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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1908)
' ,1 A PORTLAND BUSINESS MAN, AND A HEAVY ADVERTISER, SAlD THE OTHER DAY TO ANOTHER BUSINESS MAN AND ALSO A LARGE, ADVERTISER: "THE:::: ARE TWO FRUITFUL DAILY NEWSPAPERS IN PORTLAND. THE JOURNAL AND THE OREGONIAN; PAPERS OF STANDING AND INFLUENCE; PAPERS THAT MEET A WANT AND THAT SERVE THE PUBLIC; AND OTHER DAILY PAPERS JN PORTLAND REPRESENT NOTHING, STAND FOR NOTHING AND ARE NOTHING BUT AN UNNECESSARY BURDEN TO THE PUBLIC AND THEBUSINESS INTERESTS -OF PORTLAND. THE TWO DAILY PAPERS NAMED MEET EVERY WANT, PERFORM EVERY SERVICE THAT IS POSSIBLE FOR A ' NEWSPAPER. TO PERFORM, COVER THE STATE AS i ADVERTISING MEDIUMS AND ARE USEFUL, SERVICEABLE INSTITUTIONS, DESERVING OF THE LIBERAL SUPPORT THEY RECEIVE." ; ' ; . . X . , V A - r , ... , , ; y 1 ZTE ri JOURNAL CIRCULATION - . ' YESTERDAY WAS 30,600 , The -Sunday Journal . Av.f'7'CS-t.-- , Comprises '. - yv V ' 5 SeeUons58'Pcges The weather Fair;? ,w$ Bterly rinds. " .' " ; i i t' " Z ; ' ; : " ,; PORTLAND. , OREGON, SUNDAY , MORNING, r JUNE 14, ; 1908; VOL. V. , NO. 14. PRICE , FIVE CENTS. mm CM 7. At , f V i t , President Forms Monop oly and1 Rcfuscsntp Allow "Favorite Sons? i to Borrow nis tcnr TaftlBjahLofi Goods Only Kind' Rcpubli- t : 'can : Delegates'; at Qii- ; cago'Will Bellowed toPurchase. , 1 ( SAMUEL C. SLYTHB (Hunt Ktw tr LoogMt lMd WIm. i Chicacro, Tunc 13. President Roosevelt first went into the- con- Ventioanruhg business 'idvx years agd Re 'was by way fit a snjaii .pacKer ftioen, -wnn .oniy ; a few specialties Hefsentjout1 a canned patfbrm and a few othef kinds of canned, resojutions and .l.jtjvi ilJ. 4.u-Jr'-.':L opened a novpuy. at..oiic scssiun in the shape of k Jar of hisjifstly- celebrated Pericardis-Raisuli eat- - :'ehi-alive! raw "blood! '" t, His success was so great with this small line that 4ie 'branched oit; ;Thi$ year he- has aent to Lhicago a,: general :andt comprer hensive1 stock "of gopds, a.bout 46 varieties "hf 'all: He has canned eterything in ' the national com mittee to the assistant sergeant-at-arms. The platform is'canned, the convention is canned,' the can didate is canned all to be. opened at the rieht'time .bymemberstof his expert corps.Qf. canjopeners. une urst..sampieusndw was the , binned national committee.;, That was' found t6, be up'. tb, specifica tions strictly. .It was4 ell cooked, properly ; seasoned f and laited as t long as there was active demands. ' All the goods'- in thtf other,.cans are expected ' to be : of 'the., same satisfactory grade f More " than ;' that, 'Packer Roosevelt has taken uuutfj oi.iusj .pmpiy,-cans,,a them to the other candidates, who , cjaimed to be allied; but really were alloyed, and sent them yelp in g down -the street.' r-, ' : , : ' Nothing Doing. ' There should be a law against tils sort of thing. There are 400 good, ac tive; alert reporters In the city, anxious to write about what Is golng on, and .there 'is nothing "going on. ' It' haB all gone on.' Now and again, when It is time to open a can the 'reporters , are called in and allowed to describe the contents. , All the rest : bt;'the time Is spent ia .discussing such im portant topics as whether Jofcn Hays Hammond will get the Alaska dele-, gates ; for- ylce-p resident, forgetting: the vice-president Is coming along In a can about next Thursday, or whether some of the southern etates- .(Contlnued on Fat rive. Eft- BY ' PACKER R ; I U J , v v;; . First comes Governor Charles' E. Hughes" of New York . with aspira tions tto be higher upv' . 'The right hand '-man ls Senator Joseph B. Foraker of Ohio, who sees a ooBsibiliOr aaar mm.rand. rr., !i Xathe' centeVf?ifncl)Jc4?CaiH non.; the "lean tattdviitnnered nanta ( I OF flOLiliifJIflfl . (Beant l(w by, Lonrett lotted ,Wlt.) v ', ' Unsoln. Neb.. June It. If. la all over ; Denye.r, buithe sutlng. ..WUliam J. Bryan Is absolutely assured of the DemberatioTnoUin&ron.,tThlsi-?ls the aHnounSeiaent' the'Nebpaiska ptlb- licltyvbureauma4nt&laed y. th friends M -r, St. . , -. w fsryan in nu own iuis- , a r ' Conventions iivft been " hl(l"s In nil "of the'' states and; territories,, but ten. The Bryan bureau proclaims that (SO delegates' are, already Instructed for th Nebraskan and that. 7.:others In states not 'bound by . the unit, rule have de clared their Spereonal j preferences ifor d will give Bryan their votes, srfyes Bryan5697 votes, 28 more th r first i ballot under "the two thirds rule. '-iJ' if , ' . .... The . states, with ,;Porto Rloo in ad dition, shlch have,', yet to .hold, Uelr conveniions, ere: ' iortaar Tesnessee, nortn Carolina, Vermont,. -Georgia, - Maine, s Mississippi. Montana and Colorado. , . ' The Bryan bureau maintains that th Nebraskan will ret- a larre majority of the 144 votes, of -these states. r "jf 'JS I,"" 7? OOSEVELT f - J 1 - 1 s , t "? f - s TRWO Kill A HOIIOLULU COP Dynamite Bomb Exploded ' Outside . Window ot Chief - of Detective Home. (Heant New by Ivaosest Leased WI'S.) IlbnolulUj June 13. An attempt to aasasslnati Chief of Detectives Tay lor and his wife was made early today; A dynamite bomb was exploded outside the window of their bedroom. , The force of the explosion snattered a larre water tank, throwing: the heavy timbers a distance of SO feet and de stroyed . the back porch - and outside sun-case or the house. The main building however,' 'was not damaged and neither of its occupants were in jured.-- Chief Taylor's life has often been threatened bv Chinese ramblers. : The attempt on the life of the chief of detectives has created intense excite ment here, especially , because of . the cowardly "method of the crime. The no- lice already announce -that they have a rood ciue to-ttie perpetrators,, but what it is or who ' they suspect com mitted the outrage ' they will not dis close. -Neither Mr. or Mrs. Taylor received anything- worse than shock from the ex plosion. r ' ' DENTIST ACCUSED ' ' c , r OF ABDUCTING GIBL V (rnltfr Pr!i4'Usd Wire.) f Chicafeo, ; June 13. Detectives-tonight broke open the doors of -a resort' in Chinatown In . their search for Carrie CannlnK. a 21-vear-old vounsr woman whose-mother, complained'. to the police sheobeileved her daughter ha been ab ducted by Dr. William M., MoOurllng, a Identlst, .in a. down-town ' skyscraper, -The : dentist was arrested on j war rant sworn -out by Mis. Canning,- mother of theml3slng girl. - He locked-himself In hls-offlce and the doors 'were bat tered In by a posse of -officers, Mrs. Canning accuses McGufUng of - hav ing detained the girl in his .office for two-days.-- . ." - . 1 r Portland Student Takes Degree 'A New ' Haven. Conn.' June 1J. Amonr the successful candidates for- the bachelor .of -science degree at Sheffield solentif lo school. Tale, is Lyle- Gordon Fear of Portland, Or. ?-He will receive his degrees with honors at commence ment, June J4., . .. i-' i "M"!JU t- . Mile Eace Cours Under. Construclioo ?J(TM IS UP HISTORY OF 0REAT FIELD FIGHT FOR REPUBLICAN rT0 HOLD BIG 5iF mm mm m m Big Warship Goes Ashore at Dungeness Spit t While Trying to Make Bremerton Navy Yard May Be To- ' tal Loss. Vessel on Way From Calif or- nia for Repairs . in Com pany With Cruiser Penn sylvania Cost Four Mil lion Dollars: . (Bcanit Newt by Ixmsest titased Wlra.) ' Seattle, ""WAsh., June 13.- The United States cruiser Colorado representing naval cost to : the government -of ap proximately - $4,000,000 Is - .ashore . on Dungeness Spit, Paget sound, with every DrosDect of proving a total loss. f The vessel ran - on- -in- a- dense fog about 4 o'clock this afternoon, in com mand of Captain Edmund Beardslcy Underwood, along." with ' the -cruiser rennaylvania,. a sister ship, the . Colo rado was proceeding -at the time from California to. Puget- sound navy yard at Bremerton, where both were to have a fire control - apparatus '' system in stalled. The details, both Jty wireless and . land telegraph regarding the dis aster are meagre. - The situation is als0 further com plicated from the fact that the Penn sylvania, wnicn is - supposea to nave been but a. short distance ahead of the Colorado, cannot be picked up by wire less. Passed cape xiavcary. The Pennsylvania passed Cape Flat tery, hound in. at 1:06 p. m. and the Col orado soon after. The latter was off Port Angeles at S p. m.. and Judging from this time she ran on the spit about 4 o ciock. Dungeness Spit is a long, narrow strip of land, portions of which are covered by water at high tide, extending far out to the eastward in the sound and la about midway between Port Angeles and Port. Townsend. The vessel s position is the mors per ilous from the fact -that where the Colo rado struck the water Is only, two, three and- four fathoms deep and leaves, off most abruptly to water ... the - depth of SO and TO fathoms. -. The spit is more of a sandy - formation than rock, hut a vessel of the length of the Colorado, which is 502 -feet long, would so project out that her oosltlon would at onoa be come most perilous. , s .. Cannot Bs avsA,,:- In the opinion of local marine men familiar with 'Dungeness spit there Is not much hope of saving the Colorado unless marvelOusly good -luck attends her as to the .character of the beach brought up.' - - i ":. . The Colorado Joined the Paclf to fleet after returning from Asiatio waters by way: of San Francisco last winter. Then she, the West .Virginia, : also- a sister (Continued- on .Page .Eleven.) s" -V- r s i v "k - " " - ' - ' - - 4 ' f i - ' x . - Z rtifu,:...; -f ; . . . .:- -r- ; i - yTC J . i 1 ' : -v T r4-- : - u ' . ... ;1 ' . v. , , -,4 , r on the Grounds ot the Portlahd Country Club and Livestock Association. Senator Bourne Abandons v -Efforts to Nominate Pres ident for Second Elective r Term and Will. Sail for Europe Next. Wednesday. Portland Somewhat Sur prised at Decision After Vigorous Bureau and But ton Campaign Waged in Face of Distressing Odds. Chloago, June 13. Finally abandoning L ail nope or Boosevaivs renonunauon, lenatox Jonathan Bouras will sail fo Surops Wednesday. He did not even some to Chicago. : Jonathan Bourne, Oregon's Junior sen ator, has thrown up the sponge, aban doned his second elective term propa ganda, forsaken Roosevelt and on Wed nesday next well sail for Europe to forget his chagrin in the wonders of the old world. The Chicago convention holds io. hopa for him and he ia .off Word received in : Portland from Portland people now in the east tell the. story of the senator's loss of hop ana nis prospective -aeparture ior Europe. So absolutely has any hope of success -xor-ine secona elective term idea deserted Senator 'Bourne that be did", not Journey to Chicago, nor - will he.Deiore ne seta sail on Wednesday, , .... . Championship . Ceases. . Senator Bourne's championship . of the. second elective term . idea has mada hlm-oneof -the fruitful themes for car toon and caricature throughout the na- nlals from the president he has 'Con tinued tot insist that Roosevelt would be nominated and that he could not refuse the nomination When It was ten dered to him. , The now widely heralded 11.000 nrlce assay contest Inaugurated by the sen ator put him In line. for the quips of the funny writers of the east and he has been before the people since his entrance Into the senate until now, dot because of his work done in the sen ate but because of his long continued ride- upon . the second elective term hobby. - The recent eirort or tne senator to line ' up - the delegates to the national convention from Oregon for the sec ond elective term and the capture of the-convention by Fulton s friends and the consequent lapse of Senator Bourne from any influence in the meeting are wen rememDerea oy me people. - It 4 was - believed that the senator would make a trip to Chicago and there make ; a last . attempt to carry out his hobby, but the apparent capture of the convention by the Taft managers has seemingly taken theV heart out of the senator and caused him to lose the last femnant of his hope. DEPOT BURNED AT NORTlr POWDER - r -: (Speclsl Dispatch V Tbe Journal.) 'La. Orande, 'Or., June It. A phone ?iessage from North Powder states thaj; he O. R. A N. depot there and adjacent buildings were burned to the ground today. The fire was started by sparks from a locomotive. No statement of losses is obtainable. .- . Frederic J. ;Haskin v Tells Story of First Nominating Conference Known . to' An nals of American Records Lincoln's Platform. " Events That Have Led Up to Forthcoming Chicago Gathering of Men Who Itepiesent . a Great Na tional Party. ; By FREDERIC J, HASKHf. . (Copyright, 1908, by Frederlo J. Haskin.) Washington, June 13.-The first national nominating convention of the Republican party 'met in Phila delphia ' on June 17,' 1856. :It brought into' . existence the most magnificent and effective political or ganization known to the annals of American history; From that con vention, which,, nominated Fremont and Dayton, to the convention which will meet in Chicago ; this -week to name the Republican candidates to succeed Roosevelt and Fairbanks, is a far cry. ' The first convention was an - unorganized gathering of ; men who were brought together because of . the!4. opposition 1 to", la very- yet they, dared not Bay aloud that they opposed It. It was a gathering of men who were impelled by.fthe be lief in a common cause to form ah organization, yet ; they , were t almost afraid to take the step of launching a new party. ' The , convention which will '; meet , In Chicago this week will be ashorough ly organised as refined; party machin ery, can make it ' The delegates 'will hot be the leaders of their people, as in 1856, but they will . be the mouth pieces of the organisations behind them. Afraid. In 1856. , to .break away and form a new party; the convention . of 1908 wlU find It diffloult. In its heart of' hearts, . to understand- why., any other party has the nerve to presume to oppose it. "Whether one is a Remibll. can-or a Democrat-or an independent mugwump, he . la forced to admire, the spirit ot . the Republican party - which has bullded up the splendid and com pact organisation of today upon the wrecks of all the parties that appeared to oppose the Democrats in the 60 years after the fall of the Federalists. rtrst Organisation. The Republican party as. an organisa tion wsvs Dorn- ai- jacKSon. MichJnn. on July, 6, 1854 .'when the first state convention J'of -"the- - organisation '- was held. ...The name .was first . applied by Alvan'E.,Bovay of, Ripon, Wisconsin. who suggested it as an admirable name ror a new party to a meeting of .Whigs, anti-Nebraska Democrats and Free. Soil ersi held at Ripon on,-February 28. 18S4. . Horace: Greeley in the New York T (Continued on Page Flva) jrii'Pfj!'(Pfj',i Work Already Done on Ex hibition ; . Grounds of the Country Club Shayr Mag nitude of the ' Enterprise Planned. Magnificent Race Track and Steel Frame Grandstand Two of the Features HugeBarns for Livestock , in Near Future. Out at the eastern edge of ths city df Portland, near where Sullivan's gulch begins to head to the left , ot Mount Tabot, there is an oval basin containing; about 90 acres in which soma Portland business men have recently been plan U ing 1100,000, and are about to put in 150,000 more to establish a great park: for- a country-club and livestock exhi bition ground. The other day a num ber of the men who have, been furnish "g the money.visited the place for tha flrst time and were amazed at the won ders which the money has worked wltJi the original elements that nature suy pued. , :. v . The man, who haa not visited tha Place can imagine a vast platter 40 feet deep and blgv enough at its oval bottom to make the trip around it a mile long, the rim gently' sloping In ward and on one side rising at the outer edge to a height of 6 feet, and looking across the long way of the oval s-wMa green ' vista - opens 6 miles to a gre vt snow-capped mountain Hood. This la the place where the Portland Country Club and Livestock association has chosen its home. - f- No photograph by an ordinary camera can give an adequate idea of the blsr ness of the project nor the beauty of Its natural formation. Th finn. nf great earthen platter falls gently from each side to a line drawn through its center, end the- racetrack ia niBf..i ? 0?r ,c"y any object at any point on its mile course up to tha rim v anyone sitting on tha - On the flnnr htn' - 3" ,th. tracl?, horses. Ten thou peopl te tally-hos. , automobiles and carriages could stand in the pad 2cki,an.d not. lntr'" with the vision ?h-tii5w.e8tJr0?Lo" P"Pl seated In tne grandstand. -.From nin . v. ; 1 JTandstand the spectator can see tvorv ooUall of the racehorse that measures ui ouw wa ima iracK. Subway Into Basin. At the tr.m. , .v- . basin, the ground was not formed a perfectly as at the sides, and the clui ' has made enormous fills, to complot e, the race course on a level grade, - Tha . It .is Drnnni.il . th.t fhl. .l... be kept atall- times absolute!?. clear f! '2 J,n5' th' ecept the ntZ JTm .b110'd4to cross t.i- Under-, th i!!.at,th,TJi and a, subway 20 tXtl lee. will Pass. The tunnel 1. a 'doubi' ach driveway being :10 ulX Bams 'Already Tull. ' ,-' Eiaht barns for mm.)ui.. v. ready beeu completed t ln the - padJocIo Each barn .haa individual'talls fnJ . raee horses. The entries already r- corded for tha comlna 8ntnh ing have filled these barns nd there It so great an overflow that the club la Eompelled to immediately6 build four more barns. , 4. .. The formation of the great basin is Perfectly aila.nH fn. of .the club" that a vast amount of sutis nave Deep gained by the 'expenditure- of the first 100.000. To haV begun with an ordinary site for thes grounds the bringing of them to th:r prS"en.LhaDO "would have cost 81,0no - ;0i.1.rh9.,lof;,.n,t ?f th Faddock floor to ItS center line Is an important fea ture, for It provides absolutely per fect drainage from tvery point on tne tract and Inside the paddock. a-Preliminary, to seeding it to rrass In the fall, they have rented the floor f the basin to a potato grower, and he u aiming to feed the multitude with po tatoes next fall. . Never did a potM patch of 80 acre so perfectly lend lt t to irrigation. A tub of water pour-1 at the upper end of any one of the rows would trickle to the center line. : Stock Barns Going Up, " The club is carrying forward !ai flans for other buildings, lin-ated li he outfield. - Ai the wt end r t show barns nine of them for llv. . stock,, are rapidly nearing complMtl-.1. In these buildings will be shown I cattle, horses, pU, sheep and gf,'s" from far and near, and in the srrvi will be found the pick of the hr,) , -the Pacific northwent and ('.1 !ifirt u. Next year a meat many herds rum i eaptern states will ooine. Plans are made" fur an norm 1 pavilion,, to he built ii'il r, at a cost Of 40,0tH, to rurliier the , show. . Steel Trarae Cmnd.-'i.-i 1. At the north side if the 1 .-- t well up along thu 60-fot si. , - , ' 1 bank, will be p!:'d a . I c.i.'t - . grandstand sut: 3,0uu pe..i... I (Continue t-h Pag-s Ilv.j, ' " I ', - . r-