TIIH orXGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY 10, 1812. 1 .'35 J"HWi!!!J!i JET! CIRCUS SOLLY HE DOES AN ACROBATIp FISHING STUNT 1 M S' -- - : 11 mm "Tahl Let d pups come! "I'm all ready for m pole vault "Lilts I useter do in me college days. "And now wit' a little bait-. "Ill poceed dogs! Fish to mall d pupa mouf water. 81o la tlahl- Brief Items o f Tuesday's Late News Short Stories of World Happenings Not Iteceired la lime for Yeater day's Issue of The Journal J Congressional. Th senate appropriations subcommit tee has reported favorably the follow ing amendments to the sundry eivll bill: To purchase target range at Van couver barracks. $25,000; roads and Im provements in Crater lake, $100,000; fog and signal station. Cape St. Ellas, $116, 000; amount for Improvement of roads In Mount Rainier National park In creased from $5400 to $48,500. Introduction of a "gag rule" to In jure the passage, unamended, of the Clayton contempt bill precipitated a bitter fight in the house. Thj rule, which prevents any amendmenta being offered to the bill and limits general debate to three hours, was adopted after tbe "insurgent" Republicans upbraided the Democrats for deserting principles for which they fought together In 'the victorious campaign against the alleged "gag" rules of Speaker Cannon. Political. Plans were outlined at Oyster Bay Tuendav whereby Colonel Roosevelt hope to capture local or state tickets from both the Democratic and Republi can parties In furtherance of his pui pose to put the new third party on its feet. It Js hoped to arrange fusion of the Republican and Democratic tickets providing the candidates on the local tickets will support the Roonevelt elect or in exchange for having the Roose velt strength thrown to them. Lieutenant Qovernor Gordon, candi date' for governor of Minnesota, has Is sued a call for n convention of the progressive Republicans of that state. Theodore Rooeevelt is to make hiH first mmpalgn speech at Boston on August IT. Hlntiog at the possible defeat of Senator KenyOn at the bands of the next legislature ss an alternative re sult. Governor Carroll of Iowa has de livered an ultimatum to the progres , slve3 In control of the stste Republi can convention that they must indorse President Taft or face a fight. At a conference of the Iowa progres sives, participated In hy George W. Clark, nomine for governor, and many prominent state officials, it was de cided to write a progressive platform, "but not to mention the president. Enstern. Harrison Patterson, a rallrond watch man, Is dead at Louisville, Ky.. from wounds inflicted by negro thieves. Fort Mcllenry In Maryland Is to be abandoned as an army post and Repre sentative Unthlcum will fight for a national park In the place. President W. F. Rlllensteln of the National Wire & Iron company, anil daughter, Cora, were killed, and six J OVER RHEUMATISM Poisons That Cause Multitudes to Suffer Cannot Withstand Assault of Nature's ' Purifier. Mr. C. M. C. Stewart, Seattle. Seattle. Wash. Dear Sir: I am pleased to bo able to tell you that vour generous gift of Sulphurro did all for me that I had wished and hoped for. My rheumatism left me in less than three weeks after commenc ing the treatment; that was several months ago, and I am as free from It as I ever felt in my life and will always voice its merits to all whom 1 may meet suffering for the need of yofrr remedy. If this endorsement should bo of any use to you, you are more than welcome to any benefit it may be. Very respectfully, with best wishes. (Signed) James W. Law, 4318 14th Ave. N. B. Rheumatism's conquering foe has at ! last been found. In personal Observa tion covering several thousand cases of Rheumatism there 1b yet to be found a single case which did not yield to Sulphurro (Stewart's new Liquid I Compound of Sulphur) when the dlreo tlons were carefully followed. This is In itself one of the most remarkable reoords ever made by any medicine. -Sulphurro cures rheumatism by . ex pelling from the blood the poisons and Impurities which produce It. Get the blood pure; rich and wholesome, and disease no longer has a hold upon the system. Sulphurro acts with aft espec ially beneficial effect upon the blood, puMng it of Injurious matter. Then Nature performs ,her kindly work of healing, and the patient is back on Health's Highway.-, In the treatment ef Rheumatism the Sulphurro Bath is an especially Im portant feature. By means of the bath .Itself a delight the Sulphur enters the blood through the cores of the skin. and so more quickly lessens pain. At the am time It softens and beautifies tbe skin. 'Sulphurro at drug stores in B0 eent and $1 bottles. Free booklet upon re quest to the C M. Stewart Sulphur Co.. 71 Columbia St. Seattle. SlfllpSlIlFFO -v . Sold by . ; Woc'dard, Clarke & Co. . America's largest Drugstore. . -; ; Orders vy Kail Promptly ruled. ' , others seriously hurt In a collision ot their automobile with the Lake Shore fast freight at Cleveland Tuesday. Heavy storms visited Indiana Toes day, damaging houses and crop many thousands of dollars. Every mechanic aijd laborer employed by the United States is affected by the opinion given by Attorney General Wlckersham Tuesday which will extend the eight hour law Pr include more than the workers on government fortifica tions and buildings. The question of all workers employed by the government coming under the eight hour law was raised in connection with the 1000 laborers at customs ports. In the Thaw examination Tuesday at White Plains, N. T., Dr. John W. Rus sell, head, of Matteawan asylum, said that Thaw could safety be released, in the care of special attendants. Scores of deaths by heat prostration were reported from the larger cities of the country Tuesday. There were two deaths and scores of prostrations at Montreal, one fatality at Cincinnati, six deaths from heat at Philadelphia, nine deaths and 21 prostrations at Chicago, three prostrations at Milwaukee and two deaths at Boston. Building and loan associations have passed the 1 1,000, 000. mark In tottfl as sets, according to a report of H. F. tellarlus, secretary of the United States League of Local Birllding and Loan associations, made to its conven tion at its opening session In Atlantic City Tuesday. Their growth for the year was In excess of $98,000,000,' es tablishing a record. Negotiations for final settlement of the question as to whether the Western Newspaper union of Omaha Is violating the Sherman law were resumed Tuesday at a conference between James A. Fow ler,' assistant" to- tbe' attorney general, and counsel for the company which furnishes the "ready print" and "boiler plate" for the lnsldes of hundreds of country newspapers. library building at Union Tuesday morn ing. The building is to be of brick and concrete and will cost $55,000, Following his attendance at a series of Evangelical services conducted by a mission at Stockton, Cal., C. L. Adam son, recently married and si laborer, wrote the Denver authorities that he had murdered a man there eight and a half years ago, after robbing him of 15 cents. Foreign. Twenty-five Americans, Including American Consul Edwards, ware held in the office of the Mexican Northwestern Railway at Juarei for nearly two hours Tuesday night while an armed guard of rebels prevented them from leaving the building. Rebel officials had be come angered at the officers of the Mex ican Northwestern over a $5000 check payable to the rebels as export duty on a consignment of gold ore by the Amer ican Smelting & Refining company In Chihuahua. No new cases of bubonic plague were reported Tuesday from Cuba or Porto Rico to the publlo health and Marine hospital service. Miscellaneous. Through a dictaphone, Jacob Qrlnspan, a Denver Jeweler, was detected Tuesday defrauding creditors of $9000. , Denver women have launched infor mally a plan to erect a memorial to the late Mrs. Sarah Piatt Decker, who died In San Francisco Sunday night Mistaken for a burglar, Donald Crom well. 6 years old, son of an lnstruotor In the Missoula, Mont., manual training school, was fatally shot early Tuesday by Walter Smith, a farm hand. The official call for the twenty-third session of the trans-Mlsslsslppl congress was Issued Tuesday by secretary use, er. The congress Is to be hold at Salt TJaka Cirv from Aueust 27 to i. The governor of each state may appoint 20 delegates, mayors or cities two ror ecn 5000 population, up to ten delegates, and Mmmnrntal and Industrial organisations one for each 60 members with a maxi mum of ten. A repetition of the horrors of the Congo rubber Industry among the na tive rubber gatherers of Peru Is the cause of a dangerous mission which the state department sent up the Amason rivr in th interest of humanity. Re ports Indicate the existence of condi tions below the equator tnat paranei the outrages in the Congo country, where natives were forced by tortures and mutilations to collect certain quan tities of rubber for Belgian and other concessions. CAMPERS RUSH INTO UPPER HOOD RIVER VALLEY Socll to Tha Jouroal.k Hood River, Or.. July 10. Hundreds of campers are arriving In Hood River from outside cities and going to Lost Lake, Ml Hood. Devil's Punch Bowl, and other valley fishing and hunting grounds to spend the summer months. flavantv schools in horseshoeslng, with courses ranging from one to six months, are maintained at public ex pense In Germany. DUFUR MEN BUY FIVE THRESHERS Crop in Central Wasco. Is So Big More Machinery Is Needed. f Special to Tha Journal.) Tlnfiir Or .Tnlv In That tha Dufnr country has an immense crop of wheat to harvest this year is indicated by the number of new threshing machines be ing lurchased by the farmers in tne vicinity. Five have been unloaded and taken out this week. They were pur chased by the following: J. W. Hlx, O, H. Russell, S. H. Banks, Trudell Jk Dennle and Jointly by G. H. HI 11 gen, Owen Jones and H. Fargher. It is understood that other threshing machin ery has been ordered and will arrive later. The wheat crop hers this year rivals any that baa been raised in pre vious years. (Special to Tha Journal.) Pasco, Wash., July 10. The first new wheat delivered to a Franklin county warehouse this year was that sold to the Kerr-Glfford company, of Eltopla, yesterday by H. M. Owen, the price paid being 72 cents. Mr. Owen has 2000 acres of wheat, which he thinks will average from 20 to 25 bushels per acre. Harvest is well under way In the north ern part of the county now, and the yield generally will run close to 20 buBhels per acre. Laborers are reported to be very scarce, and wages rang from $3 for common laborers to $1 for perleneed. 'separator UnAn'Zr$r?- TRAIN ROBBERS Ft TO "GET" EXPRESS SAE' mnlteA Press Leasee vtn.l Oklahoma City, OWa, Jtjly lO.Th! i Missouri. Kansas & Texas . passenger ' train due here early today was held up ; near Coffeyvllle, Kan., and nine nnsuo-' ceesful attempts made to blow the safe In tha express car, aooordlng to reports received here. The bandits were fright' ened away. It is not believed anything of value was takes. . Pacific Const. Joaquin Miller suffered a relapse Tuesday and Is reported In a dangerous condition at his home in Oskland. Leslie Wheeler Reed, publisher of th Western Weekly at Pan Francisco, is In Jail on a charge of embezzling several thousand dollars' worth of diamonds. Mrs. Anna Christensen was taken to Tasoo from Walla Walla Monday, whore she has been confined In Jail on the charge of the murder of her husband. Henry E. Chrlstenson on the night of June 1, and was arraigned brfore .ludgp Holcomb, where she entered a pIpb of not guilty. Ball . was refused for the woman, although Garey, her alleged ac complice, Is at liberty under $o00o bonds. Gladys Johnson, sentenced at Prnttlr to two years Imprisonment for "reennd degree perjury," was pardoned Tued.y by Governor' Hay, and on belnt? released from that county JalT, was married In Tir sheriff's office to Henry Johnson. The Johnsons brought suit against the city for personal damages to Mrs. Johnson, resulting from a fall on a defective sidewalk.. They got a verdict for $2500. In the course of the trial Mrs. Johnson stated that she had never been married before. This was the "lie" for which she was sentenced to prison. For the first time- In heY life, Lavlna Randall, 16-year-old daughter of Mrs. D. Randall of Spokane, stood Sunday afternoon. She was supported by box mother and the family physician. Dr. i E. T. Crane, who performed the opera tion that straightened lha child's de formed logs. Henry A. Richardson, an employe at the Kalb and Larktns logging camp on the Nasal river Tuesday, was killed near Astoria by falling off the company's railroad trestle as he was walking to the camp. Richardson was 60 years old. Declaring that the circulation of the San Francisco Examiner Is hard hit both In San Francisco and throughout Alameda county, as a result of the present boycott of the Hearst publi cations the Web pressmen's union Is vigorously pressing their war with the full sanction of the San Francisco labor council. They declare that practically every union where the Examiner is cir culated In that part of the state has voted for its members to stop their sub scriptions to the paper and to refuse to buy It None the worse for her 14 hours adrift at sea the steamer City of Panama was towed into port at San Francisco Tues day by the steamer Rose City. The Panama's engines went wrong while she was on her way to Mexico and Central America last Saturday with 26 passen gers aboard, and the Rose City went to the rescue in response to a wireless distress signal. The latest in the large crop of state wide Initiative propositions that have sprung up Is a xetlttoh from Alameda county aiming aTcnock out at the prize fight game in California. The paper, signed by 100 or more names, arrived Tuesday at the efflce of Secretary of State. Frank Jordan. It proposes a state law that shall absolutely forbid any and all kinds of boxing matches and prize fights even of the limited round, no decision, anti-knockout variety.- Thomas Benton Morrison, an Oregon pioneer of 1144, died at bis home in Astoria Monday night, aged 71 years. Mrv Morrison was born in Wynn county, Mo., February 18, 1841.' He was brought eereev 4Je -plain 4e Oregon- in 1M4 by his parents, tbe late R. W. and Meroy Irvln Morrison, who settled onx dona tion land claim on Clatsop Plains short ly after their arrival In the state. He had lived In Clatsop county and Asto ria ever since. M " Tbe contract was let for the Carnegie f,1. i WWW h a a viii SPECIAL EXCURSION TO Seattle and Return FOR THE GOLDEN POTLATGH JULY 15th TO 20th Tickets on sale July 14, 16, 18. Good for return to midnight of July 22. 3 Trains Daily 3 Leave Portland (Eleventh and Hovt Street Depot) 10 A, lL, 5 P. M., 12:15 MIDNIGHT Tickets, berths and parlor car seats at CITY TICKET OFFICE, 122 THIRD STREET AND AT DEPOT. Telephones Marshall 3071, A-2286. H. DICKSON, C. P. & T. A. Great. Northern Railway sex Second Shasta Limited VIA THD Leave Portland 5:50 P. M. U - "C aV" ROUTES 27 Hours to San Francisco FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY (July 13, 13, 14) To accommodate the B. P. O. E. and friends, the "Shasta Limited" will run in two sections on the above days, both trains carrying complete equipment Observation Car, Pullman Drawing-room Sleeping Cars and Diner. ' Electric lighted throughout. Elks and friends desiring to return to or through California are earnestly requested to secure sleeping car accommodations as early as possible. Both sections will make connection with the "Owl" train for Los Angeles. For -further- particulars,- reservationSr-ctcxalUat. City Ticket Office, Third and Washington Streets. JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent Vortla&a, Orefoa. 1 j EILM Before You Leave Visit ASTORIA and A Delightful Trip DOWN THE COLUMBIA Via t-W.UEteamei' Two Boats Daily LEAVE ASH STREET DOCK 8:00 A. M. AND 10:30 P. M The morning boat arrives Astoria 1 :30 p. m., Megler at 2:15 p. m. Thenfeht -boat in its journey down the river, passes ships from every sea, and arrives Asv toria earjy the next morning, Megler at 7:30 a. m., where trains make dose , connection with boats for North Beach points. T 3 URF BATHING FISHING THE TRIP WORTH .WHILE Full Information Cheerfully Given at City Ticket Office, Third and Washington Streets, PortlanH. ' ,; NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY EXCURSION FARES I ELKS, GRAND GOLDEN I LODGE POTLATCH cssa1 A National Gath- Bffiaam Carnival of Pleas. M3 enng, Portland. V " 1 Ticket. July 7 to ure' Seattl sa 10. Return July 15 Tickets July 14, Return through 16, 18. Return Seattle July 22. July 22 10? Tickets, Berth Reservations, Full Information, CITY TICKET OFFICE, 255 Morrison, corner 3d.i PortIan3. Phones Main 244, A-1244. ; j ; Summer Eastbound ExoOTicmTicket.wOrr-sale--for-:numerou5 dates to September "30, ' A. D. Charlton, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Porthrl. '(