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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1911)
THE - ORfeGON , . SUNDAY JOURNAL.V PORTLANDS-SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY 19, 1911. MONEY ENOUGH ALREADY; i non 'ncrirrc AMn. uic nornc.Tn.Dcr:"' STATE PUBLICITY 1 j ;kUiiLf tuipwib nnw nig uitiuh-iu-uu, LITTLE FROM RICH DAD wmstea,. conn ' Jan. -28. By ? the HAS MILEAGE OF prats' of . the; will of Jay! B. Spauldlng, a wealthy manufacturer who died Jan uary ,. from injuries received In i faU, Tils widow gets the bulk of his estate as long as .she remains - unwed. His only daughter. Mrs. James W.s Busted,; Of' PeekskilC;N. j'Y- Is be queathed 11000. , His only. slster, Mrs. Anna M. Stevens, of Andover, N. , T., gets $2000. ' v ; ;";v "It Is not for want of affection, love American Heiress Who Is to Marry Lord Decles to Have More Than Thirty-five New or respect; for my daughterv the win reads, '"that I do mot bequeath, a larger Louis D. .Brandeis to Repre Railroad Head Also Advises John F. Stevens Says Consolif sum of money, property or estate to sent Muckraking 'Publishers Made Defendants in Stand ard Oil's First Libel Suit. Oregon People to Guard Against Fake Land Schemes Goes to Salem. dation Provides Means of" Financing Various Improve ments, Extensions, Etc.-' ' her, nut for the sole reason that sh now has a great abundance of property ndwealth." -v- , Gowns. . t. VIVIAN GOULD'S : l m LARGE SUM fflLTRUsfSlES BUREAU URGED BY PRES. L t HILL 842: MORECQMIHG fferMre.) New York. Jan. 28. When Miss Helen Vivian Gould, daughter of George Gould, becomes the bride of Lord Decies on February 7. she will nave a irous seau that will have cost $50,000 and will be perhaps the most elaborate ever seen in New York. Redfern, the famous tailor, is making the cloth gowns and suits, and Drecoll of Paris, the wedding -dress and evening gowns, few York, Paris and London haVe, been ransacked for lingerie and there are hats,, shoes, Mniwri and stockinrs to match each gown. Already 35 gowns have been or dered. and' designers are at work on half a dozen more. Wedding down Elaborate. The wedding gown will be of heavy white duchesse satin, in semVemplre t via. and heavily embroidered with sil ver roses. The court train will be eight yards long. There will be a low col lar jot real lace and , a real lace veil. It is said that Miss Gould, as Lady Decles will wear this gown when she is presented at the British court after the coronation ceremonies in June. The bridesmaid's gowns will be made with the high waisted empire effect of white chiffon over white satin. They will be trimmed with festoons of sea "green satin ribbons. The hats will be of white chiffon, trimmed with green. Miss Gould has shown no .especial preference in the matter of color in choosing her evening gowns. She has some of tale 'blue satin, deliaate yel lows and cream shades and much gold and sliver embroidery. , She also has a number of beautifully embroidered linen gowns. A friend who knows of what the trousseau will consist declared that Miss Gould would be clad "as the fashionable woman of tomorrow will be' clad." Redfern declined today to give ad vance descriptions of what the designers are creating for Miss Gould. Dressmakers Rushed. - "Her dressmakers have been on the iiolna of frenzy in getting the trousseau finished. It was because more time was needed than between Miss Gould's coming out and her marriage that the designers had to be started earlier. It was on account of this that the prema ture news of the engagement leaked out." Several wedding gifts" have already ar rived at the Gould mansion on Fifth avenue. This week the Jewels will be sent "there. "AH the family are spending the.wae.lfc end at Georgian Court, Lake- wood, where Lord Decles went toaay and his English friends who had some delay over their gifts at the customs house will follow tomorrow morning. I - y!"tt a J X n J - cU 1 "(Br 'ha International News SerTlce.t New York, Jan. 28. Louis D. Brandeis of Boston, will defond Benjamin B. Hampton and Cleveland Moffett in the 1350,000 Ubel suit brought against the publisher of Hampton's magazine and his staff special writer by the sianaara Oil company. The Introduction of Brandeis into the first libel case ever brought by the Standard Oil company promises inter eating developments. One of the ..rea sons that led the oil trust to depart from Its customary policy of nonlnter ference with writers and publishers of muckraking articles, it was learned, was that John D. Rockefeller had re celved hundreds of unpleasant letters since the publication of Moffett's . ar ticle on "Cassldy and the Food Poison ers." which accused the Standard Oil company of poisoning children by put ting sulphates into tue glucose used ror sweetening candy. Rockefeller and his oil associates maintain that the Corn Products com pany, which manufactures the glucose In question, has no connection with their corporation. It was admitted at 26 Broadway that three directors of the oil concern were officers in the Corn Products company and that one of them, E. T. Bedford, was its president. But the records showed. It was added, that only five per cent of the glucose company's stock was owned By Standard Oil Interests. " WOMEN TO DECID E RECALL ELECTION COMMERCIAL MEN WILL BOOST FAIR (Continued from Page One.) brought to bear and held in line during the next 48 hours." Yandell reported that the Seattle Chamber of Commerce and its member ship had sent 352 dispatches to Presi dent Taft by congressmen and business nion urging the claims of San Fran risco. Messages were sent to business interests in New England which pointed out the commercial Interrelation between trie west and the manufacturing inter ests of New England. The organization devoted the day to the consideration Of business and the dis cussion pf policies of Pacific and trans pacific commerce. Many propositions were brought up which will be sub mitted to the various chambers of com merce for ratification by the member ship Other Important matters were acted upon today. ' Appeal for Jamlne Contributions. It was decided to Issue an appeal not only to tha chambers of commerce In the body, bui to the Paclflo slope and the I'nitcd Slates for aid for the $3,000,000 victims of the famine In the Yangtse district In China, where the successive failures of two years' crops have im periled the lives of all in a province. Donations of food and money are re. quested. Captain Robert Dollar of the Dollar steamship line volunteered to transport foodstuffs on bis vessels free of cost, and Q. B. Yandell promised that the Seattle Chamber of Commerce would secure the cooperation of the Hill lines to transport food for the sufferers free, Matters of Business, Purely. Tho Associated Ohambers of Com merce unanimously voted to urge the congressional delegations of California, Oregon and Washington to indorse San Francisco's efforts to secure a fedeal appropriation of $920,000 to complete the transport docks and depot at Fort Mason, It was recommended that the Cham- Vivian Gould and her future husband, Lord Decles, from a photograph taken this week as they were start ing from the Fifth avenue home of Mr. and Mrs. George Jay Gould for an automobile ride. The Gould-De-cles wedding on February 7 easily overshadows all other eastern society events of the season and Is one of the mbst discussed social topics In England as well, on account of the popularity of Lord Decles In British society and government circles. Lwrd Decles will bid his final farewell to bachelorhood at a dinner which he has announced for February 4. J MANY WOMEN IN I. BIER'S WILL Among Them Mrs. M. C. Pet ers of Portland, Who Is to Receive $2000. (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) San Francisco, Jan. 28. Twenty women, whose respective places of resi dence stretch from New York City to Manila, and five charitable Institutions about the bay, are named as the heirs of the late Timothy Baker, formerly a councilman of Oakland and a wholesale grocer of San Francisco, whose will was filed for probate today. Baker died on January 3. The. will was written on December 17. 1906. It Is not witnessed, showing the prob able intention of the deceased to re veal his absolute control of his own mind. The will disposes of over $200,- 000, of which Mrs. M. C Peters of Portland, Or., gets $2000. HARLAN ENTERS FEDERAL PRISON FOR 18 MONTHS (Continued from Page One.) F RANK HILTON IN AN T CONTEST Portland Boy at Stanford At tains High Honor, With Many Preceding It. carcersted for 18 months, .Harlan was required to pay a fine of $5000. In reply to Harlan's appeal to the president, the chief executive declared that fines, meant nothing to the rich law breakers and that a term In prls- bers of commerce in the organisation on th only Punishment that undertake an Investigation of the rea sonablemess of express rates. The chamber of spmmerce of Seattle has si ready started such an investigation. Distinguished Men Present. There were present at the meeting today President Willis H. Booth, former president of the chamber pf commerce of Los Angeles; ex-Governor George C Pardee of Oakland, Captain Robert Dol lar Of San ' Francisco, Captain William Matson, president of the San Francisco chamber of commerce; E. C. Giltner of Portland, C. B. Yandell, Seattle; H. M. Alexander, Tacoma; C. M. Fastett, Spo kane; John A. McGregor, San Francisco; William Gerstle, San Francisco; C. A. KUIott, San Francisco; Theodore Gler, Oakland: W. . A., Dennlson, Oakland; James S. Clausen, : Loa Angeles. FIVE ACES TOO MUCH FOR WIFELY TRUST New York, Jan. 28. If the word of - Mrs. Laura Elizabeth Cogswell Is to be accepted as gospel,: five aces mark the-! chief cause of her complaint of deser tion and cruelty on file against Dr. Henry B. Cogswell. It was in the fall of. I902.tbat Dr. and Mrs. Cogswell went to poker playing In the house of Austin It. Broker, an artist. There were four In the game. ' "I stopped the game when" I' found ' my husband had too many cards In his hand," she told a reporter. "Too many cardsT" .echoed the re Hwrto'i"'"""1 '" "" ".' .' 11 1 "Yes, Dr. Cogswell had. five aces, was the crushing reply. : t ! That was the beginning of tha end. From that time, Mrs. Cogswell said, she began to lose confidence, 1n her hus band. i--;""7 ; j,,.''"":;:" ": J!: V'fi counted. The Great Question. Immortality .seems But the fragrance of dreams, Yet, even so. It must Be kindred to the dust -In whlchv enthroned, unseen, Supreme, must be some queen Who radiates the thought I That we are more than naugMt" ' . C. d. Blandln. (Special Dltpatr to The Journal.) San Francisco, Jan. 28. R. Justin Miller, '11, of Hanford; Frank Howard Hilton, 11, of Portland,, ana Eugene Earl Tlncher, '12, of Long Beach, have been chosen as the Standford univer sity representatives in the seventeenth annual Carnot debate, All the mem bers of the legal fraternity of Delta Chi and of Nestorla literary society and have been prominently Identified with debating activities since entering col lege. Hilton's achievements on the platform have won for him the presidency of the Nestorla literary society and member ship In Phi Alpha Tau. He was the winner of the Bonnhelm contest this year and was on both his freshman and sonhomore debating teams. He was also president of his class in the second year and a member of the 1911 Quad staff. ' ' VOTE ON TARIFF BOARD BILL IN THE HOUSE MONDAY (Continued from Page One.) favor of the tariff board at the last minute. He has been playing presiden tial Dolltlcs again on a larger scale. Clark Is opposed to the tariff boards or commissions on principle. He does not believe such a body can get any more accurate Information on the tariff than an Individual congressman anxious to determine the facts. In fact. Clark believes a tariff com mission besides being unconstitutional is less likely to get accurate informs tlon. Seeking information by a com mission frightens away ,a man from whom information could be secured. Clark Flays Politics. But Clark knows also that the grett body of the people want a tariff board and want the tariff as far as possible taken out of politics. Clark knows also that over In the senate Bailey of Texas Is opposed to a tariff board and has served notice of his intention to de feat tiie tariff board legislation at this session Bailey Is credited with being a Harmon man. The line of thought Is easllv found. Clark is willing to let the tariff board bill go through the house without pfo- esi oocause it would pass anyhow. But l-e also avoids running counter to the wishes of the people, and sees the bill go to the senate, and intn fhA inthu of Bailey, whf with his presidential fa vorite. Harmon, suffers all the discredit ior oostructlng the popular will. It Is Expected That 25,000 Will Vote on Gill; Total Registration 71,574. NEVER ANY II16ESTI, DYSPEPSIA OR , BASS Y, UPSET STOMACH. A Little Diapepsin Will Make You Feel Fine in Five Minutes.. Take ; your sour, out-of-order stom ach or maybe you call it Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gastritis or Catarrh of Stom ach; it doesn't matter take your stom ach trouble i right with you, to your Pharmacist and ask him to open a 60 cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and let you eat one. 22-graln Trlanguie and see )f within five minutes' there is left any 'trace of your former misery. The rorrf!r-nami for ypur-trmrblrlf Food Fermentatlon--food sourlngf the Digestive -organs berome weak, there Is lack of gBtrlc -Juice; your food is only half digested, and you become af fected With loss- of 'appetite, pressure and . fullness after, "fating, vomiting. (Br tie International New Service.) Seattle, Jan. 28. With a total regis tration of 71,574, as against 42,000 last March, Seattle Is going Into the recall election a week from next Tuesday, February 7, with 29.000 more voters to cast their ballots than ever before, and It may be said for a certainty that 25, 000 of these re women who are about to cast their first ballots. The recall election of Mayor Hiram C. Gill, opposed by the Public Welfare league candidate, George W. Dllllng, will furnish a test of woman suffrage In Washington, where the principle has Just been adopted. Gill was elected originally On an open town platform, while the candidate of the reformers is pledged to batten down the lid. It' Is claimed that GUI would be re elected by the male voters by a large plurality. Just what class' of women will vote and Just how they will ex press sympathies 0(, antipathies Is yet to be determined, and will decide the election. Gill has made a game fight, and his managers claim that he will win by 10,000 majority. The reformers claim about 5000 majority for their candidate. That it would be well for Oregon to arrange some way. to Issue official pub licity matter on the state's resources and Its opporuntties for settlers is the opin ion of Louis W. Hill, president of the Great Northern railway. Mr. Hill will go to Salem tomorrow to discuss the matter with the legisla ture In response to an Invitation from various sources. "Other states and British Columbia are using this method of supplementing the publicity of develoDment clubs, com mercial 'bodies atad the railroads," said Mr. Hill last night, "and with excellent results, and I believe It would be well foe Oregon to do likewise. Publications bearing the official seal of the state carry more weight than matter Issued by railroads, commercial bodies or in dlvlduals, and therefore such literature Is excellent In bearing out facts already placed before peqple who have become Interested in the state. Will Consider Plan. 'No, I would not care to make any suggestion as to- how It should be done, but I believe some official or depart ment could be vested with authority to carry out such work. A commission would be too expensive and I do not believe in placing further drains on the state's treasury. It could be -done In a very Inexpensive way. I have been Invited and urged to discuss the matter with your people and will go to Salem Monday for that purpose. We are deeply Interested In Oregon and are doing everything that we can to attract the attention of good homeseekers to the state. We have ex hibit cars traveling continually in tho east from the Mississippi river to the Atlantic coast and have large exhibits at the land shows that are" being held In the east. Last week we had a fine exhibit at Omaha. "The publicity organizations of Ore gon are doing splendid work, but I be lleve that It could be supplemented to good advantage by the state. Offiolal bulletins could be Issued occasionally on topics of Interest to., homeseekers and bearing the state's seal they would naturally carry much weight, as they should. Fake Land Schemes. "Another feature that could be In corporated In this work would be to In vestigate an guard people against fraudulent land schemes that will oc casionally be worked in new sections don't know that there are any such In Oregon, but It might be well to take precautions, and it can be done if the state will Interest itself to the extenti suggested. V "Oregon should have a tremendous influx of people next summer, I would not venture to guess how many, but ;the advertising that has been done and Is being done Is bound to bring re-1 suits. But there are others In tho field for these people, among them be ing British Columbia, and that fact should not be lost sight of." Mr. Hill arrived here yesterday In his private car and expects to start for St. Paul Monday night upon his return from Salem. En route east, Mr. Hill will visit the Puget sound cities Rnd Victoria, B. C. First Aid. Husband I met Hawkins today, and he was very gloomy; told me he was perfectly willing to die. Wife Oh, John! Why didn't you ask him here to dinner? Harper's Bazaar. Merging of the Hill roads with head quarters in Portland was practical! . completed yesterday at a meeting of v tha trustees at tho SnnUnnn lrtttlunft & Seattle Railway company In Van- T couver. Wash. All that remains to .bi done U the formal transfer of the stocK or tne various companies, or . wnicn : John F. Stevens of this city has been presidmt for some time. ' The value of the property of th merger 'will run far above the amount of capital stock, $62,600,000, since it 1 known that the building of the Nott.i Bank tine alone entailed an expenditure of more than $50,000,000, but what tlm, exact valuation will be placed at can not be accurately ascertained until tn-i lines still In' course of construction are completed, as, for instance, the Oregon ; Trunk' and the extensions of the Oregoa ' Electric to Eugene and the United Rail ways to Tillamook. ' With the Oregon Trunk completed. the merger will have a total trackage - of 842 miles, not Including the Oregon " Electrld line from Salem to Eugene that Is to be built this year, or the extension of the United Railways from North Plains to Tillamook, which is also ex pected to be completed this year. The. mileage included In the above figure is represented as follows: A. ft C R-j Spokane, Portland A Seattle and 1 the Goldendale branch, 038 miles; Oregon' Trunk line from the Columbia river to Bend, 16" miles; Oregon Electric, 801 milts; United Railways, 32 miles; l'a- clflc & Eastern, 31 miles. - I Speaking of the meeting at Vsncouvef yesterday, Pres(deit Stevens said last night; I "At a meeting of the stockholders ot the Spokane, Portland & Seattle Rail way held yesterday .at Vancouver au thorlty was given for the increase- of the comptny's capital stock from $2S, 000,000 to $63,500,000. i "The company being incorporated un der the laws of the state of Washing ton, the meeting was necessarily hell in that state. Trustees present wer: Myself, as president; L. W. Hill, pres ident of the Great Northern railway; and Judge Brown of Seattle. "As neither President Howard Elliott nor Attorney George T. Reld, trustees representing the 'Northern Pacific, could be present, -L.. W. Hill attended to pro vide a quorum. I "No significance was attached to the, fact that no Northern Pacific repre sentative was present,' as ,Iheld proxies for all the stock and represented botty roads at the meeting 'of the stock holders. "The object of the Increase In th capital stock is to" provide ( for th parent company, the S., P. 6 S., tt.kT Ing over the various companies owned Jointly In Oregon and by the Northern rm:iiii: anu uitrtti uiuihiii iBiiw&ys, The companies thus to be taken over are the Oregon Trunk. Oregon Electrl?, Astoria & Columbia River, United Rallr ays. Pacific & Eastern and The Dalles). Portland Navigation comrany. . The nctlon taken-also provides means . by which llnanclng may te done foe various Improvements, sdditlors and extensions to the, properties. ( "No other matters were handled or discussed at the meeting." . - ' , nausea, heartburn, griping In . bowels tenderness in the pit of stomach, bad taste In mouth, constipation, . pain in limbs, sleeplessness, belching of ; gas, biliousness,, sick, headache, nervous ness, uixstness or many other similar symptoms. . , If your appetite is fickle and noth ing tempts you, or you belch gas, or if you feel bloated after eating, or your food lies like a lump of lead on your stomach, . you can make up your mind that at the bottom of all this there is but one cause fermentation of undl gestedvfood. ... s Prove to yourself In five minutes that your stomach is as good as any; thstthrrffls-TTOthrng'Teiny'wTongrtop this fermentation and begin eating what you want without fear of discomfort or misery. 9; 1 1 ';.. Almost Instant relief is watting for you. It is merely matter of how pogn, you. take fc little piapepsln. Tomorrow and Tuesday Are the Last Days of Our Annual January Clearance Sale Tuesday afternoon will therefore be your last opportunity to make an unrestricted se lection from our exclusive stocks of Furniture, Carpetings and Drapery Fabrics at prices far below the normal. Scores of very special values will be offered in every department lfi.IACW.CO. JEifthand-StarlL - U A