(i ti ii in ii Ei ii iti ri ri i VOL. XLIX.-XO. 15,202. GHQCKER WINNER 111 SMI FRAN CIS C D Business Men's Ticket Ahead at Primary. GRAFT PROSECUTION IS ISSUE Republican Party Divided by Bitter Factional Fight. HENEY IS BEHIND TICKET Xoted Prosecutor Is Not Given Sup port Expected From Reformers, and May Not Ran for Office In November Election. SAN FRANCISCO. Cal.. Aug. 17. (Spe cial.) The primary election which was held in this city to select municipal can didates for the November election, re sulted in a close and bitter fight between two factions of the Republican party, which comprises 60 per cent of the voters of San Francisco. The issue involved in this factional fight is really whether the costly graft prosecution shall con tinue along the present lines or be dropped where it is apparent that con victions cannot be secured. William Crocker beads the business men's ticket for Mayor, while Byron Mausey Is the candidate of the Independent Republi cans, representing; the reform element. At midnight a snap compilation of the votes so far counted in 67 precincts em bracing strongholds of the various can didates In different sections of the city, which should give a fair average of the total vote cast, show that Crocker has received 3300 votes and Mausey 2687. If this rate holds out until the complete vote is counted, Crocker's plurality should reach a total of 3000. Heney Jjoalng Out. The fight for the Republican nomina tion for District Attorney - is between Charles Flckeifml 1'iu.itrj'T. Wfrticy: The same 67 precincts give, Fickert MIT and Heney ISM. indicating that Heney has actually run fan behind his ticket and Mausey's vote. This is a great surprise to everybody, for it was believed that he would receive the pledged support of the ardent reform element to such an extent that the ' battle for the nomina tion for District Attorney would be a very close one. Of course it must be remembered that Heney'a name did not appear on the face of the ticket and that he was running as the Independent candidate of all parties and that his name had to be writtten on the ticket by his supporters; but it Is contended by his opponents that the voters who were so Ignorant as to let ' that fact cut any figure In their vote were not of the class who would have voted for him had his name been printed In black-faced type. It was the en thuslastio reformer who was supposed to give Heney his main support. Heney May Hare Plan. It would not cause a great surprise to the knowing ones If the great graft prosecutor saw the handwriting on the . wall and chose some other way of keep ing control of the office of the Public Prosecutor than by allowing himself to run as an, independent candidate at the election in November. The complete returns will not all be In before late tomorrow morning. The ticket Is long and complicated and the counting Is necessarily slow. It Is said the entire busines men's ticket will be nominated by the Republicans, with Crocker at Its head. Dr. T. W. B. Lei and receives the Democratic nomina tion and McCarthy perhaps the Union Labor. ' WIND AGAINST WELLMAN Twice Prepares to Fly to Pole, but Puts Back. " HAMMERFBST. Norway, Aug. 17. A dispatch from Walter Wellman's Arctic expedition camp at Spitsbergen dated Au gust 14 says: "A north gale which had been blowing on the 6th dropped on the 12th, and Mr. Wellman made ready to start in search of the North Pole. The balloon was in flated and provisioned, and the motors were working smoothly. On the 13th the wind was still variable, but Mr. Wellman decided to get the airship out of the house. "The offlcers and crew of the Thalia assisted In swinging the airship, which was of fine appearance, out of the stied. The wind, however, again freshened and at C o'clock In the morning Mr. Wellman ordered the airship back Into the shed to wait for more propitious weather." WRECK 0NLEPER ISLAND British Vessel Ashore on Molokal Will Be Total Loss. HONOLULU, Aug. 17. The steamer Niihau went ashore early today on the coast of the Island of Molokal, and has been abandoned by her officers and crew. The vessel, which Is of 600 tons burden, will probably prove a total loss. The steamer Claudine has gone to the scene of the wreck to attempt to float the Niihau- SUICIDE CAUSE OF LYNCHING PLANS CITIZENS OF GOLDFIELD DE TERMINE OX VENGEANCE. Two Murders Within Hall Year, In Which Women Are Victims, Cause Outbreak. noT.rF151LD. Nev.. Aug. 17. Infuri ated by the suicide of Thomas Heslip, the well-known mining man. who enaea his life by taking cyanide of potassium today while crazed with grief over the death of his wife, who was shot and killed by Patrick C. Casey last night, a mob later In the day determined to storm the County Jail, In which Casey was con fined, and string him up to the nearest .i.rih nnle. and to wreak a similar vengeance on Martin SheridaD, who has been awaiting trial for wife murder- tor bIx months. . It was the purpose of the mob to dvnamite the Jail, which withstood an attack last night Just after the killing of Mrs. Heslip and the wounding of Mrs. Frank Mann by Casey. The plan was defeated by Sheriff Callahan, how ever, the prisoners being smuggled out of the Jail and carried to Tonopah in automobiles, which were manned by heavily-armed guards. Because of the lury of the citizens, the District Attorney has called the grand Jury to act on both cases without delay. ESCAPES DUTY ON HATS Kitty Gordon Appals Customs Of ficers With Much Headgear. NEW YORK. Aug. 17. (Special.) Hon. Mrs. Henry Beresford, known to the stage as Kitty Gordon, arrived from Southampton today on the North German Lloyd liner Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, to play leading parts for "Sam" Bernard In the coming production of "VThe Wls ard." The vast number of hats In her luggage caused the customs inspectors especially to Inspect the goods. "Are you a milliner?" they asked. "Indeed. I am not," she replied scorn fully. "There Isn't a hat in that lot I don't need. That's why I brought them with me." The customs men looked a bit dubious. "I can convince you very quickly that I have worn them all at some time or other," she went on. "You know a wo man never gets her hat on straight the very first time. As I'm ableto do this, you can see they're not new." The speaker began putting on hats one after another, but before she had pro ceeded very far the customs men gasped and quit. 1 M. L. WISDOM IS DYING Well-Known Editor and Horseman Suffers Relapse at His Home. M l. Wisdom, editor of the Rural Spirit, and widely known in Portland and the Paclfle Northwest, who has been critically 111 at his home for several weeks. Is not expected to live. He is v.o. .Mended bv Dr. L. W. Hyde, who at 10 o'clock last night announced: "Mr. Wisdom is very low xonignu n is very doubtful In my mind as to his surviving the night. Indications are against it." Mr. Wisdom is suffering from heart diseasa. He was taken ill about a month ago while attending the A.-Y.-P. Exposi tion as a member of a committee from Portland. He was sent back to this city and was confined for a number' of days at the Good Samaritan Hospital, from which he was discharged three weeks ago upon improving. He suffered a re lapse yesterday morning, and his condi tion has grown worse steadily. POWERS CAUTION CRETANS Warn Islanders Not to Resist Re moval of Grecian Flag. CANEA. Crete, Aug. 17. The foreign Consuls here, on behalf of the Interna tional squadron now anchored in Canea Bay, today notified the Cretan govern ment that the Greek flag would be hauled down Wednesday. They warned the government that irreparable conse quences will follow any attack made on a landing party. On account of this warning the Cretan authorities issued an apeal to the people not to obstruct in any way the action of the powers. C. P. R. DISCOVERS FRAUD Fake Accident Syndi'-Zul Said to Have Been Successful. MONTREAL. Que., Aug. 17. The legal department of the Canadian Pacific Railway believes it has unearthed a huge conspiracy to mulct that and other cor porations by means of false claims for damages for personal Injury received in alleged accidents. The claimants are al leged to have a regular organization, with branches in Chicago, Toronto, Van couver and other places, and to carry on a systematic scheme of fraud by means of false claims, false witnesses, etc. Three arrests have been made and others are promised. BLACK HANDSHAKE COSTLY President of Rust College Has to Resign for Own Safety. CINCINNATI, O., Aug. 17. The execu tive board of the Freemen's Aid So ciety of the Methodist Episcopal Church here has elected Rev. J. F. Decking to j be' president of Rust University, at Holly springs, mim. The election was made necessary by the abrupt resignation of Dr. F. C. En glish, of Cincinnati, who said he had been threatened by a mob at Ethel. Miss., because he had shaken hands with j a colored presiding elder. , PORTLAND, OREGON, .WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1909. ASTORIA CHILD IS BELIEVED KIDNAPED Mother Sent Her With Friend to Boise. TRACE COMPLETELY LOST HERE Later Man Writes to Astoria and Boise for Money. FATHER MAY HAVE HER Estranged From Wife, He Has Shown Fondness for Daughter, And Grandmother, to Whom She Was Going, Is Afraid. . Police of three cities are searching for little 6-year-old Mildred Waldorf, the daughter of Mrs. Bessie Brown, of As toria, Or., who left her home more than a month ago for Idaho. The mother of the child had entrusted her to the care of Harry E. Hallock, who had been In structed to take her to the home of Mrs. H. A. Laberg, the little girl's grand mother, living at 1409 Thirteenth street. North, Boise City. All Trace Lost Here. .... Man and child are known to have left Astoria and to have arrived in Portland but here all trace of them was lost. Whether the girl wandered from her guardian or has been kidnaped or mur dered, or whether she Is still in the care of her custodian, who has not taken her as directed and failed to notify her mother, is a question whh&h the police of Astoria, Portland and Boise are trying to solve. A general alarm has been sent out for the man and his charge. The Portland police were apprised of the disappearance by Frank Nobuye, a Japanese, sent to this city yesterday by the mother of the girl to engage in the search. He, accompanied by a prominent Japanese merchant of . Portland, visited detective headquarters yesterday and left a description of the missing people. He said Mrs. Brown had given Hallock $45 to defray the girl's expenses to Boise City. Both Gone for Ten Days. After searching through Portland's ho tels yesterday, Nobuye found Hallock and the child had been living for a time at the Merchants Hotel on North . Third street The hotel people stated that Hal lock left about ten days ago and that they had not seen him since. As the girl has not arrived at her grandmother's, her relatives, who began to be uneasy about her several weeks ago, are now frantic over her uncertain fate. GIRL'S FATHER MAY HAVE HER Estranged From Mother, but Al ways Fond of Child. BOISE, Idaho, Aug. 17. (Special.) Learning by telegram of the supposed kidnaping of her granddaughter, Grace (Concluded on Page 4.) EXTRA FOUR THUGS TIE MEN, BLOW SAFE - ATTEMPT MADE TO ROBDOERN BECHER FACTORx. Watchman and Hobo Bound and Brakeman Met by Volley of Bul letsEscape Without Loot. Safecrackers made a desperate effort to get into the safe of the Dornbech er Manufacturing Company early this morning and succeeded in badly dam aging: the safe with three charges of nltro-glycerlne. but did not get at the contents. They were frightened away from their work by the crew of the switching: engine which pulled Into the siding of the Dornbecher siding to pick up cars. E.' R. Mickley, living at 263 Fifth streeet, was in the flreroon of the fac tory when he was suddenly seized by one of four men, all of them masked and armed. He was thrown down and his arms tied behind his back. The robbers carried him outside -and upon a pile of ties 25 yards from the build ing they found a hobo wrappped In his blankets asleep. Him also they seized and bound and carried the two help less men 100 yards down the track to the Twenty-eighth street bridge and laid them outside the fence along the right-of-way. They then went back to the factory, gathering up a sledgehammer and other tools, and went at the safe. hcy knocked ofr the knob with a hammer, and drilling holes, set of in all' three charges of nltro-glycerine. In the midst of their work a switch engine pulled into the su ing to pick up cars from the factory, the brakeman entered the rear door to get his orders and was met with a volley of shots from the robbers, one of the bullets going through his hat. He prompt ly ran off and the engine backed down town, going back In half an hour with po lice aid. As the engine returned, Mickley and the hobo were found lyinlg beside the track, but the robbers had gone, leaving a pint bottle of nltro-glycerlne and all their tools in the factory office. SEATTLE IS MUCH UPSET Taffs Proposed Visit Starts Numer ous Estrangements. SEATTLE, Aug. 17. (Special.) Settle's Mayor and Councilmen, after reading of Josiah Collins' plan to keep and hold President Taft as a little private exhibi tion for a few specially selected guests at the Seattle Golf and Country Club for an entire day, were peeved. Some of them showed real anger in discussing the mat ter between stunts in the councilmanic slapstick show at the City Hall tonight. "Let the people see their President and let the President see his people," cried the Councilmen, and some wanted to ar range on the instant a grand street pa rade when William Howard Taft would sally forth in a slow-going automobile among thousands and thousands of cheer ing people lined up on Second avenue from the depot to Belltown. TAFT IS TRUE ENTHUSIAST President Braves ''Xor'easter" to Play His Game of Golf. BEVERLY, Mass., Aug. 17. President Taft today braved a northeast storm and a steady downpour of rain to play golf. DISPELLING THE CLOUD. INSISTS SUTTON KILLED HIMSELF By Intent or Accident, None Can Know. FINDINGS OF INQUIRY COURT Mother's Theory of Murder !s Utterly Rejected. WINTHROP WILL APPROVE Decision Will Confirm That of First Court on Almost AH Points and Ignores Charges Sut ton Shot by Officers. WASHINGTON, Aug. 17. (Special.) Authentic information of the decision of the naval court of Inquiry which Inves tigated the cause of the death of Lieu tenant James Sutton, of the Marine Corps, was obtained today. The court's decision, which will be made fully public tomorrow, varies little from the decision of the first board of inquiry which inves tigated Lieutenant Sutton's death the day after the tragedy at Annapolis in October, 1907. The theory of murder advanced by Mrs. Sutton is repudiated by the court, the question of suicide or accidental death Is left as a matter never to be fully known, while the wholesale charges which It was predicted would be lodged against Lieutenant Sutton's companions find no place In the court's findings. Act. lng Secretary Winlhrop expects to give the court's decision his official approval tomorrow. Most important among the court's find ings is naturally the finding that Lieu tenant Sutton held the revolver which fired the fatal shot into his own head. This was the contention of the officers who were with him and the report made by the first board. Again It negatives the bold assertion of Mrs. Sutton's attorney, Henry E. Davis, that the wound could not have been self inflicted and the allegation that Lieuten ant Sutton was shot In the back of the head while fleeing from his brother offi cers after they had beset him and beaten him. Why Lieutenant Sutton pulled the trig ger while he lay face downward on the ground Is taken up, but the evidence on this point Is Insufficient to determine what passed In the officer's mind when he fired the shot. How far the court's finding on this point will console Mrs. Sutton in her con tention that her son did not commit sui cide is not known. Broad discretionary authority is given the Secretary of the Navy in acting on the findings of a court of inquiry and he my approve or disapprove in whole 'or In part, send the case back for further inquiry or order a new court. Should the court find that some marine officers have violated the marine regula tions, the time has not yet elapsed in which punishment for infractions may be meted out. LAD'S LIFE SAVED BY REWARD WATCH FALLS WITH GUN, BULLET HITS TIMEPIECE AND GLANCES. Ralph Ramsdell Meets Serious Ac cident at Seaside Arm Frac tured, but Life Is Saved. SEASIDE, Or., Aug. 17. (Special.) A gold watch, given to Ralph Ramsdell by his father as a reward for not smoking until he attained his 19th year, was the means of saving the young man's life to day when a rifle he was carrying acci dentally discharged. The bullet, striking the watch In a pocket near his heart, glanced and shattered his arm. Although seriously fractured, surgeons believe they can save the lad's arm. Young Ramsdell, in company with Or mand Rankin and Robert McClure, all of Portland, had been hunting near Forest Grove, and were en route overland to Seaside. Whiel crossing the bridge over the Necanicum, a loose plank tripped Ramsdell and he fell forward, the Im pact on the hammer discharging the rifle he carried. Young Ramsdell is the son of a well known employe of the Llpman-Wolfe Company, of Portland, and is a student at the University of Oregon, Eugene. The watch which saved the boy's life was a family heirloom, and had been carried 30 years by Mr. Ramsdell, Sr., before he presented it to his son. Young Ramsdell was taken tonight to a Portland hospital for treatment. TRINITY FREE OF TERROR Visiting Nimrod Kills Half-Ton Grizzly In California. MARYSVILLE, Cal., Aug. 17 (Spe- rlal l-Thomas McDonald, a well-known miir. man and caDltalist. has won the distinction of ridding Trinity County of the terror of the ranges, by Killing wnai is undoubtedly the biggest grizzly ever seen in the northern part of the state. Th monster beast, weighing close to inort nounds. has for years Deen sinKing terror to the hearts of the residents of the Salmon River range, killing slieep and making other depredations. McDonald, who is an expert rifle shot, to rid the COUntV Of the T,i, .anto nnri has arrnmnllshed his task After a short though fierce struggle, the bear was killed, and McDonald now has trophies of the chase in the way of the biggest bearskin ever seen in -this region, and has been voted a resolution of thanks by the residents of the section the bear had terrorized. QUAKE TALE EXAGGERATED Returning Travelers Say Damage Was Not Very Serious. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Aug. 17.-Pass-engers arriving from Mexican ports today on the Panama steamer Acapulco, the first vessel to bring details of the earth quake of July 29, 30 and 31, declare that the reports reaching this country by wire greatly overestimated the loss of life re sulting from the disturbances. They declare that only two persons were killed outright at Acapulco, al though hundreds had narrow escapes. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 85.1 degree, minimum, 55.2 degree. TODAY'S Fair; northwesterly winds. Foreign. Contract signed at Pekln admitting Ameri cans to share in Chinese loan, page 2. Curtfss' .aeroplane repaired, ready for night Sunday. Page 8. National. Government shows decrease In coal produc tion in 1808. Page 2. Great advantage gained by Invading army In war maneuvers. Page 3. Politics. Crocker nominated for Mayor by Repub licans; Heney beaten for District Attor ney. Page 1.- Domestfc. Trans-Mississippi Congress will debate rail and water rate controversy. Page 3. Kitty Gordon escapes paying duty on many hats by trying them all on. Page l. Great grizzly bear killed In California. Page 1. Brave rescue of whole crew o; wrecked ship on Long Island Coast. Page 5. Harrlman to start for New York today and close New York Central deal on arrival. Page 3. Fatal automobile accident in Wyoming. I Page 8. Jerome denounces Persch as common thief and discredits his story of having accom plices. Page 1. Heat causes more deaths in Southwest, but cool weather comes. Page 4. Sports. Coast League scores: Portland 6, San Fran cisco 5; Los Angeles 4, Oakland 3; Sac ramento 7. Vernon 1. Page 7. Comisky buys leader from Coast league and spends 100.0O0 on players. Page 7. Great scores made by winners of Camp Perry rifle matches. Page 3. Northwestern League scores: Portland 8. Aberdeen .1: Seattle 8, Vancouver 2; Ta coma 7, Spokane 10. Smlthson to represent Multnomah Club In game at Athens In May. Page 7. Pacific Northwest.' State steals march on Schlvely's attorney, much testimony admitted. Page 1. Hay. In message to Legislature, recom mends -adoption of Income tax amend ment. Page 6. "I told you so." is the echo In Eastern Oregon since Hill announcement. Page 6. Prison Congress at Seattle hears reports. Page 2. Commercial and Marine. Large importations of foreign wool. Page 15. Small fluctuations In wheat at Chicago, page 15. Portland and Vicinity. Great legal battle for existence of Oregon Trunk begins. Page 5. Farmers' Institute workers close their con vention. Page 10. Port of Portland approves plan for new rail road bridge. Page 14. American Association of Mutual Fire Insur ance Companies opens 14th convention. Page 10. Police of three cities And trace here of girl placed In care of man by mother. Page 1. Little boy drowned In lake In Hawthorne Park. Page 14. Bold robber get good haul when they hold up East Side saloon. Page 4. PRICE FIVE CENTS. 40 ARMED PIRATES RinSHTRAPS Steal $10,000 Worth of Sockeyes. THIEVES RECROSS TO CANADA Bold Trick Turned by Men From Fraser River. REVENUE PATROL IS ASKED American Cannerymen Aroused to Fever Heat of Indignation. Heavy Rewards Are Posted and Pinkertons Employed. BEIXINGHAM, "Wash.. Aug. 17.-A, band of 40 armed Fraser River fisher men, on board eight gasoline fishing boats, swooped down last night on the Millegan and Jalsell traps of the Pacific American Fisheries Company, at' Point Roberts, within a few miles of the international boundary line, held up the trap watchmen at the point of rifles., and balled out $10, 000 worth of sockeye salmon, which they loaded Into their boats and took back across the boundary line. Bert Rooney, a watchman on the Mille gan trap, gave the news of the fish pi rates' raid to the captain of the Paclflo American Fisheries Convpony's tuff Vic tor, who brought It to this city tonight. A telegram haa been sent to Port Town send by the officials of the Pacific Amer ican Fisheries Company, asking that the revenue cutter Peary be dispatched here at once to guard the northerly traps from Incurslors from across the border. Heavy Rewards Posted. The Pacific American Fisheries Com pany will hire Pinkerton detectives -o guard- every one of ita traps on Pugef Sound ard has posted a standing offer of $1000. reward for news of the Identity of any pirate caught looting a trap. Trapmen of this city are In a fever heat of Indignation over the occurrence, Rnd will go to any expense to prevent a recurrence of the raid. A plan to patrol the border Is now being talked of. The raid was carefully premeditated, ac cording to the report which reached this city, as a fish buyer was aboard one of the pirate launches. Fraser Cannerymen Blamed. Cannerymen here believe that the raov was urged and directly planned by tha Fraser River cannerymen, who have not been securing enough fish to run their plants at full capacity, and who have been complaining that the American trap men were not observing the closed seasou law. The number of salmon stolen was be tween 40,000 and 50,000, or all that tlis launches could carry. The value, reck oned at the current price of 25 cents apiece, Is $10,000, or more. This raid Is the biggest act of fish piracy ever report, ed on Pugct Sound. HIS FALL MAY BE FATAL Laborer Props From Trestle Xeat Oswego; Budly Hurt. D. Sutton, a laborer employed by the) Southern Pacific Railroad in construction work near Oswego, is dying in St Vin cent's Hospital as the result of injurle received yesterday by a fall from a tres tle. Sutton fell about 20 feet. He sus tained a broken leg and a broken arm and severe Internal Injuries. He was brought to the Jefferson-Street depot by train last night and conveyed to the hospital In the Red Cross ambu lance. Companions who accompanied hl.il to town from the scene of the accident said he had made a misstep and fallen) off the trestle backward. BRYAN GETS PAY AT FAIR Defeated Candidate Expected to Be Drawing Card at Seattle. SEATTLE, Wash.,. Aug. 17. William J. Bryan, having announced his intention of visiting the Alaska-Yukon-Faclfic Expo sition during the closing week, and ex pressed his willingness to take part In any exercises that may be arranged, plans have been begun for the celebra tion of Bryan Day, with excursions from all over the Northwest. It Is proposed by some to make Octo ber 16 the closing day of the fair, Bryan Day. SOUTH CAROLINA IS DRYER Fifteen Out of Twenty-pne Counties Vote for Prohibition. CHARLESTON, S. C. Aug.. 17. Pro hibition won in 15 of the 21 counuty elec tions today. The county ispensary system will be retained only in six of the counties vot ing. Troops to Quit Fort William. WINNIPEG. Aug. 17. The regular sol diers who have been on duty at Fort William returned to their barracks hero today, leaving 30 special Canadian Pa cific Railway constables armed with rifles! to maintain order. Five hundred men arq now working on the docks, . ITl 106.2