The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, March 21, 1909, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING,. MARCH 21. 1909.
BOURNE WINS
IMPORTANT
PRIZE
MARSHFIELD AND NORTH BEND WORK AS A
UNIT FOR THE BOISE TO COOS BAY RAILROAD
Chairman of. the rommittee
That Shall Prepare Plans ,
for Proposed Ketreiich-
nient of (loverninent Ex
lenses Entails Itiir J oh.
By John K. I.athrop.
fSporlul rn.".l. h (o TO Juurnnl.)
Washington. March 10. Senator
Hourne hua landed the highest priie In
the whole lint r KcpuDiirau committee
In thn senate In KcttlilH !
membership of the budget committee
and chairmanship of the working sub
committee which shull prepare the
, whole plan of procedure for the pro
poned retrenchment of governmental ex-
ntiriltiir-n It in freely iidmltted at
' every hand that Bourne's task Is one of
-the larcest . and m'oHt Important, ever
tarklod by a senator.
The theory has been, evolved that by
the adoption In modified form of an
, Kngllsh budget system, from . 1100,009.
tiOU to I20.0(0,000 may be saved an
nually w ith better, net .results than un-J
uer me prrweni eiipaiiuji im-miMm tn
proprlations where under expenditures
grow f Hater than revenues and the us-
signment will entail Immense labor.
Senator Bourne's idea as expressed to
me Is to utilixe the most expert men In
the largest industrial enterprises of the
-. country whose opinion ha has asked
. and whose services ho has used in ap
ply lnjr to government the most ap-
proved methqds of coordinate revenues
and outgo, to prevent a deficit.
The senator during these days, with
1 the entire eastern press teeming with
new stories and editorials on the pro
posed plans, modestly assigns credit for
it to other senators, but the truth ly
thatlM really originated the idea and
issued it constantly ever since he came
lo tne senate.
" -To my personal knowledge lie-Is over
renting an everlasting indisposition to
ever change any existing condition and
now sees ms idea taken up ny notn
, radical and conservative faotlons. and
- It will be announced Monday In th
' senate when the committee assignments
... are given out.
Chamberlain STotlfled.
Senator Chamberlain was notified to
... ay of his final selection of committee
places approved by the Democratic com
, mittee on committees, getting public
lands, irrigation, agriculture and print
ing, i
Instead of 'taking the military affairs
and Indian affairs committees he stib
. stttuted thn agricultural and lands, thus
-being on three committees,, those most
. intimately coming in touch with Oregon
and Pacific northwest interests.
These assignments place Oregon in as
strong position as would be possible,
leaving nothing to be desired.
Senator Chamberlain was entertained
tonight by the Mississippi society, as a
k uniive oi mat state, wun six other na
tive MiHHisslppl&ns in the senate, Gore,
Clarke, Newlands, McLaurin, Money and
Bailey. v
' In TtccordCTcv-wtttrttraatrontBgrTRe
president proposed to have the land
fraud oases cleared, up as soon as pos
sible, as I "Wired the other day, the
attorney general today ordered the dls
missal of the indictment in the Idaho
' federal court against Senator Borah and
tlie Barber Lumber company and oth
ers. Borah has already been acquitted,
having waived technicalities.
It Is understood that the intention is
,to see that cases so long pending in
Oregon bo gotten out of the way.
Xioad Complaint.
t- Complaint has been loud and insis
tent that injustice has been done by
.bringing indictments then permit cases
.to drag along for vears. unit t)i o-niiti.
remain unpunished and the Innocent are
resting under a cloud on their reputa
tions. ". Senator Hevburn today, to the presi
dent, urged that Fulton be appointed
Judge, paying him a glowing tribute as
"one of the fittest men for such position
1tir' " I''
It Ml
By ddlson Bennett.
Marshfield, Or., Mrqh 14. The meet
ng at the. Commercial club last evening
was an oyeopener to pne who lias attend
ed such meetings In viirlous parts of the
state, for the hall Vai not only full to
1 1 so ting -capaolty, but fally 104 pe-uple
stood during the entire proceedings, and
many were op the walk outside.
Dr. J. T.' ilcCormac is the president of
the club, and Walter Lyons la the secre
tary, but Mr. Lyons has been in Wash
ington all winter, and the $26,000 appro
priation by congress for the improve
ment of the Coos Bay harbor may be to
a large degree credited to him, for he
was at his post all the time, and did not
allow the matter to be forgotten.
- One of the best omens of the meeting
last night wai exhibited by the attend
ance or a large number rrom isorm
Bend. The tw'o towns are working in
entire harmony, all pulling together for
Coos bay, the names of Marshfield and
North Bend cutting no figure when there
Is an opportunity to assist in the devel
opment of the section at large. In fact
when the people from here get abroad
they always claim to come from Coos
bav In preference to claiming to hail
from any particular town.
It must be confessed that this Is the
right spirit, something that Is bound to
win, for it is hard to deny anything to
a united people.
But the meeting last night was not
only pleasing In numbers, but doubly
so in the spirit manifested by the audi
ence. -" Your correspondent spoke for(an
hour, his nlsslon being to tell the audi
ence what had been done at the meeting
of the Oregon-Idaho Development con
gress at Boise last month, and other
Tacts about the movement for a rail
way from Boise to Coos bay, and when
the resolutions adopted at Boise we re
read, when it was shown that 'the con
gress has but one aim,, on object and
one ambition, and that the building of
such a railway, and when it was further
pointed out how the work was gaining
conveits among the , best men in the
state every day, the aiMience simply
went wiid.wun entuusiasra.
Are Terribly In Earnest.
When one's remarks are bo enthuslas
tlcallv received it seems like self lamia
tlon to speak or write about It. But I
feci that It was my mlRslon and' not my
personality that the vast audience rose
to. Tiipy are terrioiy in earnest, ana
they welcome any instrument that can
assist them In the furtherance of their
object, and In the present instance they
feel that the Oregon-Idaho congress and
Its workers can assist them, will assist
them, and they are willing to bnck up
that work to the bcBt of their ability.
I cannot well speak of this moetlng
without mentioning lucre fully the or
ganization which held it. the chamber of
commerce. As said before. Dr. Mctor
mao ia the president, and Walter Lyons
the secretary, but behind them stantj
the best men in the community, and the
chamber Is a live wlr for sure. They
do not hold fixed meetings, but meet at
the call of the president, and they only
come together when there Is something
to be done, and then they get busy ana
do it.
The chamber mav be said to be the
real organizer of the Oregon-Idaho De
velopment congress, for the suggestion
for such an organisation was first men
tioned here by that body, and the first
meeting held here. The fine new hotel
here Is an outgrowth of a resolution
fiassed by the chamber, the asphalt pav
ng came from a movement bv them,
several of the- fine- buildings likewise
were there first mentioned, and the.
magnificent high school building, ,1ust
completed, was the outgrowth or a
movement by the same .body.
in sucn an organization mere must
IL.II
BOW
LOOKS
TO G0ffl!(N!P
Condon Solon Has His Eye
on Place Now Filled by
F. W. Benson.
LIXC0LX HAD HIGH
CIVIL SERVICE IDE.1LS
' ,N,ewYork' Mf,rch 20 Members of the
r Civil Service Reform association an
nounce that they have come Into pos
session of a letter which shows Abra
; ham Lincoln was Imbued with civil
. service Ideals. As proof they have given
,out the following letter, dated 10
" months before the assassination of the
martyred president:
"Executive Mansion. Washington
Aug. 6. 1864. Hon. Morton McMichael
.My dear sir: When the Philadelphia post
master was here on the 20th of June
? last I read to him a paper in the fol
lowing woras: - - i
; ""Complaint is made to me that you
sare using your official power to defeat
'Judge 'Kelly's renominatiou to con- i
BTess. i am well satisfied with Judge I tarvshin
lo not . know that the man who miglit
supplant him would 1p satisfactory
but the correct principle. I think is
- "that all titir friends nlmulii l;av abso
" lute freedom of choii-e among our
friends.
"'My wish, therefore, is that vou will
do just as you think fit with your own
suffrage in the case, and nut constrain
liny of j'nur subordlnalcs to do other
Ihan he thinks fit with his Thts is
Jirefisely the rule I imnl. ,.t il and ad
hered to on m part, w !,. :i :, certain
timer nomination, nrnv ;
was being canvassed frr '
f "He piomised t.i strir;;
I am toid that of the i
.hundred employes in the i
one of them is oix-rilv for
- This, if true, is noi
-to their free ehric t
m'Ubt that a large v.i.mi
Jay Bowcrman, president of the
state senate, is to be a oandldate for
the Republican nomination and conse
quent election as governor of Oregon.
Senator Bowerman has not said so. On
the contrary he has said that he will
not be a candidate, but his friends re
member that he also said that he would
not he a candidate for president of the
senate and that he never said he was a.
candidate until he had his fences buua
ed so strong that there was no opposi
tion to him when the. time for battle
came. Therefore, they argue that the
senator from Sherman, Gilliam and
Wheeler will come out Into the lime
light when he deema It time to unfurl
his banner to the gubernatorial
breezes.
The practical announcement by K.
W. Benson that he would not be a can
didate for governor, but would try Tor
reelection as secretary of state, lends
adSed color to the renewed rumor that
Bowerman will be a candidate for gov
ernor. There Is a persistent rumor that
some sort of an understanding exists
between Benson and Bowerman by
I which Benson Is to stick to the secre-
leaving the race that much
the more open to Bowerman, while
Howerman In turn will use his Influ
ence for Benson in eastern Oregon.
It Is arguedjthat the course pursued
by Bowerman In regard to the normal
Hfhools will aid him in his aspirations
to be governor. Throughout the ses
sion he took the stand that the normals
shotrtA- be wiped out of existence - and
started over, by vote of the people, on
a new basis. He led the fight In- the
senate against the normal school com
bine, defeated the efforts of the nor
mal schools to secure an appropriation
for the next two years and insisted in
wiping out 'all normal school statutes
in the effort to start the normals out
on an even fight before the people. It
was through his suggestion that the
senate submitted its final proposition to
the house, providing for an appropria
tion until the end of the present year,
wiping out all normal statutes and re
turning the normal properties to their
original owners, which bill was turned!
down by the house on the last night of
tne special session.
Bowerman's friends contend that he
will make a formidable candidate' for
the governorship and ' insist that he
stands a good show of election, should
he decide definitely to come out into
the field and make an energetic campaign.
To the right Firat Trust and Savlnga bang, one or me line new
buildings in Marshfield.
In the center Chandler hotel,' Marshfield, opened February 1,
1909; cost $75,000. This elegantly furnished hotel is one of the best
In Oregon.
To the left Marshfield's new high school," completed last month at
a cost of $40,000.' The grounds cost $12,000 and the building furnished
will represent an outlay of $75,000.
credit. I have had long talks with him,
and he is willing to tell of many things
which have happened and many changes
which have taken place since he arrived
4, .
be one moving- spirit, one great leader,
one around whom all the others can
raljy. Doctor McCormac Is to a great
extent such a man, but he takes no
, 1
on the seen over 80 vears atro. ' But
rVhen T besan to inaulro about the won
derful change that nas come over me
place curing tne last j montns ur two
years, tne doctor tiaa dui iqe one an
wer Grimes! -
Ames Morlnr Spirit.
.Now,Mr-arlmei not the .aort of
man who would like to be held up as tne
one great leader o the community, and
I am not going- to give him credit for
doing all that has been done. But he
has been the great moving spirit, and
that spirit, which I will call the Grimes
spirit, has accomplished wonders. And
then remember that Mr. Grimes la not
yet a three-vear-old as an Oregonian,
and you will ask how it is that a
stranger can come Into a community and
do so much in such a short space of
time. To that I will answer that you
have now hit upon the Coos Bay spirit
where a man la received for wha lie
is and la followed aa a leader for what
he does.
In many cpmmunlties It Is thought
that a new comer must sit down and
watt for 13 or 20 years before he is
fit to make any suggestions or head
any movement, but here it is different,
and we find the people of the entire
Coos Bay district already pointing to
William Grimes as one out of a thou
sand. r, .
And It might be' well to digress a
little and tell bow tt came about that
Mr. Grimes came hers from his Okla
homa home, where he was a leading
citizen, having; served two terms as
United States marshal. And that brings
us to the Portland rair or lot, and
the Coos Bav exhibit there. Mr. Grimes
visited the "fair and saw the Coos ex
hibit, and that brought him to this
city. And -In gaining- this one citizen
Coos gained a man who by his works
will repay the country doubly, trebly
for all the money she spent on the
Portland exhibit.
Tomorrow I am going some II or Z0
miles up the Coos river, and in my next
letter f will tell your readers some
thing about one of the beautiful Ore
gon streams and the relation it bears
to Coos Bay.
LID: GRAFTERS
. JUST SUFfER
Gove rnmejit Has No Intcn
lion of Abandoning Pros
v ccution of Offenders . '
Tnlted I'reM Ussed Wlr.
Washington, March J0.- The rumor
that Secretary Balllnger of the Interior
department will abandon the scores of
pending lahd fraud cases In the west
and allow the defendants to go scot
free was denied today by a high of
flclal of the department. In Nebraska,
Wyoming. Colorado, Montana, New
Mexico and 1'tah several, hundred per-.
sons have been indicted and up to date
only 37 convictions have .been secured.
These will be pushed with Just as much
determination as thev were under the
Roosevelt administration. It was said to
day, but until the supreme court dec!
certain questions, the hands of the go
ernment officials are tied.
Orafters Crafty.
"And while we are tied hand and
foot." said the official, "the bis; cor
porations that profited by the land :
frauds ars spiriting away important
witnesses. iJosena of the defendants -
tliiii.at ii t n 1 a . u whA nn m m ( t .4 nan.
jury, 'and bribery after bribery, have'
mysteriously disappeared, and by the
time the cases come-to trial we will '
be lucky if we have a third of them.
"It la easy enough for ons of thv
railroad or mining companies, to movs
one of their employes to another state
and thus lose him to us. Most of the
real criminals will never be known or
brought to the surface. . The men that .
we will eventually send to prison, If
ws secure the convictions, are the su-
Serlntenrienta or bosses of ' the subsl-
lary companies owned by the big rail
roads. ' . '
Klfbsr TTp"Cmoedd. ' . ;
"The big men never appear on the
surface. When a railroad wants to
gobble a county, - the word is given to
the managers of one of the mining-1,
companies owned by the line. . The su
perintendent sends for one of the bosses
and the boss approaches the men, tell
ing them to go ahead and malts entries
on certain lands. -
Money is furnished the bogus home
steaders and In due time they est th
papers proving their, ownership.
."As soon as they get the deeds they .
turn them over to the boss, who turns
them over to the manager, who gives
them to the head man of the mining
company, who. in turn, hands them to
some representative of tne rauroau. in
the course of a few years It is found
that the railroad owns all th land
worth owning in that section. The
miner who took out the papers and per-
Jured himself gets 160 for his part ot-jf
the transactions and the railroad IM
MAXIM DEFENDS
GUN SILENCER
SHOT BY NEGRO;
SHOOTS
SHOOTER
HAERIMAN TO STEAM
BACK TO NEW YORK
(United Pre Leased 'Wire.J -
New York, March 20. E. H. Harri
man's steam yacht, Sultana, left from
this port today for New Orleans, where
It will pick up the railroad magnate
and bring him back to this city after
he concludes his inspection of his Pa
cific coast properties.
Ten Indicted for Swindling.
Council Bluffs, Iowa. March 20. The
rrand 1urv of the district court of this
county today returned 10 Indictments' in
the wholesale swindling cases. The an
nouncement was made that each of tho
Indictments is against J. C. Mabray and
others, but the names of nine of the
others were not made public, it being In
timated that some of them an not yet
under arrest. Conspirac y and larceny is
charged in each indictment. Among the
complaining witnesses in the 10 carats
was Joseph P. Walker of Denver. Af
ter returning the Indictments the grand
jury took recess until May.
Nothing Left for Lynchers
to Do After This Af
fray in Virginia.
(United Pret L-si-3 Wire
Suffolk, Va., March 20. Chief of Po
lice Brlnkley and Lieutenant of Police
isawara jueunis or BurroiK were snot
down by a negro named Thomas Smith,
whom they tried to arrest In a store
tonight. Neither officer Is expected to
live. As Brinklev was falline he shot
the negro dead.
Excitement runs high and a serious
race outbreak Is feared.
"DEAR MARIA" AT
WHITE HOUSE AGAIN
Washington, March 20. Back to the
White House have come Mr. and Mrs.
Bellamy Storer, after some three years
of exile following the unfortunate cul
mination bf their celebrated correspond
ence with Theodore Roosevelt Mr. and
Mrs. Storer. who are In Washington at
the Shoreham hotel pending the reopen
ing of their handsome home, were among
those who dropped in at the White
House for a social cup of tea.
Alleged participation In Roman Catho
lic International politics in which Presi
dent Roosevelt believed Mrs. Storer had
Implicated him, resulted In her hus
band's removal as ambassador to Aus-
uia-nungar)'. -
This was following the publication of
the "Dear Maria" letters from President
Roosevelt to Mrs Storer. Mr. Roosevelt
held that Mrs. Storer, In her ardor to
obtatrr ther-cardmal's red hat-for-Arch-'
bishop Ireland, had compromised him In
the politics of the Vatican and their cor
respondence was laid before the public
to its intense interest.
Then Mrs. Storer determined to return
to Washington and make social headway
despite the disapproval of the White
House. Mrs. Storer was Miss Maria
Long-worth -and an aunt of Nicholas
T .on a-worth, who married Miss Alice
Roosevelt. The Storers finally were dls
Bunded from their social campaign.
The friendship between the Longworth
family and Mr. Roosevelt was of long
standing. It dates DacK to ine years
when Mr. Storer was a member of the
hnnse of renresentatlves. and Mr. Roose.
velt vu a civil service commissioner,
and the Storer carriage was placed at
his disposal.
NOVEL STRAINS OF
PRAISE FOR IRELAND
New York, March 20. Irishmen, in
spite of their patriotic natures, have
no appreciation of the beauties of their
own country. Judge Marcus Kavanagh
declared in an address to the Catholic
Woman's league In the Fine Arts build
ing.
Judge Kavanagh said that while
poets sang the praises of La Belle
France, Bonny Scotland and placid
England, there was nof. a spbt on the
face of the earth naturally so beauti
ful as Ireland, yet Irishmen, as a rule;
did not arioreciate its loveliness.'
In speaking of St Patrick, Judge
Kavanagh said:
"There was a great deal of Christ
ianity in Ireland Before St Patrick
drove out the snakes. But it was only
scattered here and there. Centuries
aaro Ireland had one of the finest gov
ernments In the world. It was the
best sroverned country, at that time.
in Europe. It had over a hundred
kings to administer the law, and while
some or tnose Kings were vnnsiian, a
great number of them worshipped
pagan gods.
PICTURE OF PRESIDENT TAFT AND CABINET
'entiv made.
follow tills, i
or three 1
-i -f fire not I
Kel lev !
: l lft
i mi he no i
r f them. !
,..lf would !
And i tl ev i f.r Mm
nnd are not restrain-'! t.-i- tan p it u
'beyond ou'Mion hy r" tretM;? so ,
"Please tell t h ' j . m.t fr I,- rri'ivt!
find a why to p-lieie r r f-om the ki.f-
rdcion thut lie ! not k. ,i; f .r,,m
e to me In good f n- Y-:i iru'v :
I. IN' ' I..V ' ' i
prormnl v an much mf
t for Kllt'
COl LEAVE LADDKIJ:
: Bi'WiLAirs rsiu it'
- n.llsrtelphia Mfi-rh "(i ' ii g n rrX,
ladder, which had txon tl,. ai tfi:' '. f.
In KMitrn bv mnilK:i' , ti- .
Apartment, bureln'" rifrr,, , t,, ....
of Mm. William lt-iliniar.. : ju
North Nineteenth Mr.-! r. ,. !in;fj
" ThurlT night, and t 'p urtittfs
valued at &.
As Mrs. tiallman l Tidii.g terni.,..
vsrily In an sriertroert ) .). )n Went
Philadelphia. tie rnMe-i m no:
have hreej discovered f: an tTdi it
r-rnd If a srvsit next i,,r t-,1 rot
fonrut ftprtnta In the w.i and gur-n
tfc alarm.
. A moots ago bnrslars i; 1 jlmrr.v
f frr rw a wlndw -leading; h.to t-
Hwhesi of tt residence and t-tii o'f
ll the valuables lbv novld f.rd When'
ie fxrfV-e were sotlfted tber fnnd thev '
wT sot so rpry the burciar. aad
to u4 io laddt-r Ta gt-t Into th:
! tt rwigh the window. i
At rxtirlmin of thetr lnveit!a-
t !. tT went inf sod fofre-ot to take !
! 1-wi.w- ltd th". The loue haa
t - uanl h !ra Italtmaa 4b-
r.t t i4-t. sn-l lt laaVter remain
ahfre t fcat lf eft It aiti'l
i)m were railed wppn
r-k aa le: a;i( ft tte Ku4
t s'i af f.
ye. -" :,f.'-rr-.;. T.-r "ti i "- v t
From reft to rljot: " Jirsldijt Tft. Secretary of Trfasory Frtnkllm MacVrsrh." Attorney GBrml Gxrg W Wlckersham. SascrHarr of
Xary George too Ia. Meyrr. Secretary of Agrlciiltarc Jatnrs Wilsoii, Swetary or Coram free and Labor Charles U. Ntgle, Secretary of State
P. C. Kbox, ScreUrjr of War Jacob W. DkkiosoB, Postmastr General Frack Hitchcock and SrKary of Interior Richard A. Balllnger.
(Photo by Harru. A Ertog.)
' f ' ' - - - '
'. ....'.- -
m OH TRAIN:
BODY
Texas Shooting Scrape Ends
Disastrously for One
Against Two.
(United Preu Leased Wire.)
Clarendon, Texas, March 20. -An un
identified man Is dead and Floyd iA.ut
trey of Fort Worth Is dying here, as
the result of a three-cornered fight
with revolvers on a Fort Worth & Den
ver train near Giles, Texas, today. It
Is stated Auttrey and hls cousln, Frank
Garrett, of Fort Worth, killed a third
person In the fight and threw the body
from the coach window. The body has
oeen zounu near Keestune bridge.
TWO LITTLE GIRLS
GET HERO MEDALS
New York, March 20. Alice and Dor
othy Edgerly, girls of 12 and 14. have
been presented congressional here med
als for saving the life of Miss Jean
Dowllng last summer at Pel ham Bay
park.
The presentation was made at the
Morris High school by Congressman Jo
seph 8. Qoulden, who submitted the
girls' names to congress for medals,
together with the necessary proofs of
their heroism.
The assemblyroom at the high school
was crowded when Mr. Qoulden, after
a speech -full of high praise gave the
little girls their medals. On their part
they were so embarrassed that thev
could hardly speak. Their agitation
was Increased when Miss Dowllng. a
teacher in a Bronx school, appeared
from behind Mr. Qoulden snd kissed
them both. As a roar of applause broke
from the room full of people the two
children seemed ready to faint.
trora tne same platform two other
heroes also got belated medals. They
were Henry George a young negro and
Policeman Rush Webster of the Mor
rtsanla station. Both did splendid work
on tbe day the steamer George Blocum
was Durtiea in tne Kast rtver nut their
cases were quits forgotten for two
yesrs.
BOISE POLICE 1
WANT KUNST
Hartford, Conn., March 20. Hiram
Percy Maxim, Inventor of the noiseless
gun, was asked what he had to say
about the threat of the chief of polics
of Pittsburg, Pa., that he would arrest
anyone found possessing a silencer and
also clap him In Jail, and be said:
The chief of police of Pittsburg, If
he is quoted correctly, tells how easily
and without detection one man with a
silenced revolver could kill another.
Evidently he has not even read the pa
pers, for It has been stated very plainly
time and again that no silencer has
been or could very well bs fitted, to
revolver. The construction of a re
volver, with Its chambers open at both
ends, prevents Its equipment with a
si lencer. On ly rifles are thus tu 1 ppedjL;
and murderers do not go around empeilX
with rifles. , v X
Then again, as has been carefully
explained, the noise of discharge, of
a silenced rifle would be lound enough .
to betray the man who fired unless a
gun of small cs liber and low velocity
were used. It has been demonstrated
that when a bullet travels at the rate
of 1 200 feet or over per second It makes
a crack as It tears through the air that
Is perceptible for 200 or 300 yards. Bv
means of the silencer the explosive noise
Is done away with, but the bullet noise
remains.
SCnLEY ONCE MORE
AT WHITE HOUSE
Washington, March 20. Rear Admiral
Schley has seen the inside. of the White
House for the first time in several
years. Since President Roosevelt took
the other end of the Santiago sea bat
tle controversy the admiral has walked
a long way around when going from the
navy department to any place down
town. He called with Senator Rayner of
Maryland, who said, when the two came..
from the president's office. "No other
two persons are happier to see Mr. Taft
in the White House," and the admiral
smiled soquiescence.
The Bellamy Storers. Senator Bailey,
Senator Nelson and Admiral Schley are
only a few of the persons, who. since
Mr. Roosevelt retired, have returned to
the White House after years of ab
sence. SOLDIER FALLS 75
FEET AND IS KILLED
t.tpeetal Ptupateh to The- Journal.)
Spokane, Wash., March 20. C. I
tAmphere, private, company I Fort
George Wright, tonight fell 76 feet to
his death from a high trestle on the
Great Northern, between Natstorlum
park and the fort, his neck and shoulder
being broken In the fall.
Henry Runstl a middle aa-ed German.
would hsve been Veleasel from the city
tall on $60 ball yesterday If a telegram
had riot bren received from the ihiIIcs
of Boise, Idaho, saying that Kunst ia
wanted there rpr burglary., Anoiner
message later told that an officer was
on the way to Portland.
Kunst was a walking jewelry store
when Detectives Colemsn and Price
found him in a pawn shop a few days
ago. but it ia understood he carried the
jewelry found upon him sa a blind, snd
mat he ia wanted In several cities Ail
he trinkets found on hi person were
worn, ana nad apparently oeen tasen
from the jewel boxes of a score of
young girl a
WHY THE GE0RGLNS
SLTPORTED CANNON
l tr1tr4 fTm tuaat Wlra.l
Washington. Marrh "20. members
of tbe Oorarla d'irtio In th house
who voted for the Flttgorald smendme-nt
lo tbe nous rut rontrarr to t ha de
sire of the Democratic caucus, have ta
siM a statement of tbrtr position.
Thei members are Representatives
Urtna-aton. Howard. Rrantley, KxJ wards,
ljro and Grtrara. Thv d are that tt
buT to rl the region a reso-
lnttoa) tntrodtrr-M t S Prmocrat; as was
demaruld bjr the I "vk plat farm, than
to appoint rntnmltto of nloe Repablt
rane and els Iemorrals to rarrr out
lb Dearer deciaratloa of rnnnpiea. .
With , a comrade, G. C Terry, Lump-
hern was footlna it to the fort from
a visit to Spokane, A Great Northern t'
work tram passed ana tne men trieon
to board It. X ney were anovea orr
the conductor and again gained a fOj
inr on one of the cars.
Terry alleged that the conductor then
pushed Ijanaphere from the trestle to
his death. The military authorities
have taken charge of the body and hare
started an Investigation. ,
lem
Ihan ' l
Gilman Auction &
Commission Co.
Sales This Week at
411Washington St,
Tuesday, March 23.
Household Furniture. Rugs, etc., at
?rivate sale all the week. "Stock Dadl-r
rimmed Hats. Silks. Velvets. Ribbons.
Hosiery. Kimonos. Ilnena. etc.. at JSo
on the dollar. Indies will do well to at
tend the sale, at 411 Washington strert.
H. U. P. OIL.MAN. miftuwer
FORD AUCTION C0.H
. 369 E.' Morrison Street
Are stifl in front with' a good as
sortment of Furniture at their
usual Low Prices. It is not
necessary to try to itemize our
stock as we have(everything that i
goes . to furnish the home, and
the main part is that
Our prices Are Always- Low.
Pho'nes East SSS, B-2311