Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Portland evening journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1902 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1902)
THE EVENING JOUBNALi PORTLAND; "OREGON, ' MONDAY, JULY -1, 1802.' NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL . CONVENTION IN SESSION Teachers From All States in the Union Gath ered at Minneapolis. mm BI STORMS New York and Wiscon sin Suffer From Elements. ' BOILED WATER '';' ' Tomy Atkins Has Means of Pro curing Hygienic Drinking Fluid, (Journal Special Service.) I'att. of New York City. iVIVK'PAPOUS. Minn.. July 7. Minne-I Headquarters for the various states lius capitulated to Uie army ut were located mis morning at the noteis ' - tpolis teachem who have journeyed hither by tompanies and itginH-nts from every m-r- ' tion of the country to do tueir ehhre to- ' Ward making the forty-lirst annual t:on 5 "petition of the National Educational As- -ff'i sjoclation a feast of reason und a liow of Soul. Estimates of the number of strang- ' . .. . rg witom uicwuy a gutr-s i".- run all the way from fifteen to twenty V. , thousand, the latter figure being prob ably nearest the mark. Conspicuous by ' their badges and blue ribbons, they have ' possession of the hotels, clubs, principal Streets In the ijusli.ef-s net tion.' parks, halls, churches arid school houses. It Is i & notable gathering of those who have assumed the mission of instructing man kind from the. rli-si stages In the klnder- garten to. the final ones In the unlver elty. Wen and women distinguished In ' their eho:-en field are to be encountered at every turn. Registered at on. or ' i.OUier of the hotels, or the gdvsls of lead ing" families, are such eminent educators "4 fcs Superintendent James A. Foshay, of Lo Aneles, Pal.; President Nicholas Murray Butler, of Columbia University; Prasident Jacob Gould Schurmann, of Cornell.;: University: Hon. William T. Harris,' Vnlteu States Commissioner of Education; Pro. Thomas C. Trueblood, of .the University of Michigan; President William R. Warper, of the University of Chicago; J. J. Ooyne, jt Little Hock; Superintendent John H. Illnemon. of Pine fS-J Bluff, ArJs, " J. Remsen Bishop, of Cin cinnati; President Charles W. Dabney, of the University of Tennessee; Professor Edwin" a. Dexter, of the ITniveiBlty of , Illinois; Dr. William Bayard Craig, of i Drake University; Miss Rods 8elleck, of f, Indianapolis; President Joseph Swain, of Indiana University; J. F. Mlllspangh. of " Winona, Minn.: J. H. Phillips, of Birm- i ingnam. Aia. ; ssuperiiuenueni a. m.i ''Greenwood, of Kansas City; Nathan C. ' . Schaeffer. State Superintendent of Pub lic Instruction of Pennsylvania; Super intendent Charles B. Gilbert, of Roches ter, N. ' Y and Mrs. Carrie Chapman ami will remain open during the Week. At the West are located delegates from the following states:, California, Vir ginia. Louisiana. Maryland, Florida, Mon tana, New Jersey, Utah, Colorado. Ken tucky, Pennsylvania, North Dakota, Mis souri, Ohio, Michigan, Massachusetts, Kansas, Wisconsin, South Dakota, Ne braska, Iowa, New York. Indiana, Illi nois and Minnesota. The formal opening exercises .of the convention will take pluce tomorrow afternoon In Exposition Hall, which has been magnificently uecorated for the event with flags, bunting:, palms, flow' ers and shrubs and the Inevitable pic tares of the Little Rod School House. There will be addresses of welcome by Governor Van Sunt, Hon. J. W. Olsen, Slate SuperlnteriiV-'iit of Public Instruc tion; Mayor Ames, Saperlntendent Jor dan, of the Minneapolis public schools, and President; Cyrus Northrop, of the University of Minnesota. The music for the opening exercises will bo rendered by a massed choir, which has been rehears ing for several weeks. V At this morning's session of the Na tional Council of Education In Unitarian Church, J. H. PiMlllps, ot Birmingham, Ala., presiding "Taxation as It Relates to School Maintenance and Teachers' Salaries" was discussed by Superinten dent J. M, Greenwood, of Kansas City; State Superintendent Nathan C. Sehaef- ifer, of Pennsylvania, and Superintendent Albert O. Lane, of Chicago. At the afternoon session Superintendent Charles B. Gilbert, of Rochester, spoke of "The Function of Knowledge in Education," and William T. Harris, United States Commissioner of Education,. presented an Interesting paper treating- of. the differ ence between efficient causes and final causes in controlling human freedom. President wnffkim R. Harper, of the Uni versity of Chicago, delivers the annual address before the. council tonight, . tak ing as his s.ubject the educational pro gress of the year. lH (W Devoted Mother Hunts All Over World for Baby. (Journal SDeclal Service.) CHICAGO, July 7.-Thirty thou- -f sand miles traversed In search of her kidnaped baby, with the final -f-recovery of the child In Madras, India, Is the record Just ' accom- pllshed by Mrs. Marion TTrornton Egbert, a Chicago woman. Part of the ttnie In the disguise of a nan, Mrs. Egbert hunted tor -f almost two years over America and Eucone, .spending; thousands of dol lara in the pursuit of her daughter. The little girl was kidnaped by her father, Dr. J. W. Egbert, who came to Chicago from India to 4- gain possession of the child. The abduction took place on the after- ' noon of September 23. 19f0. SHOT WITH A RUSTY NAIL ; (Journal Special 'Service.) LA'.. JUNTA, Colo., July ".-Daniel Donlan, the. 10-year-old son of J. E. Don Ian, while playing with a 22-callber re volver, slipped a rusty nail down the bar rel of the weapon and then pointed it to ward his face. The revolver was dls charge4 and the nail entered the boy's throat under his chin. Passing clear, through the neck. It protruded from the j skin beside the spine. ! Drs. ' Hasktiis and Finney and K earns I extracted the nail. The boy is sjll mi- j conscious, and is paralyzed below The wound. His chances for recovery are I Blight. Murph'y then answered that the man would - not be put out. Reap then ad dressed the congregation, calling upon all friends' of organized labor not to hear mass with a "scab." He picked up his hat and walked out ,of the church, followed by -a hundred or more strikers. RICH FIND (Journal Special Service.) LAREDO, Tex., July 7. A Parral, Mex leD, special says: The richest gold and silver strike ever made in the famous Parral district has been made In the San Juanlca property of the Hidalgo Mining Company. At a depth of 200 feet an independent and un explored vein was discovered, carrying 00 per ton In gold and silver. The shaft was opened by the Spaniards years ago, but as the vein only showed two feet of ore, the company had postponed working it until recently. This strike eclipses the famous ' Pal mlllo, which produced over 13,000,000 In a single" year. NEW YORK, July 7. New York state was at the mercy of the elements yes terday. Rivers and creeks overflowed their banks, carrying devastation every where. Telegraph and telephone wires are down. Damages to the amount of 1100,000 resulted at Arcade, and Minnie Loper was drowned. At Batavla, the Tonawanda Creek, whose banks are 50 feet high, overleaped Its confines, submerging hundreds of farms, and causing heavy damage. The British soldier are to be provided with boiled water for drinking, The water wlU nrfct of all be clarified by a rough kind of filtration through charcoal containing; a .certain amount of potassium permanga nate, and will then be "sterilized." either Dy filtration, or by beat, after which It will be distributed to the troops by means of water .carts reserved for "safe" water only. So far as the method of steriliza tion by boiling is concerned, the war of fice has adopted a form of apparatus which is very1 economical of heat, being bo arranged that the Incoming water absorbs the heat from that which has been through the boiler, and this so effectually LORD MAYOR of LONDON f " V'. r- ; IT'S UP TO . MERCHANTS - , - . - - ; . A$ to Whether a Carnival Will 1 1 Be Held in September V. 1 a. v i. ' J ' B. B, Bich and Oeorije Wemple bave been appointed a committee of two to In terview the business men of Portland as to whether they favor having a street fair and carnival in the fall, and how much they will subscribe to it. The Idea of the Cortland .Lodge, 142, B. P. O. B., is to en deavor to raise (12,000 by subscription. It tbJs sum can be raised, the fair will be given, as the Elks of Portland have shown what they can do In this Una. This ape. clal . committee en learning the opinions of the business men of this city, will re port at a meeting of this lodge next Thurs day night. Governor-elect "George R Chamberlain, D. Soils Cohen and Judge iAlex. Sweek are the committee who have the general management and detail work of the car nival to look after. It is absolutely necessary that the sub scription committee have a complete re port In by Thursday night. The commit tee began work this ' morning and will be out tilt Thursday night. As the Elks contemplate holding the carnival from September 1 to 13, It is imperative that no time be lost, as there are only seven weeks' time to work in.- k V 0 HE LIVED THREE CENTURIES (Journal Special Service.) CHICAGO, July 7.-W'alenty Orllck, 69ti Holt avenue, who "bad lived In three cen turies, baa been buried in St. Adalbert's Cemetery. The woman who had been his wife for over Beventy-elght years stood at the grave to witness the last ritesT Orllck was 104 years old and his widow Is 102. Up to five weeks p.go Orllck had never been In poor health. He was born In the little village of Zevartyvl, Prus sia, in 1798, of Polish parents. When received the homage of the Emperor of Marie Louise, entered Dresden In 1812 and received the homages of the Emperor of Austria and the Kins of Prussia, Orllck. then a 14-year-old boy, witnessed and retained a vivid recollection of the event FLEE FROM CUBA The incumbent was inducted into office in 1901. He bears the ordinary name of Rogers but can sport a velvet cloak and all his ord ers with great dignity and seriousness. There is a charming Lady nayoress. , i Rlfi' TFHNK TiJIMFx! 11V3 ILIIIIU VJHIILJ Business Men Fearful of a Finan cial Crash1. (Journal Steels! Service.) HAVANA, July 7. -The failure of the ! 1 nited States to grant reciprocal con- j (.,.a8(,nH 40 Cuba 1ms had the effect if NlAOAl-.A-ON-THE-LAKlC, Out.. July ' drirlrig from the Island many of the 7. Interest of lovers of tennis In now ! htrgo American business interests,; In rentered in the annual champlo.iships nf ''"'""K Armour & Co. and Swift & Co., the Canadian Lawn Tennis Assoc iutlon. i "ackers. , whleh began hi re today to icmtimie i Tne fpar of an approaching commer- TlW contet;nits rep- 01al a"", nnunoial .crash has assumed the if the Tlninlriinn 'I'hu d are the all-ioiiicrs' men's doubles and through the k. 1 resent mnny parts event to be dec id Singles, handl. ap, ladles' sliiKles. proportions of u panic ijnd all who can leave are doing so. WOULDN'T PRAY ' WITH A SCAB QM 5CA HORSE 1 tracks of both the Erie and New York Central are burled beneath the flood. The rainfall continued for 24 hours In the Genesee Valley, and then came a cloudburst which raised the river at Por tage to a point where its banks could no longer hold the torrent. ' The flood spread out fully a mile wide. Crops are ruined, houses and barns swept away and the roadbed of the Pennsylvania Railroad en tirely washed away In many places. At Attica the reservoir of the Attica Water Company gave way. A dam was washed out and seven Iron bridges car ried away. The stream bore down upon Its surface wreckage of all Borts and .the dead bodies of cattle. The water supply la cut off at Warsaw, and the damage by the flood there will reach $100,000, The river is cutting a channel through the principal streets, and houses and barns were bodily carried off. Great damages are reported also from Pike, Center, Elmlra, Hornellsville nd Dunkirk. THE STORM IN WISCONSIN. MILWAUKEE, July 7. The fury of the storm king was directed against Wis consin also yesterday. . Wind and rain wrought havoc at Milwaukee, and the northern part of the state was also af fected. At Phillips a portion of tho United States Leather Company was wrecked, and at Janesvllle St. Patrick's Catholic Church was destroyed by lightning. that, although the water is raised to boil ing temperature. It flows out only 4Mi de grees Fahrenheit hotter than It entered the apparatus. The Hospital. GIRL IS RESCUED (Journal Special Service.) ST PAUL. July 7. Olga Larson, a pretty 10-year-old girl, who disappeared from her home In Minneapolis a few days ago, has-been rescued from a life "of shame by .officers of the St. Paul Cen tral Police Station., Several days ugo the girl disappeared from her home in Minneapolis, and all efforts of her father, Arthur Larson, to locate her have been In vain. The father told the officers that he believed his daughter was in a distvp utab!,' house In St. Paul. The girl was sroon located and consented to return to her home. (Journal Special Service.) ( BALTIMORE, Md., Jub- 7. Among the I curiosities gathered at sea by the mate of the schooner Merom, Which has Just arnven in port txom .port Tampa, was a specimen of the sea horse, which he found In a bunch of Sea grass he pulled on board while the Aierom was In the Gulf of Mexico. The fish Is about four i iiii-Mc ui v. Hna mil u n fun and nppir to begin the mans when Member Reap, shnped like those of a horae The mute rosa from his aeat.and, addressing the I kept the fish alive in sea wa ftr for two priest, told hbntberwas a man prow, days.- but it then died. It was preserved nt who waa.on tbe unfair Hat, and d- i bv drying- in the aun ' r i Journal Special .Service.) ' 1 ftCTRANTON, Pa., July 7 One hundred i tnea marched out of 6t. Patrick's Cfiurch, 1 iphaa t. . before the commencement of! mass,'' rather than worship with a non- ' tmlon man. Father Murphy was readv tnanded that he be ' ejected . from the ehureV' Father "Murphy 'motioned Reap to sit down. He declined to fake his feat, and rpt,ei. nl demand. Father The sea horse Is rarely caught. The mate of the Merora said It' was the first he had ever seen, though he went to sea many . years agoj .f - MAY DEMAND SHORTER HOURS BALTIMORE. Md July 7.-.About 300 delegates representing as ; many cities throughout the . United States and Can ada are attending the annual national convention of the Boilermakers and Iron Shipbuilders' Union. - The "gathering' was formally opened la Ralne's Hall today with James McNeal, the national presi dent, presiding. The sessions are ex pected to continue for ten days or longer, as there Is more than, the usual amount of Important business to be transacted. One of the first matters to be discussed Is the advisability of 'the organization de manding an eight-hour instead of a sine hour day,j GLASS WORKERS' MEETING WHEELING, W. Va., July 7.-The twenty-fourth annual convention of the American Flint Glass, Workers' Union was opened here today with elaborate 'ceremonies. President Charles E. Voltel called the delegates to order and named a committee on credentials, after which an adjournament was taken until tomor row. There was an Immense parade, in which all the visitors participated. The convention will begin its real busi ness tomorrow morning;- The principal matters to come up are the election of officers and the settlement of the ma chine question. PresidentVoltel is a can didate for re-election. The convention will decide whether to hold out for a re ductlon In the number of moves In the machines. A strike may result among the chimney men. ...: (Journal Special Service.) ODESSA, July 7. In their weekly raid here today the police arrested among the Vagabonds Prince Kurakln, a scion of a seml-royal family. The, Prince was sentenced to three days' Imprisonment for begging. KRETZ" CARED NOT Slepf Away Peacefully in a Cof fin Half Filled With Water. (Journal Special Service.) , READING, Pa., July 7.W. W. Kreta, president of the local association for the study of occult science, had himself placed In a Coffin, put himself In a coma tose state, and' was buried under five feet of earth, with an air tube running to the coffin. When be was dug up for fear a drizzling rain would drown him his coffin was half full of water, hut Kretz was uninjured, and still asleep. E3017 IT CAN BE OBTAINED How to Make a Marvelously Perfect Complexion ' v rtd Restore Youthful Looks. ' . . HOWTO REMOVE PIMPLES, FRECKLES. MOTH, BROWN! PATCH ES, BLACKH EADS, 01 LI N ESS AN D ALL DE: , FECTS FROM. THE FACE. NECK AND ARMS. Thers U nothing more beantlfol than the human face With lis vivacionf ooonteaaaes. Its sparkling eye, its pleasant smile and perfect symmetry, but the crowning glory of the fao is a radiant oomplezion with its lively glow, Its youthful Unge, and its fine, smooth texture, , . But the question is can such a complexion be attained T - ' In thl wonderfully progressive age of art, literature and science : of the steam engine, the. mighty caapon. the electric motor, the wireless telegraph and the ponderous labrlo-oasiiug machines; what is tbeie that k Impoitibief w . . By a careful study of the nature and texture of the ikln, and a thorough research in the realms of chemistry snd compounding of iugteolents, a remedy baa been at last perfected (hal will ancomplUh these results, . , . t, ' f This remedy Is Mm. A. Ruppert's lace Bleach. . ,- . , W BAT VACS BLEACH IS. ". Bleach is not a cosmetic to cover ud. but It abso lutely remote once and forever all the discolorations and blemlshei to which the complexion it subject. I can positively guarautes every woman it will do all I claim. Its action on the akin cannot fail to remove every defeat, it's a well-known fact that the blood in order to cleanse Itself Is constantly throwing off Its impurities through the pores of the skin ; now If the pores are not aepc open, tne impurities 01 me oiooa cannot est lace, and nroduoe all manner of akin troubles, such as PIMPLES, MESS, ECZEMA. ACNE AND NUMEROUS OTHER SKIN DISEASES AND DIS(X)LORATIONS. .ret are not kept open, the impurities of the blood cannot escape, but collect below the lur- a mscnetical action, which attract and draws to the surface the impurities which havecol lected underthe kin: and, secondly, a chemical action which removes by scaling off (in the form of a fine dandruff) the surface of the outer, diseased or dead cuticle, leaving the under skin beautiful, youthful-looking and delicately tinted by nature clear, smooth and perfect This metnod is psrfectly harmless to the most delicate skin, as It harmonises with the laws of hygiene and nature, the two factor which we must adhere to and follow if we wish to permanently im prove our personal appearance. THOUSANDS BENEFITED.- Thousands of patrons, who were annoyed and vexed with most miserable complexions, have been delighted with the grand improvement Madame Ruppert's Pace Bleach haa produced In their skins. Many complexlona.covered with pimplea, freckles and edematous eruptions (Itching, burning and annoying) have been changed to bright, beautiful skins, and the Improvements made In their looks were simply marvelous. There is scarcely a defect to which the complexion is heir which will not succumb to this won derful remedy. Premature wrinkles and lines those inroads of beauty are quickly effaced, and those muddy. dUftruiinr, tallow, jaundiced skins are quickly transformed Into clear, wholesome one by its use. Flabby skins which also mark the ravages of time become nnn Skin troubles which have baffled the most skilful phy- and smooth after a few applications. iciKDS have been removed and cured nromDtlf letter, their heartfeltand profoundest thanks for this wonderful Face Bleach. .and many have expressed, personally and by (Journal Special Service.) WICHITA, Kan., July 7. Word here Is to the effect that iklrs. Carrie Nation has become- a follower of Alexander Dowle, has been engaged to travel for the proph et and will make Kansas her territory.! Mrs. nation claims to have been cured of several diseases by a Dowlelte. Elder Prather of Dowie's church, Chi cago, denies .that Mrs. Nation has be come a member of their church, although he admits she may have been engaged for field work. A msitiTS ciiarantee Is riven if Face Bleach la used according to the new a pedal directions. which are furnished with each order, that it will remove every discoloration and Impurity trom your oomplezion. r All of time. A. Ruppert's world renowned preparations are sold by us at reduced prices. Olds, Wortman & King SOLE AGENTS. NATIONAL SCHOOL OF AGRICULTURE COLUMBUS, O , July 7.-Everythlng Is In readiness for the formal opening this evening of the first annual session. of the National graduate summer 'school In ag riculture at the Ohio State University. The purpose of the 'school, which Is held under tho auspices of the United States Department of Agriculture and the Asso ciation of-A-rheriii.n Agricultural Col leges nnd Kxperlm. :it Stations, Is to fur nish a1 vu nod Instruction in agriculture. The corps of instructors Includes the heads of leading agricultural colleges throughout the country. IMiiOlliS TORONTO. Out, July 7. Delegates from many parts of the United States and Canada are attending the Inter national convention of-Ironmongers, which began a week's session In Toronto today. A number of matters of Importance to the craft are scheduled for considera tion and action. ' ST. PAUL'S BIQ HORSE SHOW ST. PAUL, Minn., July .jSdcTeiy re gards the horse show 'and race meeting", which opened toffay under the auspices of the St. Paul Driving Club,JM th event of. the summer. The golf links, the ten nis courts and the yachts have been de-" serted for the State fair grounds. In the quality and number of exhibits the show is the equal of many of the more Important metropolitan exhibitions... .The complete list of exhibitors it a Jong one and Includes almost every prominent breeder of the West. The sum of T,000 will be distributed among the winners. BAD GIRLS (Journal Special Service) HULL, Mass., July 7. Miss Floretta Vinlng, editor of a syndicate of South Shore newspapers, has written an editor ial based on her investigations of swear ing and drinking among women. She says young women of. good fam ilies come to Hull with ( young men, drink whisky and beer and Indulge in lunches which cost $18 and $20. She knows of a prominent Boston society woman drinking half a quart of whisky before lunch. Swearing . she finds common among women, and many married men have to read the. papers to And where their wives are. WINONA LAKE, Irid., Jiily 7-What promises to be the most successful sea son In the history of the Winona Chau tauqua and Summer School was form ally opened ' today. Among the eminent lecturers and speakers to be heard d urg ing the next few weeks are Captain Rich mond P. Hobson, Senator M. A. Hanna, Miss Ellen M. Stone. General John. C. Black, President Samuel Oompers,- of the American Federation of Labor; Ern est Seton-Thompson and General Flti- hugh Lee. FOUGHT IN HOTEL (Journal Special Service.) DALLES. Tex., July 7. Charles Fouts, night clerk at the National Hotel, No. t.Vi Griffin street, and William Irby. a barkeeper, fought a pistol "duel In . the hallway of the hotel. Fouts Is dead at the Morgue, and Irby Is locked up at the county Jail with a slight flesn wound in the right cheek. The men had been enemies for some time. "T. CONVICT LAWYER (Journal Special Service.) TOPEKA, Kan.. July 7. Ira 'N." Ter- rill, a convicted murderer from Okla homa, serving a sentence In the Kansas penitentiary, haa appeared In the Su preme Court to argue In ht own behalf that Kansas has no Jurisdiction ov him. J W b Ik.. I . ...... . I itm-i fiv is wrongiuuy . imprisoned. He was In charge, of Warden' Jewett. Should the Supreme Court decide In hit favor 300 other convicts would be liber ated. EVERYBODY READS The Brightest Newspaper THE JUHNAL FOR ALL THE NEWS FOR. ALL THE PEOPLE FOR ALL TIME CITY, per carriers MAIL RATES 10 Cents Weekly $3 .00 Year or $ 1 .00 for 4 Months j1- JOURNAL Printing Co. 289 Yunhfll Street Phones: Ore. Main 500; C6L 705. PORTLAND THE OSAGES MAKE A SLATE (Journal Special Service) GUTHRIE, a T., July 7. The Osage Indians n!fc In convention In their legis lative hall In Pawhuska and placed in nomination their various candidates for principal and assistant chiefs. One fac tion of the tribe '.nominated James Big heart for principal,, and Bare Legs for assistant. Another, or progressive, party nominated John Claremore for principal and John Strait for assistant, while a third faction has placed Bacon Rind as their nominee for principal chief. The election will be held on August 1. Opens at Stockholm. : COPENHAGEN. July 7.i-Thex Interna national Supreme Lodge of the Indepen dent Order of Good Templars convened here today. Hor than 600 delegates have arrived, .among - them' representatives from'' the' United States, Canada, Eng land, Ireland, Scotland. Norway, Pen mark and India. The opening1 session- was devoted almost-entirely to the reception of credentials. , . ... v.- . . .... .'.: WHIG (Journal Special Service-! ' CHICAGO, July 7.-WIlllara "Hall, col ored, was shot and Instantly killed btf Harry Murphy, also colored, because n persisted In teasing and abusing 14-year old Wiley Moore, after he had been re peatedly told to desist, ;; . i. ; ,. ' The shooting took place at &T Ashland avenuev and the trouble between the ,twa men had been brewing for "some time. - The murderer escaped, and It Is be lieved left the city on a freight train ori the Santa. Fe road. ., . COSTLY MISTAKE (Journal Special Servloe.) LITTLE FALLS, Minn, July 7 W. Hj ' Coy, aged 24, a bachelor living alone 2 miles south weat ot tha cltywM .ao cidentaliy poisoned and died from tht effects. When cooking breakfast he made: a rnlstake and put;, arsenic in pancake; ' flour Instead of tfalaratus., A small, amount of money was found In his cabin. Several letters in his possession showed ' that be had relative at Bradford, tie. w