s JJ. - 1 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. VOL II. MARSHFIELD, OREGON, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1907. No. 80. UNDAY EDITIOM i; S. HE'S of r Mrs. Waymire Gives Her Ac count of "Tragedy" in Mayor's Office. CALLED HER "MY CHILD" Mayor Lnnc Gavo Woman Fatherly Advice Advised Her Not to Dwm Loud. O FAINTS AFTER SPEECH. Memphis, Oct. 5. John I. Vance, president of the Ohio River Improvement Association collapsed as a result of an at- tack of vertigo, shortly after finishing a speech before the Waterways Convention here to- day. He later Tevlved com- pletely. Governors Broward, of Florida, Plndall. of Arkansas. Burke, tjf North Dakota and Chamberlain, of Oregon, were speakers today. It was decided to hold the next convention in Chicago In 1898. . 11 BRANCH TO EfERUSHED Five Thousand Men Will Push Construction of Line Next Spring. Portland, Oro., Oct. 5. Perfectly self-possessed and speaking In even tones, Mrs. Rose Waymire took tho stand inthe municipal court at 2 o'clock and gave her version of tho affair in Mayor Lane's office a jveek ago tonight. She "took the stand, and Judge Cameron inquired of her attorneys whether they waived the to usual instructions. Attorney Fouts replied, "Yes" and then changed E his mind and declared that they waived nothing. The woman said her name was Mrs. Rose Waymire and that she wasask-Sd me lf x heard from home 20 years old. In reply to questions from Fouts she said she weighed 136 pounds and had never taken any athletic exercise. "I first met Mayor Lane in his private office at the city hall about two months ago," she said, "when I was In trouble and went to him to see whether I could recover my baby, which I had given my husband when I separated from him. Tho mayor called me 'my child,' and asked what he could do for me, and I explained the circumstances. He gave me a lot of good advice and said he would investigate my case, telling me ho would speak to Mrs. Trumbull and would inquire con cerning me at the Hazelwood, where I was then working. "While I was In his office another woman entered tho reception room, and tho mayor said he would see mo some other time, as he wanted to have a long talk with me. Then he changed his mind, and had me step into another room while ho talked to the strange woman. When he re turned he said the other woman was a bad character, and that she wanted to open a house and wanted him to Eire her. protection." This statement brought objections from tho prosecution, but the court ruled that tho woman might as well tell her story in her own way, and Mrs. Waymire continued. "Mayor Lane gave me some good advice. Ho told me not to dress loud. He said 'Girl, dress plain, for some women dress loud and attract attention. It is better to dress plain, and do so tho next time you call.' I was wearing rather conspicuous clothes that day, and I agreed to act on his suggestion the next time I called. "I stayed about 10 minutes, and the mayor asked me how I was feel ing, and If I made up my mind to get my baby to come back and see him again, but in the Hamilton building, where he had a private office, krfpt by him as a doctor. "At my next visit to him I called at the Hamilton building. Ho re ceived me and locked the door. He asked me If I were still working and if I still longed to get my baby. He said ho was glad to see me and bade me come any time. "In my fourth visit to him he In creased his friendliness toward me and called me 'girlie and 'my child.' He showed greater sympathy for me and told me to be sure to come back. "My next visit was three or four days later, and he gave me tho same advlco about the baby. "Ho still postponed the writing of the lettei he promised to give me. In the visit I told him my mother in tented to come west. He then be gan to tell mo of his own life, and his childhood history, showing me a picture of himself as a boy. He asked me if I did not think he was pretty well built for a man 20 years old. "Then He told me how good I was and that I deserved kind treatment. "Monday, ten days before the af fair In his office, I met him In tho ball as he "was about. to- talcs tho elevator. Ho said: 'Hello, girlie, Don't be in a hurry, honey; come back and sit down.' Then ho asked mo to come the next day. "I came Tuesday and when 1 was ready to go ho told me not to be in a hurry and insisted upon me sitting down on tho couch. That day he put his hand on my shoulder and tried to kiss me. I pulled away and ho caught my skirts. I told him ho had always given me good advlco and that I should be hit in the head with a brick for bothering him." Mrs. Waymire then corroborated the testimony of the mayor regard ing the letter of recommendation. "When I went to the mayor's of fice, in tho city hall, Thursday, he I FORTY MILES ARE CLEARED Dozen Steel Bridges to Be Construct ed Between Drain and Elk-ton. told him I had not, and asked him for tho letter he had promised to give me. He replied that It would bo ready for mo Saturday and asked mo to call at his office for it at that time. "When I suggested that probably he would not be In his office at that time he said: 'I wil'l this time.' "When I was in his office Thurs day afternoon a strange woman called on the mayor, and he asked mo to retire to his private room for a few minutes. When she left, he told me that the visitor was a bad woman and that she had come to him to solicit protection. "When I started to go he said: 'Don't hurry, honey,' and talked very affectionately. As I neared the door of the office he pulled mo back and sat mo down on the couch. I started to pcream and he laid his hand on my mouth, saying that If I made an outcry It would rouse all the occupants in tho building. But I 'managed to get free from him and screamed. This was followed by the breaking In of the glass door and the entrance of tho men outside." Mrs. Waymire testified that she is to bo married to Bell, tho Jeweler, Just as soon as sho able to secure a divorce from her present husband. 6. .-6oYlyJarepuKsso"anH'o-yir rf HAD SOCIAL TIME AT MRS. WHEELER'S B. r. P. U. Meet in West Marshfleld And Spend a Very Pleasant Evening. Regular business meeting of the B. Y. P. U. was held Friday even ing at the residence or Mrs. Fannie Wheeler, in West Marshfleld. There were about fifty young people pres ent, and the meeting was interesting from tho very beginning. Follow ing the regular routine of business was the election of officers for the ensuing year. They were Claude Stutsman, President; Charles Reh- feld, vice-president; Miss Clara Reh feld, secretary; Miss Mamie Gulov son, corresponding secretary, and F. M. Stewart, treasurer. Several new members were taken in and the final act of business, showing pro gressiveness of tho Union, was the decision to purchase an organ for their exclusive use. The remainder of the evening was spent In playing games which had been especially prepared by Mrs. Wheeler and her niece, Miss Franz. There were several guessing con tests, all of which were very enter taining and enjoyed by all. At the close of the contests the winners were announced and the prizes properly and rightfully awarded(?) At a late hour refreshments were served, after which the crowd dis persed, unanimous in tho opinion that Mrs. Wheeler and Miss Franz are royal entertainers. . (Oregon Journal.) A party of 10 teamsters shipped yesterday by the Hansen Employ ment agency completed an allotment of 100 men sent from Portland dur ing September for work on the Ore gon "Western railway, known aa the Drain-Coos Bay extension of tho Southern Pacific. Tunnel work and considerable haullns of materials and equipment to storage stations will be continued until spring, when the Southern Pacific will, it Is said, put on forces numbering 4,000 or 5,000 men and push construction of the line through to the coast. The route to be taken by the road after it leaves the Umpqua river for the south is not yet definitely known. Engineers are at work locating new lines, and the right of way men fol low them up and purchase ground as fast as permanent locations aro adopted. Bridge Proposition Abandoned. A continuous rlgnt of way from Drain to Reedsport has been pur chased, also large- fetation grounds at five-mile intervals, for local ter minal facilities. At these po!nt3 buildings have been moved off and the ground is being placed In readi ness for sidetracks. No right of way from Umpqua southward has been acquired. It is alleged that an attack madej by Coos Bay interests upon the pro position to bridge Coos Bay and put the line straight through North Bend and Marshfleld, has oeen accepted by the railroad people as an unfriendly challenge, and engineers have boon recalled. What will eventually be done with regard to tho Coos Bay route is not evident to anyone, out side of the railroad councils. The Coos Bay people aro disposed to protect their harbor from any possibility of being bottled up, and it is said they will make a strong effort to preserve the water front along the bay from uelng monopol ized by one railroad. About 10,000 tons of steel rails and track fixtures have been deliv ered at Drain and South Drain, where yards have been constructed and storage facilities provided. Every week the company is adding to these supplies, and there is every indication that .elaborate prepara tion? are to bo made during the win ter season for building the lino through to the coast next year. Grading work has been done at dlffsrent points for about 12 miles, and a bridge built across Elk creek. Steel bridges for the first 20 mlle3 of the road are arriving at Drain and being Btored until such time as tracklaying provides means of trans porting them to their locations. WILL HELP UNFORTUNATE New York, Out. B. A fund of several thousand dollars has been raised for Bertha Claiche, ' who is serving a two years term in the Bradford reforma- tory for killing Erall Gorgon, her former sweetheart, who she declared had enslaved her in this city. The money will be used in fixing up a little dressmak- ing establishment for tho young woman. She will be free in a few weeks. IOFFICERS II D Beyond the first 20-mllo section tho needed equipment and supplies are Doing brought from the mouth of the Umpqua. Tho railroad com pany has constructed a wharf at Gardiner for the landing of con struction material. A force of men under the direction of Engineer .Christy, with headquarters at Gardi- rner, is towing supplies up the Ump qua river to Scottsburg, where stor age warehouse and yard facilities ave been provided. Have Evidence Which Implies That Brown's Assassins Are in Baker City. ONE DRESSED A9 A WOMAN Bought Kltnonn at Local Store- Was Seen Evoing of Tragedy. ENGINEER A GRAFTER. Topeka, Oct. 5. Tho city to- day brought suit against James A. McCabe, former city ongl- neer, for $15,851, charging him with grafting In connection with sewer construction work. Shortly after McCabo's last ap- polntment as engineor, ho was accused of crooked work, sus- pended and finally dismissed. ST. PAUL MAN GIVES VIEWS OF COOS BAY J "I have been looking over Oregon," paid W. S. Mills, of St. Paul, Minne sota, at the Chamber of Commerce yesterday. "What I came down to Coos Bay for was to see whether I Baker City. Or.. Oct. 5. The au thorities seem narrowing down on various clues m me Brown murder case and believe that three men ar ranged tho plot which resulted in the death of Harvey K. Brown. They have discovered that three men visited a store tho day before tho murder and purchased a kimona, and it is learned from a reliablo source that a person wearing Buch a gar ment was seen near Brown's house shortly before tho bomb was ex ploded. The "woman" and tho two men who accompanied "her" at tracted tho attention ot several peo ple who aro coming forward with statements of the circumstance. The authorities seem to have good rea- had a right to believe that you would be tho second city in Oregon son to bellevo that arrestB aro to be In population and wealth," Some- made shortly, though owing to the body suggested that Coos Bay would various circumstances and necessity be the first city not the second. "That may be so," continued Mr. Mills. "But you must wait till tho Drain road conies in or until you &k up jour harbor a little more. Really, I think you may hope to bo ons of the great cities of tho Pacific for keeping their information secret, little can bo learned as to whom they suspect. Rumors regarding Brown's operations as a detective and his connection wlWi tho Adams trial at Wallace, Idaho, give rise to the opinion that someone more or coist, but you must put personal ef-jless remotely connected with that fort behind your hone. Your asseUslca30 have held a grudge against the liurbor. You mum work on your harbor, talk up your wonderful tlro-f ber and coal resources, and go; n little more diligent in your dal"i3S and fruit farms. "I have been astonished at your harbor. I had no. idea it was so good. ?.Iany people outsldo who haven't been here think it is a thin sheet of water spread over a mud flat, but your harbor is ab good a harbor, already, as that of many large east ern cities. What I can't understand is why you don't consolidate your cities and raise some money to dredge tho channel. I read an edi torial in the Times the other day about the way to do it. It looked like common sense. If you didn't have the bay here, you wouldn't have any city. You ought to think day and night how to make the harbor good. It's all right to ask Congress to help you and Congress will when you do what you can yourselves. You ought to block out a district containing fifty square miles with the bay in the center and make one city of it. Most large cities and many small ones, have fifty square miles of territory. Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, and all tho largo cities of the eoact have that. When you think how much you have to do and what you will gain by It, your bay cities should start right in and con solidate so as to get a port. Issue bonds and fix up pour channel. Pay the interest on the bonds and pay tho principal in twenty years. The city will become a great ono by using its credit and doing business on a broad basis. No city ever existed which There are about 12 bridges to be coul(1 improve Itself on a cash basis. Buy Mill Outfit. Sudden & Christianson of Prosper, havo given an order to A. B. Daly for a full outfit of mill machinery of tho most .modern and up-to-date pattern. built between Drain and Elkton. Work on the three tunnels, begun under the Loss company's contract, will bo completed by the railroad company if contracts are not re-let. Power plants are being installed at these tunnels, and when boring is resumed, It will bo carried on by the most modern and rapid methods. There are four tunnels, ranging from 800 to 3,500 feet in length. The en tire line from Drain to the coast will It is said, bo one of the most expen sive railroad construction Jobs un dertaken in Oregon, and will when completed be a great scenic line. Right of Way Cleared. The company has cleared and grubbed its right of way from Drain to tunnel No. 3, a distance of nearly 18 miles, and for 22 miles beyond that point the right of way is cleared of buildings and other obstructions in the way of construction of tho road. Whenever existing c,ounty. roads conflict with the right of. way, lands have been purchased and ar rangements made for changes in the county roads in advance of railroad building. , Get out of the village stage. Get in to the city degree. Coos Bay is not the place for a village. I can tell you I am satisfied that you will bo Oregon's second city Just as soon as you let the world know you as one city and as Coos Bay, and when you measure up to the demands of your great harbor. I won't bo surprised If you become her first city but that's sometime yet." May Bo Man Wanted. Bellingham, Oct. 5. A man giv ing tho name 'of Theodoro Larson surrendered himself to the police to day confessing ho murdered his wife in Seattle August 13, boxed up the corpse and left it at 572 Dock street. The man appears perfectly sano and was placed in a cell. His story has been reported to tho Seattlo police for investigation. Met with Mrs. Flanagan. The A. N. W. Club met with Mrs. Jack Flanagan on Thursday. Re freshments were served and the af ternoon was enjoyed by the ladies of tho club. I" Brown. Statement of Harvey K. Brown at St. Elizabeths hospital In Bnker City, Baker county, Oregon, mado Octo ber 1, 1907, at the hour of 11 o'clock a. m. of said day. Examination con ducted by Leroy L&max, district attorney of the Judicial district of tho county ot Bakor in tho state of Oregon. Q. Did you see anybody that you think might have dono this? A. There wns a fellow hero that appeared to bo following mo. Q. How long has he been hero? A. I havo seen nim for tlrts last few days. I passed him once and spoko and he passed on and did not speak, and I met him in front of Romigs there and I spoke to him and ho never answered at all, but went right on. Q. When was It that you Baw him, was that yesterday or when? A. That was last night about 7:80. I went up ncross there to McCulloch's office to talk to Mac for a while. Q. Ho was going down toward your house then? A. Going that way. Q. You met him going up town? A. I met him as I was going up town and then I met him again up town. He is a man that I would know lf I saw him, but that la all. Q. What connection has this with tho Orchard business? A. I think that is what it is. I picked up Orchard and thoso peoplo aro feeling angry about it Tho central peoplo aro commencing to find it out. Q. Did you ever get any threat ening letters from anyone? A. Yes, but that was in connec tion with that gambling business. Q. Never got any letters about tho Orchard business? A. I never got many threatening letters, only about three and a couplo on a horsestealing case. I never got any out of the other, but I have heard them all talk. Q. How about that Idaho timber business up there, was thoro any thing of that kind or havo you had anonymous letters from thero? Q. Whereabouts? A. Tho Senator Borah matter. A. Nothing; I was not connected with that In any way. Of course they havo been feeling radical, theso Orchard peoplo. I can reallzo that this 1b nothing but tho Orchard busincBS, because I havo had follows say right out that I did wrong in having arrested him, and now it is worse alnco they navo arrested Borah and brought Stounenberg'B name In. Q. You know Orchard? ' A. Yes, Blr. Q. How long havo you,,boon, ac quainted with him? A. Five or six ycar3. Q. You didn't &eo anyone at tho time this bomb wont off? A. Not a soul. Q. Nor hear anyone? A. No, sir. Q. As you went home, did you go along the street by Romlg's placo when you came home last night? A. I came up a littlo different than I usually do. I came up by, "Wisdom's drug store and then on down to Third and then on down by Castle'B and over across In front of Romig's house, and then on homo different than I ordinarily go. I usually go down Fourth street. At tho tlmo I didn't think about this fellow 'when I was going home. I Just happened to go that way. Of course I have heard somd things lately in regard to this. It has been reported, as you know well. I havo had a chance to close the gambling up here. I mean tho state Is inter ested. You know it is In tho rest of tho state Many talked to me about this thing, but I don't think thoro was anybody connected with it (proobabiy the gamblers) who would do anything. Still, there aro Individuals that aro pretty radical and cranky. Q. That one porson, that you saw down there Is the only ono that you havo any suspicions of? A. Yes. WILL OPEN ORIGINAL PLACE IN MARSHFIELD Marshfleld Is to have an entirely original business establishment, so far.as this country is concerned. It will bo unllko anything over opened In this city or in Oregon, for that matter. Mr. A. C. Richards, who lately arrived on tho bay from Ecua dor, where ho had spent six years, has rented tho rooms In tho second story of tho Marsdon block, former ly occupied by Major Kinney's real estate offices. Ho will havo a largo reading room, billiard and pool room, thrco bed rooms, a cafe, and card room. Everything will bo furnished In tho latest and most modern manner, as Mr. Richards has ordered furniture from tho new fac tory at North Bend nnd has given word to havo It of the very best make. Besides this, ho has pur chased a quantity of tho flno furni ture which mado the La Bon Vivant restaurant such an attractive placo. Mr. Richards will havo hl3 establish mont in order to open within two or three weeks, nnd it will bo a novelty to Oregonians. Tho proprietor has traveled exten sively and mostly in tho republics to the southward. He has spent a great part ot his llfo in Mexico, Panama, Guatemala, and In theso trnvcls has absorbed many of tho customs of tho polite races which peoplo tho countries of Central and South America. With theso customs in mind, the Mecca, which will bo the official name of Mr. Richards' Bo hemian resort, will bo a moderation of tho various customs and usages found in tho Latin republics. Mr. Richards speaks tho Spanish lun guago fluently, slnco his long ac quaintance with tho descendant races has thrown him in associations which required an understanding of tho language. During his South American stay, ho was engaged with tho Guyaqirll & Quito railway as passenger and freight agent, but tlio llfo palled on him and ho camo north for a chango at tho solicitation of his friend, Mr. L. M. Supleo of this city. Postponement. Owing to mlsconnection nnd not obtaining tho films the Crystal Theatre will not opon until Monday, Oct. jf, at 7:30 p. m., when the man agement will see that tho very beat that can bo obtained in this line will bo given to the peoplo of Uarshflold at the popular prce,of 0 ivgntR to all, L.aajes- coats at rrenuss & cofl, St r -Pffnmnlraraf' MJL.JW3ariAHMJ !