THE MORNING OREGONIAN, "WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1, 190S. PRESIDENT SIGNS PITCH'S; HUMOR Land-Fraud Thief to Have Lib erty, That He May Turn , State's Evidence. HENEY ASKS THE FAVOR Conduct of Convicted Man lias Been Model Great Help to Honey In Giving Evidence to Further Land-Fraud Prosecution. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington, Dec. 31. Late this afternoon President Roosevelt signed the pardon of Stephen A, D. Puter, and by tomor row it is expected that the Jail doors will swing open and he will walk forth a free man, for notification of his par don was telegraphed to Portland this evening by the Department of Justice. While free, Puter is yet under an implied promise to place his services at the command of the Government, and he will be summoned as one of the leading witnesses in the land fraud trials to be resumed in Portland Janu ary 13. Later, when the Benson-Hyde case is called in this city, Puter will again appear as a witness for the Gov ernment. It is because of the fact that Puter is wanted as a witness here that District Attorney Baker, of this city. Joined Mr. Heney in recommending Puter's pardon. Just when the Benson-Hyde case will be brought to trial is undetermined, for there is at present no money to de fray the expense of bringing 300 Gov ernment witnesses from Oregon and California. It is proposed some time this Winter to submit to Congress a deficiency estimate in hope of secur ing a special appropriation to defray the costs of this trial. When he was here Mr. Heney gave no intimation of his purpose to recom mend the pardon of Puter, and no inkling of what had been done was permitted to leak out of the Depart ment or the White House. Today's an nouncement came as a complete surprise. STO.RY OF THE PUTER CASE Only One of Those Found Guilty to Serve Sentence. S. A. D. Puter was arrested and con victed by Francis J. Heney, for what is known as the 11-7 land-fraud case. With him in this deal were Mrs. Emma L. Watson, Horace McKinley, Marie Ware, now Mrs. McKinley, Dan W. Tarpley and others. The trial began November "1, 1904, and he was convicted, December 6. and was sentenced to two years im prisonment and to pay a fine of $7500. All of the defendants were found guilty, but Puter was the only one to receive sentence and the only one who l has served a term of imprisonment. Mc Kinley ( fled the country and went to China, Where he was arrested and is now on his way to America. On July 6, 1906, Puter was sentenced to serve two years in the County Jail and he has served about a year and one-half. In addition to the Jail sentence, Puter was fined J7500, but it is believed here that the tine will be wiped out with the pardon. Puler decided to turn against those with whom he was connected in his crooked land dealings, because they turned him down. He has made friends with all of the Government officials since reaching that decision. There was no half-way measures when Puter decided to tell what he knew to Heney and it was through Puter that practically all of the land fraud convictions were made possible. Whatever Puter might have been, he has made good to Heney every thing that he promised when he turned state's evidence, and there is not a man connected with the Federal Gov ernment in Portland, who does not speak highly of Puter. He has been a model prisoner and has taken his medicine without a word of complaint. Last night Puter received the following telegram from Francis J. Heney: Tucson, Arli.. Dec. 31, 1907. P. A. T. Puter. Portland, Oregon. President has pardoned you at my request. Warrant (roes direot to Warden. Happy New Tear, and may you apply your undoubted tal ent to honest work. FRANCIS J. HliN'EY. WAR ON SMELTER TRUST Montana Mincowners Say Its Rates Are Exorbitant. HELENA. Mont., Dec. 31. Mine owners of Central Montana, comprising operators of Helena, Butte, Anaconda and other sections of the state, protest ting against the alleged exorbitant rates for smelting and refining of ores charged by the Great Falls and East Helena plants, will meet in this city January IS or 17 to perfect an or ganization for fighting these rates. They say the present schedule is pro hibitive and In restraint of trade. In the event that the American Smelting & Refining Company refuses to lower its schedule, the mine-owners propose to establish independent smelters throughout the state, and to ask state aid, as was done in Kansas in connection with the independent oil refineries. COOKE STILL ON THE MOVE Friend Shelters Fugitive, With Girl and Baby. SAN FRANCISCO. Dec. 31.-Rev". Jere Knode Cooke and Floretta Whaley with their S-months-old baby boy are believed to still be In this city. After leaving their Green-street flat, they were given refuge by Eugene Martin of 1205 O'Far rell street, who took pity on their help less condition. When an attempt was made to see them today at the Martin residence, it was stated that they already had left their temporary loflgings there. report of Bishop Burgess' ' sermon preached the Sunday after my husband disappeared. There was something about the handwriting that made me think It was my husband's, but I could not be :ure. Now I am certain it was his. which .neais. If I am right, that he and the t.1rl went to California at once. "Not long ago I received a letter from Hev. Frederick W. Clampitt. rector of Trinity Church, San Francisco. He is an old and dear friend. He said If he could serve me in any way, to call upon him. I thought of this when they told me my husband had been found, and my first thought was to help him in his trouble. I have always loved him. For nine years we lived a life of the purest devotion to each other. I am sure it was so on my part, and I believe It was so with him until that girl came Into his life. Then something happened to his brain. It must have become demented. When I heard he was in San Francisco I hastened to write to Mr. Clampitt to appeal to him to do something to save him. - "Some friends have told me that if there had not been something wrong my husband would never have left me, and now I see that he is reported to have said that his life with me was very un happy. This is false monstrously false. Our life in Hempstead for nine years was an open book. We were happy. - "It was not until he made the ac quaintance of Miss Whaley that I noted any change in him. This was about a year before they went away together. One day about three weeks before he dis appeared I seemed tp have an intuition that there was some sin upon his soul. Yielding to an impulse to know the truth, I said to him: 'Would you do wrong?" The question, did not seem to startle him. Taking my hand, he said: 'Let me look you in the eye and say no, no, I cannot do wrong.' Then he added: I can look you in the eye and say it, you see.' It seemed to me that the note of triumph in his voice was outjof place. "My heart asks me what should- be my duty At it were possible for him to re turn a free man? Should I forget all and receive him once more as my hus band? It is a hard question to answer, unless I lay aside all other feelings and obey only the dictates of the Christian spirit, which is to forgive, to forget." LIFE OF PUREST DEVOTION Till Evil Came Between Cooke and His Confiding Wife. NEW YORK. Dec. 81. Special dis patches from New Haven, Conn., where irs. Jere Knode Cooke now lives, quote the wife of the minister who eloped last April with Floretta Whaley and was found recently in San Francisco, as say ing: "This is the first reliable news I have had of him since that day when my life became desolate, but he has never been absent from my prayers. About three weeks after they went away I received an envelope bearing the San Francisco postmark with ho inclosure save a news paper clipping. The clipping was a brief PROMISE A BIG CONTEST AY ILL OF MRS. ALICE BONNI FIELD FILED IX DENVER. Everything Left to Denver Woman. Mother Will Fight tor Property, Alleging Will Is Changed DENVER, Dec. 31. By the will of Mrs. Alice M. Bonnifleld, who died suddenly, at the Shirley Hotel, In this city, last Thursday, which was filed today in the Denver County Court, her entire estate, estimated to be worth J500.000, is left to Mrs. Lute B. Porter, wife of W. W. Porter, the wealthy landowner and presi dent of the W. W.and M. B. Porter In vestment Company, of Denver. Mr. Porter was Mrs. Bonnifield'a finan cial agent and had entire charge of her business affairs. The executors are Mr. Porter and E. E. Roening, who haa for 15 years had charge of Mrs. Bonnifield's mining properties, the' Excelsior gold mines. In Placer County, California. Mr. Roening is en route to Denver. Thirty thousand dollars Is left to Mr. Roening, "for work, labor and services for the past 15 years." The information is given In the will that a promissory note is in possession of Roening covering this amount. .. Mrs. . Bonnlfield fs without husband or issue; her only surviving blood relatives are a mother, Mrs. Anna Watkins, . who is said to be a public charge In Watford, England; a brother, Alfred Watkins, now a soldier of fortune, roaming the world, and Mrs. Gertrude Herridge Hill, a niece, now in Denver. The promised fight over the will by the mother cannot take place until the docu ment is presented for probate. At that time all sides promise sensational de velopments. The document was drawn June 21, 1907, at a time when friends say Mrs. Bonnifield was mentally incapable, because of opiates physicians found it necessary to give her to ease her pain. A charge is made that the will has been tampered with. KILLED BROTHER OFFICER Captain Von Goeben's Confession Causes Sensation In Germany. ALLENSTBIN, East Prussia, Dec. 31.- Captain von Goeben, a distinguished of ficer in the artillery branch of the Gerr man army, has caused a sensation in military circles by confessing that he is the author of the mysterious murder of Major von Schoorebeck, a brother officer, who was shot dead on Christmas day. Von Goeben will be tried by court-martial and, if found guilty, will be. executed by shooting in his own garrison. Major von Schoorebeck, returning home at a late hour Christmas night, heard some one descending the stairway leading from his wife's room. Drawing his re volver, he went to meet the Intruder and tried to shoot him. The revolver, how ever, missed fire, and Von Goeben then killed the Major and made his escape without leaving any trace behind him. He was subsequently arrested upon sus picion, and confessed at the preliminary examination. Captain von Goeben served formerly with the Macedonian gendarmerie and he fought on the side of the Boers in the South African War. The wife of Major Von Schoorebeck has been arrested on the charge of being im plicated in the murder. FRAUD IN MANAGEMENT Receivers Xamed for Chicago & Mil waukee Electric Line. CHICAGO, Dec 31. Receivers for the Chicago & Milwaukee Electric Railway Company and allied corporations were appointed tonight by Judge Tuthill, in the Cook County Circuit Court on petition of Charles' J. Monahan, a stockholder. Monahan charges fraud in the manage ment, whereby A. C. Frost, president of the company, gained control. Carter H. Harrison, ex-Mayor; Charles G. Dawes, ex-Controller of the Currency, and Gordon Ramsay, vice-president of the railroad company, were named as re ceivers. The road, which is 75 miles long, is owned and operated by two Illinois cor porations and two Wisconsin corpora tions bearing the same names. The re ceivers were appointed for the Illinois corporations, but these own the Wiscon sin company. The subsidiary companies own the Kenosha (Wis.) street railway, a box factory and a branch railroad at Waukegan, 111. STEAMER BREAKWATER Will Not Sail Tonight ' The steamer Breakwater will not sail on regular schedule Wednesday, January 1st (tonight), but will be delayed one week, yeaving Oak street dock January 8th. at 8 P. M. . KISER CALENDARS HALF PRICE. Original photos. 248 Alder at. DOUMA IS GUILTY Members Accused of Treason Are Sentenced. LOSE POLITICAL RIGHTS Prominence of Accused Iimits Sen tence of 167 to Three-Months' ' Imprisonment and Two Are Discharged. ST. PETERSBURG, Dec. 31. The trial of the 169 members of the first Douma who signed the Vlborg manifes to was concluded today. One hundred and sixty-seven of them were con victed and sentenced to three months' imprisonment, while two were acquit ted on the ground that they had signed under misapprehension. The sentence carries, with it the Iocs of all political rights. M. Ramlschwili, who has served more than three months' preliminary impris onment, will be set free. Unless an appeal from the decision of the court Is taken, the sentence will take effect beginning January 20, until which time the former Deputies will remain at large without ball. The trial began on December 25 and was notable for the powerful speeches made by the most prominent men in the Empire for the defendants.. The prominence of the accused, it is gen erally believed. Induced the govern ment to exercise leniency. The sentence withdraws from Rus sian, politics the foremost liberal lead ers in the constitutional movement for several decades, among them being Ivan Petrunkevitch, who drafted the first demand on the Emperor for a con stitution; Prince Dolgorukof, Prince Dmitri Shakaffskoy, ex-Secretary of the Lower House; Prince Obollnsky and Prince Ourosoff, the well-known Jurist; M. Petrajltskl, Vladimir Nabou koft, leader of the Constitutional Dem ocrats; Max Vlnaver and Lenltsky, and the peasants Cehilkln and Nazarenko, together with a score of other noted men. BOMB FACTORY IX FARMHOUSE Most Complete Explosive Plant In Russia Seized. SEBASTOPOL Dee. 31. One' of the most complete bomb factories ever discovered in Russia has been un earthed at a farm house 20 miles from here. It consisted of a oomplete ap paratus for the manufacture of high explosives. Twenty-seven loaded bombs of the most destructive type and 120 such implements unfinished were seized and three men were arrested. PRICE OF-LUMBER IS DOWN Weyerhaeusers Make Deep Cut Be cause Tendency Is Downward. - ST. PAUL, Minn., Dec. 31. (Special.) Deep cuts in the prices of pine lum ber have been made by the Weyer haeuser Interests. Other concerns have been selling at concessions from their August price lists, generally 50 cents to 31 a thousand, but' the Weyer haeuser cut Is $1 to $3 a thousand. The tendency towards general reductions In prices and a decreased cost of logging this Winter are given as rea sons for the reduction. The reductions are: Dimension tim bers, S2 a thousand; common boards, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, $1 a thousand; fencing, Nos. 1 and 2, six-Inch, $1 a thousand; No. 3, six-inch, S2; four inch, $3 a thousand; C and better, eight-Inch and wider, $2 a thousand; siding C and better, $2; D and E, $1; C and better Norway. $1 a thousand; laths 50 cents a thousand; no reduc tion on Inch D or on thick select and shop. The Store Where Portland's Great' est Clearance Sale Is In Progress Every Department Shares in the Most Generous Value Giving 30th Annual Sale A Happy and Prosperous New Year To All '?S THE SINCERE WISH OF OLDS, WORTMAN & KING We Ended Year 1907 with phenomenal selling gains for the last two busi ness days of the year. A start for the Clearance Sale that bids fair to make it by long odds the most success ful one we have ever held. We have just cause, as we look back, to be proud of our accomplishments for the year just past. We have ample reason to be satisfied with the business we have done and with the large number of new customers we have added, and now that the year is over, we extend to the public of Portland our sincere thanks for their generous patronage, our earnest appreciation of. their help in making 1907 the most successful year in our h iatory- Inspiteoffinancial flurries that threatened bus iness prosperity, our holiday business surpassed our most enthusiastic expectations we're sure our friends must have been prosperous and we rejoice with them. We Start Year 1908 with a resolve to excel all previous records in the volume of business done and in point of improved store service, many plans are in contemplation for the better' ment of this store as an ideal shopping center. An ag gressive selling policy a determined effort for a sub' stantial increase over the previous sales records will result in better than ever values. Ever on the alert for new sugges tions that will improve the service mr strengthen the store's supremacy as an economical and convenient place to trade, we have in mind many new features that will tend to bet- J I rUInFsBHBlMKS3r If-. - ' . 11 I III il ter value giving and greater sat isfaction. With brighter financial skies in prospect, we look for even more generous patronage, and rest assured, we will do our share in helping Port land to twelve months of abundant prosperity in 1908 Mrs. Gould Files New Complaint. NEW YORK, Dec. 31. Attorneys for Mrs. Katherine Clemmons Gould have filed an amended bill of complaint in Mrs. Gould's suit for a separation from her husband. Howard Gould. In the new bill allegations of unfaithfulness have been omitted, In accordance with a ruling of the eourt, it being held that such allega tions are not necessary in a suit for a mere separation. The amended bill does contain, however, the allegations of the original bill to the effect that Mr. Gould hired detectives to follow his wife and to defame her, the court having allowed these to remain over the protests of Mr. Gould's attorneys. Mr. Gould in his an swer denies all the allegations. SAME RECEIVER FOR BOTH Mrs. Leslie Carter and Henrietta Crosman. Very Mnch Involved. NEW YORK, Dec. 31. Ezra T. Pren tiss, receiver for the affairs of Mrs. Leslie Carter-Payne, the actress, re cently declared bankrupt, was appoint ed receiver today also for Henrietta Crosman, the actress, and her husband, Maurice Campbell who filed petitions in bankruptcy yesterday. - The schedule of Mrs. Carter-Payne, filed today, shows liabilities of $194, 418 of which $188,444 is unsecured, and assets of $5926. Xo Xews of Phegley. AURORA, Or., Deo. 3L (Special.) No news has been received of the where- abouts- of James Phegley, who dlsap- was found on the road' between here and 10 or 15 men Is scouring the country In peered 10 days ago after starting for Barlow, returning home without a strap I hope of finding a trace of the missing OhamrxiPK-. Yesterday. Phesrley's horse or bit of harness. A searching party of man. THE Heating and Ventilation of School Buildings, as Accomplished With the Fan-Furnace System Installed by Us, Gives the Best Ventilation, the Most Heat With the Least Amount of Fuel. Our Systems not only supply all the heat you need but pure, fresh air also and at any temperature. We have installed more and better Heating Systems than any firm on the Pacific Coast. Don't take our word for it. Write to any of the following school boards, who have used our systems for years: School Board, Portland, Or. School Board, Oregon City, Or. School Board, Salem. Or. School Board. Eugene. Or. School Board, Pendleton, Or. School Board, Roseburg. Or. School Board, Vancouver, Wash. School Board, Walla Walla, Wash. School Board, Central la. Wash. School Board, Kelso, Wash. School Board, Seattle, Wash. School Board, Astoria, Or. School Board, Boise, Idaho. School Board, Weiser, Idaho. School Board. Tacoma. Wash. And lots of others. W. G. McPherson Co. 328 GlISAN STREET PORTLAND, OREGON FOOTBALL! FOOTBALL! New Year's Day, January 1,1 90S CHAMPIONSHIP MATCH MULTNOMAH AMATEUR ATHLETIC CLUB vs. ST. LOUIS UNIVERSITY ELEVEN MULTNOMAH GRIDIRON 2:30 P. M. RAIN OR SHINE GAME WILL BE THE SEASON'S STAR ATTRACTION General Admission $1 Grand Stand Free. Don't Fail to Attend They Always Return IN GOOD CONDITION WHY? Because they are Made to Travel We are the largest Trunk Manufacturers in the Norfhwest. Our reputation was built up on our high grade values. ' Send for catalogue. 54 Third, Cor. Pine 2 Stores 2 107 Sixth, Near Stark The Portland Trunk Mfg. Co. MANUFACTURING ENGINEERS WE OPERATE AN OPEN SHOP High -class loyal mechanics have steady work at top wages Medium-grade mechanics paid in proportion to their ability Incompetent workmen and agitators not wanted at any price 1