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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 18, 1908)
ii;;. J;::n:nl r; a l", :r fccy: J. C:v:rc-tJ, rc!:-l:r Circullln fa 1'crfc: J cr.3 Wli! ':. Sixty Ok; ol "Portland, All Directions, 'yti Thro:'::::! I.:: ; tl cic i.::n lny:c;' T-!Iy Tr.;;:? to' E::c:;.ll::::.- Circd:!!:3 RcccnT:. cn3 Cc:cru3 cf Ccsli Receipt Cp;n lo the Inspection cl All ACrcr.Lx.v. "I , -4 Thousands of Bargains; ' - ; Jldvortlsod by Portland Mor ' chantt in tho Sunday Journal ' , Tomorrow. Road Thorn. . 'O JOURNAL CIRCULATION e. ,,- w i The. weather Showerg and cooler - tonight. Sunday ahowora. - V PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY EVEN t NO, : APRIL . J8, .. 1908. TWO ' SECTIONSTWENTY PAGES.- ' ' ; :.! PRICE V, TWO .CENTS. 0" "AI WB VOL. VII. . NO. S3. ? mim . - i i i t -- V- , - r - - -'. . . - - . - , , I, - iTr 1 n - ? - i i i , , '. ' f' ' .7 m i n ' ' - '.r ii lift; iff EAT ' LEGismwmmEDGEBm. mSENRJORiCHOSEMmmOPLEi Mil Only One ,"Anti" Elected ; in Multnomah v CourityrMachine Politics Receives Se- vere Setback,: All Over Stata County Ti Returns: Do Not Make i Any Glgesla iii Vv 'r Oregon's ncxt '.legislature will be pledged; uncomprismgly; to elect as United '"States senator the rna'n whom the people designate as their' choice in the" Tune 'electioiui'The .wte 'in-.Vesterday'a prt- : raaries for Statement No. 1 candidates for' the legislature was an "overwhelming expression of the determination of the voters that their will Shall be obeyed and that they, not the bosses, shall choose the senator. While in a number of counties no Statement No. 1 candidates were put forward before the primaries, the temper-of the voters has been 'so plainly shown that preparations are already under way to nominate sucn canaiaaies Dy peiuion,' ana n is expectea tnai luny two iniras oi me legislators cieciea in june win De pieagea , In Multnomah county th vote for the Butcment 1 ticket aaiumcd the propor tion of t., landslide. Apparently the only antl-atatement candidate nominated on the Republican ticket la C. N. McAr thur, for Joint representative from Mult nornah and Clackamaa, whoae peraonal popularity In thla county, together with the fact that hla opponent waa little known, turned the acale in hla favor. Even the frlenda of Ben Selling, the leader of the Statement No. 1 fight In thta county, did not expect ' to aee the j phenomenal vote polled ror mm that waa ahown. The strong support alven to the other members of the Statement 1 ticket In Multnomah county alao la taken to mean that- the people nave en tered -. their protest against the effort of the old line bos sea to secure control of the poUtlca of the county. It Is. also a protest againat the reveralon of the aenatortal battles to the told style ays tern of barter and aale. Th On Bxoeptloxu Throughout the atate also aa fast aa the report come In It la indicated that tne aentiment ox tne people la tne same, Wherever there 111 been pleedged to Statement No, a candidate 1, with the exception of Washington county, that) candidate haa been given the nomination either to the house or the senate. The reault shows that the people throughout the atate have lined up solidly for and against the power of the voter to rule in tne selection or united Htates senators. Jumping from the legislative v to the aistrict ana county tickets in Multno mah county, George J. Cameron has secured the nomination for district at torney after a hard fight, with James Cole running, a close second. On ihe county ticket W. U Llghtner for opunty commissioner, la far in the lead and will have the 'nomination without doubt. He waa running against D. V. Hart and T. J. Kreuder Robert L. Stevens received the full party vote for the nomination for sheriff as did F. S. Fields for county clerk, John M. Iwis for treasurer, B. r. xtooinson ror county scnooi super intendent, and Philo Holbrook for county surveyor. The contest between B. I. Slgler and A. Q. Rushlight fYtr assessor was a hard .one but Slgler haa won the nom ination by a good margin. The fight for the nomination for con- IS" IlIiGE Archbishop Ityan of New York Positively Refuses to Sanction Wrong Doings of Helen Money, Daugh ter of Oil Magnate. Remarkable Run 7 of Ben Selling Great Blow to Family When ' rflAa TfAAtt T)aa1 r5 y-v 9 ill a Church Consider Way- .ward Woman Clarkson. Wife of mm DlllI'S . m siiiii .. v . - " v , . ' t r ....' ' H. BI. Cake, UTio Has Won the Nomination for Republican Candidate for United States Senator. CAKE S SE State Returns Indicate' His domination. in Home County. Aitchison Wrins for Railroad Commissioner, Second District. (Continued on Page Two.) RETURNS FROM THE COUNT ES SHOWNG HOW CAKE GAINED H. M. Cake has carried the atate ,1a the senatorial struggle by a majority over Fulton that will probably exceed S.000 votes. In Multnomah, county Cake's majority -la considered sufficient to overcome any danger of such a sur- was snatched - from hi a week after the primaries prise as occurred two years ago, when tne vieio ffrasn nearly were past, by belated returns from in terlor counties. Sixty precincts In Mult nonmh 'glve Cake 14.194.. Fulton 12.826. Outside of this county it was almost a necK awl necK race. . . Fulton carried his own countv. Clat. : eonf by an overwhelming majority, re ceiving neariy nine times tne vote given 'to Cake, but In Multnomah the Astorlan met his Waterloo. Cake's majority In this county appeara to have been deci sive or tne result. Marion, ana UlacK Amas also gave substantial majorities for Cake, indicating that the speeches maae oy r . j. Heney naa a strong in fiuence on the voters. Baker, Columbia, Douglas, Linn and Union counties all gave .majorities for Cake. nam. luamatn. Lane. Benton. Gil n t. VyJ , ok. :? r Wf? sorrow, oireiuwii via vrneeier were rill ton counties. - Incomplete returns from counties out side of Multnomah give Cake 8.17S. Ful ton 9,114, a follows: Cake.: ;FuIton. Baker -.. Benton ... Clackamas FULTON BELIEFS HE IS DEFEATED ; (flpeelal . Dfopitcb to The Joaraal.) Astoria, Or.j April 18 Sena- 4 tor Fulton saya that he haa had 4 no deflnlte information about t the electron only meagre' re O turns.! "What the final figures- 4 will show I capribt state, but It , looks aa If ; X had Jost out.. If ; 4 4 such' shall provev to be the case 4 I will cheerfully accept the ver- e v diet of the people. . C will submit 4 a statement later' i- r-' , . - Clatsop . . , . Columbia .. Crook. Douglas Gilliam . Klamath Lane Linn .. .r. . v ..'.'.. , Malheur ...r. Marion . , Morrow . , Polk Sherman Umatilla Union ..; Wheeler 416 260 .1121 vAW. . 248 . 929 .111 .227 . 730 . 669 . 203 .1456 . 142 . 837 . 221 . 718 . 70 ..78.: 302 9. 732 1093 211 291 784 148 461 887 480 . 223 1043 282 897 241 668 426 207 Returns from the state are coming In slowly but they seem to indicate the nomination of Cake for senator and Ellis and Hawley for congress. Many outside precincts will not be heard from until late tonight and the final figures may be changed. Ful ton made' a fine run In Clatsop as was expected,, and In Clackamas Cake forged ahead rapidly In every pre cinct, piling up good majorities to offset some of his losses elsewhere. Multnomah' will give Cake 1,700 majority, but he Is holding a good lead all along the line and if eastern Oregon comes to his support he will surely be nominated. All counties report a quiet election m'ith moderate vote. The senatorial fight, was the center of interest. ' For railroad commissioner, Second district, Aitchison leads. The fig ures Rt noon were: Aitchison Loucks Hurlburt . The following reports from various counties were compiled Journal correspondents: ; . ' (United Pre trtMd Wire.) Philadelphia, April 18. Pretty . Helee Maionej prlnpal In 1 two elopements and two marriages and daughter . of Martin Maloney, oil magnate and mil lionaire, haa lost In her efforts to have the. Catholic church sanction her re marriage to Samuel Cltykson, a young Englishman. ' Archbishop Ryan In an nounclng today the attitude the church has taken In the mattor. 'declared that what the millions of Henry VIII had failed to accomplish the millions of Martin Maloney could not do. Concern ing Miss Maloney's first elopement and marriage to Herbert Osborne, a New York stock broker, the archblxhon de clared that if a wedding ceremony was performed In that case no oowr. not even that of the pope, could bring about a lurtaer marriage ceremony wnlcu would be sanctioned by the church. Miss Maloney Is 22 year old anil strikingly beautiful, with her viva- Clousness and sunny temperament, she was a favorite with the younger so ciety set. It was on December 28, 1905, that she eloped with and was married to Herbert Osborne, then a student at Princeton. Being out of blanks, a Jus- , tlce scribbled something in a piece of paper and pronouncen tnem man and wire. Immediately afterward they both declared that the marriage was a Jok They say the marriage was never con summated and a hearing is on now to have it annulled. I.ast October Miss Maloney eloped to Canada with Samuel Clarkson. who had asked for the youn woman's hand before she ran away with Osborne. Thpv nrprf weil In Montreal and loft TTlllfrm St rnnrr for London. Then followed an exciting J. ItlLUll OUUUS Uh nn th nnt-t of Mnrlin Malnnav rather or tne Driae, to locate her. Finally he found his daughter and Clarkson on the continent. Clarkson re turned to his haunts in London and the girl came nacK to America. At Ilrst shorne refused, to consent to an annul ment, but at length announced that h would not stand in the young woman's path to happiness. But the greatest blow to the Maloney family is the determination of thj Catholic church not to sanction a re marriage of Clarkaon and Miss Ma loney In the church. However. Miss Maloney's attorney said today that whether or not her marriage to Osborne was a Joke, the Maloney family consider her the wire or Clarkson. Ben Selling, Who Made Spies did Run for State Senate. . .Ben Selling, the leader of the State ment No. 1 legislative ticket In Mult nomah county, baa carried the county by a phenomenal vote. What makes the victory the more remarkable la the fact that all daring the campaign. Sen ator Selling has distributed no 'election cards, made no effort t get a vote for himself "personally, but has followed his usual trend of ,buslesa( nre. lIUKOi snows tnat ne nas led tne republican ticket In Multnomah county toy .a, sub stantial plurality, distancing hla near. est competitor bv a larse martin. ; Mr. Stilling is tone of the- best kndwri business men .of Portland and has al- ways stood high in the. estimation of his , fellow citizens as a man of strict integrity aiid tvgh purpose. His fia-h for. Statement No. 1, as the ' leader o the legislative ticket'' pledged to that irinciple. Is responsible In. large part or tne sweeping victory in tnia.coun- m tne race or the Maud; Allen,: Who Has Been? -Iflectrifying London; Said ; to Be Eelatiye of the Man , VVho KUled Blanche La- mont. a Young Woman Said to .Bj Most Beautiful." Created Great - Furor When Sho Appeared ' on ' : European R ,960 .615 .482 the by Linn Wants Cake. Albany, 'April 18. United States sen ator. Cake B69,;: Fulton- 480; railroad comlssioner, Campbell 413, Carter 402, Robertson 77; legislative, Republican, Belts 414, Blanchard 843, Brown 60S. Freeman 339. Porter 438. Simpson 820, Upmeyer 414. r y Astorii At Fulton's Home. Aprlt 19. Cake' 184, 220, LHnenweber 494, McCue 698, Rob inson 807, Welch 488. No Democratic vote. Douglas for Cake. Roseburg. April 18. Douglas county riurnH are as ronows: v;aae vzv, nrx- (Continued on Page Two.) Fulton a. ad: 1.083. Ellis 406., deer 412. Shepherd 198: for railroad commissioner. .Aitchison 286. Gaston 148, Hamilton 106, Hurl burt 166. Loucks 26. Whiting 78: for atate representative. Tongue 902, Burko TRUST S ABOUT TO DISSOLVE TO AVOID TROUBLE (United Press teased Wire. ' ' Richmond, ' Va., . Apr 1 S.r-Trlghtened by the. evidence 'gather against "it1-by the. government and rather than face th . trial In New York nn Mav 1 ft H fore the United fitntAB eimnlt American Tobacco company according to i a story current- here today, Is about to dissolve. The dissolution Of tb 8350,600,000 com bine .was practically admitted today by Officials of the company who would not allow their names to be mentioned In connection with their admissioha. This step, i it is said, has been1, de cided upon on the advice. of the attt. ior me trust in wasningion, wno are of the . opinion - that the company will' be liable 'any Way to forcible disso lution by the federal government, un der the Sherman anti-trust law. , i v IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN Autdmpbiles READ The Sunday Jour-; nal Tomorrow v.. , ' . :" ' Automobile. News of the World Special, in a section devoted e xcl u stvely. to! automobiles. First automobile ; section ever published bv- a- Portland paper.' Phone 'your orders it today Main -7173, or Home A 6051. THUGS THROW VICTIM ON RAILROAD TRACK (Special nfepatcn to The Journal.) Chicago. April 18. Charles W. An derson waa found dying on the rail road tracks In the Chicago yards today. It is believed that he was sandbagged and robbed and his body thrown on the track to cover up the evidence of the crime and make It appear that lie had been accidentally killed by an engine. Five Men Crushed. (Special Dl.pntrh to The Jonrml.t Chicago. April 18. Five men were crushed, one probably fatally, by the fall of an Iron beam at the Troy Laun dry Machine works. tv for that ticket strenuous opposition of - the Beach-Bailey-Reed machine. IRS. UDEIiBltl TO GET DIVORCE Reported Referee Will Rec ommend Payment of Five Mi!lion;Alimorij'. (Special Dlipatcb to Tb, Journal.) New Tork. April 18. It- la reported that Mrs. Alfred a. Vanderbilt haa won her autt for absolute divorce. The ref eree's report Is to be filed Monday irec ommendlng the granting of an Inter locutory decree and 15,000,000 alimony according, to the best authority. MURRAY WILIi TAKE RIDGELY'S POSITION (United tms Lriaed Wire.) Washington, April ; 18. The president today sent to the aen- ate the nomination of Lawrence e O. Murray of New Tork to be 4 comptroller of the currency, vice WlUlam Rldgely of Illinois,- resigned. ' ATTEMPT TO WRECK PENNSYLVANIA FLYER :y CCoitad Press Leased 'Wire.) ; . Jlan Francisco, .April 18. A story Dub- Iished here today sutlng that Maud Allen, the eenaatkmat dancer, who has electrified London, is none other than Maud Currant, sister of the Vilest mur derer In California's history, Theodore Durrant, treated ' a - stir among the young; woman's schoolday friends, who had pracUcally forgotten the girl whose blood ties brought her into auch un enviable notoriety 13 years aa-o. then a mere allp of a miss. Hodsoii- At the time of her brother's trial for tne muraer or Biancne Lamnnt and Minnie Williams,, the .girl's name was fnt, 1 k,, mil r Ka tn whlK HhA a i H4 Ait a4 h,v .Inn. proven unfounded. 1 wnen 1'urrani waa nangea nis- slater waa in EurODS sturivlna- music Inas- - much as her parents -were poor, her father being a shoemaker, it waa re ported that the girl's expenses were . being raid by a millionaire, since de- ceased, but her parents denied this, say ing ane waa paying ner own expenses by selling a patent corset. As a musician and alnyer ahe did not succeed and ahe took up dancing. Then came auccesa and today ahe la the fa- ' vonte pet oi -Lronaon. miss Allen s reatest lilt is in the "Dance of the even Veils." When ahe striDS herself of the veils, her body upward from her waist niuaen soieiy ov a strinaworK of jewels, she reaches the climax of the senuatlonal dance from "Salome," but she haa eliminated the passionate, tone Imparted to It tjy other dancers. DEBS CAUSES WAR ' : AT CHICAGO SCHOOL (United Preas LMd Wire.) '.-"i Chicago, April 18. A split In the fao- ulty and ranks of the students of Chi cago university Is threatened by a proa pectlve address by Eugene V. Debs be- lore the political economy class next month. Debs' particular offense In the eyes of those opposed to him, la his advocacy of the , expropriation i of John D. Rockefeller, who haa made the university possible, and other million aires. Fifteen - hundred students ; have Indicated their intention of hearing the lecture, the subject of which . Will be "Socialism and Universities." The affair haa caused much criticism of the divinity; department, the large number of students who have apparent ly taken sides with Debs, indicating in creases In the ranks of the agnostics and Socialist In the university. - FATHER SHOOTS S0N; MYSTERY IN CASE (Special Dispatch te The Journal) Chicago, April 18. An. unsuccessful nnempt was maae to wreck the Penn Bylvanla-New Tork-Chlcago flyer near warsawT Indiana, thia mornlnr. ' .' Th irainwreciir piacea neavy iron1 bars on the track, and the passenger would surely have been wrecked had It hit mem. a. - rreiirni was runninr fw minutes ahead of the flyer and hit the oDstrucnon.. -j ne tram waa running at slow speed and little damage waa dona' illlke Goiitest ls Ovsr I . ' Turn to The Oregon Sunday Journal tomorrow and read something besides" election returns, although tomorrow's Issue w til have the com - p,.(;ierlurns UD.t0 8 m- aut lnen tninit of the Magaslne section! It Oenlua .who HVes In a tent How the simple life helped Charlea Me-'' f . Short atory His duty to his Emperor.- :! " , ' V Eaater flowers through the year that are popular only a day! vTha egg of Eaater and Its many myths. s , - t , , Revival of the Sport of Archerjr Learn how to shoot straight with DOW' and arrow.. , : v , ... .v.p:- ;.. , .a. ; -Umatnia Indiana and their Schools Progress of the redmen. ; ;The picture atory of the Resurrection Beautifully Illustrated. " Comic section with all the very beat .."funnies" that are offered by i leading artists, Two pages for boya and gtrla. Spring etylea for young women. Two leased wlrea and all the news worth; printing. . - 1 - AADft Vlb.VU MUilUajf J UU1UI11 .. ..... . v - i .. . '..;. " . ... s. : . ,, v, -. (TDltod Praes teasee Wire.) . -St. Louis, April 18. Efforta'ara be ing made today to clear .away the mys tery that surrounds the shooting of Edgar B, 6 my the, former member nf the house or diles.tPB h hla ,fthn. Charlea E. Smythe, in the latter'e homj last night - ' that; he fired In aelf-defense, while the son aaia it was an accident. Further than this no Information ran b ob tained from either man. and there win no one else in the house at the time. IIENEY REFUSES TO - DISCUSS ELECTION (raited trm JUaaed Wire.) San Francisco, April 18. i Francis J. Iieney today refuwi il ' to make a statement on the poi- .i. slble defeat of Senator Fulton at -the primary election In Oregon o on Friday. . ,: -- ,'3efore I make any sta(emnt on the outcome s-ef .. the light against Senator Fulton I want ? time to arrange my Mem i t deflnlte form. This . eh-ctyn n of vital importance and to t. of It before I am ftilly iu i of all the facts might put f - cauae ef the primary : ut-n i , . Jeopardy." . ' .