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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1912)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAU PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY EVENING. MAY M. lilt REBELS BESIEGE MILITANT SUFFRAGETTES SENT TO PRISON II CAPTURE OF fflO I Citizens Hard After Men Who,! Threaten to Fire When For . . doners Entrench Selves in Smelter Plant. Refusing to Pay for Meal, j Kill Cook. ! HOB MIES ROB Vi RAN I KasU r. Jr f1r faratfae'a. nxxOy AmrHM, r I ir4 In n.iiiti(i i.y :" '- 1 l4 rth4 of all lteir taiuaMr at ialardaaa, la tha ! J( liut. f, .- fejr Aauatlcan rifwiwi. Otertaarfl and uivuei.11 r tr.a rh- tha (.raiaae Inlitnliid thaw lt I Iha III' I ff It- l(-Ufl klun truat and tf,.1 eat III rHta Ililrir.t : fWa Th titan aarlJa! Otl lli. u .lata and li. rrtl iieit. M-'.'-aO H for) fur of thrjr mHiev !Dia tad oole4 iruate pleat ftlraa Fight AloB Inmndarj. !l iii.J I'im I..a4 Kin i rabaaa. laae. Mejr il Hlth bat tle balwaan Xlrilrkn rebal and leB. maul troop rra th inttrnailonal fcoanda rr lira from her Imraioant. Hap war taaan today br the United IUW aoraram.M lo protart A mar Iran luea a4 arixrlr. With Iha Ida of pra vantlef firing or fllaht lr ruhtr tarr Into Aiuarliaa larrlturr. Coloaal Btar. eaaimantliric iha 1i truant of Ta. tadav aant a dala.hmanl of tropa to follow Iha Una if fighting a I off iha " bordar. 7 PRISON TERMS OF 9 MONTHS GIVEN 3 SUFFRAGETTES (Continued Fruin Page On.) Jali. It waa whila In Hullowar that Jtlra. Pankhurit organised 'hunger alrlka" among the other uffrgrlt rrlaenara. But aun-ful aa tha atrlkaa have btm In the tal. It a a not ao thla lima. Whan Iha woman la- foaad to aat tha Jail authorltlee pumped liquid food through trdr noatrll Inti thalr atomacha an eitremely painful manner of taking :iourlhrtent. 'Aa part retaliation, (ha prlaonara made tha Jail horrible by night and by day with rldeoue rrlra and nioanlr.gi. at Interval yelling ''Vote for Woman:" lateral o the guard raalgnm). Itr Threat rolflUad. Window amaahlng on a wholesale rata in the wealthlrM ahupplng dltrlrt In London' faahionable weat end ful fllleJ. Mr. Pajikhurt .threatened that failure by Prhna Mlnlatar Aaiulth to make the equal franchise bill In tha common a mlnlitarlal mraaure. would mean "ex war." 1'artlea of women, all well dreiaed and rarryln;. apaclally labeled and numbered hammer in neat "Dorothy" hag. atealMly Invadrd tha Strand. Charing- Ciok. 1'arllamont Hquara and the vklnagn of Oroavenor . Craacent. Keneington avakened In tha night by the air a In of the Mar aalllala. One whole atreat riven over to Jew airy ahopa. tailor ahnpa and hotel waa II rat attacked, practically every ahow window waa broken. Not until the aun m;a, up did. the police arrive. In aucq number aa 'ta Tijrht tiff The auffra-g-ettea. In many cases the women tore the clothing from the backa of the of ficer, bit their har.da, acratched their faces, and even fellvd some with cluba. liatpina were jabbed right and left, Chrlatabel Pankhumt, riding in an au tomobile filled with beer buttles, pre- aerve jars and Iron pots, stormed Knights Bridge. Tlrht In Holloway Jail. Dragged to Holloway Jail, ncore of auffragettes refuad to don the prison varments, and to do the-work laid out for them, and many fight followed. These riots caused the British cabinet to decide upon -drastic action agalnat tha militant suffragettes under the con spiracy act, which carries with it a maximum sentence of seven years. Under this act Mra Pankhurst and tha Lawrences were convicted, and only the recommendation of leniency by the jury saved them from long terms with hard labor. Tho K"vernment, through Premier Asqulth and l-Ioyd-Georgre, has announced that it will deal hereafter with all property -destroying; "suffra gettes as it has dealt with the three aentenced today. ... ' S '. ' '' - , .,'.,' ' I i ii"-; t , - . vn f ft v j f x 'try ( -1 v t i irtb raaaa taia.4 Wl Flartelofi, Cal.. Mar I! - TK aara4 from niuo uniHnrt by H a quirk action laf 1'iHiaiabla UiKo, two alranfa ma are lu Jail at Tiu.ha I'iay lu iniatr fur the elating vf Uluvaiml liioii, a rraiauraal rouk Tl a man rtf .ia1 l pay tr a meal. an aihaa I-aiiull InaialaU. on ehet and llta uthrr lalt4 hint, kllllug him ! aliiioal Inilanlly. U.Kir aeiiaj Iha ! man ffvm a uiub whlrh rrfrliia I lo lnrh Ihrm. t'iM a motor car and huallad Ihrm over Ik atala Una. Neaa aa wired Iw Reno, but lin tha motor! car arrival It waa round Mt Kay li0 aptrltad the man aboard a freight train Wlun iha tram ped ' through Florialon the moh, Willi a rape, waa) ready at the dapol. but McKay had linked hlmaelf and hi two prisoner m a U rar 2 BOYS AND WBULD-BE It RESCUER LOSE LIVES! (Bpaelal to Tka Jaaraal I ItnnA Rlvar. nr. Xlav 11. lame and francl Baal, aga la and 17, anna of Hiram Baal, n tpertntanden t of tha O. W. ft N. company' tie-treating plant at Wyeth. were drowned yeaterday al noon In the Columbia river at Wyeth J I r do ye were piaving pn me ran r.er an undercurrent drew It Into deep water. Tha boys jumped On never cam lo the top, while tha olher cair to tha auific and E. T. William. eelng- the accident, jumped In and attempted to recu them. All three were aurke.l under. No bodlea have been recovered. Hiram Baal, father of the drowned boya. waa In Portland at the time thi ecldent occurred. Had William, who! loat hla life In an attempt to rcoue tlm I boys, was employed as fireman al t do I tla-trratlng plant of which Baal wa superintendent. Ha leavea a wife and two small children. This $2,000 Auto Given Away Oct. lit. Voting Coupon Issued With Ail' Purchases To Wear Chesterfield - Clothes Means To Be Better Dressed CHESTERFIELD QUALITIES FIRST They hive Uut exclusive style found only in Chester field Clothei. SECOND The fabrics are the best domestic and foreign weaves. GUARANTEE If front of coat breaks THIRD They fit better than otK er clothes. ' FOURTH They are made by the best tailor in the vrorld. FIFTH They are guaranteed as no others. in one year's wear, customer can have a A NEW SUIT FREE Above Is Mrs. Emmellne Pankhurst, who wag convicted of inciting her followers to smash the windows of London shop keepers. Below Is MrB. Pethlck Lawrence, Joint editor . with her husband of the suffra gette paper that incited riots. SUFFRAGISTS SUFFER JAIL SENTENCES AS MARTYRS TO CAUSE ; Local supporters of the 'equal suf .fragre caute are inclined to, the belief that at a point this far away, the iph! ' status of affairs which have culminated 1n the conviction and urntcnclntf of Mrs. Pankhurst and the Lawrences cannot be thoroughly understood merely from tho Information given in the press reports, and for thin reason they hesitate to i comment on the outcome of the London ' auffraglsts' trials. Mrs. C. S. Jackson, an ardent believer In the rights of woman suffrage said: "At this distance from the scene of the activities of the London suffragists I feel .that we are not In a petition to Judge at all of the light or Wrong- of the stand they ljavo t.tken or of- the treatment they have received. However, I believe that those who have been con vlcted and sentenced must feel that they are sacrificing tlx niselves to a great cause. Persons rained as Mrs. Pank liurst and the La vrencc.s have been are certainly, not desirous of going to prison Just Tor the sake of going there. They musf,. look upon it as a sort of martyr dom, and as Is the case wherever there are martyrs to a good cause, I believe that the cause of women's suffrage will be benefited by the sacrifices of those No Boiling ; ; -. MaJc in the Cup : Pure, Soluble Coffee ; in concentrated form. ' Three-quarter Teaspoon- f ul and a cup of hot water ' makes delicious coffee Instantly. Not an extract. For Sale at' all Grocers , x aaaiava ea a aurrr v r. C WASHINGTON COFFEE 4 ' SALES ' CO. IT7' J Wall tiww Xmk.7 - ' 1 who suffer for their belief. Those wh are going to prison must have a llvinc faith, that what they will suffer for is a good and wortliy cause, and It a goes to show, in my jnlnd, that the equa suffrage agitation is not merely a pass ingr whim or fancy." Mrs. Henry Waldo Coe, acting presl dent of the Oregon Equal Suffrage league, Haid: "I would not care to ex press mynelf on the Justice or .lnjufctlce or the sentencing; of the Ldndon sul' fraglsta, because at tills distance from the place of their activity I feel that we can not fully understand Just what conditions they ure working under. Con unions in ,ngi,Hna ana in Oregon are no doubt very dlssimlllar, and not be ing thoroughly acquainted with the af fairs of the cause in London I feel unprepared to pahs upon this late phas of the situation. "A tiny little bit of a woman, weigh lng probably not more than 100 pounds aeiicate, mtld mannered and very motherly," is the ' description of Mrs. Kmmettne Pankhurst, militant suffra- gette, by Mra. Sarah Bard Field Ehr gott of Portland, who is personally ac quainted with the English woman who has been sentenced to prison for. he methods of expounding tha doctrine of equal suffrage. Mrs. Ehrgott la prominent among the workers for equal suffrage In Oregon, She has Just returned from a tour through central Oregon, where she has been campaigning for the cause as a representative of the College Equal Suf frage league, and she reports having been well received and attentively lis ienea 10 in mat section. l Deneve Mrs. FanKhurst win go down In history aa a martyr to the cause of woman's suffrage. While do not believe in the militant campaign being carried on in England, and am of the opinion that a following out of the Lloyd George ppjicy woud b4 much .bet ier, i ao , believe that the women who have adopted such strenuoua methods have done so because they really be lieve that it Is the only way In which they can further their cause. Mra. Pankhurst has said beraelf that for 60 years English women hava waged their right ror the right of franchise In a ladylike manner and have won no re sults. Now, she says, they, are com pelled to use more forceful methods in their attempt to gain the recognition for which they are striving. - "I believe Mra.- Pankhurst and the other militant suffragettes are perfectly conscientioua in the stand they hava taken, and that they are wlllinr to suffer, even to the extent of going to prison, zor wnat they believe is a Juat cause." . mm mi is lE'S TMUC IIIUI 1U News of His "Death" Carried to Novelist as He Flirts With Budlets. (United Fref Leased Wire.) Chatham, Ont.. Maj 22. Arthur Stringer, the Canadian novelist and poet, was hoeing In his garden today, and stated that he was much surprised to learn of a widespread report that he had been killed and his wife and bahv seriously Injured by an explosion of an oil stove In his home. I am in excellent health," said Strin ger, wielding his hoe vigorously, "and my oil stove has not exploded yet. At least, it was on the Job doing excellent work at breakfast time this morning. l nave no idea where that story originated. I have been told that some Arthur Stringer out In Michigan met with some accident. If so, he has my sympathy." HOOD, RIVER HIGH CLASS GRADUATES 'RpaeUI Is T a Journal.! Hood TUver, Or. May 21 lloilbron nar hail was rilled with natron or the Hood Klvar High school laat night to wltnea tha graduating exerclae of II pupils. The rlaaa color were red and hlte with which tha larg hall wa appropriately decorated. Mlaa Viola Nlckelaen, president of tha clans, deliv ered the rlaaa oration. Ir. Joseph Schafer of the University of Oregon, delivered the class addrasa, and the fol lowing literary program was rendered: Violin solo. Leila Radford; reading, Ed ward Struck; piano duet, Elizabeth Thorn and Ruth Morrison; vocal solo, Paul Hubbard. Mra. F". H Hutton, chairman of the board of directors, pre sented th diplomas. Tha Jul lowing, stu dent graduated." Olenn' Corey, John Coahow, Edith Fernald, Alma JJlnrlch. Lamp! Hukarl, Elsie McLjucaa.. Ruth Morrison, Orland Morse, Rrith Morton, Viola , Nickelsen, Marjorla. Plneo, Marshall Plneo, Walter Shay, Will fehep- pard, Edward Struck, Elisabeth Thomas, Emmet Thomaa. Elate Wells. KNOX STRAW HATS FOR SPRING are very classy. $2.50 AND UP $25 t $50 R. M. GRAY OUR FURNISHINGS FOR MEN are the finest in Portland. ARRESTED, HE UNCOVERS $20,000 CACHE OF LOOT New York. May 23. Under arrest aa a ourglar, Ben Curtla went to a branch ' or tha Colonial bank here, opened a safety deposit box and displayed to de tectives gold and diamonds valued at $20,000. The police are seeking the owners of the loot. Deserter Itetarned to Xavy. Hood River. Or., May 22. Sheriff Johnson of Hood River county left for Bremerton, Wash., thia morning with Charles Woodward, wanted for desert ing the navy. Woodward was arrested at Cascade Locks and brought to Hood River. Ill III lit 1 III lS-lXi MUKrtiaUft SiKH.l I II I- 1 ' I " a P f it X - I lJ OCC? t JLtlaaJaaaBsaaaaaaawgari '.'jM3aaaTBa ISIIMsMlll rtrf. fiLrrrimrri ,:-..:..-!..1liIi'bii;:.i: :::.diillill3illllii:i-... hi III li iii . .n B 11(1 ' J W MV111!!1" ,4 liillilll a As a cure for insomnia, an English physician has invented apparatus which flows a stream of water over a person's forehead as he occupies &" recumbent ppaltlon. GIRL ALWAYS WEAK Tells How She Became Strong and Vigorous. "When I aee pale, jfvuny children on the street I always wonder what their parents are doing, if anything, to build up their strength," said a well dressed man the other day. Mary Lang, of Altoona, Pa., was one such child. Her story Is told in one of her own letters. '"Ever aince child hood," she says, "I have been weak and. delicate and my blood has been thin and poor. Many different forms of treatment did me no good, but last spring I took Vinol, and now I am so, much stronger and better that I want you to know it. I don't know when I have felt so well and vigorous as I have i since taking Vinol." We only wish that every weak, run down, sickly person would reallre that I Vinol la the one best remedy to enrieh the blood, build up the body and put ! the glow of health in pale cheeks. ''Your j money back if you are not pleased" Is i the way we sell Vinol, so you can see we believe in H. Woodard, Clarke & Co., druggists, Portland, Or. Facts Piano About Reed -French Co. Quitting Business We have always sold the finest Pianos and Player Pianos at lesser prices than the dealers In the high rent districts. Now that we have eliminated all profit, there can be absolutely no competition. Read Every Word of This Advertisement and Come in; Verify It if Skeleton of (Jirl Found. .coned pre raaaa Wtra.1 . tod!, ' CaL; Ma 22, Excitement runs high in this county todax, .following fh lading of skeleton ot a "young-woman on tha Parley ranch near hare. Indica tion war that -the- remains had not been buriad long. , Tha authorities be lieve tha woman was murdered la soma other town aod brought here for burlaj, -- f f 4 ! v. The Pipe Smoke for Gonflomon TUXEDO TODACCO fs made of the best Barley leaf ewerv grtrvvn prepared for the pipe by the famous .Patterson Process that for 50 years has defied all imita--, tbn. In the green .tia-f-lOcv, PATTSRS07T3 TUXEDO TOBACCO $1000 IN GOLD We have, been told that there are those who are trying to con vince the public that we are not quitting business. . They also con tend that we are affiliated with, or a branch of some other Pacific Coast concern. These statements have been made by salesmen! for other houses, who are working on a commission basi and who can find no legitimate argument to stem the tide of trade that is com ing our way during this mam moth Closing-Out Sale. To them or any other person who can prove cither or both of thdse statements we will pay one thousand dollars in gold! Here is an: opportunity for you piano salesmen to get more money than yoji have ever had in your life. Come on with the proof and collect. Truth will triumph in the end. , we staie empnaucauy tnat we are not in. any way connected with, any Pacific Coast concern, and that as soon as we can dispose of our stock we will absolutely quit business. '. v-," ;.; v . "" $275 $350 $425 $450 $500 $550 $600 $650 $550 $600 $650 $700 $750 Pianos now offered at Pianos now offered at Pianos now offered at Pianos now offered at Pianos now offered at Pianos now of f e r e d.at Pianos now offered at Pianos now offered at Players now o f f e r e d at Players now offered at Players now offered at Players now of fe red at Players now offered at $127 $197 $237 $242 $278 $332 $347 $412 $297 $351 $397 $426 $477 and so on. Ail- new, up-to-date instruments. ' Each the best pos sible value at its original price. " a in ...Hin. , , annai . . a-m--mTmTaaa-mmTaaaajfj.a-al ... - . . . This is positively the last word in piano prices. A manufacturer could not ship them out here :EmMQ MFG. CO. Open Eveningi ; v . 6th and Burnside Sts. r Open Evenings