drugs Act practically anticipated by us years ago, in the origination of ' our. formulas. p In merit, sales' and cures, Hood's Sarsaparilla has far surpassed all other medicines, and the abiding confidence of - the people in t is the strongest proof of its unequalled merit 1 as a great blood-purifier, stomach, liver and kidney remgHy. i After being before the public more than a quarter of a century, its wonderful power tccure all blood diseases, to create a good appetite and dispel that tired feeling, and the confidence ot the people in its merit, are demonstrated by the fact that in recent years it has received more testimonials than yer before 40,366 in two years, by actual coiui t " No other medicine has held so prominent a . position in :-the medicmevorldior so long a'm.e.;Vj;;v No other medicine possesses so great merit hbr effects . such marvellous cures. ' ' ; , : ' . Grateful for your past patronage and . soliciting a con tinuance thereof, we are, ,' A . Very truTyours, : 1 1 ; - I C. I. HOOD CO., Lowell, Mass. of His Bohemian Parentage, the government of the country, and they are not absolutely interested in it or Its advance, nor have they contrlbut ed to art or literature. "I am not shamed of the fact that my father wae a good, but humle cltt aen of Bohemia: a self-taught man and a musical genius, who was forced, .by reason of circumstance, to be a gar dener, but do not mistake me, he was not Gypsy. He thought that my elder hrnther was 'the musician of the lam ily, but soon gave him up in that line and devoted his attention to me I hav ing attained the dlsrnlty of my fifth year and manifesting marked taste for music. After he had labored with me for a year he concluded to send me to an advanced teacher: but- that not the auestion-rl am not a Gynav, but a true, full-blooded Bohemian, and this mistake, which Is now being, cir culated of my life, .should be corrected at once. FOUND WITH HIS HEAD BLOWN OFF Mystery Surrounds Death of Bert Brown, Near Fendle -fton-- Theory Suicide. . ,V"-'-': v : v T (Spertil Dlnpatch to the JoBfotl?) Cr " Pendleton, Or., Jan. jflBert Bfvn, middle-aged and slngif, wa found this morning with his. heed blown ' off by a charge from a -shotgun, on the road about nine miles south of Pendleton. Brown had been attending a dance last night In Coombs canyon and this was the last seen ot, him. No trouble occurred at the dance and Brown had not been drinking, consequently mys tery surrounds the affair. It is not yet known whether the case is one of suicide or murder, but It Is believed to be suicide. .(Joroner Folsom has gono to the scene and an Investigation is being made, NEW OFFICE GIVEN TO LIEUTENANT BURT (United Frnt Ua4 Wire.) Port Townsend, Wash., Jan. 1. An nouncement was made here today pf the trratlon' of the office of assistant ad 3Aant pjtThe Puget sound artillery dis trict The new nlaca hna hn flllsd by the appAM)tmet of Lieutenant C. C. JBurt, who for tba'yast two yeara has een quartermaW the district with Headquarters at ort.'Worden. IJilIQIiD HOPS IN '7 JFrjYALLUP DISTRICT (United Preia Leiied Wire.) Tacoma. Wash.. Jan. 1. Hod crdwen of Washington are to organise, pool their product and hold the crop iorjih prices. A ineetins: will be helda1 id at the R. hall in Puyallup Saturda .v to get together and the men at-the head of the scheme have assurance of suc cess in the movement. BS-EHAVXUHO Is the greatest , lnvenlloo'' in modern dentistry and ha en most successful of all methods. , -( . . v. ' We extend to an a special wviiaiion to call at' our offlc and have their teeth, examined, free' oft charger- - - we own and'-control'. me targesi ana best eautnned dental eatabltshment In the world, having just opened an office in Astoria, mnklnir na 18 offices all told. we aive a written Kuarantee wim all work for 10 years. Lady attendant,! CHieAQO Painless Dentists SIXTH JUTS WA8BXV0T0V Be aura you are in the right place. shall not escape his lungs, . and every one is authority lor the statement tnai ne naa never felt better in his life. One beautiful surprise is in store for the boys from- "show me" land and that is the wonderful nuntlng of Clarke. Perhaps they will not be used to it early In, the game but before it is many minutes' old they will be much wiser. Clarke has the ability to execute 60 and 65-yard spirals with amazing fre quency. In several games hie record hag been reduced to an average of from 44 to 48 yards bat kicking out of hounds was responsible for this show ing. Had every one of Clarke's efforts lighted 'on the field his mark for the year Would have averaged well toward 40., yards on Wet . and dry. field. He kloka with -eMMal ability regardless) of the condition of the ovaV.-, . Schneider, who kicks for the envbryo doetors, established an average of 34 yards in the St. Louis-Washington state college game at Spokane Christmas day, his alx tries netting the Missouriarta 168 yards. This pales into insignifi cance when it-is remembered that in 13 tries in the Muttnomah-Seattle game Clarke annexed something like 1020 yarda, a trifle over 44 yards on an av erage. This wan done with a ball so slippery that the punter could hardly hold it. In the lineup it will be noticed how evenly the weight of the college men Is apportioned. The heaviest man Right Guard Hughes weighs 200 pounds, and the line proper averages .180 pounds, three of the men touching 185 and the center 198 pounds. The two wings are exactly even in weight, 170 pounds. Chandler, Multnomah's crack end, is now weighing about 1B6 pounds, while Klrby tips the scales at 175. Chandler, Btott and Lonergan are lighter than the lightest man of the visiting team, ex cept the midget quarterback. Here is the way the teams will line up, with their weights: Multnomah. fosltion. SL Loul. Chandler (166). ..LE R Kenny (170) Walker (232). ,..LTR.,.. .Lmb (185) McMillan 199)..LGR....lIurhea f2O0 Carlson (170) C Orr (198) Pllklngton tl78).RGL...Brennan (185) Pratt (207)... . . .R T L. . . .Depew (185) Kirby (175) REL Roche (170) Stott (160)........ Qj . ...Murphy (132) Clarke (182) L H R. ... .Acker (185) Lonergan ( 165). ".R H L. .Robinson (178) Rader (197) F... Schneider (184) Officials H. H. Herdman, referee; H. L, Corbett (Harvard), umpire; Clarence Mucklestone (University of North Da kota), head linesman; Archie Hahn (Michigan), field judge; Leo Wills, St. Louis, and fcrank Wa,tklns, timekeep ers. JAILED FOR STEALING COAL FB0M 0. R. & N. Echo Men Who Made Merchandise of Booty Get CO Days Hold up Suspects Released. (SpecUl DUpatcn to Tba Joaratl.) Pendleton,' Or., Jan, 1. N. Kctnan apdM. J. Glasson, both of Echo, wera placed In the county Jail today for stealing coal from O. K. & N. cars at Echo. They are under sentence to serve 60 days. They sold the coal to Echo citizens. Two men who weriHmspeeted of rob bing the Ripper store at Echo a few nlghta agfb of76 rere released last evening, as there "was not sufficient evi dence agatnat them. SCATTER SMALLPOX ALL ALONG THE WAY 'Special Dlipatcb to Tb Jon rail.) Walla .Walla. Wash., Jan. 1. His face ang body showing the effects of the dread disease: Rav r.nut an ts.v.or. Kpld aod of Fred Last of this city, who broke .quarantine at Tacoma last Prl- aay, was capiurea in walla Walla yes terday suffering ,from a well developed case of smallpox. Last was Immediate ly taken In charge by the health author ities and. placed in quarantine. The boy on his travels to Walla Walla has undoubtedly exposed s groat number of people. The police say he will be prosecuted for violating ha quarantine law, as aoon as he recovers. COOKE AND GIRL IN -. HIDING AT BAY CITY (SpecUl DUpatcn to Tba looraaL) San Francisco, Jan. l Although no trace of them can be found it Is be lieved that Rev. Jere Kode Cooke and Floretta WhaleV . are In hldlno- hra The police hope that the dispatch from Nf,7i Ha;ve1 saying Cooke'a wife isl willing to forgive him will bring him Aivm turn vviiumtnieni. ... . . . . -, Mrs.:. Cooke Is heartbroken over th airair ana declares thatniie story that theit life together was unliappyls ab solutcly false, gha brieves her hus band Is cruonted. - - . - TEAMS II colli (Continued from Page One.) GREATER SPKIAlSfw IHURS m 1 ' ' '..1 ' ' ' '1 ' 1 ' ' " ' ' 11 v'1 1 ' r " .' . I . i i . " .' 1 Two ;Very Special ' , ,i,'i 1 1 l ' IT T "' ' ii I, ..:ili4. . '''' ''f' ;' AN OPPORTUNE SALE Of CARPETS AN l M ATTI 40c and 50c MfVmNGS, Best Unen Warp, 22c a Yard 2,000 yards of this excellent Matting, all in the best carpet patterns; all 40c and 50c OOI grades gathered together in this sale at, yard v LLW REGULAR $1 .00 Every Carpet, every Pattern - -" v. $2.50 Umbrella RACKS $1.40 J hihc unmiiDc ; . IliilL HULUunu c f mn im ihnrnTh Police Record for December Shows Many Crimes and Few Apprehensions. . The report of the work of the police department for the month of December, compiled by Clerk Thomas Jefferson Casey and made public today, affords Interesting reading for those who are concerned with the ' suppression of crime and the enforcement of the law. As Is usual In , such records, -thl. ar rests for drunkenness. are more numer ous than for any other form of crime, as shown in the following comparative table: r Dec. .1907. Dec. 1908. Last. Month. Total number of arrests. 1,479 1,082 ' !'8S5 Arrested for Drunkenness. 539 45b 8'2 Of the more serious crimes reponea in h nniloA durlnr the month, as well as the number of arrests made In con nection with the same, a comprenensive estimate may be made by glancing at the following table: Crime. No. Reported. Arrests. Larceny j.i.iao a ftiirorlu tv .... . 19. ...a......... .3) Knn nnecKS n ............ v, Holdups. 9... 0 Obt. money by F. P. 1. 0 Green goods 1.. ...... ...... j Pickpockets lf.. ........... 0 Murders ....... In connection with the crime of lar ceny It should be stated. that one man arrested on such a charge may hava been guilty of committing two or, more of the cases reported. , .jUaay Xdfrs at JaU. '' Of tb total arrests made during the month 1,435 were males and 44 fe males. Of the total 335 were foreign ers, 45 male minora and 8 female min ors. Men to the number of 105 applied for and teceJved. lodgings at the city prison. Only ons female lodger was reported. Thirteen ; persons were : ar rested for violations of the Sunday closing law, as compared with nine ar rested during the previous month. For gambling 70men were arrested; having lottery tickets In their possession. 10; selling lottery tickets. 2 begging, 15; vagrancy, 392; keeping a lottery place, 2; visiting a lottery place, 35. According to th. report there were it a aninlriea. 27 Are alarms, 601 patrol wagon calls and 213 nuisance notices serva. . , . , , For the month the food bill for the inmates at the city prison WAS $276.80; at Kelly's Butte, 3205.28. v WHITMANjCOUNTY may FIRE HER ATTORNEY (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) Walla Walla, Wash., Jan. 1. Political circles are all agog over rumors that the county board of commissioners at next Monday's meetingmay decide to declare the office ot prosecuting attor ney vacant and appoint a successor to Attorney Rupp. Rupp was' elected on the Republican ticket last fall by the ef forts of .. the Boxers, immediately after taking of flna ha -ariDlled for a deoutv. and .hla partner. J. H. McDonald,: was appointed" at a salary or u a montn. it is nqw alleged that Rupp is devoting most of his time to 8eattfe practice. In fact has entered a big law firm in- that city, and la leaving tne duik oi tne prosecutin attorney's work to his deputy, althoua he continues to draw. his monthly salary "Of 3126. h' ;v- .--.,: ii v. f I.:.",- : Qeqrge Struthers, . the Democratlo chairman of the board, stated that at' the next meeting but whether it some acuon win oe taaen ty the board means that Rupp la to be removed or McDonnia is to De cut off as jleoutv. he would not state. In any event, the i:hfttfnianr says he - believes the work ran ba done by one-man, as it was un der the rearim of Lester 6. Wilson;- the Na 13-6-rSquare, 6-ft Extension TabIe;pA,bat .would be, aj-sur--prisingl good value at, $ 45 twice ythis; special. V ;,. O No 493-6 Excellent 'Pedestal hxtensih i able, m the golden uanerea iinisn ; a tapie mat fnot be t offered elsewhere under $25.00. Spc- J g JQ BRUSSELS CARPETS new and good. " Buy Carpets now . - i 011 at inese prices.- , , , , jSPEpiAIh Better, than clearance h'.'-iof. Ladies' Suits mm N III Strange Party Given bv Puget; Sound Association of the Deaf Last Night. (Catted Press teased Wire.) Seattle, Jan. 1. Deaf mutes from all over Puget sound gathered for New Year's eve festivities last night at the Labor temple. The occasion . was ' the first annual ball given by the Puget Sound Association of the Deaf,, and the program Included merry-making of a most unusual character. Waltzes,- twosteps and Virginia reels, all without music from piano, clarionet or cello, were carried off in almost perfect time and with a .spirit of vim strangely infectious to one familiar with thejsllent language of the fingers. Except for an occasional outburst of laughter the dance was gone through almost noiselessly. Mora than 50 members of the asso ciation were present, most of them deaf and .dumb, although some were deaf only. Membera were present from Ta coma. Bremerton, Anacortes and George town, while, one man came all the way from Butte. New Army Paymaster. (United Press Leased Wire.) Washington, D. C, Jan. 1. Colonel Charles H. Whipple, assistant pay. l Break-Down ' Nerve . energy; is ,tlia force that controls the or--gans of respiration, cir culation, digestion and elimination. iWhen you feel weak, nervous, irri table, sick,. it is often be cause "you lack nerve energy, and the, process .of rebuilding and sustain, ing ljfe is interfered with Dr. : iCles V Nervine : has cured thousands of f such cases, arid will we believe benefit it not entirely; cure you. Try.-it. '! ' "My - nervous ' system gavs away completely, and left mo on the verga :' of tha grave. I tried skilled physl- clans but got- no permanent relief... I got so badL I had to glve -WOT.-business. I began taking Dr. Miles' ReatoraUvs Nervine. In a few days I was much better, and I continued to improve until entirely oured. I ; am. In business agairtirand Tiever miss 4 an opportunity, to jjreooromend . this - remedy.". - MRS. W. j BURKB. ' i: ' . vo-.-. t' Craek, Oregon. , - Youf 'dnig'fllst sails Dr.' Miles' Nery. Ina, and va authorlzs him to return price of flrtt bottle (only) If . It falls . to benefit you.. ...... ' - - " Miles Medical Co:, Elkhart, Tnd ' HHTPQr-UlAI T7 : ILU IfflLIL iTiihiiT iumnin v muui iiiudiu Nervous FRLORlROCKEMl No. 701-3-A- Rockerthat" fo appear ance, durability and cofrifort cannot be duplicated under. $3.25 to $3.50 and even more. . Buy one now, and the d r a price- : . . , .... ..... M DU AT 59c A YARD ) and' save H ALP. Note All Carpets sold "cut prices on ourjiew and modern stocks and Garments '-"X.. master' general f the army,, was todaJ promoted to the rankvof brigadier gen eral and made paymaster general, 'to succeed Paymaster General Sniffed The "new paymaster general Is the son of Bishop I Whipple of the Episcopal diocese of Minnesota, who was known generally as "the apostle of the In-1 -BEGIN START190d ELECTRIC Have yoiir premises wired, make a New Year's resolution that 1908 shall be an Electric Year in your household as well as in your store, and prepare to. enjoy the convenience, the labor saving, the healthfulness, ithe , safetyrthe?cbnom and the r prosperity that attends the use " of Electricity, 1 : f r,: vlil 5 Makelybur place of business bright witli Electric Light, and don't neglect the Electric Sign; and you will keep Jbusy; Lightl is the ihagnet that attracts trade; Resolve'1 to make you wife happier by giving her the con- , veniences of arrEIectric Sewing Machine, an Electric Flatiron t and Electric cooking and beating devices Electric applfeihces cost r Jittle to use, but. ad much to; comfort The. Electrical way is; thfe Economical way. Reduced rates for current on metfer basis. : . 7 ' Call Miin : 6685; or A6 13 1 forf tnforniatioa f iPortlahd Railvvay, Light ; Ga Power .r FIRST AND X ' ', v. I it: ' IN1HARD NGS ASK TO . SEE OUR. SEWING MACHINES flians." ; General Whipple, was born Jn. . New Ifark in 1819, end entered the arm as a major and paymaster In 1881. Hf has had important duties devolving upon him. , including service on the Indian frontier. In - the v Philippines,? Porto Rico and-Cuba: He will serve as'- Faymaaterv general of ihe army until 9l3.-;',--ni ' ': ' V: WITH- LIGHT r Company RIGHT ALDER S TREETS v ttl v I