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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1909)
THE .OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY; EVENING, JANUARY JJ'WJ. ion bfi placed on waiting orders with nominal compensation until 1914, when its activities may be renewed and. sal arlAs be retord. 1 The commission reports that the United States has secured excellent ac commodations for exhibit. west, dropped dead at Ills ttuitie t-' yesterday. T ' , , Building IVrmU. , Northrup street between TweitfVfil and Twenty-IXtlu A. J. Wilson, rrwt two story frame dwillln, toooi e h street, corner Montana avnue, Hr. K A. Stephens, erest tin. story frani dwelling, 11200: Elliott aventii. bftwer Hawthorne'and Birch, Thomas VlrH. erect two story frama dwelling, laooo. Coasting On the Hillsides and Steep Streets Is Great Sport For the Youngsters and Oldsters Louis Alamandro Stricken (United Prei Leased Wire.) Butte, Mont.. Jan. IS. Louis Ala- mandro, a wealthy pioneer, and one of tne prominent Italians or the north "CHEAP" PRESCRIPTIONS F - ' - " 1 , - H- : V - - ' s ' Lilts " r L ' , v - ' i xC '' If If -i - v. ' , " - - ' f . t - '1 Vv x - - If, y v I,- - r . , Ajrfi 1 " 31 " 4 4, 4 - ' .XV V. " ' I , -X -Ti CTE I II v.nvn..' 1. . . .. . . . . . ft 1 i " ' lit . a, s.,. .. .s - , f 1 1 tills work allow.d the claim of tlie II t JaHL. S-t ' .S jT i I ' ' " 'II tw., of Mltcli.ll for a refund of road k.'" - 'cl , , ill . , om. - . 4. i,s - - r.V i,.y i. ,.,,, ... ,, f . i I MITCHELL U GET ROAD filOIB Decision of County Court Means $1100 in the - City's Coffers. (SprtUI Dispatch to The Journal.) Fossil, Or.. Jan. 13. The county court this week allowed the Halm of t lie )ton of Mitchell for a refund of road money collected and used hy the coun ty during the past neven years in re palrliiR county roads. The claim as presented was for $ 1473. hut the hill wax cut down to $1101) hy tho court. The charter of the town of Mitchell provides that the road money shall he-Io'ir- to the town and not to the county. I'or the past Heyen years the road taxes have been collected by the coun ty and not turned over to tho town. Rl uiy of the towns In eastern Oregon nave similar provisions in their rha ter. providing that the road tax of the town shall belong to the town and not to the county, and it is expected that the county courts of the surround ing counties will soon have to pass on simitar cases, as tne practice Has been the same in these counties for the county to use the funds and not turn them over to the town. The county court also ordered the sum of $60(1 paid to the John Day road company on condition that It relln owlish its charter from the state per mlttlng it to operate tollroad st (irarte. This abolishes the last toll road In Wheeler countv. The, total tax levy was fixed at IS mills, which will give a revenue of aoout 8,000. the taxable property be Ing about $2.S90.00O. The expenses of me county are estimated anout J3N.OO0. This will leave a surplus of about $10, 000 to apply on tho countv debts. JIKTrir 1 1 ETC II Y FIGHT BEACHES C0XGKESS 'United Frew Leased Wtra.) Washington. Jan. 13. The Spring Valley Wuter company of San Fran cisco has begun its fight before the house public lands committee against I he grant of a Sierra reservoir site to the city of San Francisco. Attorney MctTutcheon of, San Francisco on be half of the water corporation declared that if congress passed the grant it would 'Ivc a club over the water com pany. He argued that there were other resources that could be used. Marsden Manson. cltv engineer of San Francisco, took issue with McOntcheon and declared that to refuse to pass tho grant would ba to "leave the stk-k in .the hands of corporate Interests" Manson declared that the services of the water company were Inadequate and unsatisfactory. He argued that if the The Coasting Scenes Are Taken Near Alberta and the Snow House Is in North Portland;: This Is what we are coming to If the weather stays cold long enoughran Es kimo igloo. Cold weather requires cold weather dwellings, and. those who have tried them Bay that a snow house lust about fills the bill. That is the opinion of the children of A. V. Jensen. 781 Third street, whose father has put tip an Igloo for them. It looks from the outsids like a pretty frosty proposition, but innide the tem perature is not as cold ts It might be. This house Is about six feet In height, high enough for a short man to stand up inside. Mr. Jensen built It to please the children, heaping the snow up and then digging out the In terior. Water was poured on it and this freezing made a very substantial house. Sleep hillsides in the suburbs and city streets with heavy grades swarm nightly with boys and girls, young and old, enjoying the coasting. It is not often that such an opportunity is given tnoss wno enjoy sucii sport. WHY JAPAN PUT OFF BIG SHOW )Iore Time Needed to Pre pare for Other Na tions' Exhibits. (Pulled PrMi Leaned Wire.) Washington, Jan. 13. The reasons for the postponement of the Japanese Imperial worlds exposition nt Tokio were revealed today when a report of the American commissioners to the ex position was sent to congress. The re port shows that the announced Inten tion of foreign governments to coop erate on a great scale has caused the Japanese government to riostnone tlm date In order to provide suitable ac commodations. The Japanese government discovered that owing to the disposition of for eign governments to participate on an extensive scale, the original date of 1912 would not give time enough to prepare for the exposition. A hill has been adopted providing an engineering and financial program comprising extensive plans for boule vard and street Improvements and the construction of harbors, piers and rail way facilities.. The bill, automatically and with no extraordinary expenditure, completes its work by 1916, so that by the following year the government will be ready for the exposition of lit 17. The year 1917 will be the 60th anni versary of the emperor's coronation. The report of the American commis sioners recommends that the commis- Clicap prescriptions are sometimes advertised and yet it is just as diffi cult for a layman to know whether the prescription he receives is cheap or expensive, as it would be if he were purchasing a telescope, for the cheapest prescription in the world as to price may be the most expensive in its final result. All things being equal, a 'lore till ing the greatest number tf prescrip tions can best afford to maintain (lie lowest schedule of prices. It costs us less to. fill a prescription today than it did 40 years ago, because our busi ness is large enough to absorb the undivided time and attention of a skilled force of men and to rapidly "turn ocr" the various drugs and preparations used in dispensing. We believe we have an advantage over' mosf stores in the fact that our dis pensers are qualified, experienced, registered men, devoting their whole time to this responsible work. They arc never interrupted while weighing out 5ome powerful drug to wait upon a customer for postage stamps or while writing directions to furnish an impatient patron with a porous plas ter, but attending strictly to their specific duties, reduce thereby the op portunity for errors and confusion. We have filled prescriptions lor near half a century in Portland and every device, every convenience, every improvement which will simplify and expedite with safety this work we have adopted. It is not strange, there fore, that ours" is today the largest retail drugstore on the coast and equals in the volume of its prescrip tion work any in the laud. WO0DARD, CLARKE & CO, Established 1865. plant was acaulred bv condemnation suits Interminable lawsuits would de velop and that verdicts were oflen rle layed. uo vou mean to intimate tlmr we Duy judges.'" asked Mct'uteheon. I have nothing to sav about that." hotly replied Manson. "but the .com- any must be compelled to improve morals over those of 1899." Mcl'utcheon therennon deeliiret that the companv had "maintained nroner relations with the San Francisco board of supervisors for at least six years." Kepresentatlve Smith of r'nltfort.i- declared he wanted San Francisco to purchase the Spring Vallev plant before oalling on congress to act. rian Is Mrs. McKeei Appeals. (United Pre Leuned Wire.) rails, Jan. 13. Mrs. Cornelia Baxter- Tevis-McKee has appealed from the recent decision denying her separation from her husband, A. Hart McKee of Pittsburg. The sensational case will tie taken up for retrial January 17. Mrs. McKee Is the daughter of George W. Haxter of Tennessee. She was the widow of Hugh Tevls when sha married McKee in Philadelphia in 1905. The most sen sational charges are fnade on both sides and have been given world-wide publicity. CRUELTY TO SHARKS ROUSES HUMANE MAN (t'lilti-d Prem Leased Wire.) Long Beach, t'al., Jan. l.'t Protest ing against cruelty to sharks, Byron Glen, a local passenger agent for the Salt Lake railroad, announces that he will anneal to the humane socletv for aid in suppressing the practice of tor turing the maneaters. Ulen's Ire was aroused by the practice of fishermen. who. when they land a small shark, mi Its fins off and throw it ha.-k into the water, to perish. BUTCHERS HIS FOUR CHILDREN James York Broods Over His Wife's Death Till Tie Becomes Insane. Hairdl to COFFEE knocked Dorando out twice, once in London at the Marathon race and again in New York. Read the Doctor's report: Tram the New York World, Dec. 16, 1908. DORANDO'S HEART IN BAD SHAPE AFTER RACE, SAYS DOCTOR By Dr. Jos. Creamer. "I examined Dorando immediate ly after lie was carried from , the track. His heart was in bad shape and he was in a state o total col lapse. In my opinion, the condition of his heart was due partly to over stimulation. His handlers gave him stuff from a bottle which they said was coffee. Even coffee taken in such quantities would be likely to affect his stomach and cause his cof lapse. There wasn't a bruise on him to show that the fall did any damage" affects the stomach, heart and nerves of some peo ple (a good many). If you want health and the power to do things ana win in the race for any kind of suprem acy, you better trim off the handicaps and cof fee is one. It is joy of the keenest sort to be entirely well. TRY IT. Quit coffee 10 days and use well-made POS TUM, which goes straightaway to work rebuild ing broken-down nerve centers. 'There's a Reason" You can prove it in your own case. has been a part of our mission to explain to r t ,! . .1 . m . ' .peopie marine arug, catteine, in coffee seriously ROSTUM Made at the Pure Food Factories of the Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. (United Press Leased Wire.) Mankato, Minn.. Jan. 13. After oo:i- cealing himself at the foot of a stair way In his home, James York. n ciuarryman. cut th throats of his four children as they descended one by one. He then hanged himself in a woodshed, leaving his eldest daughter. Ida. to tlnd the bodies of her brother and three sisters In a bloody heap at the foot of the stairs. The Inhuman muiders were done in York's home at Kradlcy Junction, near here. York had been acting queer but at no time was he considered a d;inKer uus maniac. The first that descended, according to Ida York, was Karl, the 14-year-old son. The girl says she heard no outcry nml no sounds of a struggle. The lad's throat was cut from ear to ear. Nina, t girl of 12, next fell tinder the knife dripping with her brother's blood. Vera. t years old. carrying Zula. a biihy. whs the next victim. The throats of all were cut. York then left the house, with ap parently no thought of his eldest daugh ter, who was preparing to descend. He was discovered later hanging to a rafter In the woodshed and life was exlinct when he was cut down. The eldest daughter on seeing the bodies of her brother and sisters rushed screaming from the. house. She became frantic with grief snd was unable to give anv reason for her fathers act. She is in a serious condition and Is being cared for hy neighbors. SAYS WIFE'S PA RENTS WROUGHT ALIENATION" tiiilk 5 IIP JjS L iv . (United Press Leased Wire.) Seattle, Wash., Jan. 13. Claiming that his parents In law, Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Peterson, by continuous offers of bribes In the shape of luxuries which his modest income Is insufficient to provide, have alienated the affec tions of his wife. Jewel K. Williams has filed a suit in the superior court asking for damages of $50,000. Wil liams states that he married his wife May 8. 1907. and that her parents Im mediately began their efforts to get her to leave him. He says that Jiav 21 they offered her the sum of 150.000 and a new automobile If she would ac cede to their wishes. Fred H. Peterson, defendant In the suit. Is a well known Seattle lawver and real estate man. ACCUSED OF LARGE THEFT IN MONTANA (t'BltWI Press Lnwl Wb. i Serttle. Wash.. Jan. l:!. Charged with the theft of $10,000 from his for mer employer, the Power Mercantile company of Lewiston. Mont.. M. K. Sroenbring, has been arrested at Port Blakeley. At the time of his arrest he gave his name as Arthur Oerlach. The alleged theft was committed January i2. 1907, when Sroenbring resigned his position as bookkeeper. On leaving Montana be went to Alaska, where he worked s a waiter. and later returned to Port Blakeley. He will be taken at once to Montana to face a charge of grand larceny.' On January 28 the United States government will again withdraw froirtthe administration of affairs in the Island of Cuba, and for the second time the tod- dling republic will try to go its way alone. -Whatever may be the future of its govern ment, Cuba is always a subject of vital interest to Americans. Closely related to the United States by proximity, by the ties of interdependent trade, and by the sentiment of the war for Cuban Inde pendence which so materially affected the American nation, Cuba is yet foreign ter ritory in its picturesque life and Spanish institutions. The readers of this newspaper will be given a clear insight into Cuban affairs of the moment in a series of articles by Frederic J. Haskin, beginning January 14, and continuing daily for two weeks. These letters will not be dry-as-dust political es says nor compilations of statistics, but carefully drawn pictures of the political, : suc-di, anu mausinai ate ot Cuba as it is to-day. Read these articles and know the way of your neighbor. mm i Mil i Will cure any case of Kidnev or Bladder i beyond the reach of medicine. No medicine can do more: Cures BacfracM 'Corrects r"T IrTe7iNri'tit Do not risk havir