Sir . J fe " " J.' , I UOVLD YOU KUVO tOVXlN& NN CAUW ViHllfc t GO tWO THft ItoR'C: . IT'S 0 CRXWDtO YQU KNOW . X DRY a1 loon; k WONT tG Bnun of the Event of Friday Afternoon and Nlghtj Paragrapbea for Congressional.. ' '"" k congrenslonal investigation into the conduct of United States District Judga John C. Polock, or Kansas, and United : States district Judge Arba 8; Van Val keoburgr, of the western district of Ml' ouri, - was asked In a resolution pre sented to the house Friday by Repre sentative Borland, of Missouri. The two Judges aro charged with conspiracy and fraudulent practices. . -v - Testifying before the house merchant ' marine committee Friday, William E. Halm, New Tork agent for the Houston line, said that a London "conference" controlled the New Tork trade to South Africa and Central and South America. "Ketp the tariff as it stands or a 'hardship will result to American indus try." That was the consensus of opin ion by witnesses at Friday's hearing on the house committee on ways and y means. . Republican senators declined Friday the proposition made to them by the Democrats to appoint committees from both sides of the senate to consider President Taft's' nominations to office. Confirmation of eomo of President Taft's recent appointments is expected In the senate within a week. ' The house adopted a resolution Friday appropriating, 20,000 for a rearrange : ment of seats and desks of the house chamber. The postofflce appropriation bill was . taken up by the house Friday, Counsel for defense closed the argu ment for the defense Friday In the im peachment proceedings against Judge Archbald. Samuel Gompcrs appeared before the ' Judicial committee of the senate and -urged a favorable report on the1 antl-ln junction and contempt bill. , Political. '.. governor Aldrtch, Nebraska'gi,retlrin executive, Irt his message to the legisla ture, declares that state ownership of t waterpower development waa as Imprac ticable as public ownership of the rail- s roads. The governor declared that "reg ulation which insures good service at Just and equitable rates" la preferable to state ownership. Utah's four electoral votes for vice- is president will be cast for Governor Had f leyr-of Missouri This . was , the agree ment reached by the electors Friday. Governor Hadley, in a message to the Missouri legislature, urged the estab r llshment of a state board of pardons : and paroles to investigate conditions in . the state prisons, and to recommend the release of convicts. Eastern. His own money to be used against him, William Brokaw is under direction by the Brooklyn supreme court to pay his Wife, Mrs. Mary Blair Brokaw, $5000, so she may prosecute her suit for abso- lute divorce. Mrs. Brokaw, who secured two years ago a decree of separation from the millionaire sportsman, asked for $15,000 counsel fees. Clashes between pickets and the police I continued Friday to mark the progress of the garment makers' strike in New -.York. Leaders of the waist and dress- : bers of those organizations had voted to go on a strike next Monday. If these workers should quit work, tt would mean that the strikers' ranks would be swelled by 30,000 or 40,000 In addition to those already out. , Bonds for $30,000 for the release from I,eavenworth prison of W, 13. Reddtn, former financial necretary of the Mil Infants It means the Original and Genuine RHAILf EE) mtil The FdodrDrlnk '..RkJi milk, malted grain, in powder form. Fw Wanti,myaMsMdgrom Pure nutnh'on, upbuilding the whole bKwy. invigorates nursing molhers and the aged. HORLICK'S Contains Pure Milk .oaUiitJ A AIMOTG waukee Iron workers' union, were ap proved Friday by the United States com missloner at Milwaukee., y J ;; Advices' received at Tampa, Fl a., Fri day, say that Captain LarHln and a crew of seven men lost their Uvea when the schooner : Future foundered off Cape Hatteras Wednesday. The vessel left Tampa December 26 with a cargo of lumber.- . --r . . ) Roald Amundsen, discoverer of the south pole, arrived at New York Friday for an extended visit to this country. United States Judge Hough, appoint ed by President Roosevelt In 1906 to the Federal bench In the southern district of New York, is seriously 111 In a hospital from hemorrhages of. the stomach. The Mollne Plow company announces that it had asked for an increase In its capital stock from $9,000,000 to. $30,000, 000, and- for an extension of its charter for 9 years, The entire estate of the late Whltelaw Re Id, ambassador to Great Britain, Is left unconditionally to his widow, Mrs, tSllzabeth Mills Reld, with the exception of specific bequests totalling $110,000. The value of the estate Is estimated from $10,000,000 to $20,000,000. . Maud Walone, a militant suffragette, who was arrested and convicted for dis turbing a meeting In New York at which Woodrow Wilson was speaking, ap peared In the court of special sessions In Brooklyn Friday, and asked that she be fined,- In order that she might appeal her case. Her request was granted. ." ' Pacific Coast. Homer Laughlin, one of the best known capitalists In California, died at Los Angeles Friday of pneumonia fol lowing an operation for appendicitis. He was 73 years old. Laughlin built the first fireproof building in Los An geles. He was a close personal friend of the late President McKlnley and a veteran of the Civil war. He had been a member Of th board pf managers of the American Protective Tariff league since 1882. , . . r Mrs., Florence Harris, 20', a bride of a . few weeks, and her mother. Mrs. Mary J. Blevins, 45, were fatally burned at Los Angeles Friday when fire ' was communicated to gasoline with which they, were cleaning lace curtains in their home; Gabrlelle Diane Bonaparte, 2s,' grand daughter of Prince Joseph Alexander Bonaparte, and blood relative of the great Emperor Napoleon, will soon be come a citizen of the United States, She signed her application for natural lzation at the federal court In Seattle Friday. She gave her occupation author, actress and musician. The lowest temperature of the van ishlng cold snap in California was re corded .Friday at Iluasna (San Luis Obispo county), in the Santa Lucia, range, where the thermometer regis tered eight degrees below zero. Nicholas Ltngley, a constable of Mc- Cloud, Cal is the father of 19 sons and two daughters. Ills twenty-first child was born Friday. wniie tnree masked robbers were drinking a bottle of cnampagne In a saloon at San Francisco, Policeman George Lewis entered to see If all was well He was confronted"by a revolv er, seized and hustled into a closet where were confined August Thorn, the bartender, and live patrons. The rob bers then escaped with $310. Four hundred thousand feet of lum ber; the deckload of .the steam Pchoon er Fifleld, was Bweot overboard in storm the vessel encountered off the Mendocino coast, while en route from an j Invalids for a!! Aces,. More healthful than - tea "or "coffee. the weakest digestion. v Keep on your sideEoarcl at noroe ' A'quicl lunch prepared in a minute. Bandoh, Or., to fian Francisco. " iThree1 hundred- eltIsenrof Redmond and the surrounding country partici pated Friday In the opening of the po tato, warehouse, of the Redmond Union Warehouse company, one of the largest and most substantial buildings of the kind in the northwest. Ex-Congressman Williamson was orator of the day. The warehouse was built of stone, cost $10,000,' and will store 200,000 bushels of potatoes. '; :';-V " :. Harvey Glass, a sheepherder, died of starvation In a cheap rooming house at Weiser, Idaho, Friday. He bad $60 in cash, but refused to spend any of it for food. : . . . - A general budget of more than $20, 000,000, the largest 1n the history of Washington, 'gives ample assurance of a decidedly lively session of the state legislature which begins at Olympla Monday, The general budget of this year will exceed that of two years ago by approximately $9,000,000. L. W. Wright, a Janitor at Hood Riv er, craving cocaine, to which drug he is a slave, entered the drug store of C. A. Plath Friday night and holding up the clerk, Herman Kresse, secured a large quantity of the drug. He then barricaded himself In a shack and was only arrested after Policeman Stone had battered down the door. Henry D. Gregory, a San Bernardino attorney and prominent orange grower and who for many years practiced law In this city, is dead at Osborne, Idaho, aged 62 years. ' That Green river is not a fit water supply was the startling statement made at a private session of the Ta eoma city council by Dr. Eugene R. Kelly, commissioner of the state board of health. Tacoma is Just completing a $2,000,000 gravity plant on Green river. State Printer Dunlway Is preparing an elaborate statement which he in tends to submit to tne members of the legislature showing In detail the ques tions involved in the work of state printing and also urging that the law passed by ;the 191i f session be re pealed. ""')':?';' .vC;-'." yv": 'r:' Foreign. Convicted of manslaughter for kill ing Jessie Mclntyre, an English actress, Mrs. Annie Gross, an American negress, was sentenced to five years' penal ser vitude in London Friday. -Jearoosy Is alleged to have been the motive for the murder. According to statistics published by the ministry of labor, there were, dur ing 1910, 1602 strikes in France, In volving 281,425 strikers. Of these, 729 worA tetr hfo'har WAB-Afl. Of thA latter Uuwwmslul,2U failed and 2B6 ended in a compromise. A new cabinet has been announced in Portugal with Dr. Alfonso Costa as premier and minister of finance: Suffragist actresses are at the head of a movement to picket all the ap proaches to the parliament chamber when the franchise reform bill comes before the house of commons. The Actresses' Franchise league has called for aid from all suffragist societies, so that throughout the entire debate, day and night, no member of the house will be able to pass in or out without being buttonholed by an ardent suffrage worker. The plan is for a peaceful demonstration and the women hope to be successful despite the alienated sym pathy through the acts of the militant suffragettes. 'Miscellaneous. Definite decision itoi carry out a co operative plan whereby' they win work for "fair" operators for half wages to assist independent coal companies to fight the coal trust was reached at Denver Friday by members o the Unit ed Mine Workers of America employed in northern Coloradd coal fields. The unfilled tonnage of the United States Steel corporation on December 01 totals 7,932,164 tons, an increase of 79, gSl-tamv-e-ver- November 30. For seversl years there was a decline In the metallic output of the state of Oregon, more especially -in its gold and silver, but preliminary returns for 1912 show that this has now been checked. The mine report of the geological sur vey for 1911 showed an output of gold valued at $633,401 and 45,221 ounces of silver. The preliminary . returns, for 1912 indicate that the Oregon yield was about $657,000 in gold and 86,951 ounces ot silver, a marked advance inlJthe sil ver OUtpUt. ' ' Swinging themselves out by a, rope made of braided strips of fciaukets, two women prisoners during a blinding snowstorm, let themselves down from a Second story window of the. city Jail at Ogden. Utah, Friday, and escaped. Four glrlH, ranging ire ages from 8 to 10 years, all Sunday school children, confessed to Juvenile Judge Ben B. Llndsey at Denver: that they are a part of a band of girls who have been rob bing fashionable homes in Denver dur ing the last two months. More man $1000 worth off Jewelry, besides money and other articles, lias been stolen by the children. I WIFE GETS DIVORCE FROM HARRY. BLADEN ' (Siwrlat to Th Journal. "Spokane. Weh-.t Jan. ih Harry Bladen, -convicted of burglary In Port land last June and sentenced to from one to seven years in Salem nonitentl ary. ' will be a . single man when he leaves his present place, of aisoaennri M Bladen, the convict s wire, secured divorce in Judge B. , H. Sullivan's donartment of .i supenior court : here her husband jleserted her at St. Paul two years ago after she by. suit re covered $90 lost In , gambling house. She produced records .of her husband s trouble at Portland as evidence. - , CONt.A.ULATG YOU. T CC(TTAINC '" YOU KCPT T A 6GCT I -J I ... J , PlLTUR.fcOF YAJ. WHrYT r I ffv ' , ar You oonnA J ' NEW MEMBERS ELECTED TO STATE LEGISLATURE J. L. Hosklns of Newberg, state sen ator from Yamhill; Republican. ilDtclal to Tb Jox-nal Newberg. Or., Jan. 11. J. L. Hosklns, state senator1 from Yamhill county, Is a native of Ohio, coming to - Oregon 84 years ago and settling near Newberg on the farm a part ot which forms his present beautiful liome, "Sunnyslope." A log cabin, the first 'home, still stands on the place. At the age of 17 Mr. Hosklns enlisted in the Thirteenth Ohio cavalry, serving until the close of the war and being under aeaerftl -Grants command at Lee's final surrender. Senator Hbskins is one of the few men In the senate who is not a lawyer He has been a farmer the greater part of his. life, but now divides his time between his home place and business Interests. He was elected to the state in 1913 after having served the county two terms as county recorder. In politics Mr. Hosklns has been a life long Republican. While In the army and yet only 18 years of age, he cast his first vote for Abraham Lincoln for president and has voted for every Re publican president since, TRUSTY PAROLE TIME NOT PART OF SENTENCE (Silfir Barenn of The Journal. 1 Salem. Or., Jan. 11. Replying to question from Superintendent Lawson of the state penitentiary, Attorney Gen eral Crawford today gave opinion that the time a convict is out on trusty pa role does not apply to his sentence . In case his' parole is revoked. -Trusty pa role is similar to conditional, pardon and If a convict violates his parole and Is returned to prison he must serve out the full time of his unexpired term, as it stood at time of his being paroled. NEW LINCOLN COUNTY OFFICERS SWORN IN (HoccIhJ to The Journal. Toledo, Or., Jan. 11. The newly elect ed officers for Lincoln county," who have Must taken oaths of office, are: Bert lieer, sheriff; K. ii. Howell, clerk; W. K. Ball, assesHor; T3. 13. McCiumkey, treasur er; R. P. Goln. school superintendent; Z. M. Derrick, surveyor; F. M. Carter, cor oner; w..F. wakerieiu ana carl L,ude mann, commissioners. All but the com: mlssioners were reelected. Tape's Diapepsin" Cures Heartburn! Gas, Sourness and Indigestion in Five Minutes. Sour, gassy, upset stomach, indlges tlon, heartburn, dyspepsia; when the food you cat ferments into gases and stubborn .lumps; your head aches and you feel sick and miserable,, that's when you realize the magic in Tape's Diapep sin., It jnakes such misery vanish in five minutes. ' .-. -".. v ' ' If your stomach is in a continuous re voltIf os can't get It regulated, please for your sake,? try Diapepsin. It's so needle?s to have a bad stomach-make your nei t mear7 a ' f aVOf tie" "f ood Xtneai; f then take a little Diapepsin) There will not be, any dlstress-eat without fear. It's because Pape's Diapepsin Vreally does'4- regulate- woakr-eu t-of-order-stem-achs that gives it its millions of sales annually, . . ' Oet a large fifty-cent case of Tape's Lrtapopaitfc-Xf ofc.tiy- dutturexj . the quickest, surest stomach relief and cure known. If sets almost like tnaglo It is a scientific, harmless and pleas ant preparation which truly belongs in every home. ' ., . -.. . ; f;V v if v 'I i ' 111' llldfo. jlm i'A " ' "4 ' GERTAIhLY ends STOMACH MISERY. sSl HIKES Charles McMillan Walks 30 Miles to Avoid Cutting . Classes. (Special to The JournaH University of Oregon, Eugene, Or.. Jan. 11. Cut off from the outside world by a slide that a week ago destroyed the Tillamook railroad, Charles McMil lan, a sophomore, arrived at college last night after walking 10 miles through the snow and over frozen ground. Mo ll ill an was spending his Christmas va cation at his home in Tillamook, when, Just before he" was about to return, traffic on Jhe Paclflo Railroad & Navi gation company line was Interrupted by a slide that tore out a portion of the track. College reopened on January 6, and McMillan knew that the recent stringent anti-absence regulation of the univer sity faculty would cost him college credits If he were .not back On time. After waiting until Tuesday for the line to be reopened, he set out afoot, rather than risk his semester's work by a loss of credits, , It was snowing, and his path lay through deep snow. Following the coast line from Nahen City he reached Seaside by night, walk ing almost 30 miles In 0 hours. From there he took the train to Astoria, and then to Portland, arriving in Eugene early this morntng. He had lost but four days of recitation. Under the- sys tem of fines, this will cost him almost one college hour. He was accompanied on his walk by H. M. Bubersten, a Portland real estate man. . McMillan does not consider his long hike an unusual feat. He has long lived In that coast country, having served at times as Ufesaver In the Tillamook lifesavlng station, for he is an expert with a' boat. He was not the only other university student cut oft from return to college by the accident td the railroad. Miss Luells Sweeney is at present at her home is Tillamook, unable to get to Eugene until tne rauroao service is .re sumed, or until a stage line can be es tablished. r (SaVni BnrMU of Tlie Journal.) Salem. Or Jan. 11. George M. Corn wall of Portland, an enthusiastic sup porter of the .workmen's compensation measure that will be presented to tne legislature, has complied from the an nual reoorts or the state insurance commissioner, figures showing the amount paid out in Oregon to liability companies for liability Insurance and the amount paid back for losses. "These figures show that the uaDy lty companies collect in premiums nearly twice as much as they pay back for losses, and then we must figure that the lawyers get half of what is paid to the beneficiaries, thus reducing the actual amount me oenencianes re ceive to one-fourth of the sum paid out in oremiums," said Mr. Cornwall. The flKures are taKen rrom me re ports for 1909, 1910 and 1911, and are as follows: Total GIRL GETS $1470 FOR : FALSE IMPRISONMENT S1i.m Rurpau of T Joiirnal. Salem. Or., Jan. 11. Mrs. Lillian Wal ling Williams was given a verdict of $1470 against Mr. and Mrs. A. M. LaFollette, prominent residents of Marion county, as damages due for false imprisonment, Miss Walling, who since filing of suit has become Mrs. Wil liams, sued for $5000. The tase will be annealed. , While at the military ball In honor -of dedioatlng the now armory here last fall, polios officers arrestea Miss w ai ling oh complaint of the LaFollettes that she had stolen Mrs. LaFollette's pocketbook and a small amount; of money. She was kept in ail over night. ; -Boon after Mrai-JuaFowette round the pocketbook where she had misplaced it at tier home. Miss 'Walling was em ployed in the LaFollette homo at the time. - C , V ' Spiritualists Meet (United r-rene Leaned Wire,) Chicago,., llh, Jan, , ll.wrhe National here today. Dr. Geo. 8.. Warn e is presi dent of the association, which ' repre sents the "Conservative Spiritualists.". Journal Want Ada bring results. . WORKMEN GET ONLY ONE FOURTH BACK si : , El! ill- IU W J? lot". 108.372I $ RS.0l M.oj flUoOl 41.1 J V 4, hmo... . m.T 4i.i iaa.03.1 ca.a V w ' . 18U..- m.m JCO.0H OS.O 281.878 .0 M I $M 1, 0781 $45,0i M.6 4t,407 4T.4 . w WiMlI NEVBERG POL T CS (Special to The Journal.) Newberg, 'Or., Jan. 11. For several days there had been intimations that there wduld be "somethin' doin' " at the caucus called Wednesday night to nominate candidates for city officers. And sure enough there was. The women turned out In force and took right hold of the political situation. Then there was so close a contest for the office of mayor that the vote for the present incumbent, J. D. Gor don, and S. K. Launer, one of the teach ers at the high school, came near being a tie, the former having only a few votes over his competitor. And the contest is to be fought over again at -the polls on January 13, when the election is to be. held. j ,i Mr, Gordon has made an excellent official, giving freely of his time and of his money In the conduct of the of fice. Mr. Launer is a man of superior ability and a Socialist. He has not lived here long, but is held in high esteem. What his experience has been in po litical office is not generally known. W. W. Nelson, who has been city re corder for 10 years, was again nom inated, there being no nomination in op position. The result of the vote was heartily applauded. Parcel Post in 'Frisco. San Francisco, Cat., Jan. 11. Up to date, $12,000 worth of parcel post stamps have been sold at the main postofflce here and $8000 at outsode stations, according to statistics com piled today. The average weight of outgoing parcel post packages handled here was impounds, and local packages half a pound. Four automobiles are used locally. FREE TO YOU l,W S1STEB srhh to continue, It will cost yon only about lSoents a week or lass than two cant a day. It will not Interfere with your work or occupation. Jtt tt m ym eeaw aai aaanta, tell aae how too. suffer If von wish, sad I will send yon the treatment for your case, enttmlr f ree.in pint n wran por.by return mail. I will also send you fret afaait my booknW0sUH-S fla BlEOICil aansta- wiih explanatory illnstratton showing why women suffer, and how theveaaeeaily ear themselves t home. Srery woman should have it, and learn to Ikiek far kertttf. Then when the doctor says "Ton must bare an operation," you can decide for yourself. Thousands of women have eured : themselves with my home remedy. It cures all thj er rtwt, Ta Uorhart at Raaikttrt, 1 will explain a simple home treatment which speedily and effectually cures Leuoorrhoe, Ureea Bioknam and Painful or Irrecular Menatmation in roans Ladles, Plumpness and health always results f roia ttsnse. . , - . . Wherever yon live, I eaa refer yon to ladies of Tour own locality who know and will glad'y tell anv sufferer tha.1 thia aw Tiaatawat reallv aaraa all women's diseases, and makes women weil. strong, plump and robust. Jaal tea e raw mnt. UeDooK. write to-aay, ss you may twf s mrs. m. summers. BoxH L 1 If you sutler from weakness of any kind," rheumatism,, lame back, lumbago, varicocele, debility, drains,, loss of power or stomach, kidney, $vcr or bowel' trouble,, you must not fail to gev this book. ' ' , ' , ' - i Don't wait another minute, ,. , Cut out this coupon . right now. and mail it.'.. Well send the J. book' without delay, absolutely free. Call if you can, THE ELECTRA-VITA CO. . .210 EMPRESS BLDG., SEATTLE, WASH. ' Please send ' me, prepaid, your free, 90-page, illustrated book.. JL ... 1-11-1J : Name ; . . ..........". . .... . .. Street Town TILlW'fll VOTE ON SALOOHS Doubt Exists as to Legality of Council's Setting Election for Tuesday. . (Special to The Joortiati ' ; ' Tillamook, -, Or., Jan. 11, Tht city council has called an election for next Tuesday to vote on the abolishment of the saloons. As the local option law ex pressly declares that this question shall be submitted only In November, the legality of the council's aotlon Is doubt ful. Mayor Harter appointed P. W. Todd city recorder to succeed T. B. Handley, resigned. Mr. Handley Is a state repre sentative from this district and has been appointed deputy district attorney.- Owing to Interrupted train service, due to storms and slides, Handley Is to day walking from Nehalem to Seaside, 26 miles, In order to reach Salem. The first mall since December 28 ar rived Monday from Sheridan by stage. Only three days' letter mail and last Sunday's newspapers were brought in. Mall will arrive three times a. week until railroad, servlc is restored. ' ' . Hugh C. Todd Becomes Benedict. Seattle, Wash., Jan. 11. Hugh C. Todd, chairman of the state Democrat ic committee is a benedict, having stol en away with Miss Mary. A. Humphrey of Pullman, Wash., to Judge It . A. P. Myers, who tied the knot .The coupla plan to spend their honeymoon at Olym pla during the legislative Session. Fret) to You and Every Sister Sutv ring from Woman's Ailments. lams woman. I know woman's sufferings, .: I have found the cure. I will mall, f ree of any charge, my ItM freatV SMStwltSj full Instroetionatoany sufferer fom woman's aliments. I want to tell aa women about , this enre-fte, my reader, for youraelf, your daughter, your mother, or your sister. I want to seu you now to cure youraetvee at noma wit fl out the help of a doctor. Mob caaaal understand women's suffering. What w women know from aiaarltae, we know bettor than any doctor. I know that my'home treatment Is safe and sure cure for lKnm at Vklttea tfftdwrfti, Uletralisa, Oil-: lacnwftt tl fttUaf Bf flw It oak, tat ma, $caaly m filttis Parse, HtiriM Siariaa Tamera, er Srawtai; alt iin is kui sack aai km It, auriif ttn ftilmft. atrwxMii, ctaealaa; fttKaf If aiaa, aMlaacftafy, iatlra la art, kat flaekaa, aarlatH, Mm uaj klatatt tnaklat start alital kf nacaatatt itoaliar to our aez. - . I want to send yon a tssalah ft sa fawhutt ' aotVatf Ira to prove to yon that you can cure youraelf at borne, easily, quickly end surely. Remember, that.it wtft cit fas Mime to sive the treatment a eompleta trial : and if ion sad the free ten day's treatment is yours, alaa tats oner again, juiarews noire uame, in a.. u.s.a. Reed This Free Book - To any man who wilt mail u this coupon , we will send free (closely , scaled) our finely illustrated book regarding the cause and cure of disease." This book js written in plain lan guage, and explains many secrets you should, know. It tells how you can cure yourself in the privacy of your own , home without the use of drugs. Don't spend another cent on doctors and their worthless medicines. ' Nature's remedy cure9 to stay cured. -You should know about it. ' i..