r ' ' ' " " PRICE FIVE CENTS. VOL. XLVIII yO. 14,822. POKTLAXD. OREGON, MONDAY, JUNE 1, 1908. FLEET VANGUARD FEARS FOR SHIP WITH 1600 SOULS GANNON BLUFFED PARADISE COLONY OF SIMPLE LIFE BRUTAL CRIME BIG CONTRACT LET FOR STEEL RAILS T HOLDUP BY STARTLES OF STEAMER VADEItLAXD REPORT ED SrXK IX XORTH SCA. SOCIALIST PLAXS A VTOPIAX HOME IX MEXICO. ILLINOIS CEXTRAL TO EXPEND $1,450,000. RAIN REACHES HARBOR CHICAGO MAN PARIS WORK BOYS Two War Vessels Drop Anchor Here. ARRIVE FOR ROSE FESTIVAL Charleston and Yorktown the First to Come. SWINBURNE IN COMMAND Xoisy Welcome Given Cruiser and Gunboat Torpedo-Boat Squadron Is En Route Up the Coast and Is Expected Soon. The cruiser Charleston and the gun boat Yorktown entered Portland har bor et 0:30 o'clock Sunday morning. The Charleston Is anchored Just north of the Steel bridge, -while the York town cast anchor a few rods eouth of the lama structure. The torpedo-boats Perry. Petrel, Farraput. Davis and Fox are ex pected to join the Charleston and Yorktown today. Visitors will he received aboard the Charleston and Yorktown between the hours of 1 and 4:30 P. M. dally. Accompanied by a chorus of whistles from excursion steamers and factories lin ing the waterfront and the exchange of Ealutes with foreign vessels lying in the harbor, the cruiser Charleston. i Admiral Swinburne's flagship, and the gunboat Yoiktown, majestically entered Portland harbor at 9:30 yesterday morning and dropped anchor near the Steel Bridge. The Charleston and the Yorktown will ba Joined, probably today, by Ave torpedo boats, consisting of the Perry. Preble, Fox, Farragut and Davis. These for midable agents "f naval warfare were to have reached Portland yesterday, but while enroute up the Pacific Coast were obliged to seek shelter at Eureka and Coos Bay because of heavy northwest winds. The fleet Includes a total of about 1200 men, and will remain the guest of the city during the Rose Festival this week. Admiral Swinburne is in command of the squadron. Spectacle Is Inspiring. The spectacle of the entrance of the Charleston and Yorktown in the harbor yesterday was an inspiring one to the hundreds of spectators on the river banks. The Charleston was the first to reach the city, dropping her anchor in midstream Just north of the Steel Bridge. Ten min utes later the Yorktown arrived, passing through the Steel Bridge and anchoring Just opposite the old Southern Pacific docks, a few rods south of the bridge. As the Yorktowh passed the Charleston, the colors were dipped, the marines and Jackles on the cruiser stood at "present arms," while the officers stood a salute and the band on the quarterdeck played "The Star-Spangled Banner." The sight (Concluded on PaEe 5 ) Cnbre. No damage has been reported. I (Concluded on Page 5 ) & r'1 , - ! J i"f$ - .3 ' Y 1 . r x s . ,n r,;, .iv,v , -y 1 i SCENES ABOUT CRACK WARSHIPS IN PORTLAND HARBOR. ' ' , ' .-.fc ' V'-flfW,. sL"- I? ' - L-bx r-S- U s ' - . ft-" '-z if, Mi rhi -SS 1 ' - " i tIv$ 1 - 1 M $r I lit -;;V-,,1 - i- , ill -I yr-v 'e :;r lylfc vs. Lv1 rJi5. 1 CROWDS BOARIlNU TiLE CRUISER CHARLESTON. AYliile Lloyds' Office at Paris Does Not Confirm News, Report Is . Said to Be Reliable. . PARIS, May 31. A special dispatch to the Petit Journal from Brussels says that it is rumored the Red Star steam er Vaderland has been wrecked in the North Sea in a dense fog. There are 1600 passengers aboard. Lloyd's does not confirm this news, which, however, comes from what is usually considered a most reliable source. There were three collisions in the North Sea today, and passengers on the Dover-Ostend mail packet de clare that they saw a vessel cast away on the Goodwin Sands. ' NEW YORK, May 31. No official con firmation could be obtained tonight in this city of the report of the wrecking of the steamer Vaderland in the North Sea. The officers of the International Mercantile Marine, which controls the Red Star Line, and the offices of the Red Star Line Company were closed. The Red Star steamer Vaderland was due to sail from Antwerp for New York, May 30. According: to schedule she would have reached Dover on Sun day, from which port she would be re ported on her arrival. Up to a late hour Sunday night she had not been reported. WHOLE FAMILY DROWNS On Outing to Celebrate Paying Orf Mortgage on Home. PHILADELPHIA, May 3L An entire family, consisting of William Eidelman, aged 38 years: his wife, Elizabeth, aged 38, and their two children, Anna, aged 17, and William, aged 7, of West Pensauken, N. J., were drowned in Pensauken Creek, below Riverton, N. J., today by the cap sizing of a small row boat. '- The family was taking an outing party in celebra tion of the fact that the father had Just cleared off the mortgage on their home. The bodies of the four were recovered after several hours' grappling. Persons who saw the boat before it was wrecked say there were five or six persons in it, but no trace of other bodies has been found. BARNEY 0LDFIELD INJURED Car Skids and He and His "Wife Are Thrown Out and Hurt. LOWELL, Mass., May 31. While driv ing a car on the Boulevard north of the city, Barney Oldfield, of Toledo, Ohio, the automobile racer, suffered an accident late tonight, the car being overturned and Mrs. Oldfield badly injured, while an other occupant of the car, James O'Brien, of Boston, suffered an ankle fracture. Oldfield and Albert Allen, of Hartford, Conn., and Dr. Park, of Andover, Mass., who were also in the car, escaped with slight bruises. FOOT OF SNOW IN NEVADA Heaviest Storm Since Last AVlnter Experienced at Ely. 2 LlifcBOAT IKOM ELY, Nev., May 31. The heaviest snow or no.'" I 1 g I storm since last Winter was experienced Uncle Joe is mt accustomed to being f : - . J ' here last night. Fully a foot of snow fell, talked to in this way. Finally he said: I A v , 4 vTgr f " fA The storm was eeneral between Elv and "Yes- I want currency legislation, but s . ) . & ' h-v s F.1'a i . li 1 Currency Action Forced by Banker Reynolds. TAKES ALDRIGH IN TOW, TOO Wintfy City Financier Brings Uncle Joe to His Knees. RAVES LIKE A MAD BULL Speaker Permitted to Exhaust His Sufpply of Profanity, Then He Is Calmly Told to Get Down to Business, Which He Does. Walter tvellrnan In VThlcaito Record-Herald. WASHINGTON, May 31. (Special.) It was a Chicago man, a banker and "not a politician, that saved the cur rency bill. Now that Congress has given the country a law enabling the banks at any time to take out as much currency as may be needed. It is Inter ting to know Just how the currency bill happened to have the breath of life breathed into it. There came a mo ment, it will be remembered, when the conferees of the two houses were unable , to agree, and public announcement was made that the bill was dead. Just before this, Mr. Aldrich had tel egraphed for a number of bankers to come to see him. Among them was George M. Reynolds, president of the Continental National Bank, of Chicago. Takes Aldrich In Hand. Mr. Reynolds took Aldrich in hand and talked to him in his direct, sledge hammer way. He told Aldrich to drop his narrow pride of authorship and to go in to secure results something that would help the country, regardless of whose name it bore. Mr. Aldrich was much impressed, and replied that he was willing to go half way toward a compromise. . The bankers then called " upon the Speaker of the House. Uncle Joe was in bad humor. He was angry at the Senate, at Aldrich, at the Fowler kickers in the House and at pretty much everybody. He walked up and down the room like a mad bull in a pen and bellowed out his denun ciations of the whole blooming outfit. Mr. Reynolds watched and listened a few minutes, and when the Speaker paused to expectorate, the Chicago banker sailed in. Cannon Feels the Lash. ' "Now, Mr. Cannon," he began, "you have used all the cusswords known to the vocabulary of profanity. Suppose you sit- down a little while and listen to us, for we are going to be heard. You can't bluff us. We know what the country wants and we are here to tell you. It won't take five minutes to settle this whole business. Are you for a currency bill or are you not? Just answer 'yes' or no.' " Uncle Joe is mt accustomed to being talked to in this way. Finally he said: "Yes. I want currency legislation, but CHARLESTON KUt-IIING TO RESCfE OF 4 CLOSE-RANGE VIEW OF THE rRHSfe Men, Women and Children Will Go Naked, and Xcver Cut Hair - or Beard. NEW YORK, May 31. (Special.) A "simple life paradise colony," where men, women and children will go about naked, and where the men are never to cut iheir hair or beardsr will be started this Fall near Vera Cruz, Mexico, by Gustaf H. Ander, well known in Socialist and an archistic circles. More than 50 persons have become his followers a"nd have promised to sail for the tropics when he does. ' ' " Mr. - Ander is spreading "simple life thoughts" and "paradise breezes," giving the plans for this unique colony through out the country and expects by September 1 to collect at least 600 colonists whd' have the same "free" ideas thftt he has. "When we get down to Mexico we will get'rld of all the clothes that we can," Mr. Ander said tonight. "Of course some of us will hold on to a few bits naturally, but before long, when we have all become pure in heart, we will have no need for even fig leaves." COLLIDE IN CHANNEL Steamer Queenswood Towed Into Harbor Where She Sinks. DOVER, May 31. A heavy fog in the channel tonight, which has lasted for 24 hours, has bee.i responsible for several collisions. The British . steamer. Queens wood was towed Into thehjybor, having been seriously damaged"rri a collision vith the Spanish .steamer Bermeo. Before she could be got to her moorings, the Queens wood sank In the harbor. The Bermeo began leaking badly. A portion of the crew of the steamer Loanda, from Ham burg for West Africa, who landed here tonight, report being in collision with an unknown steamer. The steamer Loanda is said to be in a bad condition, and her captain and the remainder of the crew are standing still, waiting for assistance. PLAGUE STILL ALARMS Several New Cases at Ia Guayra and Port Still Closed. CARACAS, May 28. Notwithstanding President. Castro's decree of May 23. in which it was pet forth that because of the absence of any new cases- of bu borii plague at La Ouayra, the port would be opened to traffic with the interior on May 29, great alarm is felt here for fear of the spread of the dis ease. The plague still continues at La Guayra, several cases being report ed daily.' WILLEMSTAD, May 31. A Dutch steamer whien arrived here today brought the information that the port of La Guayra still remained closed on account of the appearance of new cases of plague. IXl'R 31EN FROM OVERTURNED YACHT ' CROWDS OF VISITORS. Artist and Mother-in-Law Strangled. WIFE BARELY ESCAPES DEATH Three Men and Wnjan Do the Deed, Then Loot Home. TAKE MONEY AND JEWELS Police Baffled In Search for Clew. Thinks Woman Assassin AVas Her Husband's Model Italian Sus pect Is lender -Arrest. PARIS, May 31. A double murder was committed here during the early morn ing hours, that for absolute brutality would be hard to parallel in the annals of the crimes of Paris. Adolphe Stein heil,' a noted painter, a son of Louis Charles Auguste Steinhell, one of the most celebrated of French artists, and a grand-nephew of Meissonrel, was strangled to death in his home in the Rue de Vaugirard. His wife's mother, Mme. Japln, met a like fate. His wife was gagged and bound to a bed and heard her mother's dying struggles as she fought for life with the murderers. The bound woman and the bodies of her husband and her mother were found by a man-servant who had risen to prepare breakfast. Hearing groans coming from Mme. Steinheil's sleeping apartment, he entered and found her lying bound hand and foot to the bed. A rag of cotton wool, which she had succeeded in eject ing from her mouth, lay on the floor. A thin cord was around her throat. Strangled by Whip Cords. In the passage he found the painter dead. He was resting on his knees and the body was bent backward. He had been strangled by a whipcord similar to that, around his wife's neck; his fea tures were blackened and his limbs were already stiff. In another bedroom was the body of Mme. Steinheil'g mother, Mme. Japin. She also had been strangled and the body fastened to the bed. Every room In the house had been ransacked and a large number of valuables stolen. The servant at once gave the alarm and Chief Detective Hamard and other police Officers were soon on the spot. To them the wife, who had so barely es- (Concluded on Pace 5.) ATHAXON. LEW OF THE FORWARD Two Thousand Idle Men Will Be Set to Work in Iron Mills at Bir- , niingham, Ala. BIRMINGHAM. Ala,, May 31. (Special.) Tangible evidence of generous propor tions that prosperity is returning, is given in the fact that the Illinois Cew tral Railroad Company, in connection with the opening yesterday of its new line between Chicago, Birmingham and Atlanta, has placed a contract for 5100 tons ' of steel rails to cost $1,450,000. The contract goes to the Tennessee Iron & Coal Company and is the largest order since the financial depression set in. Only one contract, that of the Penn sylvania, takes rank with it. The official announcement that the Il linois Central has decided to lgnorte what remains of the financial depression, is likely to set the pace for other large systems which have been withholding similar orders until conditions are fully normal. This contract will enable the steel mills here to open additional plants and give immediate work to more than "two thou sand skilled men who have been idle for some time. In an indirect way it will start the wave of prosperity over the entire South, putting a large amount of money into Immediate circulation and stimulating all sorts of business. FATHER AND CHILD KILLED Hun Down by Train on Bridge. Three Boys Escape. LODI, Cal., May 31. Henry Scott and bis 10-year-old daughter were instantly ' killed this morning by train No. 3 on the railroad bridge near town. Scott was enjoying a Sunday walk with his daugh ter and three boys. They were overtaken by the train in the middle of the bridge. The boys escaped to the foot bridge but Scott stayed to extricate the girl's foot, which was fast between the ties. She was extricated Just as the train ran them down." Both were killed in stantly. BOYS QUARREL; GUN USED Lad of 14 Under Arrest for Shooting Companion in Stomach. L03 ANGELES, Cal.. May 31. Clayton Brandt, a 14-year-old boy. Is in custody awaiting the result of an Injury sustained today by William Colby, aged 13, who was shot in the stomach by Brandt, while the two boys were on a hunting trip. Ac cording to the statement of the wounded boy, he and Brandt quarreled over Col by's desire to return home, and, after some angry words, Brandt raised his rifle and -fired. Colby walked two miles to a telephone office, after being wounded, and notified his mother. DECK OF THE CHARLESTON. Youthful Robbers Con fess in Jail. LAO OF 15 LEADS THE GANG Eldest of Trio Tells Police He Is 17 Years Old. STORIES AGREE IN DETAILS Young Highwaymen Handy Willi Guns, and Passenger KeceiTes a Wound Conductor Narrowly Escapes a Bullet. GREAT FAIXS, Mont.. May 31. Th holdup last night of the northbound Great Northern train at the stockyards, about a mile and a half from this city, was the work of three boys, who now occupy cells in the City Jail. A fourth youth who admits having assisted in planning the holdup, lut who took no active part, is also a pris oner. The quartet have made a com plete confession to the police. The names of the four boys are: Al bert Hatch, aged 15; William Kandall, asrd 17; Harry Rheams, aged 15, and Giorge Cresswell, aged 16. lied by Lad of 15. According to the story told by Randall. Rheams and Crewwell, the hold-up was planned and carried out under the gener alship of Hatch, the youngest of the four, whd Is said to have turned the switch, ordered the engineer to back up and to have gone through the passenger coaches with the conductor, forcing the latter at the point of a gun to collect from the passengers. According to the other boys, it was also Hatch who shot William Eempsey and narrowly missed shooting Conductor Jack Hayes. Vantcd to .Repeat Trick. Rheams stated that Hatch, after .hey had left the scene of the hold-up, pro posed that they cross Sun River to the Montana Central line and hold up pas senger train No. 236 from Butte, which was due In two or three hours. Because he demurred, Rheams states. Hatch drew his revolver and threatened to kill him.' He was dissuaded from the second at tempt at train robbery by the two youths who were with him. The stories told by the boys, with the exception of Hatch, agreed in the main details. They state that the hold-up was planned two nights before. It being de cided to rob the train the first dark night. NEGRO MURDERER LYNCHED Taken From Cell After Confession and Riddled With Bullets. DIXON, Ky.. May 31. The race riot which occurred March 14 at Providence, a village near here, had a sequel early this morning In the lynching of Jake McDowell, a negro who had confessed to being one of a party of negroes who killed one traveling man and wounded another. The lynchers, ten in number, over powered the Jailer, and compelled him to open McDowell's celt. Mounting the negro on an extra horse the party pro ceeded out of town. The negro waa afterwards found dead by the roadside, having been stabbed and shot twice. i CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, ftS degrees; minimum, 40. TODAY'S Cloudy, with probably ahowers; southwest winds. Foreign. Artist and mother-fn-Iaw murdered In "homa in Paris. Page 1. Steamer Vaderland and 1600 people re ported lost in North Sea. Page 1. National. Chicago banker !rlnjra Aldrich and Cannon to time and secures currency legislation. Page l. PoliticnI. Local option campaign In Clackamas County has been hard-fouRht. Page G. Domrnt ic. Dr. Koch. German eintit. visit leper set tlement on Molokal Inland. Page 2. Illinois Central lets J l,4."rO,0V contract for steel rails. Page 1. Radical Socialist colony planned for Mex ico. Pa (re 1. Great Falls train robbery work of small boys, who confess in jail. Page 1. Ranchers travel hundred miles to hear Bryan talk. Page 3. Yaquis show wflllngnes to end JiO-yeur .war. Page 3. Currency commission organizes for work. Page 3. Grover Cleveland returns to Princeton homo. Page 3. H ports. Portland defeats San Francisco, 2 to 1. Page 7 Multnomah baseball team will plav Uni versity of Oregon here today. Page 6. Portland and Vicinity. Cruiser Charleston and gunboat Yorktown arrive In harbor to remain during Fes tival. Page 1. Pacific Coast advertising men will consider reorganization at convention, which opens today. Page 15. Polling places and hours of voting today. Page 4. Rose Festival will open today, with arrival of Rex Oregonus. page 11. Theodore A. Bell visits Portland. Page 3. Prohibition discussed In city pulpits. Page 10. New building project marks extension of warehouse district. Page lj. Attorney A. W. Ianrty makes answer to charges filed against him in the L-and Department. Page . Firwt Spiritual Society upholds Harrison D Barrett. Page 6. J Oil 107.2