(J (TMff rMMfft ruTMnnu) ? yeas, . no. . 17. f SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY MORNDTQ, JUNE 21, 1901. FIRST, SECTION EIGHT PAGE' r, - . . . - - , . I Stock tout ' ' 1 ' ' - ' ' . - "l - " - -I J ALL off L ' : : i: . 1 vf;v...-..3 thp forra.er price of .little , girls dresses . ages 3 to 14 years j Silks The highest grades which are shown this season are to be found In oiir Rilk department. The Bind that other store call fe."c jualitits, we are selling for 52c.yd. Oar $1.00 values are all re duced to 69cyd. MILLIONS TO BE DISTRIBUTED Will of Late Levi Z. Leiter Has Been Made Public Naming Family as the Beneficiaries. WASHINOTOX, June 20. Th will of the late Levi Z. Loiter, the i'hioago millionaire, was filed today in this city. It names .Mary T. Leiter and Joseph Loiter, his widow and' -son, as ceetitors nnl they, togcter with bis daughters; Xnney Liithrop Carver: Jrfiter and Sey mour Morris, of Chicago, are designated as trusfees. Tho will leaves one-third of the es tate, ontsido of specific reservations of eoal land, to the widow, and the rest is left for equal distribution, per ntirpes, among the children. There is nothing in the will which indicates the total value of Mr. Leiter 's estate. Specific provision is made, to guaran tee Joseph Loiter an annual income of SHOES With Goodyear The quality of oar shoes, together our business grow. . COMPORT v3 m Dry- Goods, Clothing, Ladies; and Men's Furnishings Salem's Cheapest One-price Cas'h Store, .: , - SHIRT WAISTS REDUCED i I ; : 25 per cent redact ion on all our fine shirt waists for summer. " LADIES' SUITS and SKIRTS at ' SALE PRICES 'Sweeping;'. Reductions ' - i. On men's clothing and special lines off men 'a slices, also ladles' and children's shoes. ' at least $10,000 under any circum stanced. Mention is made of the mar riage settlement of $700,000 previously pnadoj on one of the daughters, Lady Curzon, in addition to which the will bequeaths $1,000,000 more as a trust fund for her, the total of $1,700,000 to be charged against her as an advance ment in the distribution of the .estate. The trustees named for this independ ent fund are Joseph Leiter, Robert T. Lincoln, Chicago, Frsncis Nathaniel Curzon, of London, and St. John Frce mantlo Broderiek, of London. The will eites that during his life time' Mr. Loiter gave the following amounts in "advance: " . To Lady Cur zon, ;$ 1,700,000 (inrhiding the $1,000,- Welt Soles Mean The insole is smooth, and entirely free from nails and thread. Thy are more flexible than the ordinary 'tewed soles," and give letter fer vioe. If yoa want to know more about a welt shoe, let us show you one that fs sawed into to show how they are made lnstde. We can supply you with Goodyear Welts in Patent Colt, Vici Kid, Velqur Calf, Box Calf, and Genuine Kan 'gararoo, in great variety of new and istyllsh lasts. rith. our extremely low prices makes ' r M W T J " A CONVENTION DELEGATES . ARE-MoiDING CAUCUSES It Is Regarded as Settled That Senator Fairbanks Will Be Roosevelts Running Mate, CirtCACO, June 20. The nomination of Senator (linrh W. Fairbanks for Viee I resident was legarded as settled tonight when New York decided to east ker seventy-eigh- ? votes for him While it has seemed a foregone conclu sion for some time that the Indiana Senator would be Uoosevelt 's running mate,th?re j have ben efforts made to hrin out other candidates and start a stampede among t-e delegates for some other man. TUesa attempts failed al most in their inception and it elearly be came apparent tbac Fairbanks was the eboice of most of the delegations. Considerable eriticicm has been di rected at Fairbanks because of his fail nre to definitely declare his position. All ; that has len possible to obtain from him was a statement that he did not ernsider it ua honor which a man KhouM seek or ueein, and if the party wanted him ha would accept, although he was not a candidate and would not allow the Indiana delegation to express' itself in favor of bis nomination. This attitude tended, to irritate some lenders who say no rms;i why the Senator should not come squarely out with a for mal statement. ; 000 created by the will), to be charged against her in the general estate; to each of the daughters. Nancy and Mar guerite, 1000 shares of stock of the Chi cago Railway Company, to be valued at $155 a share, and 1000 shares of the capital stock of the Edison Company, of Chicago, to be valued at $145,000, making a total charge against each of $.300,000, to be treated as advance ments in the division of the income and principal of fhe trust. To Joseph Leiter, advancements, partly covered liy notes signed by him, but canceled and not to be taken into account and partly evidenced by en tries in books, amounting to $2,000,000, the latter to be charged as an advance ment. ; The will says' Mrt Loiter has pur chased title of 7500 acres of eoal lands in Illinois, and certain shares of the capital stock of the Upiversal Company and directs that a corporation may be formed, -under he Illinois laws to oper ate these lands. Tins trustees are di rected to permit Joseph Leiter to man age and control these lands. The divi dends and profits are to be appliod as a credit to the amount invested r the coal lands, the earnings to bear inter est at 5 per cent per annum. When ever Joseph Loiter pays to the estate left by Mr. Leiter in full the whol? amount invested in eoal lands, the fuel company is to be conveyed absolutely to him. PICNIC IN POLK Annual Hose Fair Opens Thursday Ev ening Picnic Day on Friday, When Governor Chamberlain Will Deliver Principal Address Big Baseball Game Between Ilopgrowers and Hop buyers, f INDEPENDENCE, Or., Juno 20. Arrangements aio boing made for the biggest picnie ever held in Polk eounty, followed by a' farmers and hopmen's convention of fonr sessions. Thursday evening, June 115, tho social events will open with the annual rose fair, of the Presbyterian church and a grand ball under tho auspices of the combined or chestras J of Independence and Mon mouth. Friday morning, thp 24th, will be picnic day, followed with sports in tho afternoon, and the first session of the convention in the evening. Satur day, there will be three sessions of the convention, J . Arrangements !iave been made. for a big baseball grime between the hopbuy ers and the hopgrowers, and it promises to be interesting. Governor Chamber lain will be the p-ineipal speaker at the picnic. The convention: is under the supervision of iha Oregon Agricultural College, assisted by the granges of Polk county and citizens of Independence. : Triumphs of Modern Surgery. Wonderful things are done for the human body by surgery. Organs are taken out and scraped and polished and put back, or they may be removed en tirely; bones are spliced; pipes take the place of. diseased sections or. veins; an tiseptic dressings ; are applied to wounds, bruises, burns and like injuries before inflammation sets . in, which causes them to heal without maturation and in one-third the time required by the old treatment. Chamberlain's Pain Balm acts on this same principle. It is an antiseptie and when ' applied to such injuries, causes them to heal very quickly. It also allays the pain and soreness. Keep a bottle of Pain Balm in your homo and it will save yon time and money, not to mention the incon venience and suffering which such in juries entaiL For sale by all druggists. Baggage and burdens come near to being synonymous.' lbs Uri Toi Kaittrsm Bz2 Bssnths -s9 and All Efforts to Cause " Another Candidate Have Foiled. Taflnre of the Iowa Idea. Chicago, June 20. With the time oe- eupiel in, the caucuses of state delega tions which, with a few exceptions, were mere ratifiettjo.i meetings held to appVova state convention programs, the day preceding the opening of the He publican Natioi al rouvention has been the quietest ever known as the forerun ner of similar gatherings. The princi pal diversions were offered by the cau cuses of the Tcwa, Illinois and Wash ington delegations. Governor Cnnrmins presented to the Ilawkeye delegat.ua the "Iowa Idea" i nan entirely new dress. It was in the form of a plank setting forth the idea of a declaration for reciprocity and a reduction of tariff schedules. It was re jeetel by the delegation and this sound ed its death kacll so far as the present eonvertion is concerned. In the Illinois caneus the contest was for th- chairmanship of the delegation.' Senator Cnllom ' wr. opposed by Gov. Yates' faction, -hot won out handily. It is conceded that his defeat would have prevented bis re-election to the Senate. In the .Washington caucus Sen ator Ankeny was elected national com mitteeman against the combined oppo WOULD NAME HON.W.H.TAFT EX-SECRETARY OT NAVY FAVORS PRESENT SECRETARY OF WAR . FOR SECOND PLACE. HAS SPLENDID QUALIFICATIONS The Ticket, Roosevelt and Taft, Would, .- ' It Is Urged, Sweep the Country. Five Reasons for Favoring Secretary of War Would Be of Great Assistance to President Roosevelt Not Neces sary That Ha Should Remain in the Cabinet. CIITCAOO, June 0 John D. Long, Of Massachusetts, ex Secretary of the Navy, today .mtecrized the Associated Press to announce that his candidacy for tho Vice Presidency was William II. Taft, Secretary of War, whom he re gards as in every respect the most avail able man. "There can bo no- question of Mr. Taft,' said Mr.. Long.- ."lie has made his record. The country knows him, and the ticket, 'Roosevelt and Taft,' would in my opinion, rtveep the country. My reasons for favoring Mr. Taft are these: ' ."First, eminori nualif ications as a. presiding oflier; dignity, sound judg ment and deliberation are characteris tic of the man. . "Second, his close and warm, friend ship for the President. lie certainly wonld make an agreeable running mate for M'j Roosevelt. "Third, the act that he is splendid ly qualified for the responsibilities which devolve i:pon the iVco President in ease of an emergency, and, lastly, or perhaps, I should have said first, the faot that thor? a strong sentiment throughout the country trending to ward Taft for the Presidency in 1&0S. "Objection w?nld be urged to Mr. Taft on the ground that it would re move a strong man from the Cabinet1 and jut him in position less promi nent before the country. To the first objection I wonld" twy that Mr. Taft would he of immense assistance to the President, as hi is now; and to the sec ond point, Mr. .Taft is so well known that it is impoib!e to lose sight of him. True, be has recently assumed the war portfolio, bt his work is in a sense completed, so far ns the Philippines is concerned, and tlic-re is no great emer gency j which would recessitate him re maining Secretary of War. "My suggestion of Mr. Taft is every where ; being warmly received, and es pecially among tne Eastern delegations the sentiment seeii:s to favor him for the Vice Presidential nomination." LAID TO REST. Last Sad Rites Performed I Over Remains of the Late Mrs. : " Albert. - , ; the On Sunday afternoon the last sad honors were performed over the body of the late Mrs. Jane T. Albert, who passed away at hef home on Friday evening. The impressive funeral ser vice was conducted by Rev. IT. A. Ketehum at the home on the corner of Winter an3 Mill streets. The attend ance of freind7 who desired to pay their last respects, to one for whom they had held in such high esteem, was very large. The pastor paid a glowing tribute to the memory of the deceased, and spoke words of comfort to the be reaved relatives and friends. The re mains were laid to rest in the L O. O. F. cemetery, and the grave was cover ed with the many beautiful floral trib utes. During ..the exercises at the house a Stampede to sition of ex-C-m;ntteeman James M. Ashtin and! J. S, McMillia, loth of whom were ean'idi.tes for the position. Wliat has beea teimed an "Indiana puzzle " wai one, of tie features of the day. Members of ;th delegation from the Iloosier state met to determine their course in regard to the boom for Sena tor Fairbanks for the Vie Fresidfney. Senator(FjirbJiek3 attended the meete ing atd ahilrS8-..I the delegates.'! lie talke-1 for ; fiftoa'ir-innte when j the meeting a.ljourne 1 j.nd the delegation! was no wiser concerning his wishes, be yond the reiteration of his statement that he did not wish his state to pre sent his name f o- the nomination ojf the Vice Presidency. '-i ' - Fxpressions of genuine regret at: the absence of (faces familiar at similar gatherings fonr cigh. and twelve years ago, are heard on every side. Some of those have figured; ju --Republican con ventions f of a uarter of a century, not ably the late Senator Quay of Pennsyl vania, and the l?toWm. Sewall of New Jersey. One whnsc absence is felt more perhaps, than any other man is the late Senator JIanna. Numerous pictures of the late Scnatir pttest his popularity. music was furnished ly the girls' choir of the Presbyterian church, and on behalf of the Missionary Society, of which deceased was a devoted member, Mrs. Eurper read the following orig inal poem,; a 'beautiful tribute to- her who so recently completed a long and useful life and has gone to claim her reward: ; Dear, folded hands, so worn with care, So quiet on the ! pulseless breast. Will any bunion need yon there, If heaven is a plae of rostf And'you, dear hearf will you forget, The struggle of these lower lands, Or is there some sweet service yet For folded bauds? t - - i i iYonrs was the never ending task Pom of- a never ending need; Our selfishness it was to ask, Your . sweet unselfishness to heed, j And now in the unwanted rest Long promised in th'e ltetter lands, How can you sit an idle guest With folded bands! No tears to dry, no wounds to bind, No sufferer to tend and bless Whore will1 those eager fingers find A neertl for all their tenderness? Yet knowing all they did before, Perchance the Father understands, , Anl holds some precious work in store For foUad hands. - " LITTLE FARMS MORE SMALL TRACTS TO MADE FROM A BIO ONE. BE The Ewald Land Will Be Divided and a Hundred or More Five Acre Ilomes Created. Which Will Add to the Pop ulation and Wealth of the Country. The Salem Abstract and .Land Com? pany has' made another important deal! Tho ; KwaLl . farm, containing acres - has been' secured, and it will le divided into a hundred or no small ' ; : ,av-J ; mm y- .. j farms, of five acres and upwards , so that it may le mdd off in lots to suit purchasers, and on terms that will sat isfy all comers, j This tract lies just beyond the Smith IVuit Inarms, with which this company was so successful, dispsing of the first lot of them within a year, and the sec ond lot within a few months after they were placed on the market resulting in making a number of spears of grass grow wher only one or none grew le fore, and adding permanently to the wealth and population of the country and ' the city. , The Ewald farm liet at the forks, of the road where' South Commercial Street' beeome the Jefferson'' road - on one side and the Liberty road on the other. - ' .- - In the tract is a body -of alont COO acres of timler, and a stone quarry ef twenty acres, j The balance is . mostly clear land. TIm timler tracts will le in dniand, fori they will yield a reve nue, and when they are cleared off vir gin soil is left. j, It is only a question of time until fifty to a hundred families will be" liv ing out there, in thrift and comfort, where oaly one was formerly supported. Thai is the story of the Liberty and Rdsedale tracts the Sunnvside tracts beyonl. ' I :;: The surveyors will go to work at once dividing up this Ewald farm, and it will beonly a short timo when pur chasers will havc a chance to pick their future homos. ! i GOES TO CONWENTJONV ' NEW YORK, June 20. Secretary Cortelyou, of tl.e Department of Com merce and Lalw, will arrive in tThicago Tnesdiy night or early Wedneslay mor ning. It is repr.rted th.-tt he was sum moned suddenly An meet the Itepublican leaders, it having hcin his previous in tention not to go West until after the National con veniion had adjourned. " ; BLASTS FROM RAM'S HORN. The door to heaven is often hidden in a humble home. What we see there will depend! on what 'wo seek Jiere. ' Karth may le but an episode in the history of heaven. PORT ARTHUR IS WELL DEFENDED Stores and Supplies Reach the Besieged City And the Japanese Blockade is Ineffective. 1 NDIANAPOLIS, Tnd., June 20-Tbe Indianapolis News -today received a spooial rable from Ilotor Fullor, its sjK-ijal staff wif corresMndont at t'ho fo, giving the following account of his release from I'nrt Arthur and the situ ation inside th.losieged fortrossi 1 "J'hefoo, June 20. After sending five days in a Pussian priHoii, I was-ro-l':ied and put on Ward a Chitiese junk and son t to this place." "Tlie stories: of starvation in Port Arthur spread by the Japanese are un true, as stores "nd supplies- are constant ly arriving at the l-sieged'eity from Chinese torts. The Japanese blw-V.. !? is ineffective. . The garriin consists of Wtweon 50,000 and fiO.'KW troops and the health of Wth soldiers and civilians is good. The d:imagel I atticshis have all leen repaired and ; the harlMir entrance cleare.l of olstructions Immense.-new forts have lrt constrncte, anl, in my opinion, the p!ac is in no immediate danger of falli into the hands of th'e Japanese. "The Japflfe"-e attack by land mad ion the Ctfe inH was iasily repulseil. I was fhe first CorresjMndont to report the blockade. (Mr. Fnller was rowed across to Port TH QUALITY ' - ' '' - - ' ! !.r , - i ' " i , - ! - - Dust In Qunllty, Best .-in Ilt, Cow est In IrIcM, - Im the way! our Clothing comparcH with Othcr. MEN'S its, Overcoats, WAR WILL GO ON EUSSIA WILL NOT . END TIIB CON" ' FLICT WITH MILITARY FEE3 TIGS IMTATRIin. Japan, It Is Thousht, Would Accept the Mediation of i. Power Equally Disposed to the Warring Nations Japan Demands Not Modified. ST. FF-TERSmrRC, Jnne 20. An in. terview with Haron SuyematsH, pul-Iish-el in Paris, and suggesting that Japan is willing to accept the mediation of a pwer equally well disposvI to Kussi.-i and J?pan, while regardol as a tenta tivo utterance, attracts much attention, coming from th Marqubi Ito. It is gou eially inteqretoJ as meaning that .Jap an is shrinking before the prospect of a long, exhaustive war. tlovcrnmcnt of ficials do not fhow the slightest disposi tion, however, to relax their position, the sentiment Leing that, having Wen forced into the war and driven to make heavy saerif ice to stop just now, when Itnssia is prepnred to acoimplish .somo thing, is quite imMsible. Diplomatic circles are keenly interested, but tho opinion is 'nninimotitdy expressed that it will bo impossible for Itussia to eon sent to end tho war with her military prestige impaired. liesides, it is joint ed Out that B;ron Suyematsu admits Japan has not dwcd her demanls. The Frenoh Kmbassis are hardly dLs? HKd to liolieve that Duron Hoyeuiatsu spoke by nuthrity, and tho American Kinbassy is -disinclined to t discuss the matter and to suggest that if a media tor is wanted tho l i.ited States fulfills the condition presciiled by tho Haron. " CASES IN SUPREME COURT. " The. following cases have Wen as signed by tho Court for bearing: Tueday, Jnne 2. -'-State against Driggs, Wells: FargO & Co. against Morgan. " Wednesdey, June i 2. Ferguson against ..Kay; Wright .Hlodgett & Co. against Astoria (ompany. Thursday, June SO. Mushle against Good. Arthur from'lre Maio Fto Islands by two hinsiiton m an en liat, and was on binding. Jur.e J.'t, scizod, blindf ilded and thrown inio a piixon. inid the fortress as was announced at the time by the Associafed Piess.) Great Loss to Russia. Tokio, June 20. Further reports re ceive here show that the blow inflict ew by Cloneral )kn on the Kussiaus in the fighting at Tel'iHSti (Vanfangow) on Juno 15.' was more sevrro than at first was Wlieved. The. ntimWr of nusidniis Villod in this battle irib:tbly will ex ceed "'2000, ant their total lossj-s, includ ing prisoners, is estimated at 10,000. The Japanese losos are less than I'M'O, oi a4Kut ne-tenth, of the liussian total. Fp to June 17, flencral Oku had bur ied l."il KtiHsiin dead and he reports that many m vr le;id have lw'en found. Chinese who witnessed the fighting frm the Kimnn iid. report 'that the ftussian. removed many dead men from the trains with their wounded, and that they buried or cremated many corpses in the village-of llausungkou Leforo they retreate I. ; The numWr of prisoners and troph ies taken by the Japanese 4s increasing. (Jeneral Oku is not yet able to rejiort the total number of prisoners. E OF vNeckties, Gloves, Hose, Etc. L :77r