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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (March 27, 1908)
1 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAU PORTLAND, " FRIDAY ' EVENING, MARCII 12 IS. Ill TROUBLE HUH STORE CLOSES ON SATURDAYS AT SIX O'CLOCK Manicurist Given Oil in Jail 1 . in Lieu of Kail ' Money. "'In default of $1,000 ball Mn. M. L. i' Crawford occupies a cell at th. city ' , rrlaon under a charg. of attempting " ..' n rfiannu of a nlnno not her own. Sh. V fc.s asked for and received permission . to delay making her defense until Mon- day. at which time she will be given a , preltmiaary hearing " The complainant In the f-aee Is Mar tin Johnson, who alleges that lie Hold ',Xfi. Crawford a piano on the Install ment plun. she maktnf an initial pay , ruent of 5. He further alleges that the woman traded the piano for another :? Instrument and then nttemptod to sell the second piano. The technical 01 ; . fens charged is larceny by bailee. Mrs. Crawford, who la a professional - rnunlcurlM and maintains offices In the ' Ks'.elgh building, is not unknown to the local authorities. Her. name has ' figured prominently in several police re porta during the past two years, but ao , lit aa is Known ana naa never -Deiore Leon legally deprived of her liberty for ' more than a few hours at a time, a man named Phllbrook at one- time waa ' arrested In connection with a visit he . had made to ijhe apartments of Mrs. Crawford, but nothing- cam of the ' charge- on account of the revelations . that were made when the police insti- tuted an investigation. The esse waa quashed and finally lost sight of wlth ' out any prosecution being Instituted. ' A few months ago Mrs. Crawford ; Igured prominently In a report made ' to the police concerning an attempt made to cash a check for a considerable aunt at the office of the Imperial hotel. ' The attempt jo get. the. money came to nothing because of the caution of the cashier of. the hotel and no criminal J prosecution was ordered Instituted. TEDDY in FIST u FIGHT President Roosevelt and Con 1 gressman Diekema Nearly Come to Blows. Tomorrow's bargain items will prove unusually attractive to thrifty Saturday shoppers--the following with the exception of one special being subject to delivery at our earliest convenience and for which mail, telephone, or C. O. D. orders will not be accepted. ', 0 it 5fi CENTER TABLE Tomorrow at $1.90 In the cjuarter-sawed golden oak, pol ished finish, with twenty-four inch top and large lower shelf. The legi are smoothly turned and the design is exceptionally good value, even at the regular selling price of $3.25. One only to each customer at tomorrow's special price. BUTCHER KNIVES 15C ILAClri 150 these Knives are offered tomorrow in the Base ment department at this special they are 1P; Inches long and made of high grade steel; the handles being of, hardwood. A knife that sells regularly for 33c. One only to each customer and no deliveries,. 200 Pairs Cluny Lace Curtains $3.00 Values 'for $1.75 Pair $3.50 Values for $2.75 Pair Tomorrow in the Drapery Department a special lot of these Window Hangings in ecru tints all 40 inches wide and 24 yards long with Cluny edgings and in sertions. Take advantage' of this sale for selecting ydnr new spring window hang ings. - $5.00 Values for $3.25 khd 30x60 AXMINSTER RUGS ' nAf C? ul. . In. a variety of new patterns and Vtr pleasing color combination rich ef- .-.f- fect in green, brown, blue, red and - " ' i i i "' tan. Special tomorrow in the Drapery Department sixth floor. You Cain Make Mbriefc Buying RailwpAddiima Lois Will Double in Value r In 1908 WILL YOU INVEST YOUR MONEY WHERE IT WILL DOUBLE OR BETTERIN VALUE IN A SHORT TIME? 11 MORE BLOCKS NOW OPEN. FOR YOUR INSPECTION Inside Lots, each Corner Lots, each - - S- 85 - - $100 $10 Down, $5 a Month Will bay you a choice lot in one of the, most ideal and pictur esque suburban tracts of Portland. Telephone Bonds, Savings Accounts Accepted at Full Valuation - IMPROVED STREETS, Sc CAR SERVICE. Good soil. Title guaranteed perfect. . No building restrictions. Immediate possession. AGENTS AT TRACT ALL DAY SUNDAY Take Montavilla car at corner Third and Morrison streets; get off at corner Villa and Hlbbard streets, Montavilla branch of fice; for further particulars call office 231 C P. WELLS Worcester Building. Phone M. 3233. (Calttd Frwa Ltuad Wlr. ) t ' WMhlntton. March 27. That Prtsl dent Roosevelt and Representative . Diekema of Michigan shook their flats - at each other In a rcoent argument over the Wllfley case and reached a point In the squabble where it looked as 'though an actual fight could not be , averted Is the substance ot a report - that leaked out today. The president had sent for Diekema, ; who la a membec of the Judiciary com mittee which- was investigating charges against united states judge wntley at ; Miangnai, to mrorm mm that the com mittee was altogether too officious in the matter. The president told the , Michigan legislator that he thought the committee had gone further Into the case than It had been Instructed to. ' Representative Diekema is said to have retorted warmly, whereupon both men lost their temper, according to the report, and shook their list in ei other's face. Neither could convince ' the other that he waa rlaht and finally Diekema rushed from the White House In an excited frame or mind. "The Malleable" Range Riveted together like a boiler will last a lifetime. llJMLf S? IBB' ICOMPLETE:H0U5E:FURm5HER5S HMl 1 Mission Screens Special $5.00 Regular $9.50 values, 3-panel size, solid oak frames, burnt decorations Astoria's Registration. (Special DUpatoh to The Journal) Astoria. Or.. March 27. The res-Is . tratlon of voters at the county clerk's ! ornco nas reacned z.ioo, wwen is about 600 below the complete registration two years ago. How I Took My Wrinkles Out Attar racial Uaasage, Creams and Beauty Doctors Kad railed. .BY HABBIXTT KBTA. . Troubla, worry and Ill-health brought me deep lines and wrinkles. I realised ' that they not only greatly marred my ' appearance and tnads me look much older, but tht they , would greatly ln- terfere with my success,, because a wo man's -success, either socially or finan cially, depends very largely on her ap .t''; searance. The homely woman, with deD lines and furrows In her face, must fight "an unequal battle with her younger and better looking sister. I therefore bought various brands of ' cold cream and skin food and mas saged my face with most constant reg ularity, hoping to regain my former ap pearance. But the wrinkles simply would not go. On the contrary, they seenjeil to get deeper, Next I went to -.' 'a beauty epeclalist, who told me she could easily rid me of my wrinkles. I jiald my money and took the treatment. j' tiometlmes I- thought they got less, but after spending all the money I could " afford for tuirh treatment I found I, k: still had my wrinkles. So I gave up In ' despair nd concluded I must carry them to my grave. One day a friend of mln! who wars versed in chemistry made a suggestlon.'and this gave me a hew idea- I hnmeidiately -went to work' making experiments and studying every- thing J cojid get hold of on thl sub- 6 Jeet After several long months of al Xnost numberless' trials and discourage ments I finally discovered a process which produced most astounding results i On my wrinkles in a single night. I waa Qelighted beyond expression. I tried my treatment again, and, lo and be . hold, my wrlnklea were practically gone. , n A third treatment three nights In all '' nd I had no wrinkles and my face vnas as smooth as ever. I next offered . my treatment to some of my immediate friends, who used it with surprising re , aults, and I have now decided to offer j . . it to the pubHfc Mhwr XtlzWT Tiesmond of Pittsburg,; Pa., writes that it made , her Wrinkles disappear in one night. - Mrs. J. E. Black of Tonkers, N. Y., says that when she looks In the glass she scarcely., mows 'herself, the improve- HJBMU OUT OF Nil PACIFIC (Continued from Page One.) Union Pacific stock went to pay the de mands of the banks. Securities and Control. With these Union Pacific aecurltles went the control of the great railroad holding company, and Mr. Harrlman's resignation was a part of the bargain driven by Mr. Morgan. It Is said that Harrlman's bankers, Kuhn. Loeb Sc Co.. assented and even favored the deal, and that they fully share tM views of Mor gan, Rockefeller and o hers as to the wisdom of retiring Harrlman from the forefront It is believed that public feeling against Harrlman's roalroad pol icies has been very largely responsible for the widespread movements in leg islation antagonistic to railroads, and In the enactment of rats bills, two-cent fares,- reciprocal demurrage and general railroad commission regulations, in aa dltlon these movements have had the ef fect of destroying the confidence of the nubllo In railroad securities, not because of any doubt of their value and earning power, but because of public suspicion as to the administrative honesty of those in oontrol of the railroads. Xellen's Appointment. The appointment of Mr. Mellen as president of the Union Pacific is ex pected to do great tnings lor tne rail road concerned, as he In in favor with President Roosevelt, and Is also regard ed as on aggressive ana able railroad executive. Mr. Mellen's relations with J. J. HU1 form an Interesting phase of the situation. It is said Mellen Is not on the best of terms with the Hill people. when Mellen was president of the Northern Pacific and was doing yeoman service to put the road on a paying basis after the receivership, ha was obliged to fight a combination be tween Hill and Harrlman, with the Great Northern on one side of his territory and the O. R. & N. lines on the other side. Hill and Harrlman had entered Into a comnact to build down the .north bank of the Columbia river and squeeze Mellen's road off the map, as It were, when Hill suddenly obtained control of the Northern Pacific, removed Mellen. and broke his pact with llnrrlmnn. the ultimate result being the construction of a Joint line by Great Northern and Northern Pacific down the north bank of the Columbia. Mellen went to the New Tork. New Haven & Hartford. with no pleasant feelings toward J. J. Hill, and It Is believed he hns not un dergone any considerable chanuro of sentiment. Mr. Mellen has for some years been In the service of railroad interests con trolled by J. P. Morgan & Co , and he has eminently 'made good." He is re garded by the Morgan crowd as one of the world's ablest railroad men. His policy with the Union Pacific Is expect ed to De an aggressive one. The new alignment of TTnlon Pacific .financial interests, will It Is said, strengthen the road, and materially as sist la. thm recovery of Its former strong position as a money getter. It Is believed the Morgan rule will Immediately result in the supplying of tne necessary money 10 continue me great program of expenditures and Im provements that Harrlman two years ago undertook in the northwest and laid down when the financial stringency of last year struck'hls banking friends and forced him to abandon construction of half a dosen biar railroad construction projects In Oregon and WashlnRton. GOOD CITIZENS NAME TICKET AT W00DBUKN (Special DUpatcb t The Journal.) Woodburn, Or.. March 27. The fol lowing Oopd Cltisens' ticket was nomi nated In this city last night for con sideration by the voters at the munici pal election April 8: R. H, Boott, mayor: R. M. Henks and I W. Durant, councilmen; P. A. Livesley. recorder; 6. C. Berry, treasurer; Kugene Moah berger, marshal. DEMOCRATIC PARTY (Continued from Page One.) its regjp- 23.120; W. W. Meyers, Socialist. JJM: and In the second district W. R. Ellis, Republican. 28,816; J. H. Graham, Dem ocrat, 12,161; A. M. Paul, Socialist, 3, 632;' H. W. Stone. Prohibition. 2,404. Hopeless Battle for Democrats. At that election the Democratic party through Us nominees, Galloway and Graham, polled a total of 81.491 votes or morn than 26 per cent of the total of 03.461 cast for all the candidates combined. Coming now to the present situation confronting the Democratio party It Is safe to presume that the vote for con- Jressmen will be at least as beavy next une as It waa two years ago. There Is no doubt but that the increase In population within the past two years will make It much larger, and on aome handa it la claimed that the already great divergence between the Republic an and Democratic vote throughout the state has been Increased by th tratlon and increase. With this condition and assumption it Is conservative to presume that the vote for congressmen throughout the state will be at least a total of 98,461, what It was two years ago. There Is to be a Democratio nominee in the second district, two candidates for the nomina tion having made their appearance. In order for this nominee to be able to sarve the Democratio party from fin official death for three years It would be necessary for him to get approxi mately 23,365 votes out of the second district and against the Republican nominee. , Two years ago the candidate for th second district, Mr. Graham, polled oniy ii.ioi votes, wnue Kins, tne pres ent congressman from the second dis trict polled 28,316. Unless the Democratio nominee this year should receive twice the vote given to Graham two years ago which Is so Improbable that it does noT-Deserve consideration the fate that threatens the party cannot be averted. Today Is the last day on which can didates for congress can file their dec laration of intention and their petitions with the secretary of state. It would be a matter of impossibility for any candidate to now be placed on the nom inating ticket. There is no other way which a DemBcratlo candidate can placed on the ticket in June. There by w. be Tore the Democratio party will have to go Into the battle with a representative In only the second district. Oeaaea to Be a Twxtj. Because bf this condition the Demo cratic party will be compelled to take Its place alongside the Prohibition and the Socialist parties In its consideration by the primary law Just as soon as the votes are counted in June. It will have to stay there until it can secure 26 per cent of the total vote for congressman and there will be no opportunity until the general election In June, 1910. Between June, 1908, and the first mu nicipal elections following the general election of June, 1910. therefore, the only way the Democratio party of the state can be represented In politics will " vr me oia convention system, which has been left to parties or organizations polling less than 26 per cent of the vote. ii is proviaea in me airect primary law that all parties that do not poll 25 per cent or tne total vote for congress men may place their nominee on the official ballot in June after their nomi nation by a convention regularly called In accordance with the provisions of Bellinger and Cotton's code. It will be necessary therefore for the Democratio party to follow this system until after the June election in 1910 If at that time the Democratic con gressional nominees poll 26 per cent of the total vote the party will come back Hood River Bargains ; 16.Q0 TTM ACB 640 acres In Wallowa county, Oregon, carrying (. 000,000 saw timber; Improved. This Is about one-third of Its real value at the present time, and It will go to f IS per acre inside of two years. Wo have logged-off land In Washington running from S2.50 per acre up. $250040 acres fine garden soil, 1.600,000 feet fir timber, water on land, road around entire place, 11 miles from Portland; $1,000 down, balance time at per cent interest. 260 ACBES of land, 180 under cultivation, level, no waste, all fenced and crossed In seven different fields, about 40 acres standing timber; H mlle to railroad station; rural route and telephone; the buildings con sist of 2 barns, large wagon shed and all other outbuildings neces sary; 8 good wells and a 10-room house, the most beautiful home In Marion county: lota of fruit of all kinds In orchard. This beautiful and Ideal farm will be sold for S45 per acre, complete In every detail; 84,600 cash, balance time. Have a farm to trade for house and lot, or I have acre tracts on electric road not far from city to trade for house. SI8OO 72 acres, 6 miles east of Oregon City; 8 acres of orchard, 15 . acres cleared. Get busy on this It's a anap. 17BO HO acres, JO miles from Portland, near Scappoose, Or., with tie timber and cord wood; a fine farm and dairy land after Umber Is cut off. We Have Lots In All Parts of Portland for Sale 833.O00 I-1" on th Bt" unimproved. Income being 82,100 per year; H cash, balance time. This lot will be held at 866,000 Inside of three years. We have homestead and timber relinquishments and some snaps In timber lands. If you have any property to sell, writ us. If you have any trades you want to make, write us. If you want to buy, get our list J. W. CURRAN CO. 235 Failing BItfg. Portland. Oregon under the operation of the direct nrl- mary law and can once more participate in the primary electlona which may follow, until that time, however, It will cease to be a party under the defi nition of the primary law. J MEN'S ,H1AT THE ANNEX Big Five Sales Sweeping Everything Before It Such Buying Enthusiasm and Crowds Were Never Witnessed Before SME E! RmiOml Men's $25.00 Suits Now on Sale at 9.50 One of the best makes in America. Blacks, blue series and colors, plain and fancies. some silk lined; wortn up to $25. Your 1 choice for $9.50 Men's 515 to $20 Suits Now on Sale at $7.99 The best makes of a Chi cago maoufct urer. All styles, new plaids, new stripes, browns, tan and olive shades; every one worth $15 to $20. On sale tomorrow, choice. . . . ." $7.99 Men's 510 and $12.50 Suits Now on Sale at $4.95 Big lot of Men's All Wool Suits, single and double breasted styles of light and dark materials; regular $10 and $12.50 values. Choice T::z.. ,.......$4.95 Men's Best Quality Trousers $3 and $3.50 Dress Trousers, light and dark shades. Choice tomorrow at $1.98 Genuine Boston Gar ters On sale Saturday. 15c Men's 33.30 Cordu roy Pants On Sale Tomorrow at $1.98 Genuine President ders Buy all you them: they are the regular 50c qualities. Suspen want of 35c Men's $ 5 Hats STETSON AND HILL MAKES, CHOICE 85 FATHEE FAILS TO EESCTJE WAYWlED BOY Men s' Mate G went la mo great, ana that her wrinkles ! ; r v entirely - removed. , I will send furth.t partlealar. to any out wUo-lsj Interested, bolutelr fre. ot. charge. II v. s. 06 cream, facial massage, face ; .teaming- or v-called akin foods; there 1 nothing- to Inject and nothing- to In jur, th. akttvr. It la an entirely new ai- , eovery at tat own, and ao almpi. that " ,5'ou can. e It without Th. knowledge ?f your irooet Intimate friend. You ap ply the treatment at nig-ht and go to bed. In tha morning-, lo! the wonder fut tranaforraatlon. Peopl. often -writ. ' tn. 1t aoonda toi grood ta bo trua." ' Weil-the tat will tell.' If Interested In , iriKdlix-overr; plea, .addrem Harriett v. jueta. Suit. 10S B. Syracuse, N, T and Jt till r.J full ysjtlcuUra. Belltnghara, Wash., March 27. Rag- ner Berg, a 17-year-old Vouth, Is occu pying a cell in the county jail and must stand trial In the superior court on a charee of grand larceny unless the pros ecution decides that his ag shall save him or his father comes to his assist ance. The' boy haa been held for more than a month and haa written to his father, J. Berg of Spokane, ' who ia a well-to-do stonemason of that city but no .reply has been received. The young man was arraigned In the superior court yesterday and it was then learned that; he la barely above th. Juvenile age. Tlio oii.nso is not as serious as mirnt 00 expected from th charge, tha lnf nun J9UL11HK, that' he clothes, valued at ii ft local tailor.. , bun Jltn took a suit of from the Bhop of .Tt la reported that Edward H. Har nmaa will b. a delegst. to tha Kepub lloajr national convention from Oswego county,, New Tork, where- his home is. Mr.. Harrtm.n rv-4 B a l.t. . Hh. national convention four years egoj iveffi Away Fre . ASsliteSy Five S Mmi 5 When The Annex advertises a special sale you can depend on it that vou tret what is advertised. We nrar. ! rticc no trfctewthe-pubEe, we do ot misrepresent to you. In our Hat Department Tomorrow we will give free to every Tenth Customer a $5.00 Stetson, Hill, Nonpareil, Gordon or Paragon, Reliance or Mulvey Hat. They are worth from $2.Qrto $5.00. Come tomorrow. Every tenth Hat given free. You can depend on it, we give you what we advertise Fifth arid Alder SU T OPEN TILL 10:30 SAT- v URDAY, EVENING , 1 , lllWr ' I Fifth and Alder Sts. OPEN TILL 1 0:30 SAT - URDAV EVENING i : : ' -"it"