Vol. XVI No. 29. CORVXULIS, OREGON SEPTEMBER 25, 1903. b. F. TBTnra No Previous Season Has ever found our Store, in all its Departments, so well equipped. The Stock Includes all the Latest Novelties.- LADIES' Special attention is called to our Line of Dress Goods, Jack ets, Waterproof Wraps, Skirts, Shoes and Children's Clothing. Call and see. O. A. C. UXIFOI1MS. 1 (O me Do Hot Mm ) to as high a standard as our us. but see that you make no mistake in . the house that keeps the hig- ; " est standard of Grocer- -ies that is the - - place to ' .' BUY L Fresh Fruits, resh everything to be iiad ) run our delivery wagon and our aim is to keep what you please. Call IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR SOME REAL good bargains in stock, grain, fruit and poultry Ranches, write for my special list, or come and see me. 1 1 shall take pleasure in giving you all" the reliable information you wish, also showing you over the country. HENRY AMBLER, ' Real Estate, Loan, and Insurance, Philomath, Oregon. - : H. S. PERNOT, Physician & Surgeon Office over poatom.ce. Residence Cor. Fifth and Jefferson streets. Hours 10 to 12 a. m., 1 to 4 p. m. Orders may be left at Graham & Worthain's drug store. DR. C. H. NEWTH, Physician & Surgeon Philomath, Oregon. - o) desire would promote Fresb Uegetablts, 2 in the market. We want and to and see B. Holgate ATTORNEY AT LAW JUSTICE OF THE PEACH . Stenography and typewriting done. . Office in Burnett brick. Corvallis, Oreg B. A. CATHEY, M. D Physician and Surgeon, Office, Room 14, First .National Bank Bnilding, Corvallis, Or. Office Hours, 10 to 12 a, tn., 2 to 4 p. m. .- UNSUCCESSFUL HOLD-UP TRAIN STOPPED NEAR COR BETT BY FOUR MASKED -r MEN. . Ooe Bandit Killed and Engin eer Barrett Is Wounded Slight ly Robbers Escaped With-; oat -Plunder in a Boat. -. Portland, Sept. . 24. Portland Oregonian: In an unsuccessful at tempt made by four masked men to hold up and rob tbo O. "R.": & N fverland train leaving Portland ast night at 8:15 o'clock one of the robbers was nhot and instantly kill ed and Engineer OUie Barrett, of Portland, was wounded. Express Messenger Fred Korner fired the shot that nlew the bandit, and the bullet, after passing through his body, wounded the engineer, strik ing him in the left shoulder The men bad badly bungled the job after having successfully stop ped the tram and couapelledlbe en gineer and ..fireman to 'accompany them in their work. Instead of at tacking the express car.tbey blew open the door of the -baggage car with dynamite. -1 he noise aroused the express messenger, and he op ened his dpor and tired at the lead ing robber, who stood at ,theN time but a few feet from him. The death of tbe unknown ban dit, apparently the leader of the party, disheartened the others, and tbey abandoned the attempt to rob the train. Not a shot was fired in return,. . and the bandits escaped before the express messenger fired again. :,''.-.). The hold-up" was attempted ,on tbe curve west of the. tunnel which appears above mile po9t21, at about y:6i) o'clock. Two , masked mtn stole aboard tbe train at Troutdale, hiding 0.1 the blinds end nf , the from. Troutdale the two men crept over tbe tender and, covering en gineer Barrett and Fireman Steven son with their revolvers, ordered the train to proceed, to a point near mile post 21. When this spot had been reached the bandits ordered the engineer to stop. ; ; ' The other men joined ihe ban dits at the mile post, and the four ordered the engineer and fireman to accom panyjthem back to the express car. ; the robbers, apparently ig norant of train formation and very nervous, attacked the baggage car. When the doors were not opened promptly they used dynamite and blew the door openn Though he had been ordered, with the firemen, to keep ahead of tbe party, .Engineer Burrett manag en to slip behind the leader. As the door to the express car was op ened and Korner'a gun was poked out, he was standing directly -behind the man who was under the door. - Korner fired immediately, the bullet instantly killing the rob ber and wounding the engineer. The other , bandits, frightened by the shot, retreated. ,? The dead body, of the bandit was left lying at the scene of the hold up, but Engineer Barrett is of the opinion '. that his companions re turned and removed it. He believes the men had a boat lying on the river bank and made their escape in this manner. . .- - , - When tbe robbers stopped s the train, members of the train crew immediately warned the passengers of the impending peril. It is relat ed by those who talked with people on the cars that the conductor ran through the coaches crying a warn ing and urging everyone to hide valuables. Purses, watches and jewelry were hastily thrust under seat cushions. Women screamed and eome passengers, both men and women, ' attempted to bide where they could be safe from the bullets that they expected to fly at any time or where any robber making a trip through the cars would be un able to find them. - ' - Engineer Barrett lost his valua bles. These- are lying on the plat form at Bridal Veil, and constitute the only loss,' save that which the company sustained, which followed the hold-up. : All the actions of the four menf and especially, their precipitate flight when the leader was shot down, ; indicate that the hold-up was attempted by novices. Rail road officials believe that the men were either desperate Portland men or that they live .. somewhere along the railroad. Their baoeling in blowing ppen tbe baggage, rather than the express-car, and their ac tion 10 permitting Engineer Bar rett to hide behind one of their numfeeeare further indications that the roenhad no previous experience. They acted at all times as though they were nervous and were anxious to get away. It is extremely doubt ful whether the robbers would have attempted ; to in tellers with the passengers, even had they succeed ed itSobbing tbe express car. - (A posse left Portland shortly af ter midnight last nigbt for thelBcene of the hold-up. The posse was de layed an hour from the fact that Sheriff Storey could not be reached by telephone. A t messenger had to be sent for him. Washington," Sept. 22. When the;, 'state department closed today it was agreed that the Panama ca nal treaty- was dead, although eight hours yet remained within which the Colombian congress might take affirmative action upon it. - Noth ing,? however, had been received during the day, either from Minis ter Beau pre at Bogota or from Mr. Herion, the Colombian charge here, which gave the slightest hope of a favorable issue. ' A'report is current here that Co lombia congress, secret session, has - clothed President Marroqoio wirnr full power to negotiate a treaty If this reporfshould turn out to be truei President Marroduin, who is courted j a friend of the treaty, could proceed untramraeled by tbe fear -of future reckoning with his congress. ' : - la aby event, President .Kooee veltmust now take the; next step. He Can elvct to proceed under the Spodner act and take np the Nica ragu'ao route, or he can -allow tbe matter to drift for the present in the hope that a way ruy yet be found to straighten out the present difficulty in the path of the Panama route. ' - ' ' " ."" ' yiity-v K-Ter,t.,22.TTr After a trial of eight days, the jury in t the case of Curtisf .tett, charged , with the murder ofYTawn Marshal Cock rill, at Jackson, Ky.,'July 211902, this evening rendered a verdict of guilty, and fixed the punishment at death. The jury retired at 2:44 p. m.'- When the jury entered the courtroom at 5:10 p. m., after a greeing on a verdict, quiet reiened for a few moments. Jett's mother had gone away earlier under the impression that no verdict would be reached, and the verdict of death coming two hours after tbe jury was out was a surprise to every one in the courtroom. The reading of the verdict did not affect Jett, but his brother was very much distress ed - .J.. Elijah McKinney served as fore man of the jury, and after de livering the verdict to the court the jury was polled. Tbe death sen tence was then read to Jett, after which he was given over to the cus tody of the deputy sheriffs. ; This has been the second trial of Jett on the trial of murder. In his firt trial for the murder of J. B. Marcum at Jackoon, Jett, and Thomas White were sentenced to life imprisonment. The jurors agreed among them selves not to divulge the proceed ings in the jury-ioom. One juror, however, stated that for four ballots 11 jurors voted for the death penal ty and one for a life sentence. All agreed on the-fifth ballot. ' New York, Sapt. 22. Falling I from the eighth floor of a building in course of erection at No. 20 West Eighteenth street, a distance of a bout 80 feet, and turning three somersaults in his descent, Joseph Heiser, an ironworker, -has escaped with a slight laceration of two fing ers. ' A score of workmen rushed to -the. cellar, expecting to find his mangled form. Instead " they found him calmly examining his lacerated fingers. . To convince them that be had escaped' without injurye danced a jig. - Then he went back to work at the top of the building. " ' For Sale. Vetch, rye and cheat seed at Corvallis Flour Mills. ' . , - . ' Good cloth es. for boys. Nolan Callahan. When you want fresh vetch seed go to Zierolfs. See our new fall stock of men and boys suits and overcoats, larger and better than ever at money-saving prices. . S. L. Kline. A DESPERATE MAH BURKE, ESCAPED FORGER, OVERCOMES OFFICER AF TER STRUGGLE. Robs the Deputy of Hia Weapons On Turning a Corner He Jumps : N Into the Brush by the Road i and Eicapes Other v ? . ' News." .r ' Stevenson, ; Wash., . Sept. 22. Bloodshed may result from the manhuctnow in progress on. the Washington side of the Columbia River, between The Dalles and Van couver. iJurne, the lorger and es caped prisoner from the Hillsboro jail, overpowered a deputy sheriff who had captured him yesterday and secured two revolvers, a rifle and a large supply of ammunition. His action and escapades of the past ftw days brand him as being des perate, and should the posse which is now not on :his trail overtake him, there is little doubt but that a pitch battle will ensue. ,t Burke's feats of the past week have shown that he does not intend to spend his time in jail. Stmday he escaped from bherifx Totton, of Skamania county, who had recap tured him at the hotel at Carson. The sheriff sent a shower of bullets after the fugitive, but the shots ap parently only made the fugitive run the faster, none of tbem taking ef fect.' " ": . Sheriff Totton located the escap ed man at the hotel in Craon, Wash., Early Sunday morning, af ter having scoured the country in the vicinity of The Dalles, where Burke was reported to have been seen.' The sheriff captured his man, getting the drop on him, and at onpe started with him for . Steven son, the sheriff riding with hia gun tre"tf vh'-TE-e captive, who walked ahead. - - It. was at a sharp turn in tbe road that Burke made bis escape. Be inz shut out for a second from view he bolted into the brush without the least warning. The officer emp tied his revolver into the brush, clipping tbe twigs right aud left. and ordering Burke to halt, but there was no sound from tbe fugi tive. Sheriff Totton at once rode to the different settlements, of the vicinity and left instructions that a sharp lookout for tbe man be kept Every available officer was put on his trail, with tbe result" that a deputy sheriff from Lower Cascades came upon mm yesterday and ar rested him in the brush near that settlement. Burke was unarmed and did not resist, especially when the officer thrust a gun in his face and informed him that the least show at resistance would make him a fit subject for the undertaker. Burke's eyes were bloodshot, and he showed the hardships of running through tbe forests all day and night without food.: Apparently he was quite docile, and the officer started with him for Cascade Locks to place him in confinement ' for safekeeping. 1 But Burke was merely biding his chance. When officer and captive had walked some distance and got ten on faiily friendly terme. Burke suddenly seized tbe deputy and a terrible struggle ensued. Both men fought for every incb there was in them, but- Burke s strength was supplemented by des peration, and be fought like a de mon until be bad the deputy over powered. He then helped himself to the minion's rifle, revolvers aad ammunition, bade him a sarcastic adieu and disappeared in the brush down'the river. This episode as soon as it became known, convinced the officers that they have a desperate man to deal with. Sheriff Totton promptly or ganized and equipped a posse and went on the trail determined to take the man, dead or alive. They will scour the country along the river to Vancouver. A reward of $150 is offered by the Washington county sheriff for Burke's capture. Burke is the man who swindled the Jackson county bank- out of about $250, and tried the same swindle at Forest Grove, where he was arrest ed as he entered the bank to pass a forged check.' The officers of the bank had been forewarned", and thrust guns in the man's face when he walked into the; bank. Wben arrested he was taken to the Hills boro jail; where he located a weak spot in the walla and dug his way out, in company with a young fel low named McNamara, who has since been recaptured. . Salem, Or., Sept. 22. The Stata Boad of Portage Railway Commis sioners held a meeting today and formerly directed the attorney gen eral to begin proceedings against the O. R. '& N. Co. to condemn a right of way for tbe portage . road over a portion ; of that company's! right of way near Celilo. Engineer 1 A. E. Hammond is here, and ' will assist the attorney-general by fur n- -ishing the necessary data regarding the proposed location on the 'road. Mr. Hammond's maps show that the portage road will encroach upon the O. R. & N.'s right of way for about a mile, but its nearest ap proach to the company's tract is 35 feet, and that for only a short dis tance. Mr. Hammond informed the board that while hewas at the ' irrigation congress be told some of the Eastern Oregon people that if the cost of securing a rignr. of way should be too great, uj portage doned for want of a suHL-ieut ap propriation. . He was told that the Eastern Or- egon people are so anxious to have ithn road built that they would be willing to raise $50,000 or more if necessary, in order to secure the construction of the road ana the consequent reduction in freight rates. - The Dalles, Sept. 22, A great deal of excitement prevailed around The Dalles land office ; be ginning Sunday, when about 40 men and women were holding the fort at the land office so as to be the first to enter the office when the big front door opened on Mon day morning. The cause of the rush was fractions of , four town ships! of timber land being, open for filing. These townships are lo cated in different parts of Wasco and Crook countie8 and.thesernei and women Triad found- that t w(i men representing an Eastern syndr)- -cate were here to file on tbe land themselves, and .having script and ' cash to take up the entire tract. All the parties stayed near the land office all Sunday and Sunday night and had their meals carried to them and Dick Goeman, tbe local real estate man, was busy all night making out filing papers. ' ' When the door of the land office waa open Monday morning the . would-be filers spotted one of tbe syndicate men, and held him so the settlers could file, but syndi cate man No. 2 slid in ahead and did the ' work for his syndicate, shutting out fbe 40 men and women. It is not yet determined what the ruling of , the land office will be. " : . , AT PHILOMATH. , Opening of the College of Philomnth -Public Exercises Sales by Ambler. Tbe College of Philomath opened its fall term Tuesday.: There was a very encouraging attendance. In the evening an entertainment waa given consisting of music, recita tions, etc. Those who took part ' did their work in an excellent man ner and all are to be compliment ed. This college has an encourag ing outlook. There is a strong probability of its buying the Philo math college to increase its facili ties. Miss Hawks and Miss Wheal don have been added to tbe teach ing corps, which makes an excel- lant and efi t hiiQi aat ir fnnillt.v. vuv . Mr. Pu?h has boucht the resi dence property which Mr. Scott re cently purchased 01 tne Mason heirs. The deal was gegotiated through Mr. Ambler who has also sold Waiter Kisor's property to airs xrwiu. .. . Moses Brothers have issued vol. f. No. 1. of the Philo-nath Rustler. tn snrftn.ri thn ti"WS of the vicinitv and advertise their extensive busi ness. It was printed on the college , press. - : v y '.- The Philomath public schools will (nmrnance next Monday with fnnr t.rhfrs. Prof, and Mrs. Pratt and Prof, and Mrs. S. G. Springer. Mr. Oscar Weed has gone to Co lumbia county on a trip of business and pleasure. :, , For Sale. Several nice Poland China pigs, both sexes, eligible to record. .. Inquire of. Robert Wylie, Lewisburg, five miles north of Corvallis, y . ! . . ' ,