THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY . EVENINO, SEPTEMBER 20. 1003.
ft
OLD JOSEPHINE CABIN
HAS HOUSED NOTABLES
President Hayes, Mark Twain, General Lano and Many
, Others Have Enjojed Its Hospitality First
V ' Jfcthodlst Conference Organized.
I.
:.v'f
', . Josephine County's Historic Cabin
V (Special Dlspatck U Tt Jovial I
Grant, Pass, Or., Bept 10. On of
th very oldaat landmark In Southern
Oreron 1 an old lor cabin. This cabin
la located on the old Oregon-California
atate road. near Grants Paaa. It la of
hlstorlo lntereat for the reason that It
waa a popular stopping place In the days
of long ago, before there waa any
Grant Paaa, and before the railroad
fame. "A auch a topping: place It shel
tered several prominent people, among
them being President and Mrs. Hayea,
Mark Twain and General Joseph Lane.
In this cabin, also, waa organised the
first Methodist conference of the South
ern Oregon district. Tills was ne of
the very first religious organization
of state-wide scope perfected in Oregon.
This event occurred almost half a cen-l
tury ago,' and moat of. the faithful
preacher and religious workers who
took part have long sine gone to their
great reward.
A mute evidence of the wlldnesa of
the .region tn which this cabin was
built is a lone monument that stand
under madrona a few hundred-yard
oacK or tne nouae. - tms monument
mark the grave of. a pioneer who was
killed by a grlssly bear. The encounter
occurred on the spot where 'the man
was burled.
: The house 1 built of . logs, hewn
square and nicely fitted at the corners.
The walls are almost as sound as when
first raised, half a century ago, but, the
roor, rioors and window nave decayed,
and the. cabin is In a most dilapidated
condition through disuse. It. will soon
ds torn down and the ground used ss a
site lor a more modern structure.
SHOE IIS TELLS
1. 8. HE LIES
Bryan Uses Term "Pclib
erate Misrepresentation,"
in' Sneaking of Charges.' .
BANKER'S WOE
i. if (Continued from Page One.)
that If a system ,of branch bank, very
simply ana inexpensively managed and
not necessarily open every day In the
week, could be organised, which would
ft put the resources of the rich banks of
! the country at the disposal of whole
if countrysides to whose merchants and
farriters only a restricted and local
. credit is now open, the- attitude of
plain men everywhere towards the
... banks and banking, would be changed
utterly witnin less man a generation.
"You know that you are looking out
for investments: that even the collbsaal
enterprises or our time, do not supply
ft "you with safe Investments enough for
the money that come in to you; and
l that banks here, there and everywhere
are lempiea. ns a consequence, to place
, jiiimey in Bpeuuiauve enterprise, ana
r- even- themselves t 4fomot question-'
able ventures at fearful and wholly u--
justiflable- risk, in
order to a-ett the
usury jthey wish from their resources.
Greatest Chance .Overlooked.
- "You sit only where these things are
spuiten vi ana Dig returns coveted.
There would be plenty of investments
ii v If you carried your money to the peo-
jjiu oi uio country at large ana naa
agent in hundreds of villages who
i Know tne -men m their neighborhood
j who could be trusted with loans and
f who would make profitable use of
1 them. Your monev. moreover, wnulrl
t x quicken and fertilise the country, and
J t .tnat. other result would follow which
1, I think you will agree with me Is not
V ' least imoortant in mv ararilmont tha
average voter, would- learn that the
money of the country was not being
, hoarded; that It was at the disposal of
any nonest man who could use It; and
that to strike at the banks was to strike
at the general convenience and the gen-
jiimpsniy. i ao noi Know what
the arguments against branch-banks
are, out tnese i Know from observation
i Khe ar'ument f" them, and very
"v,o"Jr iuineuu mey seem to De. t
Tax Country Xa.toConfld.ao.
4 v JTf "houid. for example, not only
iM-jii? i , r our currency
f dlfficultie. not only the safest and most
.r scientific system of elastio currency to
. .liven tiio tun venienco or a country in
rim;!! uio imiiuni oi casn needed at dif
ferent time fluctuates enormously and
vioienuy, put. we should also seek to
give me Discussions or such matters
uun puDiicity ana sucn general cur
rency and such simtillnltv uin .
, able men of every kind and calling to
understand what we are talking about
,, ig mil iiiieuigent pari in tne dis-
vunBiun. vr o cannot snut ourselves In
as expert to our own business. We
must open our thoughts to the country
-v a.uu aorvB mo general intent'
gence a well a the general welfare."
Banks t Blast for Fanio.
I.8, Walker, president of the Cans-
man nana or commerce, followed Dr.
"'"" nu, in an aaaress on The Ab
normal Features of American Bankina."
arraigned the system in this country
i "u"'0,y" aruuiiuB, comparing It with
wi.i m oiner nations, iie discussed at
length the currency, the reserve system.
titan iiia-iiuusa certincaies and re
discount and took up each subject from
the technical point of view. .
Walker charged that panic In thl
country are caused mainly by the dis
trust of Individual banks for each other,
saying:
"The great national danger I that
the panic may cause national ruin. But
what If a panic A widespread fear
without cause. In moat - countries
financial panic is caused by fear on
. the part of those who are not a part
of the national finance who are not
banker and such. But tn the United
8ttes, whoever (may start the panic,
those who accentuate It most are the
thousand of Individual bank by their
distrust of each . other. We apeak In
dignantly about the private Individual
who draw hi deposit In currency and
hoards it. - But in time of ftanio the
most active agency In drawing out cur
rency and hoarding It Is the country
bank. - . f .
'And it is not the fear of the fall n re
of banks, but the fear of the disap
pearance of currency, which aggra
vates panics and bring about disaster
and terrible reduction in values. To
sum it up, it would appear that the
same elements which in the united
Btates cause panics of the most ruin
ous character .would .not be apt to
cause panic at all In better remitted
countries. .In .such "other countries,
firstly, the' reserved cash would be In
stantly available; secondly, the banks
would not be llkelv to fear one another.
but -would cohere in meeting any pan
icky feeling on -the part of the public;
thirdly, - the newer of re-dlseounttna- or
ui issuing clearing nouse certificates
would need to be used to a. small degree
If only the demands of the public had
to be met and not the demand of In.
dividual bank; fourthly, with these
things assured and a reasonably flex
ible currency nor stonnaae of currency
payments would be likely to arise."
xewis JS. Flerson. chairman of , the
executive council, made his annual re
port, which was favorable and i-nmnll-
mantary to the officers. ; - . . . )
oecreiary rea jparnswortn submitted
U report, showing the associa-
(CalU rreaa Wlra.t
Muscatine, Iowa. Sept. 10. William
Jennings Bryan wa her today on hi
tour through Iowa and wa received by
a big crowd, which cheered hi ad
dreaa. I denounced the attitude of
President Roosevelt In the preaent cam
paign along the line of hi letter mad
publlo laat night. Bryan said that the
open manner In which the Democratic
campaign 1 being conducted with the
announcement of Ita'lrtentlon to pub
lish a detailed Hat of all contributor
to It fund, will serve a a rebuke to
the president.
J oe commoner asserted tnat tnxem-
ocratlo party would not suffer from
what, he termed "deliberate misrepre
sentation" on the part of President
Koosevelt. He said he could not deem
It necessary for hi in to enter proof that
he la not allied with the truata; that
hi life' record, known to the public,
wa all the answer he needed to pre
sent to the Insinuations. - -.
The Commoner la maklna a number
of speeches tedav In Iowa towns and in
all of them is dwelling upon practical
ly th. same points, giving much time
to his denunciation of the president I
promising that It wlU he shown clearly
before election 'day what th Repub
lican party's connection with the great
corporations ' ' ' ' - '
Bryan s reply to Roosevelt made laat
nignt is in tne form or a letter, aatea at
Rock Island. 111. It relates almost ex
clusleely to the publicity phase of the
recent controversy ana arraigns in
president on the charge of- making
Standard Oil money very vile for De
mocracy, but most wholesome and inno
cent when coming Into the hands ofl
men of such altered impeccability
Roosevelt himself and Tait and Hughes
The tenofepf Bryan's argument 1 shown
in tne teirowing extract: .
, "I do not mean . to say that Mr.
Hughe, was Influenced by the con.tr!'
buttons made to nlm by trust mag'
nate whose names were given In - the
after-election report I do not mean to
aay that you were Influenced by the
contributions collected - by Mr. liarrl
man. Neither do I mean to say that
Mr. Taft will be Influenced by taking
contribution that are being made to
his fund by the truat magnates: but
do mean to say that the American peo
ple nave a riKht to know what contrl
buttons are beinv made, that thev mav
judge for themselves the motive of the
givers ana tne obligation imposed upon
thoae who receive. The reflection udoii
the people Involved in your charge that
thev would misuse the knowledge whin!
publicity would give Is unworthy of one
wno naa been elevated to so high an of
flee by the votes of the Deoole. and I
venture the assertion that you cannot
procure from Mr. Taft an Indorsement
of your defense.- He Is now before the
people: he is offerintr himself an a. can
didate for the presidency; he dare not
tell the people to whom he appeals that
they have not sense enough to form a
lust and correct ODlnlon as to th nnr-
Dose which leads nartlea lntrntA In
special legislation to make big contribu
tions." - ,
Death Roll of
' ; the Northwest
BIr. Louisa lUrlne.
(filarial Ptipatrk la Tli Jaaraal.)
Burns. Dr., tv pt. 10. Iri (he denth of
Mrs. . l.oul . itarlne. Hurray county
loses one of lis mt highly respected
rllUens. Hlme. Haclne mine to Burns
Id years ago from Montreal, Canada,
whan tiurna waa only a small place
KlIBOLD
SMS
LETTERS SIDLED
fEEl
, , Wnt , It Tallor-Madef !
S For less than eady-madf V
' Bead our ad tomorrow.
COLPMBIA WOOLEN x
M I h L 8 C O M PAN Y
mmmm, nu u.us i in; n ..,inl ,M ,,
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Mrs. Louise f Seine. .
She and her husband built the French
hotel and had cared for the traveling
public ever since. The place wa th
neaaquaners ior an commercial men.
She had alwavs. toaether with hnr
husband, L. Racine, . worked in every
way ior mo upouiiaing or Burns.
She leaves four children: Arinlore Pa-
Cine, the eldest son. In charaa of Aha
Canyon City hotel; Fud, a farmer near
uurns: Mrs. Jennie item bold and Mrs.
rian nanaaii.
Lynden, Wash., Bept -30. After uf
fferlng the torture of an operation
'".Cordelia Halderman.
uf:
and nine months of almost continual
uiness, two-year-oia Cordelia Halder
man, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Haider-
man, near mis town, died last night.
Nine months ago the babv took nun.
tlty of concentrated lve by mistake ami
since that time effort to check the
ravages or tne poison nave been futile.
. Arthur KIrkman.
Bellingham. Wash.. Sent. snAr'th,.
KIrkman, who had been a resident of
this county for SI vears. waa m,A
dead In bed this mornina in hi h
i van ourmi eiation. Mia aeatn is as
cribed to old age and grieving over the
death of his wife. , . s .
Jf ,', .' '" ''.' .
1 Bankrupt Sale.
-j It will pay you to read the ad of the
I. X. h. Clothing House In this issue ;
of The Journal. . 1
New Tork. Bent 19. John n. Arch-
bold. Vlc-nrealdent of th BUndard Oil
company, last night gave a statement I
lp the presa In which he charged that
the letter used by William It. Hearst
reuently In exnoaln cor lain il.inn.n
mnmbera of consrvaa, notably t'nltej
Hlate Menator McLaurln of Kouth Taro
Una. and Kepreaentative fclbley of Tenn-
""'. i ien stolen from the tiles I
in .Arcnuoia s orn,e. He alleged that a
number of letter copying books were
stolen and that tht-v w iirfii h
an employ and a go-between, and that
ins su-netwren admitted that th let
ter nad been bought by two men. not
'. ir mr, neat at.
Archbold ruli Hnuiit
liability of the letters as prenentrd to
in. iiuunc ur jiearau in tne cone ud In a
paaaage of his sutement. which follows:
Corrobnrstlon nf the rn.kal.xn'al
story or tnree years ago lav In hi re-1
turn or some of th correspondence at
th time. The production of atolen let-
ters DV Mr. Hearst Is further rarrnho.
tion now. .Mnvlnualv. amAn aunli m
coterie, authenticity of their oulout la
not to be llahtlv amntad Th. nnnnr.
tunltles for falsification, aunnresslnar of
context and distortion of paasage ar
TUBERCUIXOSIS ;
(Continued from Pag On.)
wnicn naa aroused considerable com
ment i to determine th valu of a
new method of diagnosis advanced by
Dr. Detre.- A committee of alx of the
most - distinguished delegate to the
congress has been appointed to pas on
toe result or tne experiment tonight -
According to the exoerts. the exrjerl.
ment will determine whether th orig
inal inreciion in tne children wa from
bovine or human bacilli and will demon
strate all th biological properties ofl
tne lUDercuioeia organs tnat will en-1
able physicians to determine In th fu-l
ture at one whether the Infection In a I
patient la from human or bovln I
ourcea. -. ,- ,
The physicians here declare that the
experiment is not inhuman, because th
children were already affected with the
ui sense.
"Mr method consists In th Inocula.
tion or the patient a arm at three point
at the same time: first with Koch'
tuberculin: second, with a filtrate of
brotn culture of human bacillus, and
third, with a filtrate of broth culture of
bovine tuberculosis.
"witnin z nours or a little more the
result of the three methods may be
noted. It can be read Instantly what
type of bacilli caused a reaction In the
. ( ""
THE BEST $3.00 HAT
iBEN
SELLING
Leading
Clothier
patient' blood; whether the new Infec
tion awakened a dormant Infection In
the patient or is a recent contraction.
it can also be shown whether the hu
man organism can resist Such an at
tack: In short, all the biological prop
erties of the infected .organism will 6
demonatrated.
Seven hour after the -inoculation of
th children. Dr. Burke, the resident
physician at the hospital, aaid that al
ready some of the effect of the three
tests could be discerned.
"Nine reactions showed positively the
form of human tuberculosis," said Dr.
Burke, :and In the case of the -other
child the puncture where the bovln tu
berculosis was injected showed slight
trace of inflammation." -
The assembly hall of th new Na
tional museum wa crowded again today
to listen-to the saner, read before the
various sections of the congress. Tha
study of tuberculosis in children occu
pied the attention of tne sections.
James ' Alexander, ' -director of ' 1 the
Bellevue hospital tuberculosis clinic, de
clared In a. paper that out of 160 chil
dren whose parent were-under treat
ment for tuberculosis, 61 per cent were
found to have the disease.
his annua
tion ha 9,80;
member.
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in Fine Business
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Ail 'ijftara: "t5 Character
"Y" OU CANNOT help forming some
opinion of. a man's sense or
character from his dress a good
dress always gives v a good impression
It's Your Fault
FOR THE CHILDREN
T " - -- 1 irrrTiii inm msim iiiimm i in iawi i imn mim.u ii.iMMuLqjM-ijt-"iiJil :
TO KEEP THE LEGS ,
WARM AND
DRY
Atl AROUND THE
N. W. COMER. 3d
AND WASHINGTON
THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE COILDREN'S DEPT. IN PORTLAND
Wtvvv4tvvv
-
If you don' dress well, when style
and price -reasonableness are com
bined . in our MEN'S SUITS
ALU THE
i WICTC
Now on Sale nt 5 -
EILERS PIANO HOUSE
' -Tii Ik Inst .MAchfrt Parlor '
Washington and Park
1 I - ' mi' '
:, , 'Vw '
' Hi! IVvV .
J
and Select
-,One of- our Stylish Autumn. Suits
that are regularly sold for $20.00
everywhere; have it properly fitted by
our expert clothing man, and pay only
I ELECTRO PAIIMLCS5
DENTAI PARI OIK I
,: wmm . mt m mum mm m av , , r
X 303H W ASHINGTON STREET, CORNER FIFTH
I NO PAIN No More Fear of the Dental Chair NO PAIN
I NOR A HIGH DENTAL BILL" ... X
! Special Rates AH This Month
s0? Full set. that fit! ...S5.0O
Gold Crowns, 22k?3.50
Bridge Teeth, 22k..33.50
Gold Fillings ....$1.00
Silver Fillings ...... .50
WHY PAY MORE? Z
If you are nervous or I
have ' heart trouble, the t
Electro - Painless System
will do the work when $ .
others fail. -
Year..
Open Evenings and Sundays ; lady Attendant
j ; ELECTRO DENTAL PARLORS
Z Corner Fifth and Washington. Aeroai
my , - , - , - , " "uici
-r-r-r-, -WWW WV9W9
Bank Reference
A BIG STOCK TO CHOOSE FROM
CLOSING-OUT
SALE
Attend our Closing-Out Sale of Dress
Goods, Laces, Embroideries and Dress
Trimmings. We aim to discontinue
this department for lack of space.
THEY ARE GOING AT MILL
lit
ice to letei ers
There will be a meeting of the Retailers at the
Chamber of Commerce on Thursday, Octobrr I,
2 p. rrL, cpneerning the Sunday-closing rr. overrent.
Important business. Every retailer is rc ;r;t; 1 1 1
be present.
THE committi:::.
PRICES. COME and SAVE MONEY.
ii!