PRICE FIVE CENTS. PORTLAND, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1903. VOL. XLVIIL "0. 13,023. CHAPER0NE ORDER GORGE PUTS QUIETUS ON JEKYLL AND HYDE DEFERRED AFFINITY CRAZE CAREER HIS FATE ANGERS 20 GIRLS -JAP BILLS THIGE ON THEFT CHARGE FELONY TO DESERT WIFE OR PHYSICIAN" ARRESTED IN EAST FOR ROBBERY. PRETT5T PUPIL CALL PRINCIPAL- "MEAN OLD THING." ' HUSBAND FOR ANOTHER. MANY WORKMEN BURNED JN TRAP COLUMBIA CORDON ARRESTED AGTIQN 0 NT blocked m Ex-Judge Accused o Cashing Check. BONDS PLACED AT $20,000 Warrant Issued in Spokane by by Great Northern's Order. ASSERTS HE IS INNOCENT Accused ATIII laT for Spokane To day In Company of Deputy Sher iff 'Prisoner Allowed to Spend lgbt at Home Vnder Gnard. TACOMA. Wash.. Jan. (Special.) Former Judge M. J. Gordon was ar rested late tonight at his home' in this city by Deputy Sheriff Long, of Spokane. on a telegraphic bench warrant. The charge Is embezzlement and the amount is presumably $10,000. as it is understood the ball required Is 120.000, or double the amount of the alleged em bezzlement. Gordon refuses to make any statement except to say that he is innocent and" will leave with Deputy Long for Spokane at 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon. He will spend the night at his home In custody of the deputy sheriff. It Is reported that the warrant was sworn out by some official of the Great Northern Railway at Spokane, but Gordon's friends do not believe this. claiming President Hill testified before the Bar Association that Gordon's ac counts had been audited and balanced and that there was no charge against him. GREAT NORTHERN ACCUSES Gordon Said to Have Taken Money Awarded In Damage Suit. SPOKANE, Wash.. Jan. 2D. (Special.) Warrant for the arrest of SI. J. Gor don, whose, alleged shortage while Spo kane counsel for the Great Northern "Railroad Company and connection with the Irregularltlrs of Judse MHo A. Root led to the investigation by the State Bar . Association committee and Judge Root's resignation from the State Supreme Court, was Isssued this morning by Judge J. D. Hinkle. of the Spokane County Superior Court. The warrant charges Sir. Gordon with embezzlement of ItTm) from the Great Northern. The charge Is Ra-ed on In formation filed in the Superior Court. Deputy Sheriff Clarence Ixng went to Tacoma today to bring Mr. Gordon to this city. The charge of embezzlement grew out of the suit of James Sparrow against the Great Northern for damages for personal injury. Judgment was given by the Superior Court for IWin against the rail road, and a draft was drawn on the com pany by Gordon, which was Indorsed by Nuzum A Nuzum, attorneys for Sparrow, and cashed by Gordon." At the same time Gordon- delivered to Sparrow's at torneys a stipulation that the fcCOO would be paid before August 31. lfOS. Before that timo Gordon's connection with the Great .Northern was severed, and when the stipulation was tiled In the Federal Court the sum was paid by N. C. GHIman. general counsel of the Great Northern In Seattle. In an Interview tonight N. K. Nuzum. of the firm of Nuzum & Nuzum. said: "1 understand the warrant was served this morning and that bond was fixed at $10,000. While I do not know that bond was furnished. I think there is little question that Judze Gordon could get bond to that amount In Tacoma." OBJECT TO BIBLE READING Hebrews Want Less Sectarianism In Public Schools. PHILADELPHIA. Jan. 30. After a spirited debate on the question of means to prevent sectarian teachings in the pub lic schools, the delegates to the grand council of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations today passed a resolution appointing a committee to circulate literature that shall take the position that from a constitutional standpoint this Is not a Christian country. The resolution suggests for an educa tional campaign on this subject, the pam phlet of the Central Conference of Ameri can Rabbis. "Why the Bible Should Not Be Read in the Public Schools." MONEY SURE FOR OREGON Ijnergeney Appropriation for River , and Harbor Work. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington. Jan. 10. In the absence of a gen eral rivers and harbors bill, emergency appropriations aggregating J7.000.OCO will probably made for the work actually required during the next fiscal year. The projects to be listed in this appropriation In Oregon are: Coos River. t!3X-. Tilla mook Bay. rO: Snake River. J0O00: Co lumbia and Lower Willamette. JloO.OOO; Upper Willamette. J13.000; Cowlitz River, J.O00. For Washington river Improve ments, 3,500. Declares Whisky His Nemesis, and Dual Personality Beyond His Control. CHICAGO, Jan. 10. "Today I am a criminal caught red-handed, an asso ciate of evil persons, a bandit, robber, an enemy of society. "Tomorrow, I shall be a scientific recluse, deeply studious. Interested in4 psychopathic literature, an analyst of the human mind and, moreover, a neu rologist. "It is fate. Highly nervous and overstudlous In these recent ' years, I have overstrained. Whiskey is my Nemesis, but I am not a drunkard. Without It, I am the gentleman my parents bore; with it, I am the fight Ing. adventure-seeking, dangerous character the police have captured. In all my reading I never encountered so strange a case of dual personality as my own." This amazing statement of his case was offered today by Dr. Paul Trot ter, a young physician and graduate of Tulane University and of the Wash ington University Medical Department at St. Louis. Mo., who is held on charges of highway robbery. C0SGR0VE STARTS FRIDAY Governor-elect Declares He Feels Cured, but "VVI11 Return South. PASO ROBLEd HOT SPRINGS. Cal. Jan. 20. (Special.) Governor-elect Cos grove and party will leave here Friday for Olympia to take the oath of office as Governor of the State of Washington. His condition Is greatly improved. Yesterday he took an automobile ride with George Klelser. of Portland. This afternoon he made the statement that he believed himself to be completely cured, and only lacked strength to feel as well as ever. ills plans are to remain In Olympia one day and reUim to Paso Robles Hot Springs to remain until Spring. F. W. SAWYER, director. RECALL MAYOR HARPER Los Angeles Reformers Start Move ment Because of Misconduct. LOS ANGELES. Jan. 20. Two hundred and fifty prominent citizens of Los An geles, at a meeting today at the instance of the Municipal League, voted to pre pare and circulate petitions demanding an election for. the recall from office of Mayor A. C Harper. It will require the signatures " of about 800 voters to call the election. The allegations of misconduct In office made against Harper are based principal ly upon his recent appointment of Chief of Police Kern as member of the Board of Public Works and upon allegations of vice protection under his administration. AEROPLANE IS SMASHED British Army Machine Falls With Thud and Is Wrecked. ALDERSHOT. England. Jan. 10. The aeroplane with which the balloon corps of the British army Is conducting expeVlments again came to grief here today. After a couple of short flights. Captain F. S. Cody, the American in charge of the experiment work, started on a more ambitious trip. He had hardly gone 100 yards at a height of ;o feet on his third trial when the lifting fan buckled and the machine came down with a thud and was badly wrecked. Captain Cody was not hurt. 7 ' DIVORCE ENDS ROMANCE frwcllrt I.o Angeles Wedding Has Miserable Anti-Climax. LOS ANGELES. Cal.. Jan. 20. (Spe cial.) The most aristocratic romance this1 Ity ever had was shattered today by a 'hurry-up" divorce granted by Judge James to Laurlne Bayly from William Bayly, Jr. They began it as children of millionaires and it culminated in 1904 in the swellest wedding Los Angeles society ver attended. The bride was Miss Laurlne Harding, daughter of 31 r. and Mrs. B. L. Harding, and the groom is the son of William Bayly and a conspicuous Stanford fra ternity man. R0HIBITI0N BILL STANDS Tennessee Legislature Over Governor's Passes Veto. It NASHVILLE. Tenn.. Jan. 30. Over the veto of Governor Patterson this afternoon both houses of the Legislature passed the Senate bill which prohibits the sale of Intoxicating liquor within four miles of a schoolhouse In Tennessee, and Is in effect the statewide prohibition act. It Is effective July 1, 1909. HERO FUND GIVES $14,750 Two Indians Among C(S Who Get Hero Medals. PITTSBURG. Jaa. 20. The Carnegie hero fund committee today awarded 26 medals. $14,730 in cash and pensions ag gregating Jo5 per month for deeds of valor performed since the last meeting of the committee. Among those rewarded are two full-blood Indians living on Gov ernment land. California Assembly Is Willing to Wait. JOHNSON HOTLY PROTESTS Insists Japanese Population Is Still Increasing. DREW ASKS INVESTIGATION One Week's Respite Granted In Face of Agitator's Fierce Assault on Roosevelt Move to Demand Information Falls. SACRAMENTO, Cal., Jan. 20. Con sideration of the bills denying to Japa nese to own American land or to be directors of corporations, was delayed for one week by the Assembly this morning at the request of President Roosevelt and Governor Gillett. When these measures came up on a special order. Preston, of Mendocino County, offered a resolution request ing the President to furnish the Legis lature with all documents and data In possesion of the Federal authorities bearing upon the Japanese situation. This was declared to be out of order. Then Drew moved that his bill deny ing Japanese the right to own land be made a special order for a week from today. Grove L. Johnson, author of the di rectors' bill, opposed postponement in an Impassioned speech, declaring that the request of the President for delay meant nothing to the Legislature, as the Governor had not seen fit to trans mit It to the Assembly through a spe cial message and no such request was before the House. He suld that the Japanese were increasing in numbers Instead of decreasing, as stated by the President, and there was urgent de mand all over the state for action at once. He, for one, would not give up the fight against Washington's inter vention. Drew, who. introduced the land bill. aid that he was as anxious as any to have action on the bills, but he favored a delay of one week. On roll call the motion to postpone I was carried. 43 to 34. Johnsons bill was then put over without roll call to the same 'date. Drew then Introduced a resolution calling for the appoint ment of a committee of three to Investi gate the Japanese problem In the state. Roosevelt Much Concerned. WASHINGTON, Jan. 20. While such assurances as have come from representa tive Pacific Coast men regarding the lm- Concluded on rage 3.) HERE ARE EIGHT HANDSOME LEGISLA TORS WHO CAME WITHIN HARRY MURPHY'S PENCIL feet 'ENftloR & inn oT T. Head of Normal Says "Minstrel Maidens" Must Be Accompa nied by Mothers. BELLINGHAM. Wash.. Jan. 20. (Special.) Because Principal Edwin Twltmeyer, of the Bellingham High School, does not believe that six chaperons who have already volun teered their services, are enough to keep In order 20 vivacious and pretty school girls, while they are on tour with a high school theatrical produc tion, the amateur company will prob ably not be allowed to go on the road. The principal Insists that the girls shall have at least one chaperon apiece, or In , other words, that each member of the company be accom panied by her mother or older sister. The fact that the performance of the "Minstrel Maids" Is given In cos tume, and abbreviated costume at that, is thought to have a good deal to do with his fervent Insistence on the conventionalities. A storm of protest has been caused by the principal's decision. The girls have sent up a complaint whose burden Is "mean old thing." - BAY STATE JABS COMBINE New York, New Haven & Hartford Road In Trouble Once More. BOSTON, Jan. 20. The Massachusetts charter of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad Is declared to be sub ject to forfeiture In the annual report of Attorney-General Malone to the Massa chusetts Legislature, presented today, be cause of the action of the railroad in merging with the Consolidated Railway Company, of Connecticut and increasing its capital stock. ONLY ONE PASSES MUSTER Eleven Other Talesman Disqualified for Calhoun Jury. SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. 20. A single talesman ran the gauntlet of the Inquiry today in the trial of Patrick Calhoun upon an Indictment for bribery, and 11 others, whose examination occupied the entire day, were challenged or excused. The proceedings were almost monotonous and there was not a ringle clash between opposing attorneys. .. .. ; . MORE LIGHTS FOR PACIFIC Straus Wais Vessel on Orford Reef, Signals for Puget Sound. WASHINGTON. Jan. 20. For the lighthouse establishment throughout the United States. Secretary Straus today submitted to Congress estimates amount ing to J406.600. He asked, among other things, $150,000 for a first-class steam light vessel to mark Orford reef, Oregon, a group of rocks extending two and a half miles north and south and one and a half miles east and west, and $41,600 for six light and fog signals In Pugct Sound, Senator uut JrU CORrUG.N. Jam Mountain High at Celilo Canal. MAY SWEEP OUT CANNERIES Falling Barometer at The Dalles Forecasts Storm. NO FLOOD IN WILLAMETTE Santlam Reported to Be Falling. Salem Fears No Damage Unless River Reaches 30-Foot Stage. Rains at Mcdford. High water due to melting snow and excessive rains has seriously Interrupted traffic on . railroad lines throughout the Pacific' Northwest. Many. Inland Empire towns are marooned by high water, and at Colfax and Pullman the Palouse River has ploughed new channels through the cities. At The Dalles, ice In the Columbia River gorge Is piled even with the basaltic bluffs. So great Is the pressure of the Ice, that damage to the Govern ment work on the Celilo Canal Is threat ened. Seufert Bros", salmon cannery Is endangered In the path of the Ice Jam, and a portion of Taffe's fishwheel has been carried away. Much damage has been done to waterfront property at The Dalles by the breaking up of the heavy Ice. Yamhill River 40 Feet High. The Willamette River Is 20 feet high at Salem, and the Yamhill River at Mc- MInnvllle. 40 feet above low water and still rising. A height of 45 feet Is pre dieted today at McMinnvIlIe. The Santiam In Linn County is reported to be falling. The Willamette River is still rising at Portland, end the swift current threatens to damage the Madison-street bridge. Trains on the branch lines running south from the O. R. & N. are all de layed by washouts. Spokane has been unable to reach Portland by way of the O. R. & N. for two days. Falling barometers last night indicated an approaching storm. Early In the eve ning a severe gale was blowing at Port land. Astoria sounds warning of a gale off the Coast. At The Dalles the baro meter was reported the lowest In 20 years. Telegraph Service Crippled. Southern Oregon and the Upper Wil lamette Valley report heavy and con tinued rains, which means increased high water In the ' Willamette River within the next few days. Telegraph and telephone companies are hivlnr trouble In maintaining service tContinued on Page ) RANGE OF REPR? SEhnrVWS' CRUKlNS. ) Kansas WiU Send Offenders to Jail If Travis Wins Censor on Marriages. TOPEKA, Kan., Jan. 30. (Special.) "The affinity" business will not be popu lar in Kansas hereafter. It is certain that the law making it a felony will pass the Legislature, and Governor Stubbs has promised to sign It. Senator Travis, of Iola, Introduced the bill. It makes It a felony for a married wo man to run away with another man, and vice versa. Even a temporary "affinity" Is punishable by a jail sentence. Any man- who deserts his wife or legitimate child under 14 years of age will be guilty of a crime punishable by a Jail or peni tentiary sentence. The same punishment j is to be meted out to the wife. If a man refuses to support his wife or child, he must go to Jail. Another bill which seems certain of passage provides that brides and grooms must be subjected to strict questioning by the Probate Judge before they granted a license to marry. BONAPARTE SENDS 'REGRET Attorney-General Not to Testify as to Steel Merger. WASHINGTON, Jan. 20. Attorney General Bonaparte will not appear be fore the subcommittee of the Senate on the Judiciary when It meets tomor row to begin the Inquiry Into the mer ger of the Tennessee Coal. & Iron Com pany and the United States Steel Cor poration. Senator Clark, of Wyoming, chairman of the committee, received a communi cation from Mr. Bonaparte, declining the invitation to testify before the commit tee on the ground that he had a prior engagement for tomorrow in the Su preme Court. It is said Mr. Bonaparte's note Ignored the suggestion that he might appear be fore the committee at another time. BARE LAMP BLOWS UP SIX Mine Explosion in California Is Re sult of Carelessness. SAN LOUIS OBISPO, Cal., Jan. 20.-Slx miners were killed and eight others ser iously, if not fatally, injured by an ex plosion in the Stone Canon coal mine, near Chancellor last night. One of the miners entered room No. 27 .with a lighted torch. The room was full of gas and an explosion followed. Most of the men were Italians. Two of them leave wives and families In San Francisco. The dead were two Frenchmen, August Magnes and August Vassadeo, of San Francisco, and four Italians, Dave Nek- reff, Gio Veccoml, Glo Nadala and Joe Flor, former residence unknown. Only seven were Injured and they are doing well. Three of them will be able to leave the improvised hospital In a couple of days. FIFTY TONS OF DOLLARS Waters-Pierce Oil Company Will Pay line In Cartwheels. EL PASO. Texas, Jan. 20. Nearly 60 tons of silver in the form of dollars will be turned over to the state of Texas by the Waters-Pierce Oil Company, ac cording to a special from Austin. The attorneys for the Waters-Pierce Oil Com pany, which has been ousted from the state and fined Jl, 623.900 for violation of anti-trust laws, announced at Austin today that the big fine, with the at tendant costs, will be paid to the state in silver dollars. The state will have to employ a small army of clerks to count It. ICE GRINDS TWO TO DEATH Men Fall From Trestle While At tempting to Dislodge Floe. MISSOULA, Mont., Jan. DO. While at tempting to dislodge a quantity of Ice which threatened the destruction of a trestle over Hell Gate River this morn ing, Roy Robblns and another man whose name is not known lost thoir bal ance and fell into the stream. Bobbins was crushed to death between the ice floe and a bridge pier and his com panion, buffeted about by huge cakes of Ice, which carried him 500 yards down stream, was only rescued with diffi culty, and cannot live. WILL BE 13 NEW SENATORS Eighteen Members of Upper House Succeed Themselves. WASHINGTON, Jan. JO. In event of the re-election of Senator Hopkins of Illinois, 18 of the 31 United States Sen ators whose terms expire with that of Theodore Roosevelt as President of the United States on March 4 will be sworn to succeed themselves. Among the 13 new Senators is ex-Governor Cummins, of Iowa, who Is now serving out the un expired term of the late Senator Allison. BOY GUILTY OF MURDER Jury Convicts Lad of 18 in Second Decree. BRIDGETOWN, N. Y., Jan. 30. The jury in the case of Herbert Griggr, the 18-year-old boy on trial for the murder of William Read, of Vineland, brought in a verdict of murder m the second de gree tonight. Sixty Men Meet Death on Lake Michigan. SURVIVORS HORRIBLY INJURED Bodies Burned, Many Are Torn From Cakes of Ice. SACKS OF HUMAN HEADS Working In Wooden Crib Mile Off Shore in Frozen Lake, Over 100 Men Are Burned, -Stifled or Frozen to Death. CHICAGO, Jan. 20. (Special.) Sixty men were killed and 48 tefribly Injured in an explosion at the crib, one mile out In Lake Michigan, this morning. The men were Isolated on a narrow ledge without boats, and the survivors had the choice of remaining and burning to death, leaping Into the lake, which was thickly filled with ice hummocks, or smothering In the tunnel leading to shore and which immediately filled with deadly gas. Those who were not too badly stunned sprang into the lake and fought with the ice 'until tugs arrived. Some were saved, but others perished. Many men were thrown out of bed by the explosion and clung to blocks of Ice, their only clothing being thin nightshirts. The res cuers found them benumbed and Insane and some of them fought their rescuers in their delirium. Some of the escapes were marvelous. Those who could not swim swung by ropes over the sides of the crib, but the flames ate through the ropes and they dropped to death. Many were made unconscious by the force of the explosion and burned to death Inside the crib. Burned, Frozen to Ice-Floes. Horrible scenes were witnessed by the rescuers. Stark naked, gibbering men, with their bodies fearfully burned, wero found frozen to ice floes and. when they were lifted off, strips of their flesh tore off and remained on the ice. One mile away on shore was assembled an Immense crowd of people. Including relatives of the unfortunates at the crib. Helpless, shrieking, hysterical or dumb with horror, were groups of women and children. News of the catastrophe spread almost as quickly as the flames them selves and the shore for blocks was lined with spectators. Human Fragments in Sacks. The horror at the crib was enhanced 15 (Concluded on Fagfl 3.) INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTE RDA Y'S Maximum temperature, 46 degrees; minimum, 4A 3 degrees. TODAY'S Rain, with high cast shifting to out heart winds. Foreign. 1 Earthquake near Smyrna does great damage, but deaths are tew. Page a. Rational. More World men summoned in canal libel case. Page 3. California legislature holds up an tl-Japa nese blliH; Roosevelt alarmed as to result if they pass. Page 1. Senator Frazler opposes re-enltstment of Brownsville rfo(rs. Page . House declares Li) ley disqualified by election us uovernor. jrage . Politics. Illinois (Legislature deadlocks on Senator and II tip kins loses voto at each ballot. Page 4. Taft and Rockefeller meet at banquet at Auguata, Page 4. Domestic. Powder explosion in crib In Lake Michigan kins uv workmen; survivors terribly burned. Page 1.- Kansas bill makes desertion for affinity penal offense, Pago 1. Spokane bank swindler captured In fit juouls confesses. Page d. Loom Is advocates closer "trade relation with Japan. Page 4. Commercial and Marine. Cheese factories at Coast closed down. Page 15. May wheat advances cent at Chicago. Paga Stock speculation almost at a standstill. Page 15. legislature. Election of Governor Chamberlain as Sen ator is ratified, but contest ai Washing ton is possible. Page o. 1 Flood of bills for increase of various salaries introduced. Pave ft. Fight on Normal schools renewed. Page 7. Bili.s to restrict corporations much In evi dence. Page 6. Flood of measures introduced in both branches at Salem. Page 7. Senator Coffey has bill to redistrtct stats. Page 4. Pacific Northwest. Columbia River gorge blocked with Ice at Celilo. Page 1. Bishop Hughes, of San Francisco, delivers charge to .president JHoman. ot Willam ette. Page 5. Eugene Council starts row in effrrt to force uy ireasurer to resign. Page 5. Portland and Vicinity. City swept by gala of hurricana force. Page 10. Madison-street bridge closed to all traffic. Page 14. Electric cable burns out, leaving Portland" in darkness for half an hour. Pago 10. Manufacturers' Association of Norttowest holds annual meeting. Page 10. Charge against Contractor Wakefield for violation of eight-hour labor law dis missed. Page 8. Creston baker beaten and robbed by thugs. jrage v Supreme Court refuses rehearing on vehicle law. Page 10. Council committee votes to. provide $267,- 745 for police work. Page 10. Two trains derailed by landslides, and roads crippled by washouts. Page 14. Oregon hardware men will extend organisa tion to other states. Page iL 9