THE 3IORXING OREGONIAX, FRIDAY. MAY . 7, 1909. 9 HAMILTON STILL WAITS FOR BAIL Must Go to Jail Unless $10,000 Is Furnished Today, Says Sheriff Gaston. BROTHER IS COUNTED ON Mayor Hamilton, or Coctir efWlcne, Expected to Supply Bond Money. Xo More Vouchers to Be Signed . With Rubber Stamps. OIWMPIA. Wash.. May 6. (Special.) Otis Hamilton. ex-Adjutant-Oerural of thi State Guard, under arrest for em bezzlement, still waits for bail money. Although much "complaint has been made about Hamilton being kept at the Hotel Mitchell instead of In jail. Sheriff Gaston says that the matter rests with him. However, he has notified Hamilton's . attorney that unless the J10.0O0 hall Is ; furnished? by tomorrow evening, the prisoner will no to jail. It is understood that Boyd Hamilton, Mayor of Coeur d'Alene. brother of Ortis Hamilton, will furnish the $10.0110 bond in the morning. The bonding company that was on Hamilton's bond has been notified of the predicament that faces Hamilton. Records show that while In office Ham ilton had T7.933 paid to him. Attorney General Bell declares that the shortage will reach S33.O00; Adjutant-General .Oeorge B. Lamping, who cxperted the books, says that $30,000 will cover the pecu lations, while Hamilton told Governor Hay that J5onf would more than make up the deficiency. As a result of the arrest of Ortis Ham ilton on a charge of embezzlement, no longer will Governor Hay use a rubber stamp in signing vouchers. Attorney General Bell has given an opinion that in the future the Governor must read and sign all vouchers, and that he cannot delegate the work to his secretary, who will affix his name with a rubber stamp. MRS. MOORE PACKS TRUXRS ' Adventuress Given Short Orders to Quit Prominent Hotel. SEATTLE). Wash., May 6. (Special.) Mrs. Hazel Moore, upon whom former Adjutant-General Hamilton lavished funds stolen from the state, has packed . her things at the fashionable hotel where he has been stopping, and It is believed she will soon make her departure from this state and the scenes of her con quests. Today sho was notified hy the hotel that she was an undesirable per- son and was given short time in which to leave. She declined to say where she is going, stating that it is nobody's busi ness. Mrs. Moore today Is as much of a mystery as she ever was. and while ad mitting that her name might not be ' Florence Moore, that It is no one's af fair. Mrs. Moore has a S-year-o!d daugh ter, upon whom she lavishes unfeigned . affection. "Hamilton told me that he had secured a divorce," she said .today, "so why shouldn't I accept his attentions. But I will say that I have not reciprocated af ' fectlons from any man who has bestowed them upon me. T am accused of being ' a heartbreaker. Well, perhaps I am; but T cannot help being admired, or even loved. You may say, however, that to . day there is no man who truthfully can say I reciprocated his love. Nor have 1 announced my engagement to any man." Mrs. Moore this morning denied that ' she Is preparing to leave Seattle Friday, but. said possibly she might leave in the course jot a week or ten days for a visit to her old home in the East. 9he de clined to say just what is meant by the . "Bast." "Why should I dra;? my parents into this notoriety?" she asked. "Where they reside is no one's business. Who I am i no one's business. Let these people who have started this thing find out if they can. I know, and at the proper time they to their sorrow will also know." life of Astoria, died shortly after 2 o'clock this afternoon at his apartments in the Northern Hotel. The immediate cause of his death was dropsy, following an illness of about seven years and occasioned first by an attack of tvohoid pneumonia. The dc- 1 ceased was a native of Norway, about 60 years of age and unmarried. His only known relatives in this countr are a sis ter and some cousins residing in Wiscon sin, a cousin in Tacoma and a brother in Alaska. ' He came to Astoria In 1S83 from Peta- luma. Cal.. where he had been engaged In the manufacture of gas. and superin tended the construction of the first gas plant in this city, remaining as its man ager until he disposed of i.s interests to the Astoria Electric Company. He was also interested in a number of other en terprises and left an estate valued in the neighborhood of JSO.OOO. Mr. Moen was a member of the Board of Police Com missioners for six years, declining to be a candidate for re-election at the end of his second term. He was a member of the local lodges 'of the Masons and Odd fellows and the funeral will bo held un. dor the auspices of those organizations. I )SHEEPRAISER IS DEAD Balthasar Dnerst Passes on His Farm In Yamhill County. M'MINXVILLB, Or., May 6. (Special.) Balthasar Duerst. who died at his home at Bellevue, Yamhill County, Or., Sun day, May 2, was born in Canton Glarus, SHOT IN HEAD, FIGHTS Wounded Man Wrenches Away Re volver and Beats Assailant. EUREKA. Cal., May 6. With blood pouring from a bullet wound in ' his temple. George J. Sousa. an electrician- nd aerona.it of this place, wrenched the weapon with which he had just been shot from the hands of his assailant, Charles Lawrence, foreman of a lumber mill, and before officers could Intervene, beat Law rence until he was in nearly as bad con dition as Sousa himself. Lawrence had accused Sousa of having wrecked Ills home. As the electrician sat in front of his lodging place tonight, ILawrence and his wife came down the street. When six feet distant, Lawrence drew a revolver and pressed the trigger three times, two cartridges missing tire. The one bullet discharged from the weapon bit Sousa in the temple, breaking through the skin and ranging around the back of his head. His condition is serious but not alarming". -Lawrence was so badly cut and bruised from the beating he received that a doctor's services were necessary. , ENGINEER'S ERROR COSTLY Shafts In Tacoma. Tunnel Fail to Meet by Eight Feet. TACOMA, Wash.. May 6. (Special.) Considerable delay and large additional .expenditure will be Involved in the con struction of the. Union Pacific tunnel into Tacoma. as the result of an engineering error which causes two shafts at the curve near the middle of t lie -tunnel to miss meeting by eight feet. The tunnel is now in over 2000 feet. Two snafts were sunk to a depth of 60 fret at the immediate approach to the line of the underground curve in the big bore. The shafts are about 800 feet apart. Forces of workmen excavating in oppo site directions from the two shafts met yesterday, when it was found that one of the lines, deviating from the original survey only a few inches at the starting point had widened until It was eight feet from the proper survey. It Is stated that it will cost several thousand dollars- to re-excavate the section of the tunnel along the proper lines. WEALTHY ASTORIAN DIES Gilford O. Moen, With Few Rela tives, Leaves $50,000 Estate. ASTORIA. Or.. May S- (Special.) Gil ford O. Moen. who for many years was prominent both in the private and public 4 Safe Bnlthnar Durrat, Decerned, AVbo rrw Fine Sheep on His Yarn- hill County Farm. Switzerland, October 25, 184?. the young est of a family of five children. When seven years old his mother died, followed by his father. In 1869 he came to the United States, locating in Iowa, following farming; then In Missouri, where he took up mining. In Green County. Wisconsin, 1875, he mar ried Miss Annie Zwcifeh They remained three years with her parents, and in 1878 went to San Francisco by rail, then to Portland by water, locating on a rented farm near Dayton, Or. The following Fall they bought the presit farm of 600 acres two and one half Vnlles northwest of Bellevue. Mr. Tuerst followed farming fand stock-raising, making Cotswold sheep a specialty. He leaves, beside his wife, the following children: William, John. Jacob and Elsie Duerst, of Bellevue; Mrs. Fanny Barret, of Twin Falls, Idaho: Mrs. Barbara Rus sell and Mrs. Mary Russell, of Bellevue. He was buried in the Bellevue cemetery Tuesday, May 4. N HEAVY FINES ARE IMPOSED Judge Galloway Not Lenient With Tillamook Bootleggers. TILLAMOOK, Or., May 6. (Special.) Judge Galloway fined Vincenz Jacob $300 and 20 days in the County Jail; W. Lang worthy, $500 and 30 days in jail; and How ard Edmunds, $500 and 20 days fn Jail, for -violating the local option law. In the case' of Howard Edmunds, Judge Gallo way made the sentence heavy because he had been up before the courts and the Judge several times for gambling. The Judge remitted,, the jail sentences during good behavior. As a number of witnesses are alleged to have perjured themselves on the witness stand during local option cases in this county, it is expected that the Judge will advise the District Attorney to prosecute them. - The case against Howard Edmunds is to be appealed, to the Supreme Court, and his bail was placed at $1000. Jacob has paid his fine and Langworthy has gone to jail. WOMAN LEFT FOR DEAD Thug Visits Home and Ties Hope Around Her Neck. LBWISTON". Idaho, May 6. (Special). Two extraordinary attacks upon Mrs. Tim Wilson, who resides near Fraser, Idaho, are reported by Sheriff Walker, who came in from Orofino today. Saturday a masked man went to the homestead during Wil son's absence and beat his wife into in sensibility. In which- condition she was found. Monday the thug paid a seconj visit to Wilson's home and left Mrs. Wil son suspended by a rope looped around her neck, from which precarious situa tion she was ' rescued by her husband. Xo cause for these attacks is known to exist, and there is considerable excite ment In the neighborhood. ONTARIO STORE ROBBED Burglars Make Off With Revolvers and Ammunition Worth $100. ONTARIO. Or., May 6. (Special.) Burglars broke into the eastern Oregon Hardware Company store here last night and stole five automatic Colts revolvers and enough ammunition to make the loss about $100. Several drummers saw the men at work from the hotel across the street and turned in an alarm, but the robbers managed to escape. This is the second robbery in one week. Some one tried to rifle the safe of the Empire Lumber Company in mid-day, but met with little success. CAVE-IN KILLS TONO MINER James Hanlon Ixses Life and Leon " ard Stark Receives Broken Leg. CHEHALIS, Wash.. May 6. (Special.) At Tono. Wash., today, at the mines of the Washington Union Coal Company, James Hanlon was killed and Leonard Stark suffered a broken leg and other serious injuries from the caving-in - of a tunnel. Hanlon was about 50 years old, and single. Stark . has a wife and five children. He was brought "to the Catholic Hospital in Chehalls. STORE NOTED FOR BEST GOODS AT LOWEST PRICES Me Allen -jMcjD onmell CORNER THIRD AND MORRISON STREETS Are offering the best values in the city of Portland. Note the following articles and prices for Friday and Saturday. In the Ladies Suit Department all question of profit is eliminated on account of the elevator and stairs passing directly through the department. NEW MILLINERY ON THE BALCONY Everybody is delighted with the New Millinery and surprised at the moderate prices. Corsets-South Aisle Tn order to close out 'dropped numbers in Thomson's Glove - Fitting and Warner's Rustproof Corsets, values up to $1.00, take your choice for 2T? Another range of $1.50 values go on the counter at ; 47? Sweaters-Main Aisle $1.98 Ladies' all-wool fancy weave Sweaters, colors cardinal, white, gray; you pay .$2.50 elsewhere. Another line of Sweaters in similar colors, $3.50 value, at $2.38 19c Hats and Caps for boys and girls for school and outing: not one in the lot worth less than 50c; all colors and white. Ladies' Underwear Main Aisle. Impossible in a limited space to quote the special reduced prices 'on the numerous ar ticles in ladies' muslin and knit Spring and Summer Underwear. See display on counters and tables. Wash Goods Section In this department, on account of the back ward season, we have cut prices to the core, in many cases to less than makers' cost. Lawns from 4125 upwards; Ginghams from 5c and upwards; India Linons and white goods from 7c and upwards. As an index to the cut in prices, we are selling an India Linon worth 25c for .'...16J 60c on the $1 Through a very special favor we were of fered a line of High-Class Sample Suits at 60 cents on the dollar. We jumped at the chance, and they're certainly beauties. Samples are always the best garments made. The styles and colors will please the most exacting. Wistaria, rose, blue, tan and gray. Come early before they are gone. Mens Section South Aisle. 9c pr Men's fast black Socks, .seamless, extra fine grade, standard value 15c, yours for $1.00 per dozen or 9c pair. 98c Men's white Dress Shirts, the celebrated Mt. Hood brand, made by the great manu facturing house of Fleischner, Mayer & Co. The shirt bears close comparison with any Eastern shirt fold in this city at. $1.50. Mt. Hood Golf Shirts, in madras and charo brays the peer of any Eastern shirt sold in this city at $1 ; light, medium and dark colors, sizes 14Va to 16V2- This is a snap. 48c ea. Men's Underwear, French rib, extra fine grade; colors blue, pink and balbriggan; this grade sells all over for 75c. The draw , ers are double seated. Ladles' Handbags Extra special values in ladies' Handbags, ranging in price from 50e to $1.48. See display on tables. ' 98c pr Ladies' pure silk Gloves, 12 and 16-button length, double finger tips, black, white and all the new shades for Spring. Also the new two-snap kid Gloves, crisp from the maker, fitted and warranted, at 98 15c pr Ladies' fancy Hose in polkadots, colors blue, black, tan aud white; also lace effects in black, tan and black embroidered. These are the regular 2oe values. Ladies' Handkerchiefs, embroidered on all four comers, also lace trimmed and plain hemstitched; regular 10c and 15c grades, your choice for 5c. Household Supplies 1 North Aisle. We are noted for Table Linens, Blankets, Quilts and Curtains. Ask the wide-awake housekeeper where she can do best. Any body that knows values. 73c pr White and Arabian Nottingham Lace Cur tains, fine patterns, 2Vj yards long, stand ard weight. 35c pr White ruffled Swiss Curtains; plain cen ter and raffle 22 yards long, good width. Fine, for Summer cottage. - 19c ea. Sample Curtains, fine assortment of pat terns; pairs and singles; l'o to 1 yards" long; extra widths. White Bedspreads, full size, soft finish, good weight; fine range of patterns. 17x24 Feather Pillows, all feathers; best A C A feather ticking; good weight. Fine for camping. Hemmed Sheets, full size, flat seam through the center; our regular 50c grade $4.50 dozen. 87c pr Arabian and white Scotch Lace Curtains, 3 yards long. 45 inches wide. Fine assort ment of patterns. 18x25 Feather Pillows, extra heavy A C A ticking, all feathers; extra weight; good home size. 1 l c ea. Superior grade hemmed Pillow Cases, standard size or $1.30 per dozen. Sale Oriental Silks 35c yd 28-inch Himalaya Suitings, latest wash fab ric, in all the leading shades, viz., pink, old rose, gray, cream, reseda, blue. 28-inch Tokio Suiting 47c yd A beautiful silk striped Summer dress ma terial; washes well; regular value 65c. 49c pr White ruffled Sw'iss Curtains, striped and tucked designs, 212 yards long and stand ard width. 65c up Finest line of sample Camping and Sum mer Blankets; all sizes, all weights and col ors. Also great range of colors and styles in Steamer and Outing Rugs. Special prices. 81x90 best extra heavy linen-finish double-warp- hemmed Sheets, full size, soft finish. Best for hard service. $535 Finest quality messaline silk ' Waist, baby Irish insertion in yoke and - sleeve : best $7.50 value, two days for. ....... $5.95 $3.85 Ladies' silk Petticoats, silk drop dust ruf fle, deep flounce, full sizes, all colors aud black. This is the best offer we have made this season.' $4.95 Ladies' messaline silk "Waists, baby Irish lace front and insertion long sleeves, with lace insertion and edging; all colors. Our regular $6.o0 grade. ARMY FUNDS ARE LOOTED CAPTAIX FRANKLIN ACCUSED OB STEALING LARGE SUM. Must Face Court-Martial, Charged With Frauds Amounting to Hundreds or Thousands. EL, PASO, Tex.. May S. A special dispatch from Washington to the El Paso Morning Times says: Captain Thomas Franklin. IT. S. A., has been ordered to report to Major Ceneral Leonard Wood at Governor's Island, New York, to face court-martial on charges growing1 out of affairs in the quartermaster's and commissary departments at West Point from 1902 to 19dS. The nature of the charges and specifications, it is said, will make the most "Important Army court-martial since Oberlin M. Carter was tried. Captain Franklin was treasurer of the United States Military Academy at West Point from 1902 to 1908, and during that period $2,000,000 in Gov ernment funds passed through his hands. He was known as the "Army's best business man," and until recently was at work perfecting plans for the Arrfry and Navy Club at Manila. The exact amount which it is alleged Captain Franklin Is short Is unknown, but it is said to reach into the hun dreds of thousands of dollars. Franklin is 38 years old, a native of Mars-land. His' wife is an El Paso woman, daughter of J. A. Smith, post master at El Paso and a Republican leader in Texas. Mr. Smith received a letter today from Franklin, in which he says he will be able to prove his innocence. LUMBERMEN PLAN JUNKET Spokane Dealers to Make Trip to Eastern Oregon May 25. ' SPOKANE. Wash.. May 6. (Special.) Spokane lumbermen plan an excursion to Eastern Oregon on May 25. At the recent meetfhg of the Western Pine Manufacturers Association, a com mittee consisting of . P. McGoldrick and William Deary was appointed, a canvass is 'being made of Spokane lumbermen to see "who will go. The trip will require two days. The lumbermen will leave on May 23, and go to Baker City, returning on the 26th. CHELAN FACTORY BURNS Flames Devour Mill and Box Plant. Loss Is 925,000. SPOKANE. Wash., May 6. (Special.) The worst fire in the history of. Chelan, Wash., began at noon today in the lum ber yards of he Lake Chelan Box Factory, and spread rapidly. Low pres sure in the water mains handicapped the firemen. The entire mill plant, box fac tory, 2.000.000 feet of lumber, a large amount .of shingles, doors, windows, build ing materials and three small barns near the mill were-consumed. . A high wind blew and for a while the town was endangered. The fire leaped several hundred yards and burned the residence owned by S. M. Brown with its contents, and the large livery barn of M. M. Foote. Citizens saved many of the residences, and the planing mill of N. T. Hlggins. Burning cinders several times started small fires across the river in Bast Chelan. The total loss is about 25.000 the heaviest loser being -the box factory. The Chelan country is now without ade quate box and lumber supplies which will greatly hamper building operations this Summer. DEPOSITORS ALL AGREED Witl Accept Payment on Deposits in Semi-Annual Receipts. PRAIRIE CITY. Or., May 6. (Special.) Petitions have been signed by all .the depositors in the defunct Traders & Stockmen's Bank of this city, whereby the depositors agree to accept their de posits in two semi-annual payments This action leaves the Attorney-General with out basis for action in attempting to oust Receiver Poland. '- An effort will be made by the stock holders of the bank to have Its affairs ex amined by an expert to find out, if pos sible, whether there has been any mis use of the bank's funds. . . "Train de Luxe" on Exhibition. Another of the magnificent trains in the Soo - Spokane'- Portland through service will be on exhibition on Fourth street, north of Oak, between 1:15 and 3 o'clock - tomorrow (Saturday) after noon. It is of Canadian Pacific design throughout and superbly equipped. The public coniialiy Invited. 3000 PAIRS SAMPLE SHOES- My Sample Shoes are Superior Shoes, They are the Pick and Cream of the Shoe World WRIGHT'S FOR WOMEN A PAIR Portland's Busiest Shoe Shop Positively No Branch Houses in Portland FOR MEN A PAIR "Never pay more than these prices. Positively No Branch Houses 'in Portland THESE SHOES ARE REGULAR $3,50 TO $6.00 VALUES Open Daily 8 A. M. to 6 P. M. 6th Floor Oregonian Building Rooms 600-601 JAUl ATI n if i V 'NliV- f- -.- ,,-,1 trtir-. - Open Saturdays 8 A. M. to lOP.M. 6th Floor Oregonian Building Rooms 600-601 TAKE ELEVATOR ET 104.0