SHAN LEADS DIMIGK BY 4GG0 Havvley and Lafferty are 3000 Ahead. HOYT DECISIVELY DEFEATED Benson, Crawford and Duni way Win by 10,000. HOFF AND ORTON CLOSE Awmnlj Wins Tint ContftcI Plirn on Slate and Conjtrrlon al Ticket Antls Capture Fire. One Office In Doubt. RtrrBi.irAX c.vsninATs son. I.VATED IN MTIKDA rRIMARIF. J Govraor. Jay Bowwman. Representative In Conrrs. m First D1:rlrt. W. C. Hawley. 4 Rrpres-niattva In rnmrrn, Pec- I and District. A. W. Lafferty. Jocl Supreme Ovirt. fmr-rr Krm. H J. Prtn ami T. A. Mc- 4 flrMr Judin Supreme Court, als-year term. O M. Burnett, r. A. lr lierretary of State. K. W. Hanson. I Mate Treasurer. T. B. Kay. i Attorney-Genaral. A- M. Craw- for. . . 4 School Superintendent. t R- Al- J derman. State Printer. W. S Duniway. rnnnWun ef Lbnr. In doubt. Railroad Commissioner. Frank J. Miller. Ktata Knf inrrr. John II. I.ewla Water Superintendent. Division 1. J. T. Chlnnova. a . . . . . . , - T - - J Jay Bnwrrman. nbly candidate, on a court of approximately two-thirds of th vote cjt In the primary r.-c:!on of Saturday, has won the nomination for Uovernor of Orcaon by a plurality of X to i over Rranl B. Dimlclt. of Orecon C.tT. ' Brnft Hofer. of Salem, third and Albert Abraham, of Roseburw. fourth. More neatly compute returns from Mu!lnomtli County and the Mate at larae received yesterday do not ma terially char.pe the forecaat aivcn yester day on the remainder of the ticket. These, returns seem to Indicate conalusively th defeat of Ralph W. Hoyt. the as sembly candidate for State Treasurer, by Thomaa B. Kay. by a majority of sewral thousand. Outside Counties Defeat Hot. Mr. Hoyt In Multnomah County has rvcetved a majority over Kay of mora than 1S. but the returns from other counties so far received show that Kay 1 9 leadlna- throughout the nmaindrr of the state and ha overcome the Multno mah lead and has 1S advnntape over Ms opponent. The returns for Multno mah County are more nearly complete than from the .other portion of the, state, so that If the proportion of vot.w -aa for the two is maintained In the mailer counles Kay will Increase tha lead materially. On the vote ao far as counted. F. W. Benson, assembly candidate for Secre tary of State, has a lead of more than frro over G. Wlnicate. and hla majority will probably roil up to more than 10. (Ml Crawford's 10,000 Lead Growing. i For Atlorncy-GrnermJ. A. M. Crawford, en the latest returns, shows a majority over J. N Hart, the a trembly candi date, of about which will be, to creased by the berated returns. W. 8- Duniway. the present Stata Printer, taa also defeated 'VT. J. Clarke, asaemMy candidate, by a wide martin. Duniway now shows a majority of mora than tk over Clarke, and each later re port Increase Duntwajr'a lead. The closest contest la between O. P. Hoff. aaanmbly candidate for Commis sioner of Labor Statistic and O. H irton The total return so far aa compiled stva Hnff USE and Orton 1177. While Orton la thus) ahown to have a eltsrht lead, an analysis of the count In dicates the election of HorT. Mr. Hoff ran behind Orton about liVO rotee In Multnomah County, but on the returns o far received from the other coun ter a la nearly up with his opponent. Hoff Gains in Small Countle. If the counties of smaller population how on a complete count the smraa relative difference between the two mn Hon will hare won the conteet by about TJ votes. Orton has had hla principal airensTth In the town and city precincts and from theie the vote is more com plete than from the country district, where Hoff has shown tha errcat-r strer."th. For Superintendent cf Water Division No. 1. J- T. Chlrnoek hae a f rom lead over F. K- Ot'.In ard I undoubtedly nominated. Mr. Gettin had the assambir Indorsement. Haw ley Lead Growlne;. For Representative In Congress from tha First District the Incomplete re turn lve W. C. Hawley a majority over B. F. Mulkey of 14. bat In these f Iwurea less than two-thirds of the vote caat la represented. On the final re turns, eatlraatlns; the vote on the way It Is shown In the Incomplete f Isrures. Representative Hawley will be nomln iCoocladed ea Jac ll-J 500 WEST POINT CADETS ARRESTED ENTIRE CORPS FACES GENERAL COURT-MARTIAL. Pis.repect to Tactics orficer and In subordlnation Are Charges Made. Students Won't Tell. WEST POINT. X. Y.. Sept. !. (Spe cial.) The entire cadet corps is under arrest and facing a general court-martial Tor a-ross disrespect to Captain Ru fus F Longan. Instructor In tactics, and i KHio.tin Maior-General Rich ard 11. Barry, superintendent of the Military Academy, sent me lour of 100 yours; men to their quarters af ter mess on Sunday evenimc. and a board of officers Is slttina; at 1 o'clock this niornlni;. endeavorlnp to find out why the cadets -silenced;' Captain Lon gan. -r-k,. nn'i in. The whole corps has stood out airainst General Barr-'a .ln- sIMencc; first-class men wun "" n.rr.ot rerorHa In scholarship and con duct have remained as stubborn as tail- enders whose demerits run up Into me h..orfr.H. All that General Barry and the board have got out of them In reply to n.ieirtlona as to why they reiusea io eat In Captain Lonsjan's presence or re fused to speak when he was among; them la the statement: e na. formed a dislike for this officer." The nenaltv Drovlded by law for this decree of Insubordatlon is dismissal from the Military Academy. RENO COLONY ENLARGED Mrs Weiss Keep Husband Till For tunes Fall, Then Seeks Divorce RENO. Nev.. Sept. 25. Special.) One of the mst accomplished and so cially popular members of the local di vorce colony Is Mrs. Jessie B. Weiss, who has Just filed her dlvorc complaint against William H. Weiss, nlUging fail ure to provide her necessities of life. Once llvlnc In affluence, a social lead er for a number of years lrr aristocratic circles of San Antonio. Texas, then In a swirl of gay' life of Paris, where her daughter now resides, now that her hus band haa lost much of hia wealth by un wise investments since making their home In New York, she Is seeking- separ ation from him. She was formerly Miss Jessie, daughter of Augustus Belknap, who was formerly prlnclial owner of the street railway company of San Antonio, Texas, and suc ceeded a few years ago by her husband, who was general manager. Before that. Welsa was manager of the wholesale dry goods house of A. B. Frank Company there. BIRDS ARE FLYING SOUTH Old Sellers Believe That Winter Will Come Early This Year. DAYTON. Wash.. Sept. 25. (Special.) Myriad of Summer birds flew over Southeastern Washington yesterday !n a southerly direction. Occasionally a flock would alight In some Inviting tree top and linger there for a few minutes or descend to some drinking place, but oth erwise the movement southward was un interrupted. According to old settler here this la a certain Indication that colder weather Is not far off. I'sually these small birds precede the hnrdier get. so and ducks a ftw weeks, the -latter remaining north until shortly before the first snowfall. A cold, raw alnd from the west la fol lowing In the wake of the feathered harbingers. It is believed by local weather prophets that Winter will come unusually early this year. PE0MHO27T riGTJSES TTOCT'WT 1. WOODRI FF, CHAIRMAN ill . : - - :V- . ft: - ? :lryiv.B S W "-i4-avf- - HfcivX r5 if v Sid U 'hi'r'J hv. SOME ASSEMBLY CANDIDATES WIN Judge Kavanaugh Now 2834 Votes Ahead. COUNT' VIRTUALLY COMPLETE Defeat of Goddard for Com missioner Is Surprise.. BOWERMAN-'.D REDUCED Multnomah County Gives -'ferty 2n" Plttralltj- Field's Lead Is Diminished and Sheriff Stevens Forges Ahead. THE WIM5 TICKET IN MVI.T XOMAH FOR LEGISLATIVE AiU COUNTY OFFICES. Stale Senator. Clackamas. Colum bia and Multnomah Dan J. Ma larkey. by 4616 voles. Representative, Clackamas ami Multnomah W. H. Chottn. by SS9 vote. State penaior. Multnomah County rseorge W. Joseph, by 2"KT votes. state Senator. Multnomah Coutty James K. Ixcke. by 4-"J8 votes. I(epresentatles jainea D. Abbott. C. A. BIelo'. James M. Ambrose. J. C Bryant. V. J. Clemens. James Cole. A. Q. Rushlight. W. I. Cottell. Stephen Collin. nalph C. Clyde. Sejieca Fouls. Kdwln O. Amme. County Judse T. J. Clreton. County Commissioner V. V. Hart. by 74S voles. Sheriff Robert 1- Stevens. by .6T votes. County Clcrk-rFrank 8. Fields, by 103 votes. County Treasurer John M. Lewis. County Auditor Samuel B. Martin, by 1U0 votes. County Surveyor Phllo Holhrook. County Coroner Ben L. Norden. by 2)48 voles. Justices o4 Peace. Multnomah Dis trict Fred L. Olson and J. W. Bell, by 1773 and S&3 votes Constable. Multnomah DlHrict Andy Wslnbsrger. by 333 votes. With all but 13 precincts heard from In Multnomah County, the results are generally Indicated by the figures now at hand. Few changes are necessitated by the later returns, although the de feat to the assembly has not been ao far-reachlngr as at first believed. Jay Bowerman, assembly candidate for Govenor, has received a small plur ality and inadditlon a few other as sembly candidates have survived the anti-assembly landslide. Circuit Judge Kavanaugh, assembly candidate for Circuit Judge to succeed himself, is nominated with a lead of 2834 votes over S. H. Gruber in 169 out of 1S2 precincts. J. W. Bell has a safe lead to succeed hlmsetlf as Justice of the Peace, while Andy Weinberger, assem bly candidate for Constable, is nomin ated, with Fred A. Frlachkorn -298 votes behind him In second place. Pr. Ben L. Norden has defeated C. H. tConcluded on Page 10.) TJT COMING BATTLE SOYAI. OP it. iSt rnllTTr.F, ,,i I.?0L JcTBWoA VbK M CHINESE APPEAR IN EVENING DRESS FEKIV BAXQIET TO SECRETARY OF AVAR IS XOTABLE. Western Costumes and Customs Are Adopted by Mongolians Visitors Are Given Costly Frescnts. PEKIN. Sept. 25. The visit of Jacob M. Dickinson, the American Secretary of War; Brigadier-General Clarence H. Edwards, chief of the bureau of insu lar affairs, and party to Pekin wiU end tomorrow. It has been marked by a round of entertainments and a dis play of Western lnnnovations never before known In China. The Prince Recent, on learning- that neither Secretary Dickinson nor Gen eral Edwards was abel to accept deco rations, sent to Mrs. Dickinson a pair of cloisonne vases of the Chien Tung period. The Regent also sent a pafr of rod lacquer boxes, of similar antiquity, to Mrs. Dickinson and Mrs. Edwards. A banquet was given in honor of the Secretary and the other visitors last evening by Chinese students who have returned from America. . Many ladles were present and a con siderable number of Chinese appeared without queues and In evening- clothes, to which apparently they had been ac customed while residing- in the United States. More than 100 of the guests had come from the various cities of North China. Representatives of those places declared that the Government, which orlg'nally peersecuted them, was now giving them the highest offices. Toasts were given to their Alma Maters. Atlantic Fleet Returns. NORFOLK, Va.. Sept. 25. Admiral Kchroeders battleship fleet returned to Hampton Roads today, after more than two weeas of battle practice on the Southern drill grounds. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature. 74 degrees; minimum. 47 denrees. TODAY'S Fair, northwesterly winds. Oregon Primaries. Democratic standard-bearers well known men. Page 10. Defeated Republican candidates will sup port tlrk:t; parly united. Page 11. A. W. I.afferty besan practice of law when he was IT years old. I'age 11. Bowerman's plurality In state Is 400. Haw ley's and Lafferty's 3O0U each. Page 1. roiitu-s. President Tuft sadly In need of clever poli tical adviser, rage 2. Dosicntic. Confession by nurse In Eva Swan's death mystery Involves former Stanford atn . leie. Page 2. National Mining Conare convenes today in Ixis A n coles. Page . Great latitude will be permitted at Irriga tion Congress, which opens today. Page - Entire cadet corps of West Point under ar rest, facing court-martial. Page 1. Volcano puts seven mn to flight. Page 1. Donald Siubbs. accidentally shot, willing to die; drink causes downfall. Fag 1. . i -t h&nnuet In Pekln to American Secretary of War Dickinson, i'sge i. Sport. Pacific Coast Leaaue results rortland 2-1. Vernon 1-3: San Francisco 7-0, Oakland 2-- Sacramento 1-2. Los Angeles 0-1. Beavers meet Indiana of Ppokane In exhibi tion game today. Page 8. New football rules to get clear tryout this week. Page 8. raolfta Northwest. Motorman shoots man he finds with wife: woman attempts suicide. Page 5. stie tai Is levied In Washington. Page 5. Ally of provincial police killed by Mafia near Revelsloke. Page 3. Portland. Chlrago temperance worker outlines plan for anl!-ltquor demonstration. Page 1-. Civic council to discuss South Portland bridge tonight, rage . T. M C. A. opens new year in educational department. Page 16. Man fugitive for six months arrested on charge of attempting to murder room mate. Page 16. Dr. XV. B. Hlnron makes "plea for Portlsnd saloon." urging Its abolition. Page 7. KTW T02K EETUISTJ CAX3. AND MEETING PLACE 07 OtOTVCTTIOT TO BARE. jn, I.EIDF.R OF RET.ILAHS, VICE-PRESIDENT JAMES S. JHEIUIA (ABOVE). CANDIDATE OF RBGC IS SInAGINO ROOSEVEIS FIGHT, CONVENTIOX HALL AT SARATOGA WHERE BATTLE VILL BE KOIGHT. (ROOSEVELT PUIS OLD GUARD AWAY Convention to Be Led by Ex-President. ' VETERANS .PRACTICALLY QUIT "What Would It Have Profited Us to Win?" They Say. CONVENTION IS - AWAITED Presence of Majority for Colonel Admitted by Those Opposed to Him and Success Seems Certain at Saratoga. NO COMPROMISE, SATS T. B. OYSTER BAY. Sept. 2. There will be no compromise in his fight for a direct nomination law. Colonel Roosevelt said today. He declared he believed enough delegates would support bis stand to put into the platform a plank embodying hla Ideas. "The statement that I have con sidered a compromise on the pri mary plank Is untrue." ha said. SARATOGA, N Y., Sept. 25. (Spe claL) They are about to get rid of that man Roosevelt aajaln. It s going to happen this time through the rout of the "old guard" In New York politics. horse, foot and dragoons, and the work of a convention that will be led if not dominated by the ex-Presidcnt- The "old guard" set out in the pres ent Instance to eliminate Roosevelt by electing a majority of delegates to the state convention opposed to him per sonally and to the Roosevelt policies. The reverse having resulted, it now de clares it did not want to win at all this year, because Roosevelt will be in a worse predicament as a winner than he would be aa a loser. Old Guard Surrenders. In other words, "the old guard," which "dies but never 'surrenders," has sur rendered. Its chief mogul admitted to- nle-ht the nresence of a Roosevelt ma jority In the convention which willneet on Tuesday, but not by the big margin claimed by Chairman Griscom, pf the New York County committee, field mar shal of the anti-"old guard" forces. Griscom holds to a minimum of 670 out of a total of 1015 delegates. The "old guard" says the Roosevelt lead will not amount to more than 30 votes, and Roosevelt would have been beaten, it declares, had it not been for one or two flukes within the last two weeks. No Use to Win. "What would it have profited us to win, anyway?" the "old guard" is in quiring blandly, to fit the emergency. "We would have faced a losing fight in the campaign for the election In No vember, and, defeated at the polls, we would have been held discredited. Now the shoe Is on the other foot. Roose velt Is In the saddle temporarily; it will ( Concluded On Page 2.) VOLCANIC SHOCKS PUT 7 TO FLIGHT SERIES OF 52 VIOLENT EARTH QUAKES ARE FELT BY GAXG. Eruptions in Extinct Crater Increase so Alarmingly That Workmen Break Camp In Xight. FLAGSTAFF. Ariz., Sept. 25. Seven members of a construction gang arrived here tonight with the story that they had been driven away from their work near the base of an extinct volcano in the Coconino forest, 45 miles north of here by a series of 53 violent earthquakes. Last Friday night, when slight quakes were felt here and in other northern Ari zona towns, the shocks were so violent and he rumblings within the dead vol cand so terrifying that the men broke camp and left in a panic. C. McNichols, foreman of the gang, told the story, which is corroborated by all of his men. He said the shosks began on the night of Saturday, September 10. The first were slight, but they became stronger each day and night until the final one Friday. The first shocks threw a lamp off a camp box in McNichols tent and broke down his bed. He rolled off the mattress, but the next quake, more violent than the rest, threw him back on the bed. McNichols found all his men outside their tents wildly excited and being frightened himself, he ordered camp broken and at midnight the seven men began their march to this city. There is some apprehension here that the volcano, which apparently has been extinct for ages, is about to become act ive again. TWO CONFESS TO ROBBERY Complicity in Theft of $14,345 From Sluice Boxes of Mines. SEATTLE. Wash., Sept. 25. (SpeciiJ.) J. F. Warren, special Government igent for tha Second Judicial district of Alaska, today received a cablegram saying that two men now in jail at Nome have confessed to complicity In the theft ot $14,345 from the sluice boxea of the Pioneer Mining Company. Mr. Warren has not yet learned whether the reported confession has im plicated Marius Johanaon, or John Tyberg, who were arrested recently in this city on a charge ot being implicated in the robbery. Mr. Warren will leave for Nome on the steamer Victoria Monday morning with Johansen. who is 22 years old. Johan sen,' has agreed to not oppose extradi tion to Alaska, declaring that ho is ln T.nnt and will he able to prove his -assertion in the courts. Tyberg, says Mr. Warren, will be 'taken to AlasKa in a few days. FUNNY STORY KILLS MAN Paroxysm of Laughter Causes Break ing of Blood Vessel in Brain. FRESNO, Cal., Sept. 23. N. C. Shap bazian. a popular member of the Arme nian colony here, lies dead at his home at 221 M Street as the result of a funny story told two days ago at a house warming party that he attended. Shapbazian. who was a tailor, had a reputation for his genial nature. A friend was narrating his experiences on a hunt ing trip several days before, when Shap bazian was so pleased with the story that he began to laugh heartily. His friends were terrified when he broke a blood vessel at the base of hia brain and tumbled over unconscious. He lingered two days without recovering con sciousness. BE HELD TUESDAY. STUBBS'DOWHFALL ASSIGNED TO DRINK Railroad Man Rushes to Son's Bedside. DEED ASSURED ACCIDENT Despite Fault, Harriman Road Official Defends Offspring. RECENT BRIDE PROSTRATED Young Wife Confined to Home While Husband Lingers Between Life and Death With Only Fight ing Chance at Former. CLEVELAND. O., Sept. 25. (Spe cial ) Drink is my son's only fault. In all other respects he is a model lad," said John C. Stubbs. traffic director of the Harriman railroads, who -reached here at 8 o'clock from his Chicago home on receipt of word that his son, Don ald Patterson Stubbs, had shot himself and was near death in Lakeside Hos pital. "Drink was his only fault, and I can't see that when he tays that his shootinn was an accident, it can be otherwise than true. My son, in the few talks 1 have been able to have with him while he was out from under the influence of opiates, has impressed on me time and again today the fact that he shot him self by accident. Victim Willing t" Dlc- "He is penitent and discouraged and not anxious to recover, t .ouRh, outside his drinking he is a model youth, bright, happy. Intelligent and --lth an excel lent career ahead of him." Out at the Stubbs home, 1850 East Eighty-first street, Mrs. Stubbs. a bride of only a few months, is prostrated. She was Miss Marguerite Wheeler, of New York City, and was married last June. She cannot see anyone, but Mrs. Annette AVheeler, of New York, her mother, who has been with her daugh ter for several weeks, says her daugh ter insists the shooting must have been accidental. .; "I think so, too," said Mrs. Wheeler today.' "Donald was in a Jolly humor when he left the house last evening to attend a business meeting. He and Marguerite have been happy and con tended that there Is no reason why he should commit suicide. Revolver Recent rurclia.se. "Donald was always contented and ci.eerful. He did not have a revolver until the last day or two That ex plains why the police found a new box of cartridges. We were talking only Thursday of the Rice murder and other tragedies here lately and of the many hold-ups. Donald said we ought to have a gun in the house. I suppose he bought one after that talk and had not brought it home yet. There was no reason why he should shoot himself. My daughter and I believe it to have been accidental." Stubbs staggered from his office at No. 305 Williamson building. Just be fore midnight last night, crying to an elevator man: "I need help, I've shot myself acci dentally." That was all the words he would say, even when taken to Lakeside Hospital, where it was found the bullet had en tered above his heart and had taken a , downward course, being lodged in uls back. Surgeons today decided it too danger ous to probe for the bullet. They say Stubbs has only one chance to live only a fighting chance. The police searched the office while Stubbs was being taken to the hospital. They found the desk ransacked and papers scat tered about the floor. The policemen who made the search marked their re port "attempted suicide." Donald Stubbs was appointed to the general agency of the Union Pacific here last July, after his marriage to Miss Wheeler. BELGIAN CONSUL ANGERED Rear-Admiral Has Good Explanation of Seeming Insult. SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 23. (Spe cial.) Consul-General of Belgium in San Francisco. F. Drion. recently com plained to the Belgian Minister at Washington that the commandant of the Naval Training Station at Yerba Buena Island, in San Francisco harbor, had refused ordinary courtesies to cadets of the Belgian naval training ship L'Avenir, when that vessel was recently In the harbor. The Consul said he had written no less than two letters to the command ant of the training station, asking that a date be set for receiving the Belgian cadets, but his letters had been ig nored. The State Department wired to Rear Admiral Milton, present commandant, and he promptly furnished Brood ex planation, which shows the' Belgian Conxnl-Gen era! does not teep an up-to-date navy register In bis office. The Itear-Admiral said the Consul. General bad directed letters to Captain Cathcart. hla predecessor tn office, who has been trone two years. These letters had been sent to Washington. They nly reached the Reax-Admiral yester-Aay- ' i