08WMfcg jj Tf ptttm VOL. XLVL SO. 14,506. PORTLAND.. OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1907. PRICE FIVE CENTS. ORCHARD TELLS HIS -JRIIS Agent of Vengeance for Miners' Feder ation for Years. SAYS HAYWOOD HIRED KIM Blew Up Bunker Hill and Sulli van Mill in Summer of 1899. ALSO INDEPENDENCE DEPOT Lay In Wait to Kill Peabody for Weeks. BLEW UP THE VINDICATOR ' wrangled Bradley With Bomb and Shot Gregory Dead Haywood, Mover and Pettibone Proposed and Approved the Crimes. ORCHARD'S CONFESSED CRIMES. April 29. 1890 Blow up Bunk.r Rill Sullivan mill. In the Coeur d'Alenea, killing ..JLwo. .merv., November, 1903 Blew up Vindi cator mine. Cripple Creek. CoL. klll tnr Superintendent McConnlck and Foreman Beck. ecember. 3903 Mad. bombs tor nee of another man tn blowing" up soldiers. Spring of 1804 Lay In wait to kill Governor Peabody. of Colorado, for three weeks, but blundered and abandoned attempt. Spring of 1904 Shot Deputy Sher iff Lyte Gregory dead at Denver. July 4. 1904 Blew up Independ ence depot. In Colorado, killing 14 non-union mlnere and wounding many others. November, 1904 Attempted to kill Fred Bradley In San Francisco with poison; finally blew htm up with bomb, horribly mangling, but not killing him. December 80, 1905 Blew up ex Governor Frank Steunenberg, of Ida ho, at Caldwell, with bomb. Orchard' e recital of his Crimea In hie testimony has only been carried to the blowing up of Bradley. To day he le expected to continue. It closing with the Steunenberg mur der. Murders ao far confessed by Or chard Bunker Kill Sullivan mill. 3; Vindicator mine, 2; Lyte Gregory, 1; Independence depot, 14; ex-Governor Steunenberg, 1; total, 20. BOlSEi Idaho, June 5. Alfred Horsley, alias Harry Orchard, the actual assassin of Frank Steunenberg, went on the stand today a a witness against William D. Haywood and made public confession of a long chain of brutal, revolting crimes, done, he said, at the Inspiration and for the pay of the leaders of hb Western Federation of Miners. An undertaking by the special prose cutors for the state that they would by later proof and connection legitimize his testimony opened the way like a floodgate to the whole diabolical story and through out the entire day Orchard went on from crime recital to crime recital, each suc ceeding one seemingly more revolting than thoee that had come before. Catalogue of His Crimes. Horsley confessed that, as member of the mob that wrecked the Bunker Hill & Sullivan mill In the Coeur d'Alenes, he lighted one of the fuses that carried fire to the giant explosion; confessed that he it the deathtrap in the Vindicator mine at Cripple Creek that blew out the lives of Superintendent McCormick and Fore man Bek; confessed that, because he had not been paid for his first attempt at violence in the Vindicator mine, he had been treacherous to his associates by warning the managers of the Florence & Cripple Creek railway that there was a plot to blow up their trains; confessed that he cruelly fired charges of buckshot Into the body of Detective Lyte Gregory, of Denver, killing htm instantly; con fessed that for days he stalked Governor Peabody about Denver, waiting a chance to kill him; confessed that he and Steve Adams set and discharged the mine under the depot at Independence that Instantly killed 14 men. and confessed that, falling In an attempt to poison Fred Bradley, of San Francisco, he blew Bradley and his house up with a bomb of gelatin. And he has more brutal crimes to tell about that will bring his bloody career down to Its end at Caldwell, where with a great bomb he killed ex Governor Steunenberg. These will foais omorrgw, lor, he la to resume the stand when the district court sits again. The story was told to a tense-nerved rigid crowd that watched with star ing eyes for every move and word of the confessing witness, a crowd that was sickened and weary of its dis gusting details long before James H. Hawley, pleading illness of himself at 3 o'clock in the afternoon, secured ad journment for the day. Orchard retained control of himself almost from the moment he took the stand, and if he suffered much, he did not show It. His eyes were bloodr shot and his face mottled In cotor when he came Into the room to con front the man whose life he Jeop ardizes. He was plainly very nervous. He seemed at first to lose a little of his physical control, for he walked un steadily as he neared the stand and reached in an indefinite way for the arm of the chair. He had trouble in finding voice for a few minutes, but only for a few moments. He quickly steadied himself and was soon talk ing In the soft, easy tones that char acterize his speech His manner was easy and his gaze steady in any direc tion that a question claimed his at- V. I). Haywood, Accused by Orchard of Hiring- HI in to Commit Crimes and Approving; Illi Deeds. tention. His eyes blinked a little when he told how he trailed and mur dered Lyte Gregory, but his voice altered none in tone. " His eyes "met those of Haywood several times, and the two gazed fixedly at one another in tests, with honors even. Dramatic Scene at Entrance. Orchard's entry to the courtroom, after a dramatic pause, was itself in tensely dramatic: Five witnesses who traced Horsley and Jack Slmpklns at various times prior to the Steunenberg murder at Caldwell, Nampa and Silver City .and further fixed their move ments by identifying hotel registers where they had signed their names, consumed the first hour of the morn ing session, and then Senator Borah, looking toward the bench, said In a quiet tone: "It will be a few moments before the next witness arrives." The crowd knew Orchard was to come and in keen expectancy watched the two doors of the room. It was to be a realization at last. The prisoner witness, long 'sequestered at the pen itentiary, "was to be produced. Haywood's mother, Mrs. Carruthers, of Salt' Lake, and. her daughter sat beside -the prisoner and his wife, they having arrived here yesterday from Salt Lake. Mrs. Carrutners is a hand some woman of middle age and her daughter is a pretty girl of ' 20. ' The prisoner's two daughters were absent. Haywood held a notebook and at in tervals took notes of the proceedings. "None of the Haywood group could see either door without turning in their seats and, while they steadily faoed front, they : showed their' expectancy for the appearance of the man whose testimony may mean so much to them. Horsley had spent the night and morn ing at the office of James H. Hawley and was brought to the courthouse In a car riage with three armed guards. . In the chambers of - the Judge he - was turned over to Deputy Sheriff Has Beamer, who is to be his special guard at -the trial. Strangers entering the courtroom during the morning were searched for weapons and, when Orchard reached the building, the doors of the trial room were locked and extra deputies posted outside the rail. Sheriff Shad Hodgln cleared . an aisle back of the seats of the Haywood party and, when he got a signal from the judge's chambers that all' was ready, nodded his head to Mr. Hawley. "Call Harry Orchard,'; said the state's leading counsel In & loud tone. Haywood Gazes Intently. The chambers door swung open and out marched Horsley, led by Ras - Beamer and followed by two penitentiary guards and two detectives, all armed. They walked him on the march around the rail and then faced the crowd, while he climbed to the witness chair. Far back in the room a man stood up to get a better view and a deputy shouted: "Sit down." The other deputies instantly started forward and. If the man had not taken his seat quickly, they would have Jumped for him. A woman Inside the rail dropped her parasol. Its clatter drew all the attention of the nervous crowd and the gun-fighting men who were there to shield Horsley until they understood what was happening. Haywood leaned down between his coun sel, so that he might get a clear, unob structed view of the witneswtand and for fully five minutes he gazed steadily at Horsley. The latter was, however, giv ing bis attention to the state's counsel on the other side of the room and It was not until the first interruption came from the defense that the two saw each other. There were a few preliminaries as to Horsley's birth-place and real name and his first days In the North Idaho country. .Concluded oa Pac Li ALL DEPENDS ON . BACKING UP STORY Opinion on Confession of Orchard. FAILURE WOULD BRING ODIUM State Secures Witnesses Who Will Corroborate. BRADLEY WILL NOT'APPEAR Blames "Explosion on Gas Company. False Alarm of Bomb In Court. Orchard Is Indifferent to Death Penalty. BOISH, Idaho, June 6. (Special.) A most Interesting opinion was expressed by one of the visitors here today after listening to the story told by Albert E. Horsley, alias Harry Orchard, as a wit ness in the Haywood" case. It was to the effect that no set of men would dare put a man on the stand to tell such a horrible tale unless they were prepared to verify It so fully that all the world would recognize Its truth. This visitor added that those who would recklessly Introduce a witness to give such testimony without being able to support it would, under the circum stances of this case, incur the odium of the entire country. To his mind he said that thought was a powerful factor In leading him to the belief that the state was fully prepared to establish the cor rectness of the fearful narrative. More "Witnesses Coming Forward. Persons who listened to the narration experienced etrange sensations. It seemed impossible that a human befhg could have been guilty of such crimes or that others could have employed him to commit' them. Tet there sat the wit ness, calm of demeanor, resolute of pur pose and apparently bent upon unbosom ing himself frankly and fully, and ob servers felt they had been -carried back into the atmosphere and amid the scenes of the Mlddje Ages. The prosecution was well pleased today with the manner in which Orchard bore himself. It is going to have a good ef fect in opening the mouths of some oth ers who have hesitated to come here to testify. In fact, the state feels pleased with the extent to which hesitation bad already given place to a determination to come. From many sections witnesses are here or are on the way whom it was not hoped to get. "They are coming up splendidly," said one of thoee connected with the prosecu tion this evening, "and we are going to be able to make even stronger showing than we anticipated." The impossibility of getting Fred G. BUT IS MR. KZWS ITEM THE -eV-. Bradley here as a witness is one of the disappointments of the case. Mr. Brad ley and his company, the Bunker Hill & Sullivan Mining Company, have been benefited much by the state in times past, and it would seem as though he were under peculiar obligations to come here at this time. Today Orchard told of the effort to kill him because of the fact that he had Incurred the enmity of the inner circle through Jjis policy in running the great mine, the affairs of which he di rects, but he Is on record as denying the correctness of Orchard's statement. The owner of the building where the explosion occurred ; in San .- Francisco brought . suit . and secured .. judgment against the gas company for damages. When Orchard made his confession, ' the company saved a copy of that portion re lating to the attempt on Mr. - Bradley's life for the purpose of getting the case reopened. Mr. Bradley made a deposition denying the story and the defense here has a copy of that deposition. It is said he also has a suit against the gas com pany for damages, so Mr. Bradley cannot -testify here, though - he is. under such great obligations to the state. Moreover, It is known he told close friends at the time there was an explosion on the out- if iv Jf J Harry' Orchard, Whose True Name Is Alfred Horsley, and Who Confessed a Less Series of Crimea In the Haywood Trial. side which blew the front of the building in upon him, and that another inside, prob ably caused by gas escaping from a broken pipe, threw him out Into the street and saved his life. He kept it to himself because he did not want his wife to know: ... Attempts to Poison Bradley. There will be a number of witnesses here, though, , to testify about the at tempt on Mr. Bradley's life, notwith standing the attitude of the Intended victim of the bomb. One of these is a chemist who analyzed the milk that Orchard poisoned. The cook detected something wrong with the milk and tasted It, finding it bitter. Mr. Brad ley became suspicious that It was an effort made by his old enemies to make away with him and had it analyzed, finding it heavy with strychnine. Or chard could not tell of this feature of the poison Incident In his testimony. Another subject ' on which Orchard was cut off was the Archie Stevenson ' (Concluded on Page 2.) HARRIMAN IN CONDITION GOVERNMENT WHX IYSTITCTE LEGAL PROCEEDINGS TO KEQTTKK MR, HARRIMABf TO AN8WKR CERTAIN QUESTIONS AS TO KATLROAD MANIPULATION. HENEY TAKES UP SGHMITZ TRIAL Makes OpeningSpeech . .Before Jury. SHOWS MAYO jJ'S CIVIC LIFE Partner With Ruef in Black : mailing Operations. REAGAN GOES ON STAND Ex-Com mlssloner Says He Was in Consultation With Executive With Reference to Refusing French Restaurants Liquor License. SAN FRANCISCO, June 5. The open ing address for the prosecution by Dis trict Attorney Heney, the partial ex amination of ' ex-Police Commis sioner Thomas Beagan. the introduc tion as evidence of a mass of data from the mlnuto books of the police commis sion for the years 1904-05, and the questioning in relation thereto of the secretary of the commission,. Officer Charles F. Skully, were the incidents that made up the first day's actual trial of Mayor Eugene E. Schmltz for extortion. Officer Skully will resume the wit ness stand at the opening of court to morrow morning to further identify and corroborate Police Commission records. He will be followed by Mr. Reagan, who will complete his test! mony, and then b turned over to the defense for cross-examination-May Last Over Two Weeks. No night sessions of the Schmltz trial will be held. It Is expected that the trial will take up not less, and probably more, than two weeks. The auditorium of the Jewish Syna gogue on Bush street was crowded to day, when the hour arrived for the be ginnlug of the trial. By request of Mr. Heney the Court instructed all witnesses to retire, and all of them except ex-Police Com missioners Sutton, Reagan and Pohelm were excused until tomorrow morning. This was taken as notice that these, and not Ruef, will be the first wit nesses called. At 10:20 o'clock Mr. Heney began his opening statement to the Jury. At great length and with extreme minute ness he laid before the Jury the plot as alleged by the prosecution on the part of the Mayor and Ruef to "carry on a systematic scheme of blackmail," through the instrumentality of the Po lice Commission. Preliminarily, Mr. Heney outlined TO TALK? the Mayor's entrance Into politics and traced the political friendship and asso ciation of Schmltz and Ruef from the time of its inception throughout the Mayor's first two terms of office. He recited with much circumstance the facts as alleged in the Indictment and their, surrounding Incidents. Mr. Heney spoke for an hour, and at the conclusion of his address called to the stand ex-Police Commissioner Thomas Reagan. Mr. Heney recited at great length the alleged methods used by the Mayor and Ruef to intimidate the French restau ranteurs and to show them that Ruef was the only - man who could secure their licenses and that money was the onIything that would obtain his in fluence. " . "To show the bad Intention of the Mayor," said Heney, "we shall show that the fight against Commissioner Sutton, which ended in his removal by the Mayor, was made because Sutton was trying to close up disreputable In stitutions." Says French Cafes Are Bad. In his testimony ex-Commissioner Reagan said that it was in the Summer of 1904 in the Mayor's offico I - -Jl y , f I r. "i Geora-e Pettibone, "Who la Said by Orchard to Have Supplied Him Wltb Money to Commit Crime and Escape Justice. In the new City Hall that he had hl3 first talk with the Mayor on the sub ject of French restaurants. The Mayor said they were all bad places and should be closed. Reagan said he made personal in vestigation and then proceeded to obey the Mayor's instructions to withhold licenses from the French restaurants. There were in existence at that time 2078 liquor licenses, and most of the French restaurants sold liquor under that form of law. In compliance with the Mayor's instructions, Reagan as sisted in holding up of licenses. SCORNS ALLURING OFFERS Becker Will Not Desert Mayoralty lor Vaudeville Stage. MILWAUKEE, June 5. Mayor Sher burn Becker, of this city, has decided to decline the offer of 21300 per week to go on the stage. He will continue his duties as Mayor of Milwaukee until the end of his term, he says. CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER ' The Weather. YESTERDAY S Maximum temperature, 69 degrees; minimum. 04 degreei. TODAY'S Showers; . westerly winds, , Paelflo Coaet. Heney opens trial of Schmltz for extor tion. , Page L. Orchard confesses many crimes for which Miners Federation paid him. Page 1. Prosecution secures many unexpected wit nesses against Haywood. Page 1. i Foreign. Turkish smuggler blows up ship to avoid capture, killing crew and 80 would-be captors. . Page 4. Mutiny among Czar's guard . suppressed. Page 2. Guatemala sentences 12 co aspirators to , death. Page 2- Natlonal. Japan may sue San Francisco for damages suffered by subjects. Page 8. Roosevelt will decide course on Harriman case Friday. Page S. Domestic. Four' persons drowned In Nebraska on fishing excursion. Page 2. Tucker of Uncle Sato Oil Company sen tenced for contempt In assailing court's Integrity. Page 4. Oralnralsers decide to corner wheat sup ply. Page 4. Portland fiancee and St. Iouls wife of wicked jeweler mingle teacs. Page 2. Oregon girls give Chicago farewell fling. Page 2. I M- Sullivan arrested In civil en it by Investor In mining stock. Page 4, Sport. Crokers Orby wins English derby. Page 7. One Jockey wins all six races at Louis ville. Page 7- Ban Francisco beats Portland, 5 to L Page 7- Columbia University defeats Portland Academy, 5 to 4. Page 7. Portland basebal tossers again defeated by Saa Francisco; score 5 to L Page 7. Mayor Lane believes all bond Issues voted Illegal; asks City Attorney for opinion. Page 6. Portland and Vicinity. Federal grand Jury closes session by in dicting 182 members of alleged furniture trust and counterfeiting gang. Page 10. Civil Service Commission resolves to de mand adequate financial support from City Council. Page 11. A- W. Lafferty, Portland lawyer, goes to Washington to interest hlgb officials In breaking up of railroad land monopoly. Page 11. Council plans to build new city Jail on market block. Page 5. E. E- Lytle to be elected president of United Railways. Page 14. Commercial and Marine. Need of local exchange to fix dairy pro duce prices. Page 15. Chicago wheat market shows little change. Page 15- Stock market sentiment unsettled. Page 15. Heppner wool sales a success. Page 15. Gasoline launch Dolly burns in the Wil lamette. Page 14. , .. TEXTBOOKS FOR CHANGED Only Four Now in Use Are Retained. TWO SUBJECTS ARE DROPPED Elementary Agriculture Is Add ed to Course. BOOKS MAY BE EXCHANGED Cost of Xew Set, Excepting Nature. Study, Less Than Old Contracts Are Distributed Among Many Firms Choice Unanimous. SALEM, Or.. June 6. (Special.) All but four books now in use In the common schools of Oregon have, been changed by the State Text-Book Commission and new text-books will be substituted at the beginning of the new school year. The fourth and fifth Cyr readers, the Thomas elementary history and the Reed speller are the books retained. Civil government has been dropped en tirely as a separate subject and will here after be taught in connection with his tory. The mental arithmetic has also been dropped and the mental exercises' will be given with the aid of the books on written arithmetic. In the place of the two subjects dropped, an Important one has been added, that of elementary agriculture. This addition has been made In response to a very general demand. The principal changes are the substitu tion of Wheeler's readers up to the third book for the Cyr readers; the adoption of Smith's arithmetics In the place of Wer.t worth's; the adoption of Buehler's gram mars in the place of Reed & Keliogg's; the adoption of the Natural geographies In the place of Frye's, and Doub's United States history in the place of Thomas' advanced history. Cost of Books' Compared. The total cost of the books used in the schools under the list in force up to the. present time was 9.80, this list not including the book on nature study. The prices of those newly adopted, not in cluding the nature study, aggregate 19.14, or a reduction of 66 cents. If nature study be included the new list will cost $9.89, or an Increase of 9 cents in the cost of all the books a child must use in his eight years of schooling. Since the new work on nature study is a practical treatise on elementary agri culture, it Is probable that the book will come Into common use. In which event the eight-year course will require 25 books, whereas 27 books are now In use. With out the nature study, the entire list will Include 24 books, of which number seven are copy books for penmanship. To exchange an entire set of old books for an entire set of new ones on the same subjects will require the payment of 14.51. On an average the exchange price Is about one-half of the retail price. The book companies take in exchange almost any book that has leaves, although badly worn. Contracts AVidely Scattered. The new adoption distributes the books among a larger number of publishers, the so-called small houses getting a number of contracts. Ginn & Company have lost three of the readers and the geograpies but gained the nature study and the music. The W. H. Wheeler Company gels the contract for the primer and first three readers; the American Book Com pany publishes the newly adopted geog raphies; Ginn & Company, the arithme tics; Heath & Company, the elementary history; Doub & Company, the advanced history; Kewsome & Company, the gram mars; D. Appleton, the physiology; O. P. Barnes, the writing-books; Maynard Merrlll Company, the speller, and the Prang Company, the drawing-books. Ginn & Company received the award for arithmetics again, though there Is a change of authors. While this feature of the distribution may not have been considered by the commission, it is at once apparent that the scattering of the text-book business practically prevents the building up of , an educational machine backed by a publishing-house. The American Book Com pany, which once had a monopoly of the business in this state, gets one contract under the new selection. The books adopted today, with. the ex change prices and retail prices, are as fol lows: List of Books Selected. Keader. Exchange Retail Price. Price. Wheeler's Graded Primer .10 $ .25 Wheeler's Graded Piret Reader. . .10 ,2ft Wheeler's Graded Second Reader .15 .35 Wheeler's Graded Third Reader.. .20 .45 Cyr'e Fourth Reader 25 .50 Cyr's Fifth Reader .30 .80 Geographies Natural Introductory Geography.. .27 .64 Natural School Geography .57 1.13 Arithmetics Bmlth'e Primary Arithmetic... -IS .S5 Smith's Practical Arithmetic... .33 .65 Mental Arithmetic No separate book adopted; will use written arithmetics. History Thomas Elementary History ... .60 .SO History of V. a., by Doub .70 . 1.00 Grammar Buehler i Hotchklea' Modern English Leeeone SO .40 Buehler ft Hotohklss English Grammar 30 M Civil Government No separate book adopted history to be used. Physiologjr First Boole In Hygiene (Krohn).. .13 M (Concluded oa Page a i