Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 15, 1908)
. - THE OREGON. DAILY- JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY .EVENING, MAY Iff. 1CC3. IIP, SR. IS SILENT Xo-EeplyBccdved by Sus pcct Held for the Murder of Pawnbroker Wolff, Al- ; though Telegrams Have Been Sent to Europe,' Alarmed at the failure of the fathor of Edward H. Martin. the suspect In the Wolff murder case, to answer ca blegrams lent him In Europe, Mr Martini the wife of tbe man charged with the crime fears that the elder Martin may not come to the rescue of his son- Repeated messages sent to - polnta 4a Spain and Franca iare elicited no answers and the brave woman who haa been keeping up, the fight for her husband In Portland 1 beginning to lose hope of support from Mr. Martin parent. ? . ' " - City Attorney Kavanaugh, who la atlU acting .for Mrs, 1 Martln,i haa , been un able to secure definite responses , to hie 'telegram to Mr. Martin's New Tor agents. More than a week ago Mr. JCavaneugh, understood that these rente .bad located the Martina. .Each day slnoe then Mrs, Martin haa been waiting -to hear something from E u rope bu t has as of tea been dl sap pointed. Martin 'himself Js growing restless and alarmed over 'the failure to hear directly from Ills father. He has had a long and confidential talk with Mr. Kavanaugh since, his confinement In the county jail In which he denies to tally -that he had any connection with the murder of Wolff. But until It has been determined what lawyers will rep resent Martin-no line of defense eaa r Arwn tin Thua far efforts on t ha part of amateur detectives to connect - Jack La . Rose, th. (unlet fhusr-with the Wolff mur der have not been very fruitful. The city detectives will not listen to the suggestion that La Rose may have been connected with the Wolff, murder and are not working along the lines that Martin, if he was the murderer, had any accomplice, although many circum stances connected- with the killing of Wolff would tend to -show that two men had been concerned In the affair, La Rose still remains almost as much a puazle as Martin the two are the strangest murder suspects ; that have been arrested In Portland for years. La Rose was to. have. been arraigned In the police court today, but Deputy. Dis trict Attorney Stevenson has decided to tile Information direct In the circuit court, charging La Rose with the mur der of Herman- JCenman, the Couch street merchant. '' But Jdhn'Chow, -the Chinaman whom he struck over the head Wednesday, appeared- In the police court ' this .morning ana swore oux warrant charging La Jinse. with "having assaulted him with a deadly weapon, so Hint In rau the Neumen -case doesn't tick against La - Rose .he.: can- be held on the assault charge. - . .;,.v: ).,; J Harry Young, the state's witness . gal net La Rose "ln. the Neumen : case, v.an taken to the county Jail yeeterda; will ha held there Until the trial lie haa been out of work and was Outte willing to accept the hospitality of the fnunty ana ifiis witness, lees in -return lor i the- custody of Ma petton GILLEIT GIMIITS FIIILEV REPRIEVE Governor Saves Life of Man Sentenced to Die for At- A temptingJ;oFlee. poltd Pres leased 1Hre. Sacramento, Cal., May 15.- J, W. Fin- ley, whose hanging at Folsom peniten tiary was set for 10 o'clock this morn ing, is sun a living man. unim yes terday Governor Oillett issued his sec ond reprieve, granting another two weeks' grace. All had been prepared ror tbe execution ana Jiiruey spent yes terday In the death cell. He received a message from relatives in Kentucky stating that money would be furnished for an appeal to the United States su preme court, and wired to Glllett for a stay until the 18th. The governor extended the time to May . f iniey was serving a life term for murder when he Joined the prison breakers and attacked the warden with a knife. He was recaptured and sentences to oie. If he hangs his will be the first to pay the penalty of death under the Califor nia law which prescribes the gallows tor prison breakers. FUUey was given ma original sen tence from Mendocino county for mur der on June IS, 104. He had been In Folsom but a few months when be made a desperate attempt "to-eeeape, wound ing a guard. He was brought to Saerae tnento and convicted of violating the new law which provides death for his offense, and on December St, 1906, sen tenced to bang. Ho was the first to be eonvtcted of this crime. Many delays from appeals, etc., resulted, the last of Which was April 7 last, when Governor Oillett granted him a reprieve. Many letters were received at tbe governor's office asking him to' commute Fin- ley's sentence. Una or them was xroro the governor of Kentucky, Flnleys na tive stats. MACHINE MAY BE HfflEDlELlOII If Kef f Is .Unable to Go to Convention. Leaguer Will ": Go as Alternate. NERVOUS HEADACHES Frequently Caused by Mentaj 'Overwork Can Be Cured, Only by Toning TT-the JTervoua system, the Treatment which jfceetored This Toung- tttosea Woaumto Health. . . ..... fine who haa not endured the suffer- In caused by nervous headache cannot realize the awrui agony or its victims. Worst of ail, tbe ordinary treatment cannot be relied upon to cure nor erven to srive relief that is permanent Some doctors will say that if a person la sub set to these headaches there, is no in ns; that will prevent their recurrence. . Nervous headaches, as well as neu ralgia, are caused by laok of nutrition- the nerves are starved. Feed the nerves by furnishing through the blood the ele ments wnion may require ana me cause of these nervous troubles Is removed. The only way to feed the nerves Is throueh the blood, anil It Is in this way that Dr. Williams' Pink Fills, have accomplished so many remarkable cures. Miss F. Mae Markell of 10s Heuatls street, Ithaca, N. Y., says: "I had nerv ous headaohes for several years. They began when J was a atudent In the high, school,.-1 Was studying hard, grew Dale and thin and my friends were afraid I was going into a decline. - I had no appetite, my digestion was poor, and I loot In weight : The headaches came on two or three times a week and sometimes every day. They were so severe that quite often I would have -to go to bed when I came homo from school. Mv blood was In such a bad condition that my hands were oovered with a rash. "Our family doctor benentea me ror a time, but did not seem able to euro me. My grandfather told me to try Dr. W li tems rint t fins, saying mey - naa lelned him. I found that they ' "were helping me, and took tbem until cured. When school opened again I was strong and able to study and have never baa tbe headaches since. Dr. Williams' Pink Fills are sold by all druggists, or will be sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, 60 cents per doxj six boxes for tl.EO. bv the nr. Williams Medicine company; Schenectady, N. T. They are guaranteed to be Tree from (United Press teased Wire.) Sacramento, Cat, May - U.Tne Lin- oola-Roosevelters consider that they old very clever thing In securing 3, B, hanler aa an alternate to Jacob Neff as delegate at large to the Chicago con vention. ., Men, me league csnaiaais, won bv a slnsrle vote over - Harrison Gray Otis, and ' W was - late when the election or alternate waa m oraer. ,t Tke Llncaln-Roosevelters. -out -as) but one candidate, Wheeler as an alternato o Neff, while the regulars put up ourr but two or tnem were ror ueivi with none at all for Neff. There bell no contest for alternates to- Knight, Se Young and weir, tnose three- we eolared elected,, and Wheeler was o of them. .'J The chances are tnat Nsir may tie too . Ill to go to the convention, and the regulars are therefore bemoaning thel Inattention to the detail of elect ing an organisation alternate, which would make solid their delegation 10 case Nerr doesn't go. ' ' V '. ' 1 -".-? 4. 4-? :'.'..... " 1 LfcrMtsnrsTMieT -yf f-rfZf rrisiH itli .iiilsTnsM Lmmx.- m J 1 ' jfjl Out store can show you more variety and snap and gee-whiz in Suits foryoung men -than youVe ever seen at any one game. : -1 Our Young Men's Department has style nailed to the masthead Coats with, all the ?new exaggerations in cuffs, lapels, pockets, cut and in pattern. Suits $10 to $50 ; A first class fit in every instance, together with free pressing, etc., for an entire year, ;.are some of the inducements we offer our i v patrons. , . . ' to. Co- Gui3IfukilProjp, 165-168 THIRD STREET , , lotM Injure the most delicate system,- CHINESE REVOLT GROWS SERIOUS Government Alarmed at the - -Progress Being Made .in This Line. (United Press Bessed Wire.) -Shan gbal, May JS.Th Chinese g;ov ernment. Is greatly alarmed over the Chinese revolt, which is steadily grow ing mora 'serious. The rebels have cut off communication to Mengtse. It Is estimated that the revolutionists num ber 10,000 and that. thoyi are under In structors trained in Japan. 1 " Tbe fact that the rebels selected Tun- nan as the scene of their first attack convinces Peking; that they are familiar with conditions as this province is poorly protected. The government Is not hopeful of saving Mengtae, which is at the head of the French railway. irom oeing iaaen. , FOSTER III Bill GIRLS Iff TiBHTS Show Printers' Association ; Befuse to Make Objec tionable Baper. , TJn!t' Press Letted Wire.) Chicago, May IS. Objectionable pos ters ars to be tabooed by the Bhow printers' association, which has Just closed its . second .- annual convention. This decision, according to Secretary clarence E. Runey, means that the girls In tights, Jumptns- through a hoop of fire. Is to be a tnlng of the past on the bill boards of the country. WILL' SEND GOYEMOB ROCKEFELLER IS HOT SOCIALIST Oil King Surprised at Eobert Hunter's Statement at . , OonveiltioiL ' , fCaited Press Lasted Wlre.1 V PocaaUoo HI Us, N. Y., May 16. "Who Is this man ' Robert ' Hunterr - asked John D. 'Rockefeller today, when told that Hunter had informed the dele gates assembled in the socialist con ventlon in Chlcaao that the oil klni was a Soclallat, and that be had broughi Dr. Akeri , over here from fins-land to bo Castor of bis church because the latter believed In socialistic crincioles. "That's tbe mildest of ail the cruel things I have been called," he continued. "I wish some one. would tell me who this rreat seer Is. Such statements as he made stir up discontent: they do no rood. If he is correctly Quoted, and f he really thinks he has the rlaht figures on me, let . blm bold to thai opin ODlnlon. Don't snail his deduction. can hardly be said that X brought Dr. Aked here. . Ask him. HaTU setUe that point for you.. Anyway, thla fellow Hunter is not going to worry me. Golf Is more ImDortant. Bv the wav. the unas were great yesterday." CASTOR BEAIIS. KILL TEACHER Sunday School Picnic Near Pasadena Besults in Much Sickness and One Death. . (Baited Press Leutd Wife.) v Xjos Angeles, "May 15. One young woman Is dead a boy and two - little girls are seriously til-and suffering In tense agony as the result of a picnic held in the Arroyo Seco. near Pasadena. last Sunday, - when ' the merrymakers stook noisonous castor beans for wild mansanlta berries. The s-irL who died after sufferlna for three days from the effects of the poi son, is KaDhUia eurrrorr. a isundsy school teacher, who had- charge of the excursion. The three children . of J. Relchlsiy are In a dangerous condition. Twenty otnsr cruiaren were poisonea slightly. GOA TS CAUSE FATAL DUEL Arizona Miners Battle to Death With Guns Loaded ; With Buckshot A of (United Press Ltued .Wtrf.) Jerome, Arl May 18. As a result a feud of long standing, caused by OUR JUVENILE DEPARTMENT f'Sijfr'f '.; ' ' -; - " ' Overflowing with all the latest and best things for Boys and Young Men. Most comfortable shop ping place in Portland -MODEST PRICES prevail here always Assortment the largest and best Ladies and Misses' taUored coats BEN SEL TTTV'" G LEADING CLOTHIER the goats of Ed Hurley trespassing on the mining camp bi Ffank conrey, the latter Is dead and Hurley. lies In the hospital at the point of death with .four gunshot wounds In hut body. The men met this morning, both armed with shotguns loaded with buck shot and immediately opened fire. Hur ley cannot recover. CLOSING OUT THE STOCK. vress oooas, ruts, hosiery, corsets, Volts, Coats. Skirts, Table Xanens.Xto. Our entire stock: Of hlsh-grads mer chandise now on sale . . at wholesale prices. Women who want to save will find great bargains here. IfcAllen A McDonnell, Third and Morrison streets. (Continued from Page OneJ I. 8. Bruce of Iilton Dead.. (Boeelal Dispatch t Tbe Jonraal.t Milton. Or.. May 16 1. S. Bruce died at his home here yesterday, after a lingering Illness due to. paralysis. He was born In Bland ootinty. Virginia, In 1863, where he was reared. From there he went to Tennessee and In 1881 came to Milton and purchased a farm three miles north of here. He Is sur vived by his wife and two daughters. The funeral was held yesterday under the auspices of the Odd Fellows. ;,- savings banks for If the people feel the United states Is behind, their depos its there will be no tendency to with draw their money and panics will be averted. The national banks should be a certain oercentaae Into a national fund. called a sinking fund, which shall be kept as a reserve to Insure their de- compelled to pay or tneir oeposus fioslts: the state banks, to a state sink nsr fund. He also favored the excluslot of the undesirable class of Immigrants rund. He also favored the exclusion and advocated. s graduated Income tax law. .' -. u ' - - - .. Governor . Chamberlain said that he heartily .indorsed the views of President Kooeevelt and, If elected, would give his undlvl3od suport to the man who fol lowed out the president's policy. A number of the candidate for affirm and political leaders of the county were seated on the. platform. It waa gen erally conceded. by those present that the speecn or . uovernor Uhamberlaln waa the strongest ever heard In this elty. r good;kain Continued trom Page One.) mens eroo. -and' reaches. apricots are showing up wel A 4 frtifmt. MnnrtTfrnM f and prunes A ' speolal. report T from Condon, Qll- 11am 'county,- states' thai; light -snow Is falling there today, j ' No damage Is an ticipated -from - cold) showers,' however. LacV of moisture was the only thing feared- lrl that - vicinity' to Insure a bumper crop. r , .,,,,- An abundance of rain has fallen In the Willamette valley, where crop pros pects are good. MRS. NAVE, DEAD , ; AT COTTAGE, GK0VE 3 (SpecUI Dlspstca ! te Tbe" JoermLk " T Cottage rove, Qr May -15. Mrs. Florence Nave died yesterday of par alysis; following an attack, a few days ago i:: . .r r:c . f,. Kiorencs c DemlAg'waa born in cent tral lhdlana. In 1849. She was a teach er In- the . publlo srhoola of Edlnburg, Indiana. In June, 1871. she became the wire or Dr. H. I Nave. who. with their three eons, survive her. These sons are Marg, iteming, who Is completing his law course at Columbia university. New York City; Henry D. Nave, professor of history -In the Walla' Walla high school, and Charles C, a lawyer of New York. The two latter were with their mother during her 'last Illness. Mrs. Nave was an earnest, Intelligent Chris tian. - - - . -The funeral will be heldt the Pres byterian church at 3:8$ p. W - , . Nymph la Astoria's Float. Astoria, Or., -May 16. Chairman La mar of the committee to arrange for the Portland Rose Carnival float to be used In the grand parade has appointed Miss Louise Wise, youngest daughter or Mayor wise, to represent a nymph, and Carl Thomas, one of the debaters of the Astoria High school, as yachtsman, both to occupy prominent positions on tbe Astoria float during the parade. . Notice to the Trade. ? "The Pacifio Coast Rubber Co. have no connection whatever with the fire sale now being carried on at 248 Wash ington st, by the Northern Salvage Co. The entire damaged stock . of our fir was purchased by them. (Signed) "PACIFIC COAST RUBBER CO. ' A LAWN RARE. FINE ROSES GARDEN KIWI I A without Qoqm smu You cannot grow and in this vital matter of BEAUTIPUU .GROUNDS, there's no use of taking the ordinary soili and claiming that .ltSs as good SIX for no amount of imagination or glib talking can overcome the FACT that IT IS NOT and never will be Since this is a matter that was attended to at the CREATION, it is too late to think of thangjng it. ftowandjt must therefore be accepted as a fact beyond disptite.:i;;Thi3T'-wiere'jwe':cay off the palm -for we have overlooked very little that is gop4 in! getting this addi tion in perfect condition for comfortable home-and we1 bring this up to you, Mr. Buyer, as residence property , with which, , far ' and neaf upon the basis of merit, there is precious little that tan" compare.. ' - !- We are bound that the story of this opportunity $hall reach EVER Y j BODY for the average human being instinctively" selects the true from the false,'- -z; r t4 " T ' ' 4 - THIS proposition will stand the test of the irucrosoopev ' ' V 1 Come down to Room 1, Worcester building, to. see us. . F. B. HOLBROOK CO. Phone M.5396 f dioiil(Si?i:iifl We have over a hundred exclusive patterns to picic from and every rittinsr sike iforvery - shape teiiow, wnetner ne is tan,, snort, stout or sum: - JSi PJJsrfS an Ifflir 1 O ; wm--'-:si.vR:'-: - WW- $20 . Specials Bis: SEE WINDOW DISPLAY Clothing Company CORNER MORRISON AND SECOND STREETS ' r i" 'J!. . f