00mwg Jill gmim VOL. XLVIII NO. 14,87fi. PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY, AUGUST 3. 1908. PRICE FIVE CENTS. y y CROWS 1ST REGION IS 1 ASHEN WASTE Six Towns Fed to y Flames Raging in Forest. THOUSANDS IkMDE HOMELESS Loss of Life Believed to Be Greatest Since San Fran , Cisco Disaster. PROPERTY LOSS $10,000,000 Whole Country From Fernie to Michel Seething Furnace. CANADA'S GREATEST FIRE Iealh Lift May Reach Ear Into Hundreds Strong Wind Fans Flames Human Hands Fight Against Them In Vain. S3 HE AO I?i ONE CAMP. VAXroiTER. B. C. Aug S- (Special. A report from Cran brook. the first station west of Fer nie. u)i that 61 men and 2 women vrn burned to death In No. 4 log ging camp of the Elk Blver Lumber Company. The camp wi surrounded by fire and not a single, person es caped. Hundreds of refugees are being sent through from Fernie to Cran brook tonight. VANCOUVER. B. C.. Aug. 2. (Spe cial.) Fire between 4 o'clock yester day afternoon and darkness tonight burned for 40 miles along the Elk River Valley, in what is known as the Crows Nest region of East Kootenay. Loss of life has been heavy. Some reports make the death list between 70 and 13. Property damage has been estimated at from 15. 000, 000 to 110,000,000. Fernie has been wiped out and. the towns of" Hosmer. Elko, Sparwood, Olson and Cokato are reported burned. Michel is threatened unless the flames are checked. The fire is still raging Towns Hemmed in by Flames. The disaster is unique in the history of Western Canada. For an entire section of country, towns, railways, bridges and forests were swept away. Hosmer, the new pet town of the Can adian Pacific Railway Company, and Michel, 28 miles east of the point where .Fernie stood yesterday after- (Conluded on Page 4 V SZk&:7-. JCJZsVF' ASsEV . t . - - K- - . 1 - - v v- i Ay'wA -'-- X 'I Js . r-. or : ' : In n: .x : I LOSES MILLIONS . BY TECHNICALITY AGED HEIRESS CAXOT COMPLY AVITH GERMAN LAW. Wisconsin Woman Unable to Recall Remote Ancestor's Xante and Produce Heirlooms. APPLETON, Wis.. Aug. 2. (Specials Because she cannot remember the name of her great-grandfather, and be cause she cannot produce . a silver buckle and a silver knife and fork gifts from the King of Prussia to her great-grandfather, talismans required by the will. Mrs. Frederika Lorenz. V X Robert A. Bnottf Ex-State Senator, Acquitted of Com. pi racy Charge. aged 95 years, a pauper supported by the town of Ellington, Wis., will lose an tstate worth many millions fifty millions, according to the attorneys. There seems to be no doubt of the woman's Identity, but the German laws relating to Inheritances take nothing for granted. The will requires that she give the full name of her greats grandfather, who was an Immensely weaJthy brewer, and produce the art icles specified in the will. These were b'urled under a stone fireplace, but were stolen by other relatives. All the chil dren of the third generation were born in this country and have had no oppor tunity of knowing what was being done with the estate, or what was required of them. It is said the money, which has been tied up far 50 years, will soon pass to other relatives and to ' the Prussian government. WIRELESS SETTLES STRIKE Steamship Crew Ratifies Agreement From Lake Michigan. CHICAGO, Aug. 2. (Special.) Wire less telegraphy was called into requisi tion today to settle a strike. This, it is said, is the first time the method ever was used. It was Imperative that the committees on shore, who had settled the strike, should get into communica tion with the captain of the steamship Theodore Roosevelt, then in the middle of Lake Michigan, apprise him of the action and have Win verify the settle ment before his ship touched port, in order to avoid trouble. He was finally picked up by wireless and the negotia tions were completed. His seamen and firemen were instructed by the same method to stand by the ship, and pas sengers were saved from trouble at the docks on the other side and possibly from being marooned on the sand dunes at Michigan City. Heretofore the chief service of " the wireless here in connection with lake navigation has been to transmit racing odds to boats which put out beyond the three-mile" limit in order to avoid the police SCENES IN BRITISH COLUMBIA inm nirnn n n .. i nniiTii n 1 1 r iiinif m m in mr AT1ERICILM Joint Maneuvers -Will Open Today. CITY OF TENTS IS A MODEL AH Regulars and Washington Guardsmen Under Canvas. OREGON TROOPS AJ?E NEXT Soldiers of Two States and Uncle Sam's Men Will Participate in Field Work of the Coming Ten Says. TACOMA. Wash., Aug. 2. Regular Army and National Guard troops from Guard stations and Army garrisons throughout Oregon and Washington are arriving with almost every train at the American Lake district, south and west of Tacoma, for participation In the Joint maneuvers, which open tomorrow morning. Tonight all Regu lar Army troops and the "Washington National Guard are under canvas, and with the arrival tomorrow of two regi ments of infantry from Oregon, the entire force assigned to the first ma neuver period of ten days will be ready to take the field. ' Regulars numbering 2584 enlisted men and 113 officers are now in camp at Murray Station, eleven miles from Tacoma. The National Guard of Wash ington is represented by a full regi ment of infantry and one troop of cavalry. The Regulars comprise the First Infantry, 10 companies, 25 offi cers, 595 men. Major T. W. Moore, commanding: the Third Infantry, 10 companies, 27 officers. B22 men. Colonel T. C. Woodbury, com manding: Sixth Infantry, 9 com panies, 23 officers, 473 men, Lieut.- Col. W. E. Mann, commanding: Fourth Cavalry, 4 troops, 8 officers, 286 men. Captain. H." E. Hope, commanding: Fourth Field. Artillery, 2 batteries, 7 officers. 244 men, Major F. E. McLaughlin, commanding: battalion Second Infantry, 3 companies, 7 offi cers. 163 men. Captain F. A. Shuttle worth, commanding; Ambulance Com pany, 11 officers. 90 men. Captain A. E. Truby, commanding. Establish Mode! Camp. In addition to these troops, which will represent the actual flgi.ting force, are the engineers and signal corps men, and the cooks and bakers. To Company B, of the hnijiiiecr corps. Lieutenant u. 11. Watkins commanding, has fallen the work of laying out the big camp, in which the entire force is being assem bled. Perfect sanitary arrangements have been perfected. The construction of a model camp has required endless work, as well as skill, experience and intelligence. One of the most Important things In connection with the maneuvers' is the health of the troops engaged, and to this the engineers and medical de partment must attend. Baking Made a Science. Cooking and baking have likewise been reduced to a fine art, and 41 men under Captain H. T. Ferguson, will bake bread for the entire camp, and bake bread which will be nutritious and digestible, a result not always attainable by hap hazard company cooks and bakers who (Concluded on Page 8.) FIRE ZONE AND MAP SHOWING ITS GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION, WITH SPOKANE AS BASIS . fc. -.W'l,. I X if R H ERA OF PROGRESS AND PROSPERITY , IN NORTHWEST Portland's Remarkable Record for Pirst Seven Months of 1908. It Is gratifying in the ex treme to note the great prog ress which Portland is making in all lines of industrial effort. Record-breaking building per mits. 'real estate transfers and " Postoffice receipts all. point to a degree of prosperity . that six months ago even the most optimistic -would not .have dared-to predict. ' In view of this remarkable recovery lt is Interesting to note some of the features that have contributed to this prosperity and that have inspired our people with confidence In the future. Among these features having such an important influence on our prosperity and not in evidence a year ago are: The North Bank road, open ing to our merchants a terri tory nearly equal in extent to that on which we have t been dependent for years. The Lewiston-Rlparia- road, making tributary to Portland the rich Lewiston-Clearwater country, from which Portland has been barred for nearly ten years. The Oregon Electric system, opening up a nearby territory in which poor transportation and no transportation have re tarded development for years. An increased steamship serv ice to Coos Bay. Preliminary work on a num ber of important industrial and transportation enterprises. Positive assurance of greatly increased depth of water at entrance of Columbia. Those are some of the fea tures which Inspire confidence in the future of the city. Here are a 'few that have actually brought prosperity with them: For the first seven months of 1908, Portland shipped 9,922,233 bushels of wheat. For the same period of 1907, 3,205,153 bushels. Foreign lumber shipments this year to August 1 were ' 67,622,056 feet; last .year, 41,253,089 feet. ' For the seven months this year Portland cleared 414 ves sels of 648,133 tons net regis ter; last year, 327 vessels of 466,677 tons net register. The value of wheat, barley and lumber shipped by water from Portland for the first seven months of 1908 was more than $7,000,000 in excess of that sent out in the same period last year. An increase of more than $1, 000,000 per month in water shipments of grain and lum ber alone offers some explana- tion of an Increase in real es tate transfers, Postoffice re ceipts and building permits, especially when it is - known that the average of gain will be excelled during the re maining five months of the 'year. All things considered, Port land real estate is cheaper today at $5000 per front foot than it was a year ago aL $4000. " BOOTH CASE JURY VOTES ACQUITTAL Separate Verdicts for Three Defendants. RETURNED EARLY IN MORNING Robert A. Booth Is Exonerated on First Ballot. HEAR RESULT IN TEARS Defendants Are Greatly Affected When Agreement Is Reached After Juror .Gibson Had Held Out for Hours. Separate verdicts of acquittal were re ported in the United States Court at 9:30 o'clock yesterday morning against each of the three defendants in the Booth-Singleton conspiracy case, Robert A. Booth, ex-State Senator; James Henry Booth, ex-Receiver of the Roseburg and Office, and their brother-ln-lawr-Thomas E. Singleton. The jury retired at 2:40 P. M. Saturday and agreed on verdicts In favor of all three defendants at 9:15 o'clock Sunday morning. Judge Wolverton was notified and the verdicts were received and read shortly . before 10 o'clock. Robert E. Davis, of this city, was foreman of the jury. Friends Hear the Verdict. It was a glorious Sunday morning for the three defendants and, the members of their families and several intimate friends, who were in constant attendance during the three weeks' tedious trial. Patiently and confidently did they loiter in the courtroom waiting for the message "not guilty" from the jury room until midnight Saturday njght, when Judge Wolverton ordered the Jury locked up for the night. Early yesterday morning they were back in the courtroom apprehen sive lest the Jury should fail to agree. This feeling of uncertainty was ..dis pelled about 9:30 o'clock, when it was announced the Jury had a report to make. When the Jurors entered the courtroom the interested group, from an Inspection of the 12 men, was convinced that only good news was to be expected. Give Way to Tears. Tears mingled with hearty congratula tion when Clerk Marsh finished reading the verdicts, which declared the Inno cence of ' the three accused men. It was not until the acquittal of his two al leged co-consptrators was assured from the reading of the verdicts that Robert A. Booth surrended to his emotions, and, with tears rolling: down his cheeks, joined with the other defendants personally in thanking each of the jurors. The verdict acquitting Robert A. Booth of any complicity in the alleged conspir acy amounted to a complete vindication. It was apparent to those attending the trial that the Government failed to con nect him with the transaction and that the jury so regarded the case was con firmed by the fact that it voted unani mously on the first ballot for his ac quittal. Only Two for Conviction. But it was in considering the cases of James Henry Booth and Singleton that the jury failed to agree for several hours. But at no time did more than two of the 12 men vote for conviction as against either of the defendants. For the first (Concluded on Page 9.) N0C0NS0LIDATI0N, SAYS HARRIMAN ERIE DEAL MADE TO SAVE BAP SITUATION". Roads Will Not Be Abandoned, De dares Magnate in Chicago on His Way to Oregon. CHICAGO, Aug. 2. (Special.) "There not going to be any abandonment of rail roads,' nor is there to be any combina tion or consolidation of railways over night. What has been done has been done to save a bad situation, financially speaking." This statement was made with emphasis J, H. Bboth, Ex-Receiver Rosebunt Land Office, Acquitted for Second Time in Federal Court. by Edward H. Harriman tdnight, discus sing the deal whereby a syndicate of bankers paid in effect $8,000,000 for $12, 000,000 worth of Wheeling & Lake Erie short term notes. Mr. Harriman, accompanied by his family and- large retinue of servants, stenographers, telegraph operators and other assistants in a special train of five cars, arrived here this evening on his way to Oregon. Important conferences are scheduled for tomorrow and number of men prominent in railroad and financial affairs here got into communication with Mr. Harriman shortly after his arrival. Among his callers will be representatives of the J. Osden Armour interests. Julius Kruttschnitt, director of main tenance and operation, of Union and Southern Pacific systems, joined Mr. Har riman here and will accompany him on his Western trip. J. C. SUibbs, traffic director for the Harriman lines, it is thought, will also bo one of the party. SHOT BY CLAIM JUMPER California Man Killed and Com' panion Dangerously Wounded. RANDSBURG- Cal., Aug. 2. Two men were shot, one being killed ajid the other dangerously wounded, six miles west of Garden station this morning. The news was brought In by J. N. Witt, who did the shooting. There had been trouble over the action of Witt and a man named Chesborough in Jumping a claim owned by M. S. Tarkington and Bradford Peck, Jr. Witt says Peck and Tarkington came into his yard and began driving a stake. He ordered them off and went toward them, carrying a Winchester rifle. When within a dozen feet of Peck he shot him through the heart, then turned the gun on Tarkington, shooting him in the face and neck. Tarkington begged " Rim not to shoot again and struggling to his feet, started for a railroad camp several miles away. Word was received that after reaching the camp he fainted and it is feared he is mortally wounded. Witt took his family to Johannesburg, then came here to give himself up. .-v. v' ;; Wr-: . ...1 V w V ; : . A - y) m J ii. ii i insrr n " " GIVING ODDS 10 TO 1 ON TAFT Betting Like Lobsters, Says Wellman. WALL STREET AN EASY MARK New Yorkers Know Little of National Politics. GOOD TIMES ARE COMING Hopeful Over Bright Business Ont look Vsual Repressing In fluence of Presidential Elec tion Hardly Felt at All. By Walter WellmaB. to Chicago Record- ! Herald. NEW YORK, Aug. 2. (Special.) Down ! in Wall street they are living In a fool's paradise, so far as the election Is con- ' cerned. They think Bryan has no earthly show to win. They can't see even a possibility of his success. They talk about odds of 10 to 1 and 8 to 1, and 6 ; to 1 against him, and even at that no ! one has the courage to take the Bryan end of it. Almost everyone will be willing to con- , cede that this early in the campaign and as matters now stand, Taft's chances must be' considered better than Bryan's. But talk of odds of front 6 up to 10 to 1 is simply ridiculous. Two to one would , be more lirfe a fair sporting proposition. Good Risk at Three to One. If there are any men in the West who think Bryan's chances are as good as one out of three, and that is my judgment, they can get a nice mathematical equa tion in their favor by sending their money down to New York to bo placed. Bet- Hlng on election or anything else is, of course, a foolish business, especially tho way they do it here, that Is, without any sense or knowledge. I call attention to the betting odds In , Wall street only to illustrate the point ' I have In mind the utter, tho well-nigh Inexplicable inability of the average New Yorker to gain even a Small glimmer of . the true values in the National game of ' politics, . Every other sort of game he under stands, and plays a pretty good hand at that, but In National politics he Is a child, a foreigner, an outsider, a ten- derfoot, a chump, a rube, a jay, a soft one, an easy mark, a lobster. Ho getji his general Ideas from the New York ' papers, and the peoplohe talks with are his own kind, the men who believe just the way he does. These Wall-treet oddmakers know nothing whatever about tho rest of the j country. The West, to them, is a sort ; of terra incognita which thoy indicate, if they deign to consider it at all, with vague sweep of the hand In the dircc- 1 tion of Hoboken. They know and caro nothing about some of tho peculiar things going on in the minds of the people in j all that region, "out West" things which may give Bryan a better chance than most people think he has. Jubilant Over Good Times. In one respect the Wall-street people appear to be right; at least it is to be hoped they are. Over the business out look they are more than hopeful they are optimistic, confident. Tiny believe real prosperity is near at hand and that the disturbing or repressing Influence of the Presidential election is not going to' be great enough to do much harm. There is a gradual, steady Improve ment in business and employment, more noticeable in the East than in tho West, ' because in this part of the country the depression was much more severe than ; farther west. Down town they feel so sure of the election of Taft that they are already discounting the outcome on the " stock exchange. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature Si degrees; minimum 53 degrees. TODAY'S Fair; winds mostly northerly. Foreign. Venezuelans defend Castro's action in Rues affair. Page 2. Domestic. Wellman says Ne -v Yorkers are wagering 10 to 1 on Taft; bet Ilka lobsters. Page 1. Harriman and party reach Chicago en routs to Oregon. Page 1. rolltles. Bryan comments on Bonaparte's opinion of the Omaha banking law. Page IS. Call me BUI, says Mr.- Taft to newspaper men. Page 4. 8ports. San Francisco defeats Portland m 20-lnnlng game. Pago 6. Better batting by Seals accounts for Port land only breaking ven during past week. Page 6. Pacific Coabt. Forest tires raging In Crows Nest region, B. C. : most ai-palllng disaster in Can ada's history: loss of life msy reach into hundreds. Page 1. Troops gathering for maneuvers at American Lake. Page 1. Portland and Vicinity. , Jury acquits all three defendants In Booth conspiracy case. Page 1. . Many land-fraud cases pending In Fedc-ral court will be dropped. Page 0. Judge Morrow discusses need of large new Courthouse. Page 7. Real estate and building activity continues. ' Page 13. Cornerstone of new I. O. O. F. temple on East Side Is laid. Page 11. Dr. Luther R. Dyott says more personal work is needed in churches. Pag a. y