Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 2, 1907)
THE OREGON MIS YOL. XXIV. jflR OFtUE WEEK In a Condcnscdl Fra fcr ter Busy Iszizt aAFPEKIKGS OF TWO CCTTEvENn A R.tum of tho Leeg Important but Nut Lm Interesting Ivwnte of the Part Wee. A revolt a few tnllea from San tiago, Cuba, waa quickly put down. Two Juror nay they believe Hay wood It guilty but y lei Jed to tb nia- Jorlty. ' - ; ; . : ; Governor Folk baa removed K annua t'Hy police comtulsaloner to ll.Hi grafting. dr.-nt Hrltaln and Germany bar agreed on an International prise rourt at Tha Hague. Heavy la confident of convicting CIbm on the awona trial and win not drH'itd upon Zlmnmr at all. Imontratton ar being bold In many pini-e In Haywood's bonor aud alnsiiy ibnm la talk of running hi in for proaldont. . A rraiy man wrrk4 Great Nurtboru paMngr train noar llar. Munt . tH-auM tha Almighty fold itlm to do it. Oiu man waa killed and -rl Injured. Tb It ii) a I Inanraaoa Company ha aarl the aaaota of tb Uerntan In- mftirH Company front lawyara for Han Krantino people by buying the di'tumt company. , Ho plan to dlnUaPd tba Coreaa army. ', Kallrnad bar aurrnderd to Kurtb Carullna la tba rata figbt. Mn live were toat on burning .rtii.-r on Cayuga lake. Now York. Thfre I a great famlna of teacb era due lo tba atrlka agaloat atate lamluatlon. A Chicago mob trlod to kill tb auaitant t a girl but wera provenied by the pollre. ru nadir I'ettua, of Alabama I dal ll had recently eolabrated hi "COi birthday. The farmer truat, with bttadquar-l-r at Indlanapoll. baa decided on tl t& wheal for HOT. Washington lumbermen want ex Kraator Hpooner la figbt tba pro puiH'd ral of freight on lumber pro- durl. VVnetunla baa rafuaod Boot' pro PmU fur eeitlng tba trouble lt Int and rvlatlona may ba eerd by the failed Dtatea. . A acoiit crulaer ba juat been latimhod at Qulncy. btaaa. It la pmli-d to prova tba faatrat boat In the American nary. Striking coal minora la Mlnnvaota ar to return to work. Rait lka meaaecger boya bar wn ibnir atrlka for altaraata Bun da r off. Mayor Taylor, of Ran Itanclaeo, ht appoluted ft naw board of aup ertUsra. Valuable blatorlcal paper b bwn atolcn from tbelr arcblvea la llaiana, Thn gTirnmot aaya tbora I no dansor of a coal famlna tbl winter Ilk thut of laat. North Carolina ticket agonta bare been liidktod for violating tba atata railroad rata law. The approaching election In tba l'hili.piuea la aroualng but Itttla la-ti-reat among lha natlrea. , New York I terrified by tba con llnti..,! aaaulta on young glrla wblcb th pollco aeem unable to atop. A Chicago woman haa been ar , reaird who haa for yaara baen aecur Ing bnblua from ao sailed "boapltala" ad thi'n aolllng them around town. WI.Ho tha cx'ar waa rerlewlng troop near tba palace ona regiment bla guard mutinied and rafuaed to tk part In manouvera unlaw a cer tain comniandnr waa romorad. Halvador haa alitl Mailoo toact aa mediator with Mcaragna. W. J. Jitjran ha aaved a woman from Ulng run over by an auto. Hvat reconl tbrooghout the MUI.il aUi have broken all for mar record J"' Uila auininer. e m ('..llnlmrgh, a tubnrb of Ottawa, '"I., haa been awept by fir. Katl "to. l(W, 1300,000. - Th fmne In Ht Ellaalieth illftrlct, Jamaina, la growing woia. Tn thou nl pooplo ara Mid to ba ilarvlng. Tl.fl efTorta of tha Wahaah railioad to "tbllah S cent paaaengor rato all throiitfh lha Kaat baa been blocked by "'oi roada. .... Jaii ha oompleteJ a treaty taking "'1 control ol tkiraa and Uia minUtcr ' foreign aflalrt aaya China may ahar ama fate. l. H. Itogera, head of tha PUndard ""i baa bean atruck down by heat and "i oiKitor ,v ortlnml oomplata roat m tin only hop of recovery. Tliree Indian glrli ar gtiardlng the Jtmvca of tholr anocator in Kanaai ny, Kan. Tha government ha or "efiHl Uie bodlM removed and the land BOl.l, Atimer haa Jnat arrived at Van "Mr, B. o., with 1,177 Japaneae rin Honolulu. .Tha Canadian PaclOo 'Hr.at.1 wanla 8,000 ooolla lor con "'"'ctlon work. The- Cores n emperor ha confirmed 'o h,port that ha haa abdicated. BAIC FOR MOYER, l-re.ldanl of W.,i,rn Federation Mlnre Out of Jill. BoIm, Idaho, July 80 Charles f, Moyer, president of th Weatern Kud ration of Miner. and co-defendant with William II. Haywood, acquitted of I ho inurdur of ex-Oovernor Bloun enlium. J8 000 yesterday by Judgo trim., ino attorney, for the federa lion expected to have (h bond ready for filing laat um, ut ,h irrMw. meMa had not been wholly torn ploted at a lut hur and Mayor re signed himself lo another nliciit in Jail. He will probably be released today and will leave within 24 houra for Ida home in Denver. , No aiipllrailon for ball wai mad1 n the caae of George A. Pelllbone, the third of the alleged conspirator, but a. motion wua made for speedy i trial and hla caae waa ordered set down for Tuesday, October 1. j Conael Intimated that they might apply for bnnda for IMtlbone later, but It la not believed that tbe stnt.-'a attorneys win consent. It hna boon generally slated that there la more Inerlinlnatlng evidence agalnat Petti boua than any of tha others, while ii naa peen generally conceded that the caae agalnat Mayer la tha weak rmt of lha three. The defense In tbe Haywood eaao admitted that there were a number of thlnga for I'ettl tHina to eaplaln aa to hla aaanclatlon with Harry Orchard and tha ending of money to him. but they aald !i wuum uo i una enough to deal wlih tneae mnttera when Pnttlbou lilm self waa placed on trial. HAWSE BECOMES INSANE. Brain Suddenly Unhinged by Storm f Critlclam. Han Franrlaro, July 30. The brain of Kobrrt llawae, third odlccr of tha loat ateamer Columbia, ue cumbd laat night to tba abuec, rldt- culo and contempt which haa been hapd uton him ever alnce tha In vnallgatlon of the dlaaater baa been In progreaa. Holding the newapaper artlrlc containing crltlrlam of bl action aubaeuenl lo th craah In hla band, a bralu fiber enepped and ba all mad. The Ignominy lumped upon him waa mora than he could bear. After brooding for aevrral daya orer the charge whlrb bad been made agalnat him. bl Intellect loat that keen ad- luatmrnt that nature provide be tween thought and act, and bl mind reeled off Into Insanity. llawae bad epent tba evening at hi room. !M Fair Oak afreet. Sec ond Officer Kit-hard Agerup waa with him. llawae bad apent an hour or more reading the ccnaure which had been printed agalnat blm. With a cry like a wild animal ba clenched the ellpplnga In hla hand and leaped to bl feet, Agerup looked at blm and llawae looked at bl friend, but did not aee him. Hla eye were glaird. Th polled were called and uawae waa taken lo tha distention ward at the Central (emergency lloaplval. HOWL IN PAIN. Ooverrmant Wound Railroad rarely In Peckatbook. Chlrago, July SO. Wcatern rail- roada are near an open break with tha PoatonVe Department over the tranaportatlon of mall, owing to a nunlber of recent order. Tha latcat catiae of grievance la the Imposition of heavy flnea on nearly all the road for dolny In delivering the malla. To conalder the altuatlon railroad men hold an important conference today. Ono of them declared that the fine levied by tba gorernment agnliiat bl road In ono quarter amounted to 140.000. A almllnr condition on other rond wa re ported. Tho Hnoa wero aaaeaaod un der a new rule which went Into ef fect In July. 10. The roada are amaaod to find tnat they are in danger of loalng 16 por cent of their mall pay unl.wa they r vlan achednlea and place tholr mall train upon running tlmo which they know they can maintain In all c aona and In all kind of weather. Tho now rulo. tho road any. I oppreaalvo and tinjuat. It provide that if tho malla ar late ten tlmca on any route during a porlod of 90 day, the road ahnll be aaaeaaod 15 Pr cent of tno pay o - qunrlor, . Wrack Due to Ownera. Ran Kranclaco, July 30. Tho re aponalbllliy of Ihe companion whlidi by Iron-clad achodulea. compel their nfaatari of ah.pa to go at a apaad tholr own conaoloncen tell them la unaafo. waa the feature of the Co liimbla wreck toatlmony, taken bo f ro Captain llormlnghnm yeatorduy. Hecond Oincer Agerup'. testimony eatubllMhed morn clearly than had a fttll apd along a dnngorou. eonat in f oggy went her In a courae navi gated by many veae. Alfaro Kllla Off Enml. .....-... i iviwidor. juiy aw. " ooun manini ..... noi, dlera linpiic tlcnl plot nguinai mo. the rtennbllC ClonorHI Alfnro, to death by .hooting Wj w mon were aieeu ad In tl la . city t n Kiirht of the the remainder prop 1 :,her. have been , .en.encod to penal .ervituao wr -r- --.. SalownaplrncrarQulto. Japan OarrUon In Core. fl.,ouI July 30. All the relnforce manu of "he Twelfth Hrlgdo have b ndod The regnrrLonlng of Core Vjin. troop., according to the compietea uy -- ST. UELENB, .(HAYWOOD GOES FREE Jury Deliberated 21 Hours, With Two lor Conviction. PRISONER QUIETLY DISCHARGED Shake Hand With Ceunael, Thank Each Juror, and Oo to 8 HI Mother. Bolae, July 2g.lnto tb bright aunanino or a beautiful Sunday morn lug, Into the atlllnea of a city drowy with tha laxy alumbor of a aummer nuiioay, William u. Haywood, the defundunt In one of the moat noted trlala Involving conaplracy and mur- uer mai me country haa ever known, walked yeaterdny a free man. ted of the murder of Kormur Clov ernur Krank Btounenborg. The probability of a verdict of ac quittal In the caaa of tb aecretary truaaurer and acknowledged leader of the Wcatern federation of Mlnera bad been freely predicted alnce Sat urday, when Judge Kremont Wood read hla charge. It waa alao freely predicted that lb the event of Haywood'a acquittal tba atate would abandon the proaecutlon of hla aaaoclutifB, Charlca H. Moyer, mo prcaiaeni or tne Federation, and Utorge A. I'ettibono, of Denver. Hiatmuenta from counael and from (iovernor Gooding laaued today dla pol thl view of the altuatlon. It waa after being out for 21 hour tbal the Jury, which at flrat bad been divided eight for acquittal, two for conviction and two blank, and then aw mud deadlocked at 10 for acquit tal to two lor conviction, finally came to an agreement ahortly after the flrat faint atreak of the coming day allowed gray above the giant bills which bound Dolae to the north and eat. The weary old bailiff, who bad kept an all-night vigil before the door of the jury-room, wa atartled Into action by an Imperative knock from within. Eventa moved rapidly enough after thla, and hardly at laat the principal actora In the trial bad been gathered Into the courtroom at a few moments before 8 o'clock when the white envelope waa banded by the foreman to the judge and waa torn open and the vordlct read. CLASS JURY DISAGREES. Vote Stood Seren to Five for Con viction New Trial Soon. Ran Krauclaco, July 38. After 1 bnllota. In which there waa amall variation from the original atandlng of the body eoven for conrlctlon and fire for acquittal, the jury In the Louie Glnaa bribery caae waa dis charged thl afternoon by Judge Kawlor. There wa no disagreement aa to the payment of a bribe, but It wa contended by the men who voted for acquittal that the crime bad not been Doa lively tautened upon mass. The retrial ot tne case naa oeen set for August 6. Tomorrow morning. Theodore v Halaoy. who acted a the bribery agent of the Pacific Telephone Com nnnv. will be placed on trial. The prosecution anticipates no trouble In conrlctlna llalaey. and haa opooly stated that if neceeaary Be win te it run ted Immunity If he will take the stand and tell the trutn. The proaecutlon will loan no time In Placing Qlasa on trial again, it Zl miner, whose toatlmony would con rlct 0 lass In two minutes, persists In hla refusal to answer questlona on the witness stand, he will be pun labed to tha extent of the California law. which allowa imprisonment for six months for each such refusal. By thla process Zlmmer can be given a total of noariy live yeara in prison. Dtnlts Ha Attacked Hansen. Snn Francisco. July 23. Third Of fleer llawae, of the wrecked ateamer Columbia, ha made a statement in which he denies tha charges maae Bgnlnst him. Referring to Captain Hansen, he says: "I nover did crit icise hi conduct, but simply made m reoort to the United state in spector of hulls and bollora, in ac- MrHmrt with the facts, and ven tured the opinion tnat naa me nnn Pedro allowed me lo aiacnarge ine survivors from the boat, I would have had a chance to rescue more." Fire At Coney Island. Now York, July 29. Coney Island was vlaltod by a dlaastrona fire yea terdny and seven piocks in mo amusement xone were destroyed. The loaa estimated by tne snowa ib auoui $1,000,000. Tliyou S Bieepiucnne Park and nearly a acore oi smaii hotels were wiped out, and for a time the flames threatened the destruc tion of Luna Park and Dreamland, great homea of summer amuaement. and the acores of smaller place, which fringe the water', edge for a mile. A lucky shift of the wind to aea ward aided the firemen Reported Plot In Cuba. tniv J9. 8nntor Morna del dado, a prominent Liberal, who participated In last yenr'a revolt, haa written a sensational letter, which is published In La Lucha, In which he !....... that Masao Parra, once a Spanish ally. Is planning to work UP the Cuban people and Induce them to vote agninst tne pronation Bj." ment. Del Oado. aaya Parra, la to show the waaningion guvoi .... thnt the Cuban wish a speedy end of American supervision Naw Aalnatlon Plot Found. 8t. Petersburg, July 27. Tha po lice today nnenrinea j r luitte tne nliniaier ui ., !.o....? nriraillxntlon Of the Social . n..jinA. uavnrai memDers ui mo IIlllll... "-I." , . I : .n arrested. K0VOIuuuui " v- - OttEGON, YJUDAT, AUGUST 2, 1907. ROADS FACE CAR FAMINE. Thousand Will Be Needed to Market Preaant Crop. I Chicago, July 80. The western railroads are facing tba problem of assembling tbousanda of cara at var ious points during the next 80 day for the purpose of transporting the crops to market. Nearly every big railway aystem baa received detailed reporta from Its agenta In every part of the west, northwest and southwest regarding crop conditions, probablo yield and the prospect for future bua Ineas. From these statements esti mate are made of the number of cara which will be needed to take care of tbe varloua crop movements along the line of each road. The agenta are required to give some esti mate ot the time when the different crops win begin to move and bow greut tbe early movement will be. Thla la done ao that tbe railroads may arold, it posaible, taking cara out of other aerrtce and rushing them to tbe west, there to remain idle for daya awaiting loads. it is bulleved from the reporta re ceived tbua far that tbe early crop movement tills year win be heavy and therefore an unusually large numbor of cara will bare to ba as sembled. Borne idea ot the task that confronts the railroads can be gath ered from the Northwestern s report of tbe altuatlon. On a new Una of that company in the west there will be needed 100 boxcars alone to transport a potato crop which will be snipped from three new towns. ORlclala of the Northwestern insist that tbelr road will be In better shape to handle thla year's crop than It was last year'a. A great amount of new equipment baa been added and buaineaa in other dlrectlona promises to be less Imperative than last year. Tbe company ia also mak ing an effort to bare a larger percen tage of ita own earn upon ita rat la tbla year. With tbia purpose in view, fewer Northwestern cara will be loaded to go oft their own rails. Burlington officials stated that they have just now a aurplua of box cars and are accordingly assembling many cara to take care of their share of the Nebraska crop. They expect the wheat to begin to move between July 15 and August 1, and declare that before tbe flrat date arrlvea they will be in good abape to handle all that will ba offered. It la probable that a conference ot traffic officials will be held soon to talk orer the crop morement and to make plana for co-operation of Weat- era roada with respect to prompt handling of foreign cara and their prompt return to tbe borne tinea. Tbe rallroada dealre to make tbla a record year for prompt and expedi tious handling of tbe western crop. FOURTEEN BURNED ALIVE. Mystarlou Explosion Shsttars New York Tenement House. New York. July 30. An explosion accompanied by fire, abattered an East Side tenement late Sunday night, and within the crumbling walls It persona went down to death, while twlse aa many were probably fatally Injured. The wrecked building waa at 823 Christie street, where a six-story tenement rose abore the grocery store basement. The explosion is aa yet unaccounted for and tore out the front of the building, and the lire that followed caught the 20 families, numbering 100 persona, while moat ot them were Bound asleep. Fourteen dead bodies bare been recovered. Of the Injured, many jumped from the wlndowa. othere were caught by falling timbers, many, halt surf oca tea oy smoae. were dragged from tne nauwaya, while othera received tbelr wounda during the panic and mad ngnt among each other for an exit. The tenement waa occupied chiefly by Italians. A passerby waa attracted by the explosion wnicn apparently occurred in the basement. Aa ne turned toward the building the whole front with ita flimsy fire escape fell Into the street, and from the Bagging floors a acore of the half awakened Dorsons dropped Into the street. Many of these were badly hurt, but they proved to be the more fortunate of the tenants for another moment and the building waa wrapped in flames, and the cries ot persons burn ing to death rent tbe air. In the wild excitement that followed many were Injured. " All Will Resign. San Francisco. July 80. It la be lieved that by tomorrow night the 1C itipervlsora appointed oy Mayor i ay- i.,.. win Ia formally seated. The present plan ia to have one member nf tha twutllna- hoard reslirn at a time in order that there may be a majority to pasa tne reaoiuuou oi formal recognition of each ot the new membera aa he takea hla neat. In thla manner It 1a nlannert to DCO- ceed until each of the It resignations have Deen rorinany accepieu ana Mayor Taylor's Hat haa been formal ly appointed, and recognised. Mexico Will Conduct Horae Racea. Mexico City, July 30. Bached by the federal government tbe Mexican derby will be run each year for ten years, beginning in laio. ine eum of 3100,000 will be given by the gor ernment tor tbe purpose ot raising the breed of horses bred In Mexico. purse ot 820,000 will be nnng at the running ot the race. The first race will be run orer the new track which ia to be built in Condesa on the present grounds of the Polo Club. Again Enlisting Negroea. Houston. Texaa, July 80. The isuiu. . u.j . "- am MnAtu, Ulnar -n f nn n bm rnnn . received Instructions to enlist for the colored cavalry especially desirable negroes, the first enlistment ot ne-; groea since the Brownsville affair. INVESTIGATION NOW fords Between Officers of Columbia and Saa Pedro. HAWSE CHARGED WITH CRUELTY Captain Telle Why He Refused More Paaaengera Life Preservers Stand Hard Teat. San Francisco, July 27. The In vestigation Into tbe sinking of tha ateamer Columbia, whereby, accord ing to the latest figures, 81 Urea were loat, waa resumed today by Captain John Birmingham, United States Supervising Inspector. Offi cers and membera of tbe crew of both vessels were examined and tbe deposltiona of Captain Hansen of the San Pedro and bla first officer read. Tba testimony brought out tbe statement from Captain Bermlngham that It waa tbe first time be had ever known that life-preservers had ac tual! been effective in earing life, qualifying it by, adding that people were usually too frightened to don them correctly. Captain Hansen, in his report, de nied that he had been nnnecesaarlly cruel in refusing to take any more survivors on board after be bad res cued J 5, giving. aa a reason tor bis action that hla own vessel waa In such a condition that it waa danger ous to approach her, and therefore ordered tbe other boats to keep off. ' Chief Engineer Arthur V. WI1 llama testified that the San Pedro did not lower all her boats because the vessel waa under-manned. The alleged action of Third Offi cer Hawse, ot the Columbia, In re fusing to giro bis coat to a woman waa brought out in the testimony of Quartermaster Curran. The latter testified that there were unclothed women In the boat," and when Hawse was asked to giro his coat to one of them be bad refused, saying that the coat belonged to blm. The wo men, aald Curran, had been exposed for an hour before Hawse covered them np with a piece of rail. Hawse Interrupted the proceed ings by Interposing an indignant de nial, and for a few momenta counter deniala flew back and forth between tbe two officers. Hawse waa placed on tbe atand and testified that he had offered hla coat to Miss Maybelle Wataon. tbe plucky Berkeley girl. but she refused it and asked him to give it to another woman more des titute than herself. ' GLASS CASE WITH JURY. Consumed Fourteen Dave of Actual Trial Bea'dea Argument. . San Francisco. July 27. The caae against Louis Glass, first rice-president and general manager ot the Pacific Statea Telephone and Tele araoh Company, charged with the crime of bribing Supervisor Charles Boxton In the sum of 5,0Cn to rote against an ordinance granting the Home Telephone Company a rival franchise in San Francisco, went to the Jury last evening after 14 daya ot actual trial and a day and a half of arguments by Assistant District Attorney Heney for the people and T. C. Coogan and Dolphin li. Del mas for the defense. The reading of Judge Lawlors charge to the jury consumed one hour. At Ha conclusion the court room waa cleared, the Jury waa given In charge of two deputy sheriffs and by them conreyed In a tally-ho to the Fairmonnt hotel. Haywood Casa Finished. Boise. Idaho. July 27. Erldence and argument is at an end and thla morning the jury will be left to de cide what penalty, if any, William D. Haywood aball pay for participation in a criminal conspiracy resulting in the assassination of ex-Governor Frank Steunenberg, with which he Is charged. United Statea Senator William E. Borah, engaged by the State of Idaho is special counsel for the prosecution, spoke the last word last night. Tbia morning Judge Fre mont Wood will charge and instruct the jury, which, It ia expected, will retire to consider ita rerdict at about 11 o'clock. ! v 8ava 1,000,000 Yearly on Malta. Chicago. July 27. The revenue de rived from hauling the United Statea mails by the railroads running west from Chicago, St. Louis, St Paul and Minneapolis and the Miaouri river ia to be further reduced approximately 31,- 000,000 a year as the immediate result of the reporta of 125 inspectors, who have been at work for the last six months determining whether the apace osed in railway postal cara by the sov ernment wis in excees of space suffi cient to accomplish the work. - The railroads have been notified. . Getting After Opium Trade. Fekin, July 27. The Chinese gov ernment has formally announced its assent to the proposal made by the United Statea for a joint Investigation Ivy , pvnnH. luviuumg vai.iu, iuiu the whole question of the opium trade .and of the production of opium. Da taila ot the procedure will be arranged later. China' delay In acceptance wa due to a misunderstanding on bar part that six independent commissions com prehended auch an inquiry. Butte Phimbera Want More. Butte, Mont., July 27. The local pi,,!! nnln .trunk to ln. tU - av H P8' T i8bt houra. The men now receive 7, Building sggregatmg 81,. 000,000 in valua under construction are tied up. - LET ORCHARD PAY PENALTY. Borah Fervently Dledaima Thought . of Immunity. Boise, Idaho, July 26 The caae of the State of Idaho against William D. Haywood, charged with the murder of Frank Steunenberg, a former governor of tbe atate, wilt test with judge and jury by tonight. Clarence Car row, after apeaklog for 11 hours, concluded the final pies for Haywood'a life at 4:20 p. m., and at 7 o'clock last even ing United States Senator Boiah opened the closing argument for tbe prorecu- tlon. He will speak for three seas ions. or about seven hour. Judge Fremont Wood will Instruct and charge the jury on fcaturaay morning. Mr. Borah's epeech'was a sensation. from time to time he turned on coon- set for the defense, fierce denunciation pouring from his Hp, and at times brought protests Irom Mr. Richardson sod Mr. Darrow, but with blazing eyes and hot words he silenced every effort to break tbe rnsb of words. The cli max was reached, when in behalf of the atate of Idaho, Ita people, ita gover nor and himself he disclaimed all in tention or desire to give immunity to Orchard. Finally, his lace pale and voice qniverlng with emotion, the sen ator raised bia arm and aaid: "If I ahould ever join in or give ap proval to immunity to this man.. hope the great God may wither my right arm in tbe socket." Mr, Borah declared the state did not want Haywood convicted of ahy crime for wbicb Orchard or Pettibone or Moyer or Simpkins or anybody else waa responsible, and desired a rerdict of guilty only if the evidence wss deemed sufficient to warrant such a conclusion. Tbe senator denounced Clarence Dar- row'a statement that the jurors' mind had been poisoned againat the defend- anta in tbia . case. Nowhere, he de clared, could a fairer trial have been held than in Boise. GLASS CASE FINISHED. Attorneys Make Argumenta to Jury in San Francisco. San Francisco, July 20. The Lon'.s Glaus bribery. case ahould be in the handa of the jury by 1 o clock this after noon. Francis J. Heney, for the peo ple, and T. C. Coogan, for the defense. yesterday made each hia opening argu ment. At 10 o clock this morning Del- phin M. Delmaa will begin the cloaing address for Glass. Popular prophecy ia divided between a conviction and a dis agreement. No one affects to forecast an acquittal. The chief sensation of the trial came at 1 :20 o'clock, when the prosecution having cloeed its case Mr. Delmaa crisp ly announced: "So have we." Thia determination to offer no evidence in contradiction of the circumstantial web woven around Glass waa a sudden and complete surprise to everyone, most of all to the prosecution, for tbe previous day Delmaa had casually, or so It teemed, mentioned Rudolph Spreckle as one of the witnesses we shall call. Heney, after stating frankly to the jury that the declination of Second Vice President Zimnaer, the moat important individual witness for the state, to tes tify had put it beyond the pewer of the prosecution to establish definitely the connection of Glass with the crime of bribing Supervisor Charles Boxton, de voted himself to a vigoroua exposition of the circumstantial case made out. . SUMMARY OF THE SURVIVORS. Raviaed Returns Show a Total ot 93 Livea Loat. San Francisco, July 26. A. recast of the returns from the work ot rescue shows that ot the 245 person on tbe steamer Colombia, 152 - have been saved, while five bodies have been re overed and 88 are repotted lost. Of the entire number of loat, 39 were men, 49 women and five were children. Of the 191 paasenReni, 114 have been aaved. Sixty-eight of these have been taken to Astoria, eight have arrived here and the remainder ara at Eureka or 'on their way to this city. Of the 98 men, 70 were saved and of the 91 wo men 42 were saved. Two of tho seven children survive. Of the 64 member of the orew, 88 are alive. Glaaa Cat Unfinished. San Francisco, July 26. Contrary to expectations, the prosecution did not finish yesterday its case against Louis Glass, charged with the bri bery of supervisors. Tbe most inter esting witness waa Mrs. Annie Box- ton, wife of Supervisor Charles Box- ton, whose temporary incumbency of the Mayor a chair under the domi nation ot the "Big Stick," waa ter minated recently by the succession ot Dr. Edward K. Taylor. Mrs. Box ton testified that the 85,000 which her husband confessed was accepted aa a bribe from T. V. Halaey. Cuba Wanta Civil Engineers. New . York, , July 26. Colonel William Black, V. S. A., acting as adviser to the Secretary ot Public Works ot the Cuban provincial gor ernment, who has just arrived fronr Havana, spoke encouragingly ot Cu ban affairs, particularly of the ratb road building since the Spanish American war. He said the govern ment, haa appropriated 812,000,000 for this work done; He said that In hla opinion there was in Cuba a good field for civil engineers , Predicts Salonj.'a Defeat. Victoria, B. C, July 86. Count YanaglBawa, ot the Japanese House ot Peers, says his government will be defeated soon by the attitude ot Premier Satonjl on tbe difficulties with the United States. He expects the new government to be formed when the Diet meets in December. Admiral Yamamoto will be at .its j are mucn exuueu over iue oau rru-j Cisco riots. ' ' I KO. 34. CURSES ON THE RICH Darrcr At:::s Clssmsrs ssd . Ccxtitstlsa. CALLS CXCHARD A VILE TKL'S Haywood'a I awyer Occupies Day by Torrent of Invective Charges Attempt to Kill Unions. Boise, Idaho, Jnly 25. Tbe career ot Frank Steunenberg, tbe murdered ex-governor of Idaho, waa discussed at some length by Clarence Darrow yesterday In the course of his plea In behalf of William D. Haywood Justi fying the articles publisbed In the Miners' Magastne, the official orgaa of the Weatern Federation of Miners, the Chicago lawyer aaid the action ot Steunenberg in asking for United States troop to quell riot and the establishment of martial law in 1899 waa unjustifiable and had properly stirred up immense feeling in labor circles agalnat the governor. Mr. Darrow 'a argument, unfin ished when court adjourned, devel oped Into an appeal for. tabor aa agalnat capital, and a denunciation of all opposed to tbe unions. He held an audience atartled and open- mouthed as one after another the sentiments poured from hla Hps. Hia attack on Orchard was expected, and in thia respect he fulfilled and sur passed the limit of sensation. Three houra were given to Orchard, .and it waa only when vituperation, physi cal force and words were spent that Mr. Darrow now turned to James H. Hawley, The State of Idaho came In for a large share of Mr. Darrow 's denun ciation for the part It haa played ia the prosecution. Culture, education and wealth each In turn were de scribed aa constituting a combination agalnat which the workingmen, tbe uneducated and the poor must ever be opposed. Mr. Darrow aneered at tbe universities aa purveyors of cul ture. "And what la a cultured man," he cried, "but a cruel tyrant al ways?" Reaching the climax of hla denun ciation tn sympathy tor the working class and hatred for the rich, he as sailed the Constitution ot the coun try, and cried: "The Constitution The Constitu tion, it Is here only to destroy the lawa made for the benefit of the poor. Mr. Darrow's defense of labor nniona and of union men waa pas sionate and hla eulogy ot the West ern Federation eloquent. . Lovingly he touched on tbe beauty ot self-sacrifice tound in the "struggle tor hu manity where only tbe worklngma ia found," and then, with the bitter est sarcasm, his voice pitched to the higheat note and arms nnralsed. he heaped abuae noon the selfish rich and upon the administration of the State ot Idaho. SURVIVORS REACH PORTLAND. Sixty-Five Complete Voyags on Elder : From Scans of Wreck. Portland, Jnly 25. With 65 nr- rlrora of the ill-fated Columbia aboard, the ateamer George W. Elder reached port at 6:30 o clock yester day afternoon, after a alow and un eventful voyage from the scene ot thia grim tragedy of the aea of laat Sunday morning. Two thousand people thronged the narrow binding place at Martin a dock to meet these fortunate who were snatched from the jawa of death. Many were there on the happy mission ot greeting rel atives who had escaped. Others went to make inquiry tor some loved one unaccounted for. -That the wreck waa attended by many scenes ot bravery and that the loss ot Ufa waa reduced to a mini mum considering the rapidity with which tbe Columbia aettled. Is the general verdict. I a the fact of the endless number of : mlraculoua es capee from drowning. It la clear that courage waa at hand In plenty among passengers and crew. Women and children displayed admirable courage aa well aa the men, and there were few instances of rank cowardice. Muat Not Enforce Lawa. Nashville, Tenn., July 25. For the flrat time In Tennessee the pow ers ot the United Statea Courts have been Invoked In an attempt to re strain the Insurance Commissioner from compelling an Insurance com pany conforming to the lawa enacted for Ita regulation by the atate ot Tennessee. This la the nature of aa Injunction bill filed by the State Mu tual Life Insurance Company, of Rome, in which It la nought to pre vent Commissioner Folk from revok ing the license ot the Insurance com pany Helreaaaa to B40 000,000. Helena. Mont., July 25. Three young women of thla city, the Miaaea Bertha and Frederika Vomer and Mrs. Kenton Kepner, have just been apprised that, after hearing iaatlng three yeara in German courts, they have been declared tba " legal heiresses to the estate ot their grand father, named Volker, which amounta to 840,000,000. They ex pect to go to Germany ahortly to claim their fortune. They are well known residents of thla city. Remove American Flag. Ottawa. Ont.. July 24. Two American flags yesterday were nsed with the Union Jack and other deco- ratlona in connection with a carnivaL A committee ot cltlxena ordered the atars and atripee removed. - The re ception committee thought It best to do this rather than have any trouble over the matter.