Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1908)
' 13- t- V" - T ' J. ' V THE, OREGON. SUNDAY. jbuRNAU, -PORTLAND. SUNDAY! MORNINO. MARCH 1, 1908.' . s C. : FTttE IN; TOP OF EIFFEL TO WKR ii4mencan Man Pronounced , Dead by Physicians Comes to Life . and Says He Enjoyed Brief Eest From the Cares of the World. v ' ' (doited Prtn lmt Wlr. Minneapolis. Feb. 29 special to TM .Journal from Albert Lea, Minne ota. ay: , . . -"Dvinr l --Imply delightful." O. . Olberf.-.0f Albert Lea, says bo and he outcht to know lor lie has had the unique experience of being pronounced ' dead , by ' Physicians, xweniyiu ram . ft.rwird he astonished 'the ur- c eons by cmlnir to. life again,, and he i now apparently as wen as ever, "It is a strangely pleasant experi ence," aald Oibers today. "If It, really feels like that to die, one might wish for nine lives. Ilka a cat Dying would be as pleasant a sensation as one1 could know. I felt no pain at all. It seemed much like the sensation I experienced once when I tooK ether. The feeling when his heart stopped r. as trie cnysicians -testify 11 ly did for 6 minutes, is dtffl ; heatin actual cult for Olberg to describe, but he says it is a delightful sense of relaxation, as if the soul were leaving the body. The physicians said death was caused by rheumatism of the' heart. LOS ANGELES WANTS INSURANCE AGE TS People . Indignant Because President Edwards flights , - City on Pacific. , Ban Francisco, Feb. 29. Los Angeles and San Francisco life insurance agents strongly resent the efforts being made by President Edwards of-the. National Association of Life , Underwriters to change the meeting place of the 1903 convention from. Los , Angeles to some eastern city. The action of the president of the national body is taken as an affront to the whole western group, .and the rais ing of - the 4 question , of changing the meeting place. U accepted as evidence that the, whole agitation Is simply a preconcerted fforito dlverti,the con ventitVi from Los Angeles. A committee of the Los Angeles as sociation, composed of T. J. Numa, C. S, Montgomery,J. W. Whlttlngton and F. N. Coffin, is sending out a letter to th rresldents of the association' through exercn unchanged And .arguing strongix?,'!? out th country, calllnr for the exercise of influence to leave the meeting place need of the far west in the matter of life Insurance organization. After the lapse of five months, when nearly an or. the most important lea . tures Of the - gathering have been ar- , ranged ror, to wunaraw lime, they . claim, even if it were feasible, would work Irreparable Injury to the prestige of the association in its home .community .. . But. further than that It Is felt that the sole reasons advanced. namely,"hard times," is not made wholly in good faith. s BECOKD IS JIADE BY . AMERICAN GUNNERS " " ' . " MHMrst IteWs by Lontnt lu4 Wire.) "s Washington. D. C, Feb. 29. Everyone irrthe navy department congratulated everyone else to- day when a report was received 4 of the .' target practice of the e .Pennsylvania on January 21 in r Magdalena bay, which shows '"4hat the eight-inch guns of the -.afteriturret tnade a record of 25 hits out of . 25 shots at 1,(00 4 -to-3,600 -yards, - The rate of fir- ing was 2.8 minutes per gun. 4 (? ' '-.,'" ' i " -, i c .... . -!.94f tfvioi;: lillllliittltSililSltoif ilillBiliiiiSSlI 3 4 m 1. pas j; iteOS-r;--.;.; ; xi!ii;iirsiisifajf Restaurant posnnk sxiib' a odvox CTsl OFW DAT; ATOWOW. v'-f.; Dinner from 11 a. m. 'to S p. ' m. ? Special Chicken Dinner' on Sunday, 3dc - . Cream of chicken soup' ' Boast chicken or chicken not pis .. Potatoes and one vegetable ; Dessert and cofree '' Dining room for ladies - snrvEB Bm or pabh. Chicken oup free with meals -Lobster salads mayonnaise dres sing . XQt lo ... 2o of sole, Tartar Steamed Little Neck clams ZC 1 Fried halibut ., Fried salmon . . . Fried ' tenderloin sauce . . Boiled mackerel, drawn butter Half cracked crab 50 Flr in. the wireless telegraph' plant In the top of the Eiffel Tower, Paris, recently, made the small blaze In the fortieth story of the Singer building a few days ago an insignificant affair. The New York skyscrapes is, 612 feet higli, while the Eiffel Tower Is 984 feet high. There" was little in the top of the tower to burn, however, and the flames were , Quickly and easily extinguished by the attendants. OU T BATTLE FOR ttffS WEALTHY 1IEXICAN MYSTERIOUSLY KILLED , . ' . Clayton." "If. M Feb.-29. Caido Oar rla, one of the' wealthiest Mexican stock growers la this section" of the south west, was ' shot and . almost instantly killed from ambush yesterday after noon at 2:30-o'clock. The body was dis covered s on the- public road. An at 'tempt, however, ! was made to hide tie Lu! Bapcfees, ei fsieipbor'Af Garcia, has been taken" Into custody on suspl oion. There Is "said to have been an old feud between the . Sancnez arxl Garcia families. Sanchez has not satisfactorily explained bis whereabouts at the time nr f he murder. - Garcia was very dodu- lar, and there are threats- of lynching. I Oriental Bank- Magnates Op - pose Plan for Perma nent Receivership. . (United Preu Leased Wirt.) New York, Feb. 29. A redhot court battle, with millions Involved, is to bo the result of Attorney-General Jack son's attempt to throw into the hands of permanent receivers the Oriental -and Merchants & Traders banks, as indi cated by today's proceedings. Powerful financiers are interested in the banks and are opposing the receiverships, Jackson says their plans for liquidation are neither legal r.or satisfactory and win press tne receiversnip. -- First blood was scored for thf finan ciers late- this afternoon when art order was. secured from Justice Platzesl dl recti ii it Jackson to show cause before Justice Gorman on "TuesilJir why- the Oriental reclvrhlp should not be va cated on -representations of attorneys of the Metropolitan Trust company, winch has arranged to tqfce over the Oriental's affair a The- attorney-general, however, in stituted proceedings resulting in the ap pointment or James ts. t ora and Henry Haggerty as receivers of the Merchants & Traders bank. HONOR MEMORY Leap Year at Hood River. (Special ninpntrh to -The .TnnrnaL) Hood River. Or , Feb. 29 A large number of Hood Klver's young ladles gave a leap year c'unce last night at the opera houne. The ballroom was handsomely decorated. About 40 cou ples were present. A constitutional amendment designed to disfranchise the colored voters has been pnssed by the Maryland legisla ture and will be submitted to the peo ple for ratification at the general elec tion next year. The amendment pro vides for an educational or property qualification. OF DEAD PRIEST h ii ii ii i People of Paterson . Turn Out in Force at Funeral of Father Heinriehs, (United Pres Letsed Wirt.) Paterson, N. J., Feb. 29. To show their horror at the killing of Father Heinriehs at, the, altar of his Denver church by an .anarchist, the people of Paterson today turned out in great num bers to meet the body of th stain priest. So large was the crowd that the police were called in from their posts and massed about the railroad station and along the streets through which the body was carried to an undertaker's. The monks intended to hold a service on the arrival of the- body, but the tremendous crowd turned the affair Into a great public demonstration. Father Heinriehs had lived In Paterson. MINE MEN INJURED . , IN 'BK00KLYN PLANT 3Q eZ5 Clam bouillon. With toast Boiled beef tongue and spinach Chicken Dot pie Fried calves' brains. Poulette sauce Stuffed Dork tenderloin and sweet potatoes ?Q4 Creamed. Olympia oysters on toast 2Ke Lamb cutlets a la Duchess 25 Casseroles of sweetbreads Q$4 Veal -sausage and rice 20c Pickled lambs' tongue and potato B.I.J " 9l.i .aw romesRIea of ' chicken. Hanover sauce 25 Stewed cod fish, family style Corn beef hash and poached egg Beef stew and vegetables 16c Pork and beans 15 Half spring chicken' on toast ...504 Baked apple dumplings, cream sauce 15t Side order apple dumpling 54 Roast -turkey and cranberry sauce 3 IS Roast chicken and dressing 304 Roast veal and dressing ' Roast pork, and dressing 204 Roast beef and brown gravy xoc Roast lamb and Jelly. '. 204 Prime ribs of beef .254 Sliced tomatoes 1K4 I-ettuce 1 Celery 104 Side order sweet potatoes 1U4 - Fried parsnips 5 spinach Sauerkraut 54 Coffee, bread and but ter and potatoes -with all meals. Din ner from 11 a. m. to 8 p. m. 1 . ' , mm !,""" TV-' WBmm THREE filEII ARE , KILLE0JH FIGHT Kentuckians Battle Over Quarrel Which Started Among Children. (United Pren LeaMd Wlrs.) Evelyn, Ky., Feb.. 29. Three men were killed -and, a fourth mortally wounded in ,a battle with six-shooters, following a quarrel in the lumber camp of Congleton and Williams, on Ross creek, near here. John Hamilton, James Bowles, Rich ard Splcer and George L. Fraxer had been working with, about 70 men haul ing lumber. The Bowles and Splcer children had fallen out and the men came to blows. The men quarreled later over the -matter as they worked. Finally Bowles whipped out a pistol and began firing. He killed. Hamilton Instantly and. shot Splcer in the leg. By this time Splcer had out his pistol and was firing at Bowles, when Frazer Joined in the shooting. When the smoke of -battle cleared away It was found that Splcer was dead and Bowles had been killed by a bullet through the heaxt' Frasar was shot through the lower abdomen and will die. (United Preu by Specltl Leued Wire.) New York, Feb. 29i In an explosion In the .National Sulphur company's mill In Brooklyn, nine employes were terri bly burned and lacerated. A driver of a passing truck was struck and his skull was fractured by a section of the roof which was blown off the building. The xactory was burned, with a loss of about $100,000. 1 he employes were at work in the milling section grinding the sulphur when it Is supposed a spark from one of the grinding machines ignited the owder sulphur, causing a series of eavy explosions. 'The men Thomas Ho-rarty. Thomas Smith, Alfred Moore, William McCul lough. Robert Kerr. William Dischend. Jeremiah Egan and Thomas Wilger were found unconscious by the other mm employes, who rushed Into the mill ing room arter. tne explosion. LACE, HOUSE, LAUNDRY Gentlemen's Linen a Specialty Strictly High-Grade Hand Work Puones A1784 Main 1784 CURT MULLLR, Prop. 26 North Twentieth Street Near Washington CATHOLIC PRIEST IS THREATENED Cincinnati Clergyman Noti fied .That He Will . Be Killed at Church Today. (Cnlted Pren LetMd Wire.) Cincinnati, Feb. 29. Ths threat of meeting the fato of Father Leo Heln rieha. the Xlatholie priest Killed at Den ver last Sunday, if he appears In his church tomorrow, has been made against Father Mulvlhlll, pastor of the largest ustnonc cnurcn in Cincinnati. The threat came In a letter to the priest today signed "Rysn." It declared Father Mulvlhlll will be killed if he tries to officiate at the Sunday serv ices. . A guard was at once placed over St. Paul's cathedral, of which Father Mul vlhlll is in charge, by the police, to" whom tne getter was given. As a re sult, about a dozen strangers who en tered the cathedral and acted suspi ciously were arret). ea lomgni All were foreigners. They, however, were re leasea. ilRlsTs YOUNG GILLETTE Will Appeal to Authorities for Clemency for Boy Condemned to Death. (United Preu Leased Wire.) Auburn, N. T., Feb. 29. With iron barn intervening to prevent them from ever shaking the hand of the son they naa traveled so rar to greet and a sud den shutting off of all view of their loved one. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Oll- Lletta -of . .Denver.- Colorado. paid a nu.-. thetlc visit this afternoon to Chester K. Gillette, condemned to die during the week of March 30 for the murder of his sweetheart, Grace Brown. On Its conclusion Mrs. Gillette, Who is leading the fight for her son's free dom, announced that an appeal for ex ecutive clemency in Chester's behalf will be made. The legal flbt has prac tically been abandoned. Although the elder Gillette is la poor health, he Insisted on making the trip irom uoiorauo io visit nis son and to assist Ms wite in seeking clemency for tne cu'iuemnea youtn. PORTLAND MAN HURT JUMPING OFF TBALN . (SpecUl Dispatch to Toe Journal.) Hood River, Or., Feb. 29. Arthur Mc Henry of Portland is a patient in the Cottage hospital here as- the result of an attempt to-allgbt- from a mo v lag passenger train while it was passing over the bridge across the Hood River yesterday.. McHenry jumped from the train when it was near one of the abut ments to the bridge and fell 40 feet to the srround. In the fall one of bis legs was badly fractured, his head cut and several, teeth knocked out. Jt- is feared he may also - bava sustained internal j Injuries, - , - ;- - - , - - The Columbia the men of Portland to inspect the largest and finest line of high class fabrics in the west All the New Season's Nobbiest Effects the pick arid the best of : them. Men who appreciate exclusiveness, style and character in their attire, will find everything that is commendable in the splendid gathering of. new Spring Woolens, now ready for their selection at this store. We have outdone all previous efforts, for we have a larger line than ever before the largest in the Westwe are confident and we believe it is beyond comparison and the finest ever assembled on the North Pacific Coast. The new novelties, new grays, blues, browns and green mixtures are all shown in bewildering array. The staple lines, as heretofore, are complete in every weave and shade. Columbia Tailoring means more this spring tfcan before. It has established itself by reason of high "quality of fabrics, splendid workmanship, invariably perfect fit, satisfactory wear and all round superiority. Last, but not least, the popular prices of Colum bia Tailoring have had much to do with attaining its position of supremacy. SUITS $20 TO $50 TROUSERS $4 TO $12 DRESS SUITS $45 UP GRANT PHEGLEY, ' Manager USE THIS COUPON We wish to thoroughly test the advertising value of ' this newspaper. For three days Monday, Tuesday and Wednes daywe will accept this coupon for Y $5.00 Instead of Cash toward the payment of any suit or overcoat ordered durinp these three Ha vs. No ifs. ands or huts ahnut It You must present this coupon when you place your order? If you do not bring the coupon along, there will be no allow ance. - While this will be expensive advertising for us, we pro pose to ascertain how many people read this paper today and are willing to benefit by it . Now, let's hear from you,. gentlemen! 7th and Stark READ THE . COUPON IF YOU WANT TO Sll THE NEWEST IN WEARING .APPAREL VISIT THE STYLE STORE DISTINGUISHING CHARACTERISTICS . That Win Instant Approval Are the Charming Feature! of the New Spring Tailor Made Suits, Coats and Princess Costumes - WE NOW SHOW The modified Prince Chap Suit in single and double' breasted, in fine striped materials, in blue, brown, gray, tan and Copenhagen. Kange in prices from... $20.00 Tailor-made Suits in fine worsteds,-in plain colors, checks and shadow stripes ; coats lined with satin or taffeta ; skirts eithei' plaited or gored. Range in prices from. , $28.00 r"" ja-" i $25.00 Madam Butterfly Models Choicest novelties of the season, . i 1 j ' i in DiacK, navy, reseaa, green, Drown ana copennagen ; beautifully trimmed. Range in prices from Spring Coats in fine broadcloth, covert and diagonal worsteds, lined with taffeta and strap -trimmed ; -made in full and half box effects and semi-fitted. Fnces trom. .- itSs $16.00 We show a complete assortment of Lace Coats, dainty de signs fn silk braid, Renaissance lace mounted over taffeta, in black, white and brown, at very popular prices. Besides high quality, artistic tailoring and moderate prices, we extend . You are privileged to have your outfit charged to .your account and pay in, small weekly or monthly payments. No charge for credit accommodation. Other dress acces sories displayed in abundance. Credit If Desired MOVENT SKIRTS Simple, practical transforming. Just what you have been look ing or just what Fashion de mands. No bent buttons, tapes nor hooks and eyes. It adjusts itself Snugly tb the waist and stavsJn nlace about the hina without a wrinkle or fold. Made in various grades. Kange in prices from $2.00 to $9.00 EASTERN0UT The StoreWhere Your fredit Is Good v --tr-ar--- Kloslil pATfKTto Juki 4, 1907 Petticoat' Designed for women who wish to be correctly -dressed. Side gores fit rightly over the hips. PITS WITHOUT A WRINKLE . Made- of rustling Tafiena or best quality. Taffeta Prices $1.00 to $9.00. Displayed In Petticoat. Department COR. WASHINGTON AND TENTH an