FRIENDS SEND FLOWERS TOjOF
FICE OF BOISE NEWSPAPER
MEN ON RELEASE.
Boise, Jan. fI.-R. S. Sheridan and
C. O. Broxon, publisher and editor of
the Capital News, and A. R. Cruzen
were given an ovation when they
walked from jail after having served
10-day sentences for contempt of
court. When the two former reached
the office of, their newspaper.
which was published the message from
Colonel Roosevelt 'that was held i,
contempt by the Idaho supreme court,
they found floral offerings sent by
prominent persons from all over the
country.
As a result of the movement start
ed by State Senator Dunning to col
,lect money by penny contributions to
pay 'the $500 fines assessed by the
court, nearly half of the amount had
been received. Contributions have
come from every state in the Union.
Among the contributions 'was $10
from Henry F. McGinn, federal judge
of Oregon, "with the wish that
heaven's choicest blessings 'may be and
abide with them and their's forever
more."
GUGENHEIMM WINS
WIFE'S SUIT
JUDGE IN CHICAGO DISMISSES5
PROCEEDINGS TO HAVE DI
VORCE ANNULLED.
Chicago, Jan. 11.--The application
of Mrs. Grace Brown Guggenheim to
have her divorce from William Gug
genheim annulled was dismissed by
Judge Heard here today for want of
equity.
Mrs. Guggenheim based her applica
tion on the allegation that when she
obtained her decree she swore erron
eously that she was a resident of
Illinois.
The then Grace Brown married the
millionaire mining and smelting man
in 1900 and the decree of divorce was
entered the next year with alimony
in the lump sum of $150,000.
Since the divorce bioth parties to the
suit have remarried.
According to Jacob Newman of
coinse or ,Wrillia a Guggenheim, Mrs.
duggeiheirris first hu' ban'd was
Charles Herbert of Washington, D. C.)
A divorce separated them. Her mar
riage with Guggenheim came next, but
Mr. Newman states they lived to
gether only three days. After this
divorce Mrs. Guggenheim married
Jules Roger Wahl, a Frenchman resi
dent in New York.
"They lived together for four years,"
related Mr. Newman, "when Wahl re
turned to France. Whether the re
port is true that Wahl's parents had
his marriage annulled in France I do
not know."
Guggenheim married Miss Amy
Steinberger, by whom he has a son,
William, Jr.
It was after Mrs. Guggenheim had
married Wahl that she filed suit in
New York state for divorce from Gug
genheim, claiming that the Illinois
divorce was illegal. The case went to
the supreme court of that state, where
her bill was dismissed. In 1909 she
filed another suit to set aside the
original Illinois divorce, but Judge
Honore denied her right to file her
petition after the lapse of eight years.
She sent this case to the appellate
court, where it is still pending.
In the present suit Mrs. Grace
Guggenheim claimed that Guggenheim
knew she was not a resident of Illinois
when the divorce was obtained. Mrs.
Guggenheim, or Waj4l, claims that
she does not want money but wishes
to ascertain beyond doubt whether the
divorce .was legal.
Judge Heard, in giving the decision,
criticized the divorce laws of Illinois
and urged that steps be taken to
change them. He declared that both
Mr. and Mrs, Guggenheim pnocured
the divorce of 1910 by fraud. He also
held that if fraud were practiced in
securing the divorce, Mrs. Guggen
heim *as a party to it.
This factor weighed largely with
the court in his decision against the
the complaint, who was not in court
when the decision was rendered.
REAL ESTATE MAN
SUFFERS INJURY
FRANK M. PEARSON'S AUTOMO
BILE SKIDS OVER AN
EMBANKMENT..
Frank M. Pearson had a bad acci
dent yesterday. forenoon about 10:30
o'clock. He was driving his car up
the grade near Clinton, with the
wheels blocked and chains on to pre
vent their slipping. In spite of this
precaution the car skidded on the idy
road and went over the grade about
40 feet below. When Mr. Pearson saw
that the car was 'surely going over,
he jumped and landed ahead of it.
He suffered a wrenched knee and a
splained back, but was able to get
to a farm house near by. He was
taken care of there and assisted to
Missoula. The automobile remained
end up over the bank and it will be
brought in this morning. Mr. Pearson
will be laid up for a few days, but he
is thankful to get offt o slUy.
Ir 1d a God Time
1 . "
Mrs. Clara Baldwin Stocker (on left) and her daughter on Mrs. Stocker's
$40,000 private car.
Arcadia, Cal., Jan. 11.-(Special.)
Mrs. (Clara Baldwin Stocker, one of
the two heirs of the 11ias Jackson
(Lucky) Baldwin estate, who has al
ready received approximately $1,500,
000 from the estate and who is soon to
get -half of the remaining $24,000,000
or so, arrived here from Chicago a
few days ago in her specially built
private car, bringing the first instal
ment of her $1,000,000, purchases of
rare gems, precious wares and other
things, in accordance with her ex
pressed declaration to "spend a mil
lion or two in order to have a really
good time."
Mrs. Stocker, radiant over her re
turn to her beautiful home at Ar
cadia and Joyous over possession of
her veritable princess' fortune that
surrounded her, expressed her policy
with promptness and decision :
"I am going to have the very best
sort of a good time," she declared as
she stood upon the observation plat
fonm of her car and viewed the little
throng of people who ,welcomed her,
"for what is money for if it is not to
give one access to real enjoyment of
life? I have already started to have
my good time. I'm having it and I'm
going to have still more of it. I'm
going to-have. all the good-time-that
money will buy me. Iavish in my
purchases? Of course. But lavish as
it seems, I'm going to be, still more
so, for I'm going to have a really good
time."
N NO SONDERCLASS
YACHT IN SIGHT
GERMANS PROTEST AGAINST
LOW "SLARY LIMIT". OF THIS
CLASS OF BOAT.
Berlin, Jan. 11.-There is a likelihood
that the next summer's international
regatta will furnish no sonderclass op
ponents for the Americans.
At present not one sonderclass
yacht is being built by any of Ger
many's greatest yacht constructors,
and none will be unless conditions
alter. The German yachtsmen have
long protested that the existing price
limit for sonderclass racers-$1,300-
was too low to enable them to com
pete with the higher priced American
yachts, and the builders also demand
ed that the limit be raised. A few
weeks ago the price-limit was in
creased with the consent of the Em
peror to $1,400, but the builders are
still dissatisfied with this figure. They
demand a limit of $1,625.
Whether the emperor, to whose in
itiative and encouragement seonder
class racing in Germany owes its de
velopment, will consent to the new
price-limit is doubtful. If he does
not, there will probably be no Ger
man competitors with the American
yachts.
Germany's practically applied sci
ence is about to rescue another waste
product and make it useful.
Professor Reinke, of the Brunswick
Technical high school, has discovered
a method of converting into cellulose
the waste of the asparagus plant. A
good quality of paper is made from
cellulose, and it has many other yal
aable industrial uses.
TOO AMBITIOUS.
San Francisco, .Jan. 11.-Wallace I.
Poland, Pacific coast sales manager
of the International Harvester com
pany, was sentenced to seven years in
San Quentin penitentiary today ,for
peculation aggregating $84.000. His
wife collapsed. Poland had been a
trusted employe for seven years. He
had no bad habits and his thefts were
prompted solely by a desire to estab
lish himself independently in business.
He speculated in moving-picture ven
tures and lost.
WHALES RAM TUG.
Olympia, Wash., Jan. 11.-Three new
tug Collis was almost torn from her
mooring here'last night when she was
rammed by l vpr monster whales in
pursuit of a -dtb6f Of porpoises. 'the
whales were the largest seen in this
locality.
Included in the $1,000,000 expendi
tures just made by Mrs. Stocker are
a $200,000 steam yacht, diamonds ag
gregating in value $250,000, a ward
robe whose'cost is estimated at $100,
000, the famous Colonel Northam res
idence on the Foothill boulevard, $60,
000; a splendid residence on the Ven
ice ocean front, $30,000; private Pull
man car, $40,000; silverware and oth
er precious metals, $20,000; automo
biles, $20,000; and mnany other articles
purchased in the east.
"I believe I just about bought Tif
fany out," Mrs. Stocker declared,
laughing, in discussing her gems.
'I just love diamonds," she added,
"and you certainly ought to see my
collection. I have diamonds and dia
monds and diamonds. I have them in
all sorts of settings-necklaces, sun
bursts, pendants, bracelets, rings-oh,
I cannot enuimerate the list. There is
at least $250,000 worth of them in the
collection. I just bought and bought
until I gbought all that pleased me.
Then I quit-for the time being.
"But my yacht!" cried ,the happy
woman, pointing to a photograph of
the craft. "She is a beauty. She cost
me $200,000. She's one of the most
beautiful things of her size afloat.
"And," sweeping her hand around
her private car, "isn't 'this just the
loveliest car? I had it especially
built by the Pullman company. It
cost $40,000 and was built just as I
wanted it."
MISLEADING ADVICE
DENOUNCED
REPRESENTATIVE SIMS WOULD
HANG MEN WHO ADVISE PRES
IDENT TO .DO WRONG.
Washington, Jan. ll1.-"When men
privately, under the guise of friend
ship, mislead the king or president, in
order to obtain an end other than pub
lic welfare, they ought to hang," Rep
resentative Sims of Tennessee de
clared in the house today, upon the
conclusion of the reading of an edi
torial regarding the cabinet to be se
lected by President-elect Wilson.
Mr. Sims obtained the floor during
the consideration of the postoffice
appropriation bill and sent to the desk
an editorial lauding the .president
elect for the stand taken in the mat
ter.
"Under the English law, they did
not punish the king for any wrong,
but they punished his advisers," Rep
resentative Sims added. He said
when he read this in his boyhood
days he thought it a great outrage,
but since had concluded it was wise.
Mr. Sims continued:
"Those who get next to the king
and next to the president, who are en
trusted with his confidence, and who,
instead of telling him the plain truth
as they see it, color it so that he does
not see the facts, but views them
through colored glasses and there
fore does wrong through misinforma
tion. I am in favor of hanging the
advisers instead of punishing the
president.
"In the last 100 years good pres
idents have done that which they
would not have done had they known
the facts. When a man is appointed
to a cabinet office, he ought to be a
man of ability, ought to forget him
self, forget his friends and enmles,
and tell the president the plain truth."
Representative Sims declared the
country had confidence in Vovernor
Wilson's judgment to do the right
thing. During his dissertation on the
cabinet, Representative Sims was
asked by Representative Cannon if
he had in mind any one who would
fll the bill. Mr. Sims replied in the
negative. *
WOMEN PLEAD GUILTY.
Spokane, Jan. 11.-Two midwives,
Dr. Mary Swartz and Dr. Veronica
Jacklewicz. appeared in federal court
late today and on pleas of being guilty
Df having used the mails in the sales
of illicit drugs, were fined $50 and
coats.
There are more than 40,000 known
species o= rues.
[FLLER
HO,.ISE CMITT.EE SENDS PHY
SICi/I4 No SEE IF MAGNATE
. i WiftIOUSLY ILL.
Musi l t Jan. 11.-Dr. Charles
w.. 4'.i.: of Washington, repre
senting the Committee of the house of i
repreleltttti5es investigating the so
cailed '"MtrldY trust," arrived here to
day to 'lnettine William Rockefeller,
to d~eteO 1e ' whether his physical
co"iditio tlk isuch as to prevent him
froit' tetlitle yg before the committee.
Mr1` Rodkefeller is expected to ar
rive here tomorrow on the steamer
MI&ami from Nassau, New Providence,
wlei'e- he hhas been spending a few
days.
The Miami was due to arrive today,
but was delayed by grounding on the
a r of .tiscayne bar Thursday.
Ill addition to Dr. Richardson, Percy
A..r'ockefeller, a san of of William
Rockefeller, and Dr. Walter F. Chap
pelle, Mr. Rookefeller's physician, also i
arrived here today from New York.
Dr. Chappelle said he would be pres
ent at the proposed examination of
:Mr. RockefeUer by Dr. lRichardson.
Statements previously made by Dr.
Chappelle have it that Mr. Rockefeller
is suffering from an affection of the
throat, which makes extended speak
ing impossible.
AN EXPENSIVE CLOCK
AS MEMORIAL
TIMEPIEGE COSTING THOUSANDS
PLACED IN VILLAGE CHURCH
IN SWITZERLAND.
Geneva, Switzerland, Jan. 11.--A
clock costing $4,100---a value out of
all proportion with its surroundings
has been placed in the steeple of the
village church at ltremgarten, in the
canton of .Argovie.
The mayor, the elders, and every
other man, woman and child in the
place lent the dignity of their presence
to the installation.
The time..piece was designed as a
nmeinorial for a Itrlllgmart(ener whom
nearly everyone hadl forgotten, but its
striking will be uan hourly reminder of
the wifely devotion if \Vidow Honegger
who toiled for tmore than half a ccn
tury to make possible the testimonial.
The widow is:76i years of age. Hier
husband died. when she was 24 and a
village beauty, le1aving her penniless.
In all the yearsa'inee she has worked
as a -household servant or in the fields,'
hoarding her. earnings. 11cr labor.
bent figure, excessive self-denial, and
"miserly" habits made her an object
of ridicule among the thoughtless, butt
locked in her breast was the secrer
ambition only revealed to her aston
ished neighbors when the money for
its fulfillment was in hand.
The other day Widow Honegger,
noW about the most popular citizen of
Bremgatten, witnessed the clock start
ed on its tick-tock journey. Then
she dried her eyes and returned to
the fields.
The Prince of Liechtenstein, the
head of the independent state ot
Liechtenstein, wedged In between
Real Female Smokers
Al k
Jil
FEMALE8 OF FILIPINO FAMILY ENJOY'ING A SMOKE.
Those American society women who
boast of their ability to smoke fifty
and sixty cigarettes a day and to "get
away with it," have. nothing on some
of the female smokers of the Philip
pine Islands. The accompanying pho
tograph shows a whole family of fe
male smokers puffing away like loco
motives on their immense cigars.
Their American ejaters who take to
the. weed could hlrdly do more than
this.
The expression on the faces in the
picture does not speak bighly for the
pleasure derived fron; "my lady nic
otin." In fact, the .oatpbers of this
family look rathew- li 00tti witt the
Always Here Is a
Missoula's
Men's Store For Every Mati to Save o `:
Clothingi
Come Monday, Men
When you can take your time. Go
through our clothing fixtures and pick
out any
Benjamin Suit
or Overcoat
Selling regularly for $25.00, $27.50,
$30.00, $32.50 and $37.50, and take it
away for
U$ 75
The better class
men of Mis
soula buy their
clothing here.
Why not you?
(No blues or blacks included)
For years the This is the best clothing offer
clothes we sell in town; it is the best clothing
have been rec- (No other make quite com
ognized as the pares with Benjamin's), and it
standard, and is positively the best price, as a
therefore sell fair comparison will easily
the most read- convince you.
ily.
So Come Monday
Get the habit 41R"p Io(, p
men! Trade at M r oyff-,,,- ... :-,'.,,,
Donohue's ! Benjantin Clothes
Switzerland and Austria, is developing
a large revenue from the sale of
Christmas trees.
He sold $5,000 worth abroad for
Christmas, chiefly in Vienna, Berlin,
Munich and in Swiss cities, and sent
some large consignments to England.
The Prince has made4 special Study
of forestry and takeg a personal In.
terest in this part of the sovereign do
Ima ins. The fir trccs are lanited each
great cubes of tobacco stuck into their
mouths, and it Is hard to reconcile
one's self to the sight of little chil
dren, scarcely out of the toddling age,
puffing away at cigars which would
put a veteran smoker "down and out."
Since Uncle Sam took the. Philip
pine islands under his wing, the civ
ilizing influence that has followed In
the wake of the Stars and Stripes has
been the means of largely abolishing
the use of tobacco by women and chil
dren. The sight pictured in the photo
graph was Common a few years ago,
but is now becoming a rarity, so
rapidly have the Filipinos assimilated
Amerilca cU4toml,
season In great numbers about two
yards apart in open spaces and along
the roads. Entire fields of poor land
are sometimes planted with trees
about 1,000 to the acre. They take
from 8 to 12 years to reach sizes sult
able for Christmas use. They sell at
from 10 to 15 cents anplce.
The expense of cultlv:tltro is almost
nothing. The plants are strong and
require no attention. The prince be
gan this undertoaiing in 1900. It is
said that the profite from land of lit
tie use for other urpoases, taking 10
years as the period necessary to grow
a tree, are from $10 to $15 an acre per
year, averaging through the entire pe
rtiod.
BIG SHIPPING TRIST
'TO BE PROBED
J. P. MORGAN WILL BE SUB
POENAED TO TESTIFY BEFORE
HOUSE COMMITTEE.
\Washilngtonl, J;an. 11. An vIll\'..tgnl
tion of the Interntllation l I M rcn nt ilti
Marlno co'l palll ny, the $12)0,000,000
American cororrition, (ontrolling
numerous Amnlrlcan atnd foreign conl
ianies, with J. Pierpont Morgan as
the chief witness, Is contemplate.d by
tihe hiouse collunllitte- on tnertchlnt
Iuri' e In (conne t(tlon with its heir
irg rof thei s-cnlilidl slhippingi trust.
Mr. Morgan is said to have orginizei
this e, terpany mil to control Its steoic.
('lhair'llll AtIlexintdelr o1 the 'irnm itIteelIii'
annltunced ltodly thInI Mr. Morgan
I ri tibly would he sutpooetnaed iiinie
liatly llupon his return from l rll rtllolop
I'. . S. Franklln, vice president of
Ith White Star line, one of the tin
lsortanllt companlir e c-nnected with the
Internatolnal MoPrcnntile Marine, al
r'otily has been subpoenaed and prol.
ably will be examined In the near fu.
ture.
The Internatlinal Mercantile Marine
owns the entire c(aplital stock of the
(lcean lc Stea.ll Navigation comllpany
(the White Star line), the Interns.
tlonal Navigation company (the
American and Red Star lines), the
Mississippi and Domlntoinn Steamship
companies and the British & North
Atlantic Steam Navigation company,
and owns the controlling Interest in
Frederick Leyland & Co., with the
shipping business of the Ismay, Imrlt
company and Richard Mills & Co. The
combined salllngs of the various con.
paries cover 45 services, New York,
Philadelphia, Baltimore, New Orleans,
Galveston, Montreal and Portland to
Liverpool, Plymouth, Southampton,
London, Havre, Cherbourg, Bremen
and Antwerp. The corporation also
operates various lines in the distinct
ly foreign lervIg9,
PERFUMED BURGLAR
GETS AWAY
YOUNG CRIMINAL EFFECTS IN
CENIOUS ESCAPE FROM SAN
QUENTIN PRISON.
San Quenttin, ('ial., Jan. I1.--When
Ilerbert I'. ltepsold, known as "The
perfumed Ilrglar," escaped from San
Quentin penitentiary last night the big
prinnon was in total darkness. As the
molment caine for the daring young
convict to take his chance of escape,
he removed a plug from an electric
connection and instantly every light
In the Institution went out. In the
black night Repslld ran from the of
flce of Warden John 1;. Hoy'le, where
he had been on dutiy as ai trusty, and
disiiappeared. NoI triei, iof him had
teen found this morning.
RepIildltl left the prian wteailng Ie
side his iiiiieriarnients and shoes
only the triouser and vest of til suilt
of strllpes. In tile hills where lie is
holieved it tie hiding, the snow lies on
the grloundl and all dtluring the night
a benumbing raw wind swept over the
knolls and down the canyons.
Repsold's father, a prosplerous wine
merchant residing in Oakland, died
since the boy was sent to prison,
leaving his son a bequest of $50,000.
The arrest of young Repsold followed
a series of crimes in Sacramento and
bllurglaries in Oakland on the ine of
whichl hel struck down Miss ('onstant
Meers. in her home and severely in
Jiired her. Iln eai h honie rolbbled by
Rep.lild thlere remained, the strong
aroma. of violet pierfume hfter his de
parturn, ant this, comblined with the
fact that the burglar's tools found
upon him when he was caughi t were
all perfumed, earned him the sobriquet
of the "perfumed burglar." At the
time of his arrest Repsold was said to
be engaged to two girls, each of good
family.
Repsald was tried and colnvclted of
burglary In Sacramento In February.
1911, and sentenced to 15 years in San
Quetin.
His Stomach Troubles Over.
Mr. Dyspeptic, would you not like to
feel that your stomach troubles wera
over, that you could eat any kind of
rood you desir-d without injury? That
nlay seem so unlikely to ylou that you do
not eve\' hope for an ending of your
troubl., but permit us to assure you
that it Is not altogether impossible. If
others can be cured permanently, and
thousands have been, why not you"
John R. Barker. of Battle Creek. Mich..
is one of them. He says, "I was
troubled with heartburn, indigestion,
and liver complaint until I used Chamn
berlain's Tablets, then mY trouble was
over." Sol4 by ll 4ru lisra,-QMV,s