The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, November 18, 1908, Page 10, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, 'PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY EVENING, . NOVEMBER 18, 1008.
TELLS 1ST HOW
BIKOIST FEELS
Balk, Thomas . Costello, C-eorge : Laa.
gridge, Leo Langrldge. George Opper
man, Frank Butters, Joseph Cullfnane
and Joseph Rlordan. Th youngest was
14 years of aga and the oldest 24. -
Tney loosed .a small cat-boat from the
wharf of the Dolphin Boat club and
embarked for a cruise, Monday
after.
scrambled ashors
smashed to Dlecea.
: . ... boat -.-
The tor soon enveloped
Ml
em and
TWO 31EN WII0 SAILED IN , . , . s ,
THE RECENT BALLOON RACES
noon.
they lost their bearing. After drlftln
is
After wandering on ths island . for
soma tints ths boys earns tupbA the bar
ranks on ths government reservation.
They war given food and dry cloth tuff
and near evening sent to their nomas.
11 night" in ths raw cold, tha craft
struck -th rocks of Angel Island at
7 o'clock in the- morning. The boys
were thrown Into the water but all
JJ
Van Vlissengen's Comment
on Stensland a Record
of Introspection.
.
(United Prase Leased Wlra.)
Chicago, Nor. IS A remarkable
HEWS
Journal Letter From Windy
City Tells of Important
Things Happening in the
: Middle West Results of
Business KeYiral.
Chicago. Nov. 18. State or federal
regulation of timber cutting on lands
In private ownership la a new depar
. turs In the way of government regula
tion tvhich may be effected this win
ter. ay lumbermen in this city, as a
result of the disastrous forest fires
which have made this season historic In
. the annals of ths lumber Industry. Tim
ber owners here and throughout the
Lake and northwestern states, who
havfc begun 'to figure up th cost of
the fires; have come to the conclusion
that something more radical must be
done than establishing scattered fire
patrols. That this something will be
regulation by the state or federal gov
ernments, which will not only Insure
greater protection from fire but will
' also protect the- soil from erosion and
the streams from floods and droughts,
is Indicated by the publication In one
of the leading lumber journals of an
opinion by Judge J. W. Judd of the
Jaw department of Vanderbilt univer
sity, and formerly attorney for the
Louisville & Nashville Railroad corn
nan v on the cower of the government
to control timber cutting on private
lands. In this opinion. Judge Judd
traces the development of the powers
Of the federal government under the In
terstate commerce clause of the consti
tution and of the several states under
their right of police power, and reaches
th following conclusions: "The feder
al government has the "power to regu
late the use of the forests of the great
. watersheds of the country forming the
source of the navigable waters, when
such regulation has a direct connection
with, and Is necessary, in the opinion
of congress, to the preservation of their
navigability. The states, acting sing
ly or In compact, with the consent of
congress, can regulate the use of the
forests within their mnlts, when such
regulation Is necessary, to preserve the
soil of the land; to provide food and
water for the people to preserve the
health and comfort of the people, or to
' protect commerce by preserving the
navigable streams." In support of
these views he rites a number of recent
decision, notably-one by ths supreme
court or Maine in wmcn it upneid me
right of the state to restrict destruc
tive lumuerltig in tn interest or -me
general welfare. This Is substantially
- the position taken by the supporters of
the Appalachian bill at the last ses
sion of congress. Thatthe lumbermen,
who have hitherto usually fought such
legislation, should be falling Into line
. is considered significant.
Business Bssults.
The first results of the big business
revival have already begun to make
themselves felt In an Inoreased demand
.for money, declare Chicago bankers.
"At present the volume of free money
In the banks Is the largest in the lils
: tory of the country," said W. T. Fen
ton, vice-president of thf).. National
Bank of the Republic, "but there are
marked evidences of Improved senti
ment anions merchants and manufac
turers, and that feeling is already de
veloping fresh demands for funds. Our
bank will encourage the activity so far
as It Is warranted, as we believe that
better times are ahead. Since th'e elec
tion discount rates have advanced a
fill nno half An. KAnf r.
supply of notes offered has been de
cidedly Increased. Customers from
now on will not be held under any re
straint when they need money for sane
purposes. Adjustment during the
panic worked out an extremely health
ful condition in general business, and
the country Is starting fresh with snnll
stocks of manufactured products, big
crops, good prices, and an abundance of
cheap money." Bank clearings show
a Bain and for the first time now the
comparison of current clearings with
those of 1807 gives a real Indication of
the progress toward recovery from the
effects of last year's panic, as hitherto
the comparison has been with weeks
when prosperity was at high tide, before
the financial storm broke. A recent
week showed a gain of $29,262,179 over
the corresponding week of 1807. or a
gain of almost $6,000,000 a day. If
this rate of increase continues It will
not be long before buslwvs will be on
a permanent basis of prosperity again.
' . Xilquor Income.
. Pw 7.000.00 of Chicago's Income
thin year will come from saloons, which
makes the Item of dog tax look sick
lonly 1128,000. The increased cost of
'licenses from SB00 a year to J1.000 did
driv about 1,000 thirst emporiums out
,of buslness.but made an enormmm in.
, crease In tha city's revenues. The taxes
ion the two billions of assessable prop-
, erty brought In a revenue of only $f,
661.461 last year, so the saloon business
looms tip as the city's biggest producer
with revenues from the traction busl-
( ness, under Chicago's prise solution of
Munidtal control of nuhllc ntnm, or,-
Ing next, at over $1,000,000 a year. The
city had 8.097 saloons in 180E. mm th
trevenuaa therefrom were only $4,000,000,
)so the decrease of 1,000 In the numbers
sof licenses as result of higher oost was
imucD mora man onset. It Is said that
, itha nuner of women running saloons
;haa not been affected by the price set
'on their licenses. The process of eliml-
mmion nas Deen gradual tne numbers
jceing reduced from 8.097 saloons to
J7,63 at toe outset, to 7,7 after they
iiaa six montns more or the license In
(crease, to still fewer each six months
i since taen. The pc
IhA lw C1A QAt
the house of correo.
jtlon f 376.262. and the municipal courts
$807,687 a year. With these figures
friends and foes of prohibition can both
. prove iceir contentions.
Tearing Down City Kail.
The old Chicago city hall is about
aemoilaned and work at once will com
mence on the new $4,000,000 structure
which Is to be one of the l arrest and
beat equipped municipal buildings in the
country, me wrecking gang will give
way to the construction gang, and the
passeroy win cease to squint at the riy
RESTORING COMPLEXION'S
The following prescription Is
contributed as being one of the
moat remarkable known for bulng-
' Ing back the rosy tint of youth to
the skin:
Two ounces Rose Water; one
mince Spirits of Cologne; four
eiiH-ea Sartoln. Put the Rartoln
Into a pint of hot water (not boil
ing) and when dissolved and
cooled add the Rose Water nd
Pplrtts of Cologne and strain
through a Ane cloth. Any large
eottie will serve as a receptacle,
if U can t closed air-tight.
These simple ingredients can ba
'obtained at any well stocked drug
tore and asily, mixed at borne. .'
1 t proration ahould b applied
alter washing.--It Is
the results become apparent ;
tk5 rt few applications but
f.n f-Mitttjeut should be Continued
( . t rose tint complexion b
- "-- trmanen
On the left Is Captain Augnsto E. M ueller, pilot of the balloon Ameri
can, -which recently contested 1 n the Ixs Angeles balloon races,
and on the right is J. K. Hutchinson, United Press correspondent
who made the trip with Captain Mueller.
SIDELINE, STORIES
Or GRLAT NORTHWEST
1
VISITS 'GRANTS PASS
Consul General Miller Shakes Hands
With Old Friends.
(Bpeclsl DUpatch to Th Jixirnl.
Grants Tass. Or. Nov. 18. Consul-
General H. B. Miller, who Is home from
his post at Yokohama. Japan, has been
visiting his farm home near warn.
Pass and shaking hands with his many
old-time friends of this city Mr. Mil
ler has extensive property Interests in
this City and county, and "made his
start" in the lumber business here sev
eral years ago; He expects to make
this part of Oregon his home a"Pte
is released from duty In the orient.,
Several Informal receptions have been
tendered Mr. Miller and his wife and
daughter, who will visit here for sev
eral days.
HOSEBURO ROAD MEETING
Plans to Be Formulated for Immedi
ate Improvement.
(gpediil Dispatch to TJ Iooral.
Roseburg. Or.. Nov. 18. Roseburg
will hold a monster good oads conven
tion Friday. November 20, at whlcn
more plans will be formulated for good
roads work than at any former meet
ing In 1ouglas county. All of the busi
ness houses will close. Many prominent
speakers will nddress the convention.
Several sections of the county s worst
roads will be Investigated and an actual
estimate made of the cost of Improv
ing. BACK HOME AGAIN
Charlton Perkins After Five Times
Round the Globe.
Spcll nupntrb to Tb Joomtl
Grants Pass. Or., Nov. 18. After be
ing around the world Ave times. Charl
ton Perkins, a former Grants Pass boy,
la home again for a few days visit
with his parents in this city. He Is ac
companied by his wife, a California
girl, whom he met in Japan. Mr. Por
kins Is a writer of considerable not,
and traveling correspondent for several
eastern periodicals.
BUYS 1,000 ACRES
Portland Firm Will Market Timber
on Woods Creek.
(Special Dispatch to "Hi iournM.l
Philomath, Or., Nov. 18. A Portland
firm has purchased 1,000 acres of tlm
hr mi woods creek and intends to
erect a large sawmill and flume, to
connect with the C. B. railroad, about
one mile weat or pnuomam.
EASTERNERS AT PHILOMATH
Michigan Firm Bays the Horning
Brothers' Sawmill.
rRnMlil EHsmtck to The Jonrnol.l
Philomath, Or., Nov. 18. Horning
Brothers have sold their sawmill and
handle factory to Michigan capitalists.
The new company Is said to have ample
capital. Tha dam at the mill Is com
pleted. ing rock dust and plaster and
111 look
on wonderingly as th
he great steel skele
ton rears itself above the street; 11,000
tons of it later to be clothed with 14,000
tons of granite, 83,000 tons of concrete
and 6,000,000 bricks. One can Imagine
a train of more than 3,600 cars. 18
miles Ions:, creeping slowly forward as
this mass of steel and stone Is unloaded
and put In place. Two years will pass
before the train is all unloaded. Close
beside It and occupying the rest of the
block is set tne court nouse, lately com
pie ted: and when the city hall la fin
ished, and the twin structures, towering
13 stories above the street, are locked
together with bands of steel and con
crete, there are none who doubt that
I tLe7 wl,u P
i and whl ofl
resent such an appearance
ler such1 faculties lor con
duotlng the business of local govern
ment as to Justify the cost over 18.
000,000. Through a complement of the
county Duiidlne. the city bail will
cover 1.700 more square feet, will con
sume 1,000 more tons of steel and will
Include 850.000 more cubic feet. The
great columns of the collonade, nine feet
In. diameter and nearly 100 feet long,
are the largest columns of any colon
nade In the world. There will be 14
elevators, more than a mile of corridors
and nearly 16 acres of floor apace. This
wun tne county Dun ding, means the
crowding of nearly 80 acres of floor
space In a city block. Pneumatic tubes
are to cobweb the building.
Companies Incorporated.
(Salem Burean t Tot Journal.)
Balem, Or.. Nov. 18. Articles of In
corporation have been filed In the of
fice of the secretary of state as fol
lows:
Bowen-Small Publishing- company
principal office. Baker City; capital
etoctc. szo.ooo: incorporators, u. a.
Small. N. B. Email. I. B. Bowen and
M. E. Bowen.
The Llthie Manufacturing; company.
incorporated : principal ornee, foruana;
capital stock, 860,000: incorporators, M.
C. Reed. F. I. Masters and C. O. Boyer.
Oregon Orchard-Farms association;
irlncipal office. Portland; capital stock
6.000; Incorporators,. Lillian B. Pow
ers, w. a. Johnson. A. a. winrree.
The Swedish Publishing & Printing
company; principal ornee, rortiana;
capital stock, 16.000; Incorporators, F.
WT Lonerren. Vald. Udell. Carl J.
Renhard. Victor Brandt, B. Helmer and
C M. Anderson. --
Provident Building Improvement
eomoanv: orlncmal ofrloe. Klamatn
Falls; capital stock, $25,000; incorpor
ator. W. H. Harris. C. S. Stalder. Wil
liam A. Wrtgnt, Burt emltn and M. t.
Wllklns. ; mi-;
Mprton' Film. Exchange; principal of
fice; Portland ; capital stock, $2,600; In
corporators, B. Morton Conn, Alex
Bernstein and Joe Wertheimer.
.Michigan Oregon Logging company;
Frlncipal office, Portland; capital stork,
300,000; Incorporators, K. V. Jones, E.
B. Clark and Wallace Mccamant.
Woodlawn Laundry company; prln.
rinal- office. Portland!
capjtai. stocic
DICK TURPIN ARRESTED
Constable John 2?. Ryan Is Bringing
Him Back.
(Special Dlspatrh to Th Jonrnal.t
R06eburg, Or., Nov. 18. Dick Turpln,
a blacksmith and horse trainer of this
city, was arretd at Grants Pass to
day on a warrant charging him with
larceny by bailee. Turpin sold a horse
that was under a chattel mortgage to
another man. He also took a liorse
with him to Grants Pass that was un
der chattel mortgage. Whether or not
he was Intending to leave the country
with the money received for the horse
he sold and the one he had 'with him
will be determined when Constable John
N. Ryan arrives in this citv with Tur-
Lin and he is arraigned' before Justice
ong.
NEW MILL TO RISE
Planing, Sash and Door Plant
r
at
North Powder.
(Spprlal lnpnteti te Ths Joarnal.)
North Powder, Or.. Nov. 1 S. i
H.
Brown, western renresentatlva nf thn
lumber firm of Radford Hros. & Co, of
Oshkosh, Wis., today completed arrange
ments for a planing anil sash and door
mill on Front street. The contract for
the bnlldinR was let to Peter Bosquet,
the La Grande .builder anrl contractor.
Work will start at once. The Hogsted
& Meteler sawmill on Clear creek has
the contract for furnishing the timbers.
The output of the netv mill will ho
shipped to Oshkosh, Wis.
GOOD ROADS MEETING
Lane Clthvns Will Gather at Eugene
November 28.
fSpeelol Dlapatrh to Vbe Jonraal.)
Eugene, Or., Nov. 1 8. At a public
meeting at the commercial club yester
day afternoon nddressnd by Judge John
H. Soott of Salem, It wag decided to
hold a monster mass convention in EJu-
:ene aaiuraay, jNovemoer zs,-to uiscuss
he good roads question and to inaugu
rate a campaign for the betterment of
the roads of Lane county. A commit
tee of 12 citizens has been appointed to
complete arrangements. Several prom
inent speakers will address the meeting.
HIGHWAY BOOSTERS MEET
Big
Convention Will Be
Grants Pass.
neld at
(neelal Dispatch to The Journal.)
Grants Pass, Or.. Nov. 18. A good
roads convention in which the several
counties of southern Oregon will take
part will be held at Grants Pass No
vember 28. The affair Is being planned
bv the county court and the commercial
club. Prominent good roads speakers
will address the meeting, among them
being Judge John H. Scott of Salem.
ELECTION AT DATTON
Full
Cltlzt-ns' Ticket Named
at
Municipal lSvent. .
ISpeclal Dispatch tc Tn Jemal.)
Dayton. Or.. Nov. 18. At the citv
election yesterday the following citizens' !
ticKet was elected: Mayor, rt. L.. Har
ris; clerk, W. T. H. Tucker; treasurer,
O. B. Rlppey. Three councllmen for
two years, S. 'W. Slgler, L. A. Litcher
and E. J. Avery.
FOOD FOR A YEAR
Meat 300Ib
Milk 240 ots.
Butter 100 lb.
East..... 27 doz.
Vegetables, 500 lbs,
This represents a fair ration for
a man tor one year.
But some people eat and eat and
yet grow thinner. This means a
defective digestion and unsuitable
food. A one-dollar bottle of
Scott's Emulsion
equals in nourishing properties
ten pounds of meat. Your
physician can tell you how it
does it
Send thli advertisement, together with name of
paper in which It appear, your address and four
cent to cover postage, and we will send you a
"Complete Handy Atlai of the World" t; s
SCOTT BOWNE. 409 Pearl Street New Yark
TEA
The way to buy tea is to
say to your grocer "I
want Schilling's Best; I lb
Japan" or Ceylon or Eng--'lish
Breakfast or Oolong.
f Voir trocar return, rosr steoir II a tea 'I
Ute tu mi aar bin ,
"The Success Factory"
EMBOSSED l,.U.E.RtwH!
Only 01 Moral per H In 10M lots, liriebt.
uiowiv, i.iaaay. Aalc or
write for
(9
Samples
r i ii
PRINTERS ft&mJi
commentary, which must apply to bis
own career, has been found In the ef
fects of Peter .Van Vllssejfgen, the con
fessed forger of deeds amounting to
nearly a million dollars.
In a book was written a aamrnnt nn
the oase of Paul O. Stensland. the
Chicago bank wrecker, who fled to
Morocco, where ha was captured. Stens
land Is now in prison. Van Vllssengen
"It is not to ha aninnnaitA that Rtna.
land deliberately resolved to rob the
poor people who trusted him. Such
IS not the history at the riefnnlter
His downfall begins with a trivial Ir
regularity. Again you yield to tempta-
nun auu nua uui you nave done no
body harm that Is, nobody only your
self. You go on and finally you are
jorceo to cnoose between Torgery and
the wreck of your hopes.
"The time comes whan ruin ff vmo
tltutlon ia gone and the defaulter faces
conviction as a common felon. Groping
uuwu in me Dearocic oi nis cnaracter,
he chooses whether he will pass the
remainder of his life as a fugitive from
Justice or will make a clean breast of
It and serve the Justly earned sentence."
Receiver Nlblack said today that he
would not reveal the names of Van
Vllssengen's victims unless he was
mrcea 10 qo so. 'jney were listed In
a secret card index. Kept by. the forger,
miiv.il is ueiud guaraea oy tne receiver,
BATTLE FOR OIL
OH 111 MEXICO
3Iexicans and Californians
Merge to Chase Out
An Englishman.
(United Press Leaaoil W0
Mexico City. Nov. IS. A battle royal
for the control of the oil Industry In
Mexico is expected to follow the state
ment, on good authority, that the Mexi
can Petroleum company has merged its
blif refinery at Ebano with the exten
sive oil holdings of the Pierce company,
a branch .of the Standard, for the nur-
pose of driving out S. ' Pearson nd
son, an Knglish concern which recently
entered the field. The Mexican Petrol
eum company Is composed of California
capitalists ana is a powerful factor in
the industry.
SEVEN CASTAWAYS
AGAIN SAFE AT HOME
(TTnlted Press Tended Wire.)
San Kranelseo. Nov. 18.. In nvn
homes here thankfulness reigns-supreme
uvn ma iKiuin ui bi many youtns who
were thoucht yesterday to hav tie.n
drowned in the bay. The boys had been
missing a day and a night and the po
ice patrol boat had given them up as
lost, when word came Rt nip-lit th.
they had been thrown ashore safely on
Angel Island. The boys were Wilfred
v.
III
L.-
from perfect health the protection that
excesses of life to-day
Gliirardelli's
the perfect
the
TP
m
Cures Coughs, Colds, Croup, La Grippe, Asthma, Throat Ths asnuin b in th
and Lung Troubles, Prevents Pneumonia and Consumption yellow PACKAq
The Store Noted for Hfst
0M0RR0W
LAST
Tomorrow (Thursday) will be the last day of the Directors' Sale.
Thousands of customers from this city and surrounding towns
have taken advantage of the splendid values offered, and many will
doubtless be on hand tomorrow and share in the most remarkable
bargains we have yet offered. All Black Goods Bargains will be
on sale again tomorrow at the same prices quoted today.
MeAikn-IWcDorineH Company,!
CORNER THIRD AND MORRISON STREETS
Nature
intended man
to be happy and
to be able to give
Smile All the While
Look at healthy children look at
man or woman and you see the pleasures that come
food drinkbraces up
strengthens the body and enthuses
Lorain into perfect activity
besides it pleases the palate,
too.
30 cups
of a delicious
drink
25c
TOM BAXiB BT AX.1. BSVOOXaTTS.
Qonda at Lowest Prices)
BAY 0
SALE
BOTH PHONES
v
V
the healthy
wards off the
Coca
the system
-
it
CONTAINS NO
HARMFUL j (
DRUGS
I'O.OOO: ; Inco ajorators, J. Fi '"J'tfflth,
..';-v-irA;;--:'-rr.v