The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, July 19, 1908, Page 11, Image 11

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    Tilt OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTL AND, 1 SUNDAY 1 MORNING, JULY 10. 1008.
n
Extensive Alterations on the Store of Rosenblatt & Co.
- : i :
I hfj run
tin
m f 1 1 ; . . i IT I . 1 4 1 '-a ja t :
is yufl rii iHrf Ilk m On hi
Miplr Vflw'
SHREWD GAME
' ' "ii ' f ii iil'V it Vt fr 'I' if - yii .,.
The entire front of the building of Rosenblatt & Co., at Third and Morrison and that of the adjoin
ing etore are being merged into one. Steel columns are being installed preparatory to the complete re
construction of the front of the establishment. When the alterations are completed, the clothing establish
ment of Rosenblatt & Co. can boast of the most model premises In both exterior and Interior appearance.
Politics and
Politicians
Jame H. Whltecotton ha withdrawn
from th content for th nemooratio
nomination for governor of MUMurl.
William H. Tnft ha been 1"!
ppeak before the Republican "tta con
vention of North Carolina, which la to
be held in Charlotte next month.
G S Tlllrnun will probably receive
the Kepulillran nomination for governor
of Tennessee. Mr. Tillman la an ad
vocate of etuto-whle prohibition.
Missouri will try It new primary
election law for the flrnt time next
month, when camllilntPB will he named
for practically nil etate ana couniy 01-
I'!ccs.
It reported thnt the Farmori' union
of Mklahomn. with a meiriberahlp of
nearly HHJ.uoo, In plniinine the orjran
Izatlon of a now political party, Bltnllar
tO tlT Ol(l-lltie I'opllllMlM.
Walter Alexander of Wauaau la !-
In mcntloneci nti a possible candidate
for the 1'nitod states aenato in the
primary election fl;ht to be held in
Wisconsin this fall.
("linrles V. Kwlaher, Hecretary ofatate
of West Virginia, haa been nominated
hv ih' RepubllcBiiii of tliat atata for
governor. ,
Tin. indrncndcnco liaie in Callfor
nia Ima decided to lioM Its ntat con
vention In Oakland early next month.
7c 'invention will ccmaiwi 01
ilKtttn.
I'ow.i'a iuprome court haa held eonatl
Notes From the
Labor World
Upholatarara in Quelph,
flfhtlnir a 40 par cent cut.
Ont.,
REFEREP NAMED IN
FRANK GOULD CASE
tutlonal the law K'vInK women the rlnt
Hiici-inc proposn ion ror
and iHoulhs- municipal
t.' . "t,. on
1C in tax
bonds.
l'iv,- women were numbered among
tt, . i i 5 tr . 1 1 and alternatea at the re-t-.
nt li. nni ratic convention at Iicnver.
.x the Ucpulil lean convention but one
woman had a aeul.
T!i presidential campaign thla year
is I be f i rut of modern tltnea to which
th. railroads liavc not contributed from
j;;,!., l t, J I .!" i , m t In the form of
frt c' transportation for dtump speakers
and other political workera.
-' .
Wisconsin Is to have a primary eleo
tlon the first of September. It is to
be the first time in the hletory of the
state that I'nlted Statee senators are
in he nominated by direct vote of the
people.
The controversy nmnni Illinois Re.
mihllcan candidates as to who shall
have their names flrat on the primary
ballot haa been settled by the decision
that the lifts shall lie headed by tha
names of t ho candidates for renomlna-
tion.
James M. Onffr the jrrlm antagonist
of William J. Bryan, 1ms been a lomo
cratlc lender In Pennsylvania for many
vears. In addition to tielna a past
master In the tamo of politics he la
the noaessor of an Immense fortune.
which ho made for the most part in
the oil industry.
In Indiana this fall rreat battle will
he foiiKht for control o
If the Republicans win, a (Treat major-
The stationary firemen in Denver.,
Colo., have formed a urfton.
The Han Francisco Barbers' union has
a membership of more than 700.
Revere, Mass., town laborers have re
ceived u wage increase of 25 cents a
day.
The Hoston Clg-armakers' union has
levied an asHessiueiit of 5 on each
member to advertise the blue label.
The convention of the International
Stoel and Copper Plate Printers' union
meets In New York City next Monday.
'
The Taekmakers' Protective union of
the United States and Canada is the
second oldest labor organization In
America.
The hodcarrlers of San Juan. Forto
Rico, have formed a union, and the
railroad workers und streetcar em
ployes are about to organise.
Two hundred pupils of Chester. Pa.,
public schools recently went on a strike
because two or their teachers rode on
boycotted trolley cars when It rained.
The threshers of western Australia'
nnvii formed a union, wun us neaanuar-
ttrs at Casterton. and have been so far
successful In raising the rate of wages
from td an hour to d.
(Pol ted I'ren Leased Wire.)
New York, July 18. Announcement
was made today of the selection of a
referee to take testimony in the suit
for divorce brought by Mrs. Frank J.
Oould against her husband. Edward G.
Whltaker of 45 Broadway will act as
referee.
The appointment was surrounded with
all the secrecy possible, wkjleh, by the
way, has marked every step of the pro
ceedings. When the referee will begin
taking testimon- was not dlvulgud.
Tomorrow (Monday) will be posi
tively the last day for discount on
Kast Side gas bills. Portland (ias Co.
Fritnds Are Astonished at
Surprising Talents He
Has Developed.
(United Prea Leafed WlrO
Washington. July 17. To say that
Judge Taft's friends In Washington are
pleased with the way In which he plays
the political game on his own hook is
putting it mildly. They are prophesy
ing that before the cajnpalgn l over
me country win he convinced that it
was Taft shrewdness that made tho
Roosevelt administration such a pictur
esque success.
A few of his most srdent admirers
are pleased to contrast hia behavior In
the limelight with President Roosevelt.
The?- admit that had the president been
handling tha chairmanship rumpu.
with one daeh out of the box, he would
have settled It once and for all. They
are rather proud of the fact that Judge
Taft did not do It that way. They be
lieve he will be the stronger for this
display of consideration of all sides of
the matter before taking the fatal leap.
They say It will appeal to the business
interests of the country that have made
success possible in the past.
Buckeyes Are Sore.
It Is estimated that the presidential
nominee Is about to pull off aome stunts
in the Ohio political situation which
will make old politicians sit up and
take u second snuint at Huckeyo Hill
There is no denying the fact that the
Ohio aggregation, which him hnen hnl.t-
lng the whip hand in that state since
last spring, Is soro at tho failure nf
Arthur I. Voiys. of their midst, to land
tho chairmanship. They wanted the
big prize for the prestige that It would
give to the machine that they have
been laboring on ever since Secretary
Taft started out to cnt the Unrkeve
delegation to .the Chicago convention.
j ne recent repeated visits of Senator
Dick of Ohio to Private Citizen Tnft
have led to tho belief that the
dential candidate is seeking to pneifv
all factions in Ohio at one fell swoop.
xwevums uj me orrensive and defensive
alliance between Senator Fnrnlcpr mid
Senator I)ick. caused by the White
House opposition to some of their plans.
oeiittiur in h cioaest allies in Mb Ohio
fights were tho present Ohio bosses
who have been Irving to put the Muck
eve senators to sleep. Walter Itrown.
chairman of the state central commit
tee; Henry 9. William, chairman of tho
state executive committee, and State
Atiditor Walter Guilbert. were as thick
with Dick as hops.
Dick Joins Taft Squad,
For Senator JMek to go to these Ohio
leaders wno iimugut they were about
to blossom forth Into national politl
clans, and with bared breast, show them
how. in the Interest of p irtv s'H i ess
he has set them an exampl by getting
onto the Taft bandwagon, would have
a wholuom effect. It would also have
a. tendency to make them believe that
If they were to be President Taft'a rep
resentatives in Ohlu they must not let
the other crowd In Ohio get onto the
ground floor ahead of them.
Senator Mlek made arrangements with
Judge -Taft to see him at Hot Springs
short! jF after the subcommittee selected
a Phnlrman of the nn I hum I committee.
At that time it Is bell.ned an under
standing will bo reuehed which will
bring these two men closer together.
Wise as Judge Taft mar have been
In his selection of a campaign man
ager his admirers point nut that the
greatest single factor In Dinkey Hill's
campaign will. tie the part that Charlie
Taft, not the Cincinnati variety of
Tnfts. but he of t ha later generation,
will play In it.
Already young Charlie has been Hhle
to demonstrate unconsciously to the
world that hla father is a good-smiled
Individual, made up of the same In
stinct I hat every father loves to hesi
xtnlled. Charlie haa made up with the
newspaper boys and ia regarded m
prise winner aa a presa Mt for pt
dad.
V hut's lb rr?
From the Hefanton Tribune.
Wellington Waggles ley say
money talks
Henry HolmHut what's de use when
It's lit de other end of de phoneT
' - 'II'
At the instance of, and under the- patronage of, the I'nitcd States (lovernmcnt, Edw.
R. Squibb established his Brooklyn laboratories in the year lS.'S. The governments of the
United States, England. Germany, France and Russia arc today his best customers, and
that, too, only because of the unapproachable excellence of the Squibb Product.
!
!
Ours is a Squibb Drug Store, and if the people generally
cnlv understood, as the doctor does, the immense superiority of
Squibb's medicines, as against all other manufacturers, we .
would simply be unable to handle our trade. A prescription
filled with Squibb's medicines means health to the sick, and
satisfaction to the physician. Ask your doctor.
Some One Week Specials
FOR NEXT WEEK ONLY
A 1-Pound Cake of Paraffine 9?
A 2-Pint Bottle Spirits of Camphor 25
A 50c Box of Seidletz Powders 19
Two 25c Cans of Mennen's Talcum Powder 25
A 25c Cake of Colgate's Cashmere Bouquet Soap 19
A 50c Bottle Wyeth's Phosphate of Soda 29
The Perkins Hotel Pharmacy
THE SQUIBB DRUG STORE
Free Delivery
Phone A. IOH
Alain 8624
r
!
t
lty of the counties may exerclae local
option. If the l'oniociats are victori
ous, there probably will he no appre
ciable change In the present law gov
rnlna the sale of liquor.
Jacob F. Jacobson. the Republican
candidate for Kovcrnor of Minne
sota, Is a nntlve of Norway and
settled in Minnesota In 1871. fie
took an Interest In politics be
fore he had been In America a year,
pnd In 1873, two years after his arrival,
he was elected auditor of his county.
Jn 16!9 he was elected a member of the
Minnesota leitlslature and was sevral
times reelected Six years an he ran
for slate auditor, but was defeated by
a small majority. Two years uo he
ought the Uepubllran nomination for
governor, but was defeated In the convention
( h.nip Clark as Speaker.
From the Philadelphia Record.
Champ Clark has never taken him
self seriously, which Is hla principal
fault. llecauae of lone experience in
the house of representatives, however,
aa well aa because of real ability, he
Is so manifestly the most available suc
cessor to the lmorratlc floor leader
ship that the assurance of support said
to have been given him by a majority
of the members in that aide of the
chamber Is most rtlfyln. The rxw
sihiilty that Champ Clark would be
come speaker in the event of the elec
tion of a Democratic house nest fall
mar be Terrifying to those deficient
In the sense of aumnr Nobody nee I
fear that he would "call for hla plpej
and call for his aisss an J call for his fid-1
dlers three, but even sn era of Klnf
Cole" In the house would be a refresh
ing diversion after the domination of
Cannon and standpatlam.
nrewerv employes in Toronto, Ont.,
recently had their wastes advanced to
the averiiRC of $1 per week and hours
reduced Knsrlneers and firemen in
tho breweries received an Increase of
10 to 25 per cent.
Plans are being made by the Struc
tural KnlldlnK Trades slllnnce and the
Central JMibor union of Spokane. Wash.,
to erect a labor temple In thnt city to
cost $76,000. There are 7,000 union
men in Spokane.
The United States government within
the next few weeks will l c;in a scries
of scientific Investlsntlons into the
causes of disaster in American coal
mines, In the hope of reducing; the pres
ent frightful mortality to a minimum.
The international convention of the
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers
at Columbus. Ohio, voted to admit to
membership the engineers of all elec
trically drawn trains on steam rail
roads. Admission of engineers In Cuba
to the brotherhood was also voted.
It Is reported from the headquarters
of the I'nitod Mineworkcrs of America
that the two years' wage contract en
tered into at Toledo last month by the
miners and operators of western Penn
sylvania, Ohio and Indiana has been
ratified bv a referendum vote of the
locals by 77,000 to 7,000.
The agreement between the minors
and operators of Kansas City, Mo., Ok
lahoma and Arkansas coal fields signed
In Kansas City recently, provides a
scale for two years, and the terms are
practically the same as existed last
year. Under the terms of the contract
the average wage of a miner will be
$4. ID per i-ay.
For the second time within three or
four yoiira an attempt Is being made in
New York to organize the stenographers
and typewriters- of that city. The
Hookkeeners'. Stenographers' and Ac-
countanta' union, which ha-i been formed
recently, has issued a circular to all
bookkeepers, stenographers and type
writers in Greater New York, urging
them to Join the new bodv.
Women Workers In British Factories
Consul Maxwell Blake of Dunferm
line flnda that a late official return its
to employment in factories In the
I'nlted Kingdom other than textile
gives interesting particulars as to the
nropdrtlon of male and female worker.
Out of a total of 807.1 57 workers in!
clothing factories. H7.II0 were women. I
me reinaie tailors numbering 46.072 'o
1J.JS4 men. Out of a total of 102. 1S9
employed in boot and shoe factories.
llthographlo printers, S.53S were women.
In explosives' factories there are 5.J1S
women employed out of a total of 13,
114. while 2.S47 out of a total of 12.-
4S1 r'rsons employed at bottling be-r
I n
I , III ! WIPWHSawSSHIP Si
1 rami v Brew of sai'','Wn
y , - . ffl l wimirKiii i wwrivr- mmn.i
i rh. ..ci .. .i tr 1 um aiMif w ism p i '
u 13 wi uutiu ivi JUfflfi
For the man with a case of "GAMBRINUS" in his home, hot weather has no terrors.
HE knows how to take comfort. He knows that he can put his body in condition to with
stand the discomfort of hot weather by common-sense use of GAMBRINUS.
HEALTHY people don't mind the warm davs we're having now. And drinkers of GAM
BRINUS are invariably heaJthy.
Some people say they can't drink beer, that it makes them bilious. They haven't tried the
right brew.
PURE beer like "GAMBRINUS" CAN'T make
until it has been properlv aged and all fermentation
barley malt and hops, and the water comes from a we
one
bili
T . 1 ,11
unous. it never leaves tne orewery
is over with. It is made from the best of
m the premises a well of great depth
which produces water that chemists pronounce the purest possible to obtain.
GET THE GAMBRINUS HABIT
are women.
lere are also 25.U03
women included in the total of J4.li:
workers in tobacco, snuff and cigar
factories.
The Tlrrleaa Pace.
From the Washington Btar.
"Toil Awwrlcans don't take enough ex
errlne." salt the foretm rhyali-lan
"tjreat ot'" replied the -ung man
with a sunburned tint "Tea ousht te
e aa on the boardwalk at a summer
reeorj-" .
Oalj Ride !.
FYoee the Atlanta Cwt!tutn
Tha wtiisra of 'flussf Jim" bar
r-art only a s'ls Vue.
Teheran's Water Rnppljr.
From the London Chronicle.
Teheran. the center of the cjvl!
waar now ' raalna In Persia. has
within the last 20 years undergone
the most rapid transformation of all
oriental cities Since the old four mile
wall waa taken down and the ditch
filled nD to form a broad boulevard.
Iras, tramways and telerrapha have
modernised tne ancient birthplace of
Hroun-al-Rachld.
To preserve the ebaractr of the rltv.
however, the old pits that tap the sub
terranean wstereoursea. on which all
ioeal, life depends, are still aa they were
centuries ao.
Real Crook.
From the Boston Transcript
That man over thera Is the blfreat
kin In the city."
"Bob yea. would he?"
fUb! ay. if I had to shake hands
with that fellow I wouldn't feel aura I
had all mr flncara until J d counted
Drink GAMBRINUS with vour meals, and
ing and ou'll be sure of sound, refreshing sleep.
THEN you'll arise in the morning with enoul
day.
2 DOZEN PINTS" $2.00
25c the dozen for the bottles when returned
C!l loV
them. Prink a pint bottle on retir-
1!
anc
go m yi.'ii t
la-t through a busy, hot
PHONE
Main 49
In filling orders for the country an extra chargt
charge is refunded when the case is returned.
GAMBKII
1 DOZEN QUARTS $1.75
40c the dozen fcr the bottles when returned
i made for a two-dozen case. This
PORTLAND, OREGON
BREWING
COMPANY
PHONE
A-1149