The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, November 07, 1919, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORT LAND FRIDAY?. NOVEMBER V. 1$19.
KILLING
JUSTIFIED
TO AVENGE HONOR,
PLEA OF DEFENSE
Unwritten Law to Be Relied Upon
-by' Couple Who Shot in "Vin
dication of Sister's Name."
EYE WITNESSES TESTIFY
Testimony in California Tragedy
Differs as to Whether Man
' Who Was Slain Had Weapon.
MarysvWe, Cal., Nov. 7. (U. P.)
The unwritten law that a man has
the right to avenge the honor of hla
, ulster will be relied upon to clear
Frank A. McCormick and Mrs. Fred
VJ. Wilson of the charge that they
murdered Charles A. Brown, young
stockman.
This was made plain today following
the Inquest last night. The coroner's
Jury found that Brown came to his death
from gunshot wounds inflicted by "the
hand or hands of Mrs. Fred J. Wilson
and F. A. McCormick."
Two versions of the killing; were given,
one hy Arvln Ward, employe of Brown,
and the other by Wesley Potts. These
ye-witnesses differed 'on the important
point of whether Brown had a gun.
Ward declared he did not. Potts said
he did.
They agreed that Brown and McCor
mick first struggled and that Brown
accused McCormick of fighting unfairly.
CLAIMS GUJT WAS BETtRICED
Ward said Brown had had a gun,
' which had been given to him by Mrs.
Wilson a few weeks previous. He said
LAST
TIMES
TODAY
Today will be your last
chance to see this
whirley-girleV filmusi
cal comedy.
There is a bunch of live
chorus girls and the big
Columbia Symphony
Orchestra, too!
Altogether 33
Different 3
From Anything
You Have Iw
Yet Seen 17
Coming Tomorrow
Marguerite Clark in
"LUCK IN PAWN"
'Help Yourself
Bosses' Plea in
Baltimore Strike
Baltimore, Nov. 7. Help yourself
barber ahopa are the order of the
day here. The boss barbers, hoping
to break the strike of their helpers,
have inaugurated the plan of letting
cutomera who can do so make the
use of facilities of the shops to shave
themselves.
"I haven't tried cutting my own
hair." said a man in one of the shops
today, "but I think I can beat some
of these fellows at that."
Brown had returned this gun to Mrs.
Wilson before the fight.
Mrs. Wilson is the wife of Fred J.
Wilson, well known newspaperman.
Ward said McCormick came into
Brown's cabin and argued with Brown,
declaring Brown had been with Mrs.
Florence Howard, McCormick's younger
sister, the night before. McCormick, ac
cording to Ward, said he would see his
Bister and that if Brown had been with
her In an apartment the' night 'before
he would return and have it out with
Brown. '
WITNESS DESCRIBES FIGHT
"McCormick returned to Brown's cabin
Ister in the day," Ward testified.
"Brown and myself were lying on a
cot. McCormick said Toii are a
I'll kill you,' and grabbed Brown
by the throat, starting to choke him.
Brown arose and said, "Why don't you
fight like a man? "
Ward testified McCormick got a rifle
and shot Brown. Mrs. Wilson, he said,
came from behind the house and fired
three shots. Ward said that McCor
mick cried to Mrs. Wilson, ' Shoot that
other ; he knows too much."
"He meant me," Ward said. "I start
ed rtihning."
William Dews testified he saw McCor
mick with blood streaming from his
mouth and heard a shot, but did not
witness the shooting.
Mrs. Howard, about whom the killing
centers, said she was in Orovllle when
the killing occurred: She refused to
answer Coroner J. K. Kelly when he
asked her, "Do you know what led to
the shooting?"
'SAYS BROWIT PULLED QVX
Potts testified he saw them struggling
and blood streaming from McCormick's
face. Brown, he said, (Allied a pistol
and a bunth of keys from his pocket
and fired at McCormick.
Potts said Mrs. Wilson ran from the
house, crying "Charlie, don't shoot."
McCormick. he said, shot Brown and
Mrs. Wilson, then fired several Bhots
into Brown's body'. Potts said Brown
lay on the ground two minutes before
Mrs. Wilson fired.
Dr. A. L. Miller testified he had per
formed an autopsy and that Brown died
from a gunshot wound In his neck,
which severed an artery. Brown died
from loss of blood, and if given proper
attention might have lived, he said.
Auto Accidents
Proving Painful
And Expensive
George Wagner, 640 Morrison street,
a messenger boy, was thrown from his
bicycle Thursday afternoon at West
Park and Couch streets, in a collision
with an automobile driven by Glenn
Walton, 990 Woodward avenue. Wag
nor was taken to the Good Samaritan
hospital. His injuries are not serious,
it is reported.
Stepping from the curb at Morrison
and Third streets, in front of an auto
mobile driven by L. Landringham. 132
East Thirtieth street, George H. Kelly.
7b, of the Taylor hotel, was knocked
down and badly bruised Thursday after
noon. "KffSI
i wo auiomoDiies were Daaiy damaged
Thursday afternoon at Broadway and
Mill street In a collision between a ma
chine driven by P. H. Riggs, 1092 East
Flanders and a car driven by C. H
Jackson, 170 Vista avenue, of the Wash
ington Park garage.
CONSERVATIVES OF
ABOR
BALK
UPON
RAD CAL
PROGRAM
Faction Refuses to Permit Names
to Be Put in Nomination When
Radicals Get Control.
CANDIDATES ARE NAMED
President Anderson, Conservative,
Holds Delegates in Check, by
Threatening to Adjourn.
The . . . .
CHENEY
Let the Cheney sing for you.
It has a voice of matchless
sweetness. It s clear-serene
satisfying.
We give daily demonstrations.
Come in. J Ask to hear the
Cheney. It; will delight you.
Prices $90 up to $60O
G. F. Johnson Piano Co.
149 SIXTH STREET
Chlckerlng Packard Bond Pianos
Conservative union labor men re
fused Thursday night to permit their
navies to be posted as candidates for
the presidency and other offices in
the Central Labor council when the
weekly meeting of that organization,
dominated, it was said, by known
radicals, placed several of the more
radical candidates in nomination.
Election of president and secretary
treasurer to fill unexpired terms will
occur at the meeting next Thursday
night and, forecasting the result, radical
leaders believed they have already mus
tered enough support to put D. E. Nick
erson, delegate from the carpenters'
union, in as president and William Wil
liams, a bollermaker, as secretary treas
urer. CANDIDATES ABE NAMED
Candidates for the presidency nom
inated Thursday night were: Nlckerson,
E. R. Doods of the carpenters' union ;
C. H. Copeland of the meat cutters, J.
R. Sturgeon, shipwrights ; Joe Thornton,
retail clerks: J. Laundy, bollermakers ;
William Williams ; R. F. Geist of the
machinists and W. G. Lynn, carpenters,
were nominated as secretary treasurer
to succeed E. J. Stack, whose resigna
tion the council had previously accepted
and refused to recall at the Thursday
meeting to permit Stack to serve the
remainder of his term. By a vote of
87 to 82 the council reaffirmed Its ac
ceptance of Stack's "resignation.
Harry Anderson is the president of
the council who will retire with the elec
tion of one of the radicals named Thurs
day. He proved at the meeting, how
ever, that he will continue to hold, the
reins against all comers until he re
tires, when he squelched a near riot on
the floor by parliamentary procedure.
CANDIDATE NOT CITIZEN
Williams, leading candidate for the
place made vacant by Stack, has not
yet completed his citizenship papers,
and failure to do so is said to be the
only thing that will prevent him from
being elected. He has been a resident
of the United States for many years,
encaged chiefly as a seaman.
ine council unanimously indorsed the
assessment of every member of the
unions .In Portland a dollar each to
raise the capital to construct and equip
a cooperative laundry. If the unions
respond. $40,000 will be raised. As soon
as $5000 has been pledged there will be
a telegraphic order eent for machinery.
MOONEY CASE DISCUSSED
Delegates heard John B. Mooney, who
is touringlw country in behalf of his
brother, Tom Mooney, who is serving
a life sentence in California for com
plicity in the San Francisco Prepared
ness day bomb plot. He asked that a
hall be obtained for a mass meeting.
He told of the way in which the labor
organizations of London are said to have
forced the authorities to grant them the
use of Royal Albert hall, an auditorium
seating 16,000 people, by shutting off
the lights, and threatening that the
next time there was a gathering of any
kind there to shut down lights and
transportation, unless the demand for
its use was granted without distinction,
to workers as well as others. His re
marks were received with great ap
plause and a committee of five to secure
a hall was appointed.
OPPONENTS OF PEACE
TREATY ARE VICTORS
(Continued From Pit On)
1 Tlascarets" work while you sleep!
When you are feeling bilious, head
achy, constipated. If the breath is bad,
stomach Upeet or for colds, i sallowness.
Just take "Cascarets" to regulate the
liver and bowels and all is well by morn
ing. . ' c
vrfar!U ?,ever eniv' 8tck or keep
SaTts on S & 11ne"d like Calomel.
a,t. OH or violent Pills
cathaMio16 8re a deliShttul laiative
SwHch t'VrrOWn-Up!' an chaldren.
bwitch to Cascarets"-Cost so little!
tlrelv satisfied with or,,,
- - " "j icocivauona
that Hitchcock felt Justified in accept
ing, and which did not nullify any pro
visions of the League of Nations.
The Dresident. accnrdlnw tn T-ritv,i.
' "O v ikuUVA,
expressed pleasure at the defeat of
amendments to the treaty.
LODGE DE1EAT FORESEEN '
Hitchcock rlfirlarAH Ma Kll iv., v
- --"j Liiai. Hie
resolution of ratification offered by
oenaior ioage win be defeated. He
then Will nffor a poonlntlnn i ,
- - at'yiuveu uy
wio nununisiraiion. li this is defeated,
he said, he believes the Democrats who
favor the treaty and the Republicans
who favor it can, in conference, agree
on a resolution of ratification.
Hitchcock said he found Wilson "much
Unproved."
"The president sat propped up with
pillows throughout the interview "
Hitchcock said. "He seemed keenly in
terested, putUng and answering ques
tions with his characteristic energy."
JOE HOB AN SHOWS TJP
While Senator Smith was speaking
today considerable commotion was
caused by one of the gallery spectators
who later gave his name as Joseph Ho
ran of New York, who Jumped to his
feet waving an American flag.
"Gentlemen of the senate," he began,
"I want to make a. Rn"
NAt this point attendants grabbed him
I n rl Ha ma. I.
" in-ivcn H um me gaiienes to
4he capitol guard room.
Upon his return to the capital Hitch
cock said:
"The president indicated that any
compromise we thought necessary to se
cure ratification, provided it did not de
stroy the treaty terms, would be satis
factory." He added that Wilson had expressed
complete willingness to leave the treaty
f ight in the hands of his friends in the
senate, and approved the action of ad
ministration senators thus far.
DESTRUCTIVE, 8AT8 WILSON
Wilson agreed with Hitchcock, the
senator said, that .the pending Lodge
reservations would be "destructive,"
and therefore unacceptable.
Hitchcock informed the president that
the Lodge "destructive" reservations
probably would muster 49 votes, but
would not receive the necessary two
thirds when they come before the sen
ate from the committee of the whole.
Hitchcock outlined his plan of action
in detail for, the president's approval.
When the Lodge reservations are de
feated, Hitchcock will move unqualified
ratification, whk-h, he added, probably
will not receive the accessary two-thirds.
Interpretative reservations will then
be offered, which, according to Hitch
cock., wllj ret a larger vote, but prob
ably Tnot the two-thirds, and the treaty
will then be deadlocked,
Man: Who Cut Wif e
And Shot Self Dies
Stevenson, Wash., Nov. 7. John
Boughman. who attacked his wife with
a machette Tuesday morning and then
shot himself in the side witk a rifle,
died at the Skamania hospital in this
city Wednesday night. Mrs. Boughman
is at home here, suffering from wounds
in her face that will disfigure her 'for
life. She recently received a large Bum
of money from an Indian allotment and
had bought a new car, In which, it was
Dandruff Soon
Ruins The Hair
Girls if you want plenty of thick,
beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all
means get rid of dandruff, for ft" will
starve your hair and ruin it if you don't.
It doesn't do much good to try to
brush or wash it out. The only sure
way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve
it, then you destroy it entirely. To do
this, get about four ounces of ordinary
liquid trvon ; apply It at night when re
tiring ; use enough to moisten the scalp
and rub it in gently with the finger tips.
By morning most, if not all, of your
dandruff will be gone, and three or four
more applications will completely dis
solve and entirely destroy every single
sign and trace of it
Tou will find, too, that all itching and
digging of the scalp will stop, and your
hair will look and feel a hundred times
better. You can get liquid arvon at any
drug store. It is inexpensive and four
ounces is all you will need, no matter
how much dandruff you have. This
simple remedy never falls. Adv.
aid, ah Intended leaving with friends
foe Yakima, Tuesday morning. Bough
man, It is said, was Jealous. Mrs. Bough
man Is a quarter-breed Yakima Indian,
as was her husband.
. S. H. Green stamps tor cash. Hoi
man Fuel Co.. Main 5. A-168. Adv.
BAD COLD GOT YOU?
FEELING GRIPPY7N
Dr. King's New DUcovery
soon starts you on the road
to recovery
ONCE tried, always used. That'i
a trite expression, but one never
more applicable than it is to Dr.
Kind's New Discovery.
You will like the prompt, business
like way it loosens the phlegm-congested
chest, soothes the tortured
throat, relieves an old or a new cold,
jtrippe, cough, crpup.
The kiddies can take it in perfect
safety, too. No bad after-effects.
Standard half a century. 6oc and
1.20 a bottle. At your druggist.
Don t Continue Constipated
Don't let your bowels bulldoze
your system. Make them function
regularly keep the body cleansed of
waste matter with Dr. King's New
Life Pills.
Biliousness, sick headache, sour
stomach, indigestion, dizziness, furred
tongue, bad breath think of the em
barrassments and discomforts trace
able to constipation. How easily
they're rectified by the occasional
use of .Dr. King's New Life Pills.
Move the bowels smoothlv but sure
ly. Try them tonight. All druggists
25c as usual. Adv.
E
Sweets
SALT LAKE
CHOCOLATES
Popular Hen-
SaUFroa
Jsska
- to Australia ' ;
r m
i
-foidlx sine
tLcyre Sweets'
sell Sweets
Chocolates
Hart Cigar Company, Distributors,
Portland, Oregon.
( :,."".
stLEgTYCO I
Adapted From
the Story of
WAPI, THE
WALRUS
STARTING
TOMORROW
ONE
WEEK
ITS
"UNIQUE
ITS
DIFFERENT
ITS
UNUSUAL
"BACK TO GOD'S
COUNTRY"
Tlia story of Dolores, the swimming g-irl of the Canadian
wilds, and how her Iova and sympathy for animals won the
love of "Wapi, the Killer," tha great fighting dog bf
the trails.
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
"THE GRIM GAME" and "SALOME vs. SHENANDOAH"
RingLardner I HIPPODROME'
Remick Song and Gift Shop
Phonograph Records You Want
Favorite records you have been waiting for. We have just
received a small shjpment which we will jut on sale Saturday
in our phonograph department.
10-INCH DOUBLE, 85c RECORDS
Tell Me and Mammy O' Mine Dance Records
Blowing Bubbles and Beautiful Ohio Song Record
Dear Old Pal of Mine and The Americans Come Song Record
" Vamp and Behind Your Silken Veil Dance Records
Dreamy Alabama and Hawaiian Lullaby Song Record
Oh, What a Pal Was Mary and Pretty Little Rambou Songa
Blowing Bubbles and Beautiful Ohio Blues Saxaphones
Who Played Poker with Pocahontas Al Jolson's newest
Everybody Calls Me Honey and My Baby' Arms Song
OPEN EVENINGS
"What You Want When You Want It"
For Phonograph Buyers
yZiK'0:? ??n?W.EP'tmt and
, . ' - " wniie ue stock is com-
vo tL, Columbia. GraFonolaTn
your terms pay while you arc enjoying it.
'When r Music or Record s
Go Where the Crowds Co"
"Portland' Most Popular Music Store"
Tmief Sony )Gitf SAfi
FlioaV Mali tit
Another column
or so bf fun is in store
for you next Sunday
when you read Lard
ner's letter entitled 'Til
Say I Won't Dance."
The Sunday
Journal
performance
. of
M
"The
iracle
M
a
99
begins this evening at" 8
o'clock. The 49th at 9:40
Hurry and see it tonight.
There are not many per
formances left.
MAJESTIC
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
BIG SCOOP
Addition to Usual Big Hip Show
Official U. S. Army
Motion Pictures
Battle of St. Mihiel
and
Meuse-Argonne
Photographed by Corporal R.-H. Ingleston
500,000 American
Bos in Action
Including Men of 40th, 41st and 91st Divisions
FIRST ALL AMERICAN OFFENSIVE
Commanded by Gen. J. J. Pershing
Many Portland Boys Shown
S
x Compounded
Annually
on
Regular Savings Accounts
f Individual, Commercial and Savings Accounts Solicited
t "The Open Door Bank" - .
Open Saturday.
All Day and
Evening
1
Broadway
and
Stark
tti 1Tahlnt-in Ktrret
J V -