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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1908)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL PORTLAND. FRIDAY EVENING. OCTOBER 9. 1008. SKELETONS BARED IH I i ' - .- .. . . . IllilK MM IIIISIIUOD CAMAS couple; celebrate . THEIR GOLDEN WEDDING r GANTENBEIW'S COURT The stolan child, tha villain huabamT. , another who had lived ST year with hi wire and then had gone away, the one who had lived with hla rM but three daya and . other little, atorlea of the heart, were all related to Judge daiiten : fceln In the circuit court thla morning with tlie reault that eight divorcee were (ranted., Aire. Maggie Cook applied for divorce on me around of deaertlnn. ine aland thin mornlnt that ahe had ben married to Jeli waa on yea f ) Mra. Conk the atand thla morning and aald hn IVmlf in prince county, , wiaconaln, In 1870 After a while they rame weat. Laat ear wnue living in rairvlew, John aald waa going- awav. lie left hla wifa and thre children and they have never ' heard from him. No money ever rima , aimer, cut an the time the light burned - In ths window. John never returned and Mra. Cook decided to aak for a dl- VF.7 mna cuatody of twt minor cnuaren. Mer request wae granted. t ' .- . Brief Xonajrmooa. -.. : , ' v ' Tfia little atory of her ehort honey moon aa routed by Koae E. . Stewart wae auogetner dirrrrent fronj the aa ! perlence of Mre. Cook. Mra. Stewart and Jier h unhand lived 1 together but - tnree iaya. Clyde B. Stewart, aha aald. : ' waa formerly a Portland fireman Thew -were married in 'July leaf year, ror 'three daya Mr. and Mre. Stewart lived wlth Mre. Stewart a mother. Clyde B., ;ahe eald, paid no board. Then he aald ne waa going awar. And he did. The . decree waa granted at Mra, Stewart's C requeat on the arounde of deaertlon.. , 'Mra. Stewart waa alao. allowed to ra ', aume her maiden name Fcoae B. Border, Mrs. Minnie Hehkle alleged deaertlon. She Uvea In Portland. - Laef week the -v huaband, Clarence K. Henkle, rame from .- a distance and stole-the child . away. Now ne la said to be In Idaho. ' They were married In Spokane In April,-. 1000. Mra. lienkle la pretty and all. ahe aaked -'waa that she.be legally "separated front her husband and that aha be given the right to have poaaeaalon of her little 1 8-year-old child at regular Intervale. ..The humble request waa allowed.- f ... Mra. Beatrice K. Meyer not only got a . .. . , . ...... Monroe waa anotner or ma io were made happy and freed Ilea of matrimony. She alleged irniM M. Monroe had married her divorce, hut lit a month alimony. She aald hr huaband had beaten her at one time until she had to taken to -a hoapltal. The dix tor waa thre to er. Ify the statement. Mra. Meyer ald hrr liuahMnd great on atavlng out late nt night. - Bald that soma times he never came home at all. Hla name, la laadnre, and h aerva drlnka. That la. he uaed- to. Hha didn't say what lea dore la doing; now. Her huaband fueed and plrkod at her a good deal, Mra, Meyer e.ild, - and that furthermore- he waa alwaya saying that ha badn't much UBf jor .inrara BJiy way. , Warl Monroe waa another of the, e ght . w i of the tl (hat Ham In Anrll. 1S06. under an waaumed najne and otherwise droelved her. Said that he wag a gambler, when he had the money, that he nan Deaien ner. wnn be waa anary. and In addition called her all klnda of vile namea. Samuel hadn't contributed toward the support of thetr child, either. ' Cruel and Brutal. Fannie Spencer, jwtrrled InTennessea many yeara ago. said that aince ana and her husband, Clarence Spencer, a car penter, had coma to Portland ha had wanted her to go out with other men. Also suggested one evening that the beat n ace for her waa room In a north end boardlnar houae. Clarence had alao ben brutal and at Intervale called hla wire all klnda or oiaagreeame namea. Judge aantenneln agreed witn the complainant ,and the decree waa granted. , - , . Hannah JVannette Naylor aued Hiram. Cruelty. - They were married In HIUs boro. two yeara ago. She had made liv ing for both. Boarding houae. Hiram had' beaten her. Dreve the -boardera away. - Nelghbora saw her race bleeding. Hlram'a dolnaja. Mrs. Ralph Clark veri fied cruelty statement llDur separated from ueorge cnargoa cruelty, vne names I ' Mr. and Mra. J. D. Stanley, Camii, Wash. Mr. and Mrs. J. IX Stanley celebrated tha fiftieth anniversary of their wed ding at their home weat of Camaa. j W'aah., Wedneaday. They were married i In Maryavllle, Ohio, October 7, lib. I Those preaent were Mr. and Mra. O. D. Stanley of Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Mover LHly Wilbur E. Wilour. of Planer and' Mra. rat rick and nine grandchildren. The house was decorated wtth autuma bougha. - At tha noon hour a repast waa servea. i- i In the evening the grand children ser enaded - the old ' folk a, which brought smuea to ins enae ana groom. THAIRKILL-MOXAHAX "7 REQUISITION ISSUES and that he had accuaed her unjuatly of having oeen. untrue to mm. were mar ried in Missouri 1 yeara ago. Mra. Wilbur la to have cuatody of two chil dren.. .the household furniture and 116 monm irom ueorge. - LOOKS UP RESOURCES OF UNTAPPED REGIONS fCnJUd Press Leasts Wlre.i 'Salem, Or., Oct I. Requisition upon the governor of California for the re turn to- Portland of Charles ThalrklU and J. P. Monahan waa laaued by Gov ernor Chamberlain today on requeat of District Attorney Cameron of Multno mah county. ThalrklU waa a stenogra pher In tba employ of the Southern Pa cific at Portland and la charged with the theft ofa ticket from tha office of tha railroad company In tha Wells Fargo building, good for pasaage from Ashland to Han- Francisco. Monahan ' la charged with receiving atolen property, aa ft la alleged It waa for him ThalrklU took -the ticket. The ticket was made out by ThalrklU In favor of Frank Nelson, a fictitious per- aon, and delivered 'to Monahan, who. It la alleged, used It. San Francisco, Oct, . Tha Standard Oil tank ateamer Aaunclon which aalled from hera at la.10 yeeterday morning for Portland la passing Into tha bay at 1 P. in. Tha Aaunclon la towing the ateamer Norwood which left Ore ye Harbor for thla city with a cargo of lumber. The vessels collided off th I roast or t'utua uoraa yesterday and the Norwood; la water-loggsd. while the powa or tha oil steamer ara badly A large hole wss nunrhad in tha hull or the Norwood and aha filled In lu minutes, out ner rirtit nr himh k,m i -mi . ----- . -------. ner anuBi mna tna Asuncion took ner in ww, - , if fm rr SPERRV TO REVIEW YOUXO BOB'S CASE (United Ftmc teaaed Wire.) Manila. Oct. Lturlna- tha cruli from hera to Yokohama, Admiral .Sperry will review and consider tha evidence taken' by the rourt-martlal In tha ea of Lieutenant Frank T. Evana. son of Fighting Bob" Evana, who was tried ere thla week on three nhm rr - at drunkenness; absence from Dost and ae of abusive lansuase to s aiinerfne officer. So fsr not tha slightest Ink ling Of ths Drohahla daolainn In the case haa been obtainable. Was Never More Complete Than Now I00D RIVER TAKES , PRIZES AT FAIR (Special DUnatck to Tke JonrnaLI The Dalles. Or.. Oct. . Hood River was this morning awarded the first ana secona premium ror tne nest gen eral exhibit at the district fair of ap- plea. The attendance continues to I nr ,, each day. It la believed that tomorrow win am racora-oreaser - ' Colonel William Hollablrd." the man ; who haa Invested 140,000.000 In Ore gon for E. H. Harrlman, la back from a ': three weeks" trip through western Ore gon during which he traveled from Ta- qulna bay to Coos bay along the coast and covered pretty near all the terri tory between the coast range and the ea by horseback, canoe, stage and afoot. The results of Colonel Hollabird's . trip are embodied in some exhaustive ? reports of the territory and its resources - which he is preparing to forward to Mr. Harrlman. And UDon the tenor of theae reportm depends the immediate building "i iiarrimun uno aiong tne Oregon took! up Se sources, ' ' "I didn't look up the feasibility of ' line from the engineering standpoint. - ix-auot; i iii nui an ensmeer, said U01O- nei Hoilablrd this morning, "1 wanted to get an idea ror myself and the com pany of the resources of those western uregon counties that are -at present - unuui rauroaa lacinties. I round what nearly everyone knowa, that the :- timDer is or vaat extent, that the trees are tan a.nd that the timber is of un usual quality. I was also greatly lm prceseu Dy tne aKricui turai resources of the Taqulna vallev. The land Is ex cellent and the farms are of fine quality aiinougn tne owners vaiue mem at an absurd figure. "I think the articles to be ahipped ' iiiav country on a posnioie roau ' would be largely timber and timber prpducta with agricultural producta to b umiica put increasing extent ' Xiid Prices Too High. "The one thing that is going to In jurs uregon and Keep people from com .. Ing here is the .exorbitant amounts peo- pie are asking for their land.: For in- stance while In Tillamook J asked a farmer who had a prosperous looking dairy ranch what lgs land was valued at. 'One hundred arid fifty dollara an acre,' said he. We talked it over and figured out that after everything was paid for, after his expenses for hired men and for the care of the stock and buildings had been taken out that he would have 2S0 left. He had 400 acres and valued his place at 160.000. - "Now said I. Til let you do a little figuring. Buppoains; I naa jbu.ouo ana was getting 8 per cent on it That would bring me whalT Why, 14,800, of courae. And yet you value your prop erty that is clearing you $280 at $0. 000.' I 51d him he would find that tha email farmers, from the east would not fay auch prices, but Instead would coma o other parts of the state where they could get land at a much cheaper figure. "But anyway Oregon la a wonderful State, and for scenery I suppose there la nothing like It In the Union. There are no mountains In Switzerland to com pare with those around upper Klamath ake. The mountains and forests are full of game and the streams teeming with trout and salmon. Tou can't beat it." Bluffed Bad Men. While riding in the Wilson river stage on his trip Colonel Hollablrd "whipped" three loggers without rais ing his fist -It waa this way: Colonel Hollablrd is a small man, rather alight, and has white hair. But he haa a de termined blue eve that counts for-' a good deal. ..-While bound for Coos bay on the stage three men climbed in the seat In front of him and proceeded to dispose of two quarta of whiskey be tween them. As the whiskey .dimin ished their voices rose and they be ara n denouncing the capitalists, announcing that they were Socialists and that thev didn't think thereearas much room' fori men fwitn money in the world. Some how they learned that the little white haired man behind them was the most lmporta-.. figure tn the railroad world In Oregon. And they finally announced. aa tha last drop of whiskey disappeared, that they were e-oinar to clean nut: tha capitalists and intended beginning on the one in the back seat , Colonel Hollablrd rose un In the stage, 'i- - ."s 'Come here, everw lrfst nna of vnn said he. alowerino- at them. "I'll iir-'ir an tnree or you. I'm a strong man, and I'm not drunk, while you are all three cowards, and you've had two quarts of whlakey. If I hear another worn ait nf the mouths of any one of you I'll throw you out of the stage." 1 ne little colonel stood and Innlreri at the men a minute, and they ssnk down without a word. Thev rfMn't speak again on the trip. Do you know what Bonn Ami The Finest Cleaner Made will do ? No ? Well it cleans windows and mir rors, polishes tins and all kinds of metals, and cleans paint without a scratch. Askyour grocer. WHITELAW REID WRITES GOVERNOR REGARDING CREDULOUS AMERICANS (Salem Bureau of The JonraaL) Salem, Or., Oct. 9. Governor Cham berlaln Is in receipt of a letter today from Whltelaw Reld, United States em bassador to Great Britain, In which ha asks tha governor to do all la hla power to prevent Oregonlana. and other Americana who might apply to him, from going to England for the purpose of looking up title to old estates, a great many -Americans go yearly to England under the impression that their , ancjestors have left large eatatea and ' plantations without heirs. Recently an Oregon woman applied to Governor Chamberlain for letters to the American ambassador at London and obtained them arriving in England the latter part of September. It was this Incident that led the ambassador to write Governor Chamberlain regard ing the futility, of such questa. The number of Americana drawn Into these searches." writea Whltelaw Held, "for mythical English estates la beyon belief. I am now In my fourth year of service, here and hava never yet heard of a genuine case. Such persons get Into communication wlAi m nt m ang of apeculative lawyers who fatten on the credulity of Americans' about supposed English estates, a hundred or twe years old." Mr. RM Infnpm Ik, 4Kb he bad referred the Oregon woman look- Inar for an aatate In three MnnnclhU AmarlMn t,rmA..K in T .4 j - - - . . i- j n iiiiwii nun promised that she should be taken care nr raicni was Wltnin nis pww aa amoansaaor. HENE Y CHALLENGES HEARST OX GRAFT Catted Pnas Leased Win. I San Francisco, Oct t. Francis J, Heney, assistant district attorney la charge of tha graft prosecution In thls .city, today Issued tha following chal lenge to William Randolph Hearst: "Do you Indorse tha attitude of rrn.r Saa Francisco Examiner In reference to the graft prosecution T "I challenge yon to da fend oa a pub lic, piaironn with ma tha position you bve taken. Appoint tha time and place. I will tftefraw tha - - - . Hearst and Thomas U Hlsgen. the In- .umnr 1-ariT ranaioata for presi dent are here to speak at tha Central theatre tonight Heney's challenge appeared in an an- SURPRISINGLY GOOD . Post -Toasties . "Tna Tasta Linear," Veda f rVarlr mni( Cnrn W Foataai Ctm rrpa-r. Limited. - Battle Creek. Mick, emoon paper hera In tha form of Statement AVee hie nam. Hearst waa at hla home at Pleasanton in. uprnom ana couia not De reached for a statement hs to what reply he """ ' " ins neney enaiienge. HENEY AND ACH IX WORD-FIGHT AGAIN (raited Press Leased Were.) San Francisco. Oct- . Verbal riant. ing waa resumed aaraJn . todav in tha trial of Abraham Ruef on a charra of attempting to bribe a former auparriaor, when . Attorney Ach, for tba defense, and Special Prosecutor Heney clashed over tha examination of Henry D. Byrne, a prospective laror. Byrce. It developed, was well te. Qifeinted with many of Ahe politicians of tne city inriutllng nearly ail of tha oood J era. So fierce was the wordy stnio nd Heney for his dismissal, that Judge Uslw compelled to admonish both that side remarks wre not t be sasde. .ar Byrne admitted that ha had "flon pom toe" for Osorg Kaana, form er ecretary of Mayor Schmlts, and knew Riaef. Riu k.iiH . and traa eu.talnad br the court aad Brma waa diah.e ' A free tara hiimi A am - I . ' 1 ruminann. tt whKh a tfnaea rent pea hare km esww. he Jry box cnatahse ut sis, i j-iura, ana i our teanporar-. if l-ssaexL - k . T QaiH Telle. . A suit to sulet title t ei 1. blnrk -nlels, addltVta . ta Kt ' . 1 - a rm rjTT.u Prara. Harwed agaios Aioit- A OR UYERS The grreat values being offered in men'g'and women's wearing apparel are attracting'hundreds and hun- uicua 01 mrury jroruana Duyers to me 227 Morrison Street Bt. First and Second INDEPENDENT Etch and every pitron of this store has been well repaid for their visit, for never in the history of jroruana nas sucn a goiaen opportunity to save money on fine goods presented itself. COME AND SEE THESE GREAT BARGAINS Fighting' the Combine Prices MEN'S SUITS AND OVERCOATS 1,000 high-grade Suits and Over coats, from such leading tailors as Kaufman, Hackett, Carhartt, Em Ell Em, and Rochester; at a prices that II .worry the combine. $5.85 buys-Suits and Overcoats, late style and colors; up to $12. f 8.85 buys fine Business or Dress Suits and Overcoats, new, nobby styles; worth to $18. $12.85 for. choice hand-tailored Suits and Overcoats, the acme of perfection; worth to $25. PANTS. 89 for Work Pants worth $1.50. fl.es bujts Dress. Pants worth $3. 2.85 for best Dress Pants worth to $6. I FURNISHINGS 5 for black or tan Sox worth 15c. llf for wool Sox worth 20c 33 for sterilized Underwear worth 75c. S0f for Work Shirts worth 75c. ' 59 for Dress Shirts worth $1.25. 29 for President style Suspend ers worth 50c. 79 for Cooper or Eagle Under wear worth $1.50. LADIES' CLOAKS $4.95 buys long Cloaks, the equal of any sold by the combine for $12. $7.95 for" silk rubberized Cloaks worth to $16.50. $12.85 for finest pattern Cloaks worth to $25. LADIES' SKIRTS $3.35 for fine Dress Skirts, sold by the combine as high as $8. $3.85 buys silk Petticoats worth to $9. $5.65 for Maitland voiles and Panamas worth to $12. WAISTS The most choice selection of fine lawn, net and silk Waists in Portland, at prices that will amaze you. 79 for lace effect Waists worth $1.50. $1.89 buys fine lawn and lace Waists worth $4. $3.69 buys fine net and silk Waists worth $8. 11 buys Uermsdorf black Hose worth 25c This list contains but a few of the many bargains that you will find displayed at this great Black Letter Sale Umbrellas .and Suit Cases at fust l2 the combine prices ti Ko m,lf!er low keptca! yoo may be, we guarantee you will find every article exactly as advertised. AH we ask Is that you call on us before buying elsewhere. Yon will ouickly be convinced of our sin cerity and hone$ty.- . 1 - . INMPENMIMT CLOTHILRS 227 Morrison Street "SJSI1 Bet Firs and Second Wc are putting special stress on a line of Shirts that retail at ?1.50 du ett. Star and Excello plaited or, plain bosoms, also a line of stiff bosoms, $1.50. Fall-Weight Underwear in all the good makes Stuttgarter, Norfolk, New Brunswick, Cooper's, Win sted & American Hosiery Co.'s; all the best . ones. All weights; wool, silk and wool mixtures; two-piece and union, 85 to $5.00. Our 50 Neckwear is remarkable value; quality and stvle in. it. Better grades ?1.00 and ?1.50. Holeproof Hose We are sole agents for Portland. Every pair guaranteed for six months. -. Transfer Supplement for women readers wilFbe a feature of next Sunday's Jbu nal. The twice of the Sunday Journal including the Trans fer Supplement is big j""""""" 4. . it Don't forget the date, Sunday, October 11th Oregon CHy Trains Portland Railway, Light & Power Ca Beginning Saturday, October 10, 1903, Oregon City trains will leave First and Alder streets as heretofore. , Cazadero trains will leave East Morrison and Water streets. Passengers can ; take any "car-operating oer East I.Icrricen cr Madison street bridges. - SaV I