The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, July 10, 1908, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE' OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. FRIDAY EVENING, JULY 10, 1903.
PLAN A WELCOME TO
CONGRESSMAN WILLIAMS
John Sharp Wllllama, congressman clal club and lie esoorteil in t lie rluh-
from Mississippi leader of the minority rooms, where nn Itiformiil recepllon
party In the house, lecturer and master ()a tfndere.i him.
f .11 .., . .Vwl"f. lo hp '''''"J-lp. the irnln upon
- wn en rnnirPKKiunn w hmn in irnv-
elliig, no nrranifeirii'ntR were mode for a
morning and Grady Inst nlitht had nronv
laed the support of New York for any
nucleate and nny platform that mlcht
i hp stamp or ins convention, nut
New York heHltated. On could
hear the stam
mill
only Bee the New York delegation now
whi-n the crowd purled momentarily.
Mont of the ripliKHtpa. headed bv Mur
phy, were sit tins;, while the mob'rlrcled
around them once more In an effort to
cany off the Ni-w York atnndnrd.
Th Cllniax of ths Tempest.
the march of the standards had set 'n.
A stalwart member of the Pennsyiv., ,U
delegation snatchml the marker of tnkt
mate from It socket '"') set off down
the hall with It toward wlrera tha Ne
lirankii dole gution was .sentcil. Tho del
eeiitex from Wyumliig grouped the
standard of her tal and the example
was. followed until finally the banners
of New York, New Jersey.. Delaware,
(3nrirlfi find Mlniieeota were all that re
mained In place. And they would have
The nlr In the hall became almost i Kn were It not thut maiwari . nandi
liieiu hiiii i-fiTi itfii ail
ii r them. Deleirates
II. n mr.vt m.H 'l, . . ,i i P If StrldlllK llhollt t ll O llltll from
ipnillnK all the power of th.lr charniM i M " .v direction.; wavlns nK. banners
and nresence to force NVw York Into 'ml hunllriK. alternately u-.rlng for
i nil in intf nun upvalue Hitniii I "
Htlfllnn. Mont of the men had removed j were guarding n
their coats and vestn. The women for i Bttempts to capt
ery person In the building was cheer
ing On snthualast clambered upon
the rostrum with a beautiful little girl,
rarbed In pink and white, clinging to
his neck .and wared a bit American
fhif for J 5 minutes without apparently
tii-lns: of his self-appointed task.
" Platform Ooa Might TBronfU. -V
Handy was permitted to conduit his
speech and Haskell waa then Introduced.
He made a real hit when lie declared
that that committee, after a two iluva'
struKRle. hud succeeded In recnncltlnir
all factions and drafting a document
upon uilcn every member could ngrne
After the platform waa adopted. Au
gustus Thomas, the playwright, made
an eloquent address, which, -waa thun
derously applauded. '
Statu Senator J.ooney f .Texas aug
ecitfd that Hryan's nomination be made
unanimous. Krra William of Illinois
also seconded ltryan's nomination, and
then Ollle James of Kentucky, the
Blunt statesman of the bluexraas, Rave
the wornnut delegates a brand new
thrill with vigorous address, winding
up with thin nsnertlon:
"lie hops not ix-iong to NebrasKa; no
r.' '.-'1 ' ,1
.... .my.-w"- tl'&SA
Congressman John Sharp Williams.
most prominent politicians In America,
wlll reach Portland tonight at 8:50
v o'clock. He will be met at the depot
I by a large committee representing the
. citizens of Portland and the Commer-
formal recennon bv the official of the
Commercial club. This being ladles'
nlsht nt tile club, however, n h ex
pected that the lnfurmul greeting to
the noted visitor will be a succexHful
one.
governor Will Attend.
The committee whl-.-h will meet Mr.
WIllluniH at the depot will ftSNemble
at the club und will Ivnv there at H:30
sharp for the depit. It In composed of
the committee on entertainment of the
club and other prominent cltlxens, In
cluding tlovernor Chamberlain, who will
represent the mate and extend Its greet
ings to the visitor.
The committee from the club Is com
posed of V. n. Olafke, chnlrman; I(r.
J n. etherbec, vice-chairman; Ed
ward Ehrman. E. H. McCraken and Slg
Slchel. The remainder of the commit
tee of welcome Is composed of Gover
nor Chamberlain. J. N. Teal, C. 8. Jack
son, l.oneorssman V. E. Hawloy, H. K.
line. It was the most extraordinary
scene ever witnessed in a pollllcul gath
erlng. At the end of the demonstration
which ;ore started Weilnemia y olio
could only ask what Hie ltryan me" wen
Cross, manager of the Chautauqua; K
I. Thompson. Henry Hahn, Herman
Wittenberg and A. H. Devers. -
WUi Address Chautauqna.
Congressman Williams will address
the Chautauqua tomorrow, and while In
Portland will be the guest at manv nri-
vate entertainments. Plans are belna-
(erfected by which he will be shown the
beauties or the Columb a river. nnr1
while he will be taken for various trin.
mwuiiu lie vicinity or foruana, an es
pecial effort will be made to make plain
to him the resources of the state ih
advantages and needs of Portland as a
port and the prospects of the state for
rowin ana development.
SURD II HAND
OF
(Continued from Page One.)
V for Bryan by demanding a poll of the
state delegation during the roll call.
No one who spent the night in the
big auditorium is likely ever to for
." get the events. Following an exces
elvely warm day. the structure was
. like an oven before the first person
was admitted, and when the gavd jf
Permanent Chairman Clayton finally
- " fell. 45 minutes after the hour set. 7
.'. o'clock, there Tias not a vacant Inch of
space. The Inevitable result was that
several women fainted and required
medical attention, hut so Interested
were those present in the proceeding;
that few if any of those not In the im
't. mediate vicinity noticed these inci
dents.
The chairman's f!r3t words male
.' known the fact that there would be
a late session. Recognizing Ollle
"""James, at the head of the Kentucky
delegation, he Inquired whether the
committee on resolutions was ready to
, report. Receiving a negative answer,:
.,, he appointed a committee to wait on it
. and ascertain When It would be readi
er and - then .declared that , folcltous
speeches would 'be In order for a time.
Beveral Democrats of national prom
: inence delivered brief addresses until
8:40 when James returned and an
nounced that the resolutions commit
... ?; tee would be unable to report until
midnight"
domination and Pandemonium.
Then the Kentucky solon moved that
the rules be" suspended in order that
nominating speeches might be made.
making the proviso, however, that tho
-vote on the candidate for president
" . should - not be taken until after the
platform could be adopted. The mi
..! tlon nrevalled. and ,thn T T nnnn
assistant city attorney of Omaha, was
recognized to place the leader of the
" rveDrasKa democrats in nomination.
Dunn was In excellent voice, and his
i speech, an eloquent tribute to Bryan,
:.. thrilled the crowd. Especially dera-
- onstraxive were tne Alabama delegates,
wnose action in givinir way to Nebras-
. kn nn th rnll nnll iruira that - f r, V, m
opportunity to urge the claims of
favorite son first.
nno ine speech was punctunted
throughout with volleys of applause,
It was not until the peroration was
.em iieU lnal mere was unison in tin
tucviing.
The Dots In the Portrait.
Dunn's peroration set the crowd wild
as he concluded with the magic name
... iiitt neurasnan a riocK of doves
loose rrom the gallery and
' Ji iioaiins; aoout the audttori-um-
Simultaneously a great pictur'o
. . jo,, nu ipi ciown rrom above
mic i.iuurm. scenes even wilder than
Wednesday s demonstration followed
ine noise was a steady roar. Menu-
' if SToing. i in noma In
creased the Ylln. The Interior f i,
' a sona wass of waving colo -.
Great flashes of explodinr snanshol
pwwaer and the dull roar following
nuuea 10 ine spectacle. One of
the released doves took refuge on the
iramje of the monster picture of the
candidate and the concrete walls f
the hall fairly trembled beneath the
shock of the volume of sound that was
set loose.
The Obstinate Contingent.
As on yesterday, all but a few of
the eastern states were particlpatlni!.
New York still held out. Finirv Con
fers and a detail selected bv him
fought off a party of determined' Bryan-
v V . soufht t0 wrench the New
York banner lose from Its fastenings
and carry it about the harKIa the pro
cess on of delegates which hSd been
started. The other states which re
fused to participate in yesterday's dem
onstration again obstinately declined To
LWll. . I no ORnO entllH rr.t V.A
How the States
Voted on Bryan
10
. (United Prcu Leased Wli.)
Denver, Col., July 10. Following is
the vote by states as recorded before
Bryan's nomination was made unani
' mous this morning:
For Bryan.
I Alabama 22
- : Arkansas 18
. : California 20
Colorado 10
. Connecticut 9
Delaware ,
.; Florida
. Georgia
Idaho
- Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
. Kansas
Kentucky ....
Louisiana
; Maine
) Maryland
Massachusetts .
Michigan
Minnesota
- Mississippi
Missouri ,
Montana ......
t Nebraska
, Nevada
New Hampshire
' New Jersey . . .
. New York . . . .
; North Carolina
, North Dakota .
Ohio
neara aiiovp tn rnrii, tv
tlon had gone absolutely Bryan mad
I be women as well as the men Joined
n he hysterical rush about the hall
At the end of the half hour Chal--man
Clayton attempted to get order.
The pounding of his jravel was abso
lutely unheard In ro n.
abandoned the effort and during the
lull the band was heard playing "Hot
Time In the Old Town Tonight." The
wu iHKen up dj- the crowd and
frantic voices shouted the tune that
Kooseyelt made famous. The parade
encircled the hall, women and m-n
romplne; together, state banners hclj
aloft, hundreds of pictures of the Nc
braskan wavinir In the air hn ,i
ing, whistles blowing, thousands of feet
stamping.
tn,oriy tiv minutes had gone bv and
stin there was no prospect of anv cessa
tlon of the storm. Littleton ' in the
placed In nomination. This was their
ans-ver. It was greater than the day
beforo. greater than Kansas City, great
er' than Chicago In 1 S'lfi It was tho
frantic, mad, hysterical, enervating, de
moniacal. de astat lug abandon of polit
ical fervor.
The convention was absolutely beyond
control One would not have wondered
If at any moment the crowd by sheer
force had robbed New York of her
standard and wlllv nlllv born" the Em- I
plre State banner t rl unuduin ! I y to tho
Hryan shrine t the foot of the plat
form. A trumpet voiced enthusiast ap
peared In the gallery and In siren tones
stirred the crowd to frenh efrort.
"Hryan! Bryan! Bryan!" It was now a
full hour since the tumult started. At
this rate It looked as If the convention
would not get to balloting before morn
Ing. And tho platform was before the
delegates. The stamping, hysterical, un
reasoning mob was to be called upon
weakened bv the excesses of Its enthus
iasm to give ear to the declaration of
party principles and pass upon tnem oe
fore rest or slppp.
Thpn more oratory and more ehoprlng.
nnd then the voting. Clayton was hav
ing trying to have the aisles and
platform cleared. His gavel struck the
table, but no sound of it was heard. Only
redoubled cheering. The expedient of
turning out most of the lights In the
convention hall was resorted to to quiet
them. But they ceased cheering because
they were exhausted.
Oearln and Others Second.
The demonstration lasted one hour
nnd II minutes. When nt last It died
ou. more from exhaustion thnn any
thing elre. the naming of candidates
was continued.
Former United States Senator Oearln
of Oregon got the floor to second
Bryan's nomination through the goner.
oslty of California, which surrendered
Its place on the roll call. He made a
good Impression by his speech, the fea
ture of which was an anneal for more
rlgin Asiatic exclusion laws
Colorado came next nnd former Gov
crnor Alva Adams seconded Bryan.
Johnson and Gray Named.
Connecticut was next called. By
agreement it gave way to Minnesota,
and W. S. Hammond of that state men
tioned the first of the rival candidates.
iiovernor joonson.
When ho concluded, his candidate
was cheered for 15 minutes, several of
tne ardent Bryan advocates nldlnsr the
solitary Mlnnesotans In their effort to
prove tneir governors popularity.
Delaware Was called, and former
Congressman L. Irving Handv Disced
the name of Judge Gray before the
convention. He had just got fairly
wen Pianeri on nts speech when the
committee on resolutions made Its ap
pearance, neaaen ny liovernor Haskell
of Oklahoma. Its chairman, with th
aran or ine completed document under
nis arm.
The March of the Standards.
So soon as the cheerlne iingin
to one long settled roar of the magnl-
iuop oi nnir a nunnrea sream calliopes,
Hrvun or Jeering at those who sat stol
idly In their .seuta r.-fuslng to Join in
the demonstration.
Galleries Make Tell Unanimous.
This outburst differed materially
from that of the day before. Then the
I floor conducted the demonstration, but
now the ga ll-rles were striving to outdo
the delegates ami alternated and for
half an hour It scenic I as If nearly ev-
9"
Ulld he UrlPd this fact ns irotul renium dmu nut lieloticr tit Amnrlen- h hnliinra
wny inn piuiTorm snoubl lie udopted
Kansas pjty also failed to make him
self heard. ' ,. . ."
'.When New York was called.. Chief
Murphy simply Said: -
"New York represents no candidate."
When J. Thomas Heflln of Alabama
trlod to make a long address ha whs
howled duwn.'J. J, fcenla of Ohio T.-ns
liven slightly better attention but was
not allowed to talk long.
Senator (lore of Oklahoma and a half
dor.en others made brief speeches.
When the roll call wus taken, the
first delay came in the demand of a poll
of the New York delegation by which
A OOX.DEIT WEDDIN8
Means that man and wife have lived
to a good old age and consequently
have kept healthy. The best way to
keep healthy Is to see that your liver
does its outy 305 days out of 366. The
taiy way to ao tnts is to keep Ballard's
rirnne in me house and take It when
ever your liver gets Inactive. 60 cents
per Dotue. aoia by Kkidmore Drug Co.
COFFEE
One can spoil good coffee
in making, but can't make
good of bad.
Tour grocer returns your money if you
don't like Schilling's Best; we pay him.
4404444
N
WPO
6
64
SO
26
20
26
18
10
7
32
28
0
20
S6
6
16
6
7
0
78
24
8
46
Oklahoma j g
Oregon c
' Pennsylvania '" 4914
Rhode Island 5
. (Smith CimllnD ' '
,' South Dakota
t Tennessee 24
:: It
Utah (
Vermont 7
. Tirjmia 14
Washington 10
, AYMt Virginia, J4
- Wisconsin ;
W vtm Inm .
Alaska ..
Arlxona ;
District 4f -Columbia
Hawaii
New Mexico
Porto Rico
Totai
For Johnson.
Connecticut ....'...'..
Oeorgia,
Maine
.iibi j-maiu .- .......
New Hampshire
Pennsylvania!
Rhode Island
44444A
n rmin a rm ttt
lUJ li l u
WJlMifll II 111
7
1 4 1 irrasi
JH-W s WVVL
pi
uiianlmouhly. Various sections of tho
rlatlnrni ns ho rend were cheered heur
lly, especially those with reference to
an tl-ln junction, government guarantee
of bank deposits', and anti-trust liglsla
tlon. At tho conclusion of the reading
Haskell moved the adoption of the plat
form and this was carried without a
dissenting vote. The committee und
ftub-commlttfcH hud been in almost con
tinuous m-sslon for CI hours.
to Immunity and the world- Ood bloss
him."
This set .the convention wild and
there were .repeated demands that
James continue speaking, hut he de
clined. J. H. Sullivan of Iowa and Samuel
I.. Ollmcre of Louisiana snoke briefly.
Judge Iv. W. Powers of ftah and Kd
ward Drynn of Michigan tried to make
speeches but were drowned out by the
noise of the arowd. James A. Reed Of
Leader Murphy was first forced to vote
roi
The Pennsylvania vote gave
personally
yu met
or Bryan. Judge Alton II.
had gone to bed and was not
recorded.
wryan tne needed majorityi and soo'i
afterwards the motion to make th'i
nomination by acclamation was carried.
seven Read advertise
ment of Chicago Clothing company.
Sol Garde, proprietor.
. Top-o-page
OF MEN'S AND BOYS' CLOTHING is rushing to a
finish ONE-HALF of the Men's-Suits and a large
proportion of the Boys' Suits have been sold in the
last four days. If you wish to share in this BARGAIN
CARNIVAL it would be well to come THIS WEEK
today if possible.
Young Men's Outing
Suits One-Half Oif
$15.00 Outing Suits, now... 7.50
$10.00 Outing Suits, now... $5.00
Boys' Suifs al One-Half
Every Boys' Spring Suit in the
House, Knickerbocker or straight
pants, all this season's latest
styles, ages 7 to 16 years.
Boys' $ 5.00 Suits, now $2.50
Boys' $ 6.00 Suits, now $3.00
Boys' $ 8.00 Suits, now $4.00
Boys' $10.00 Suits, now $5.00
Boys' $15.00 Suits, now $7.50
All Boys' Suits, Blacks and Blues,
ONE-QUARTER OFF.
Men's Suits at One-Hall
Men's $40 Spring 'Suits, now $20.00
Men's $35 Spring Suits, now $17.50
Men's $30 Spring Suits, now $15.00
Men's $25 Spring Suits, now $12.50
Men's $20 Spring Suits, now $10.00
All men's Black and Blue Suits, One
Quarter Off.
At One-Quarter
The following items Young Men'
College Suits, Young Men's Spring
Suits, Every Blue , and Black Suit in
the House, Men's, Boys' and Youths'.
Washable Suifs
$1.00 Washable Suits, now. . . 75
$1.50 Washable Suits, now. ..$1.12
$2,00 Washable Suits, now... $1.50
$3.00 Washable Suits, now... $2.25
$5.00 Washable Suits, now. . .$3.75
REMEMBER Every article in our store is marked in PLAIN FIGURES. All you have to do is to
look at the price ticket and deduct one half. We have strictly one price and never change the price tickets.
No exaggerations ever permitted in any of my advertisements.
i
YAQU1NA BAY
Oregon's rlatchless Beach Resort
The Place to Go for Perfect Rest and Every Conceiv-
able Form of Healthful and Delightful Recreation t
ITS FACILITIES ARE COMPLETE Rest nf fH 3ri a 1
abundance of it. Fresh water from springs. All modern ne
cessities, such as telegraph, telephone, markets freshlv pro
vided every day. Fuel in abundance. Cottages partly fur
nished or unfurnished to be had cheaplv. Strict municipal
sanitary regulations.
Summer Excursion Rates
From All Points in the Northwest t
X1UK1 is reached by way of the Southern Pacific to I
Albany or Corvallis. thence Corvallis & F
Train service daily, and the trip a pleasure throughout Leave
Portland 8 .15 a. m.
RATES FROM PORTLAND
Season tickets, on sale daily $6.00
Saturday-to-Monday tickets $3.00
Correspondingly low rates from all other points. Call at the
City Ticket Office of the Southern Pacific. Third and Wash
ington streets, in Portland, or at anv Southern Pacific agencv
elsewhere, for complete information.
WM. McMURRAY
Genera! Passenger Agent. Southern Pacific Co.. Portland, Or.
If 7 "v XI 4 TV
olbN
SIT? If Tf Rv TT
bLLINQ
LEADING
CLOTHIER
0LIARS
0
0UBLE
UTY
2E525E3I
SAVES
ALTERA
YOU MONEY
ON
ON
Total
For Gray.
rlwr . ..
CrAfY1 ....... ........
JrrT
-nrlflnA
41
24
Ttr
Kot. Totinc.
. 1
1
Main
arnr1raiUa .-
Vtrnoit ........
- - w - ' . .
ti ............ a
T' tm-br ef rote In conrcntloa
If - - -- - - -
.
Morrison Eleclric Company
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
Fixtures. Wiring, Supplies
291 EAST MORRISON STREET
PHONES: EAST 3128. B1625 K
Mti BATHASWtET RICE POWnn
mm m rwa mmmiu m " - . sm
THE GREATEST SALE OF ALL
Look for the store without any show windows; carpenters
are Dusy tearing things upside down; we want to clear
our counters as much as possible; we cut the prices
lower than ever before in the history of the
RED FRONT. ATTEND THIS SALE.
REDUCTIONS 0
FOURTH" TO 0NE-HA1E
ON EVERYTHING in the HOUSE
Men's and Boys' Furnishings Included
RED
MLN'S and BOYS' OUTFITTERS
193-195 FIRST ST. Corner Tavlor
THE
MM
TTP7T
.
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