. - Nsw... ... ; J 0 13,734. BANGOR IS SEARED BY S6.000.000 FIHE Three Lives Lost as Flames Sweep City. THOUSANDS ARE HOMELESS Blocks Dynamited in Attempt to Check Flames OTHER CITIES SEND AID By Freak of Conflagration, City Hall In Maine Town Escapes Ce" U-wtlon Mayor Put Com munity rndrr Martial Law. FANOOR Ms, prH lA-One-thtrd of Bangor l to ruin, thousands of per son, ere homeless and a property lose estimated at ,.000.000 has been talned. a. th. result of a conflagration which raged for hour tonight- Starting In a hayshed on Broad street, the Are swept along Broad and r" .tmti through the heart of tha city, leaving residences, churches. hool business blocks and an tho publlo build ings with tha exception of tha Oty Han a dim of smoking ashes. For many hours tho fireman assisted br men and apparatua from other Main cities, battled against tha blaze before they conquered tt. Dynamite proved of little svall. Buildings r blown up. bat It waa not until the wind, which had been blowing almoat a gals during the night, ablfted and a light rain felt that there waa any Indication that the fireraea would win. Fir Fighters Cheered. Cheered by the help from th la unex reeted quarter, th flra-flghtlng forces wtre concentrated near the corner of Hammond and Central treats, nearly two rot lee from the place where the blase started, and there the epread of tha flames wa checked at midnight. But while the rain and the shifting of the wind to the eaat eared the reat of the city. It only added to the dlscom forta of thousands who had aeon their home go up In name, and who war huddled together In th atreeta. The burning of churchea and publlo buildings left many of the unfortunatea without ahelter. Three lives are known to hare been loot, although the namea of the dead hare not been learned. A fireman waa Injured by a falling wall and died on the way to the boapltal: an unidentified young man waa crushed to death when one of the churchea col lareed and an elderly man, from Pen rer. who bed crossed th river to watch the fire, also waa burled beneath fall ing debris. Neither of tha city's newspapers waa burned out and both will publish tomor row aa uauaL Food Supplies Destroyed. The problem of housing and feeding the destitute must be attended to at day light and It will be a sertoua one. There la hardly an eatlng-houee. bakery or other store where food can be obtained. Already offers of help have been re ceived by Mayor Mullen, but tha prof fered aid cannot b expected to arrive In time to prevent suffering. The Mayor called out a company of the National Guard and placed tha city under martial law. The fir la considered by Insurance companies the worst Maine haa known since the Portland fire In 1SCS. when a large part of the business section waa destroyed with a loaa of 110.009.000. Bangor haa a population of nearly 25.000 by the 11 cenaua and the lateat flgurea show a real estate valuation of tlMl.7. Flro Start In Hay Shed. The fir started In a hayahed near the J. Frank Green building on Broad street, and In a short time was sweep ing through th city In a northwesterly direction. Before midnight, both sides of Ex change street from Tork to State, both sides of State street from Kenduskeag stream to Broadway, a considerable part of Central Franklin streets, nearly all of Park street and Marlow street waa In rutna and the flames had made Inroads of nearly a mile Into the best residential section of Broadway, Center f!d West streets. Half an hour after the first alarm, nearly a dosen buldlngs were in fames, and the fire was eating Its way north eryly on either side of Kenduskeag atream. In lta path were bank, of fice buildings, library and other struc tures, all of which were consumed. Telephone System Gone. The city was soon shut off from tele phone communication by the burning of the central office and calls for aid from Portland. Lewiston and Augusta were sent out by the wire chief of the company, who climbed a pole and cut I In at a trunk line- The telegraph com panies offices were both burned early in the conflagration, but later it es tablished temporary offices outside the fir son and communication was re stored. Several alarms were sounded almost almultaneoualy. In addition to the fire at the oorner of Broad and Exchange atreeta, the firemen found a blase in a bicycle repalrshop In th rear of the telephone office. Both fires spread Concluded oa Pace 2." SOLDIER, ORDERED TO FRONT, DROWNS DEATH TAKES COVETED COM MISSIOX FROM GUARDSMAN. City Attorney of Alatnetla, Cal., Swept Into Bay by Boom From Deck of Yacht. OAKLAND. Cal, April 10. M. W. Simpson. City Attorney of Alameda and Major In the Fifth Infantry. California National Guard, waa drowned off the yacht Carrie L, in San Francisco Bay, lata thla afternoon. But a few hours before hla death he had received cov eted orders from the War Department to proceed to the Mexican border to ob serve maneuvers there. With Simpson In the boat were Po lice Judge It. P. Tappan, of Alameda, and a Chines boy. As th sun set ths breeze freshened and Simpson started forward to ahorten sail. Inex plicably, the boom swung, knocking him from the gunwale.. Judge Tappan, who haa only one arm. found difficulty In rounding to, and when the beat reached the place where Blmpeon went overboard he had disappeared. Simpson was 41 years old. a Call fornlan by birth, and was an Assembly man in the isth Legislature and a Sen ator of the Itth and 10th session. In th Spanish -American War he served at Vancouver Barracks as Cap tain of Company O, Eighth California Volunteers. At the cloee of the war be received hla majority and was as signed to the Fifth Infantry. He was divorced from his wife about three months ago and aha and an Infant child survive him. CAR LEAPS THROUGH AIR Concrete) Steps Demolished by Crash of Loop-Lino Runaway. LOS ANGELES. April 10. (Special.) -Thundering down th long Alvarado street hill like a sled on an Icy slope, a car of the First and Sixth streets' loop left ths tracks today at the curve, leaped 10 feet through the air and crashed through a flight of solid con, crete steps as though they were so much paper. Th motorman. conductor and three passengers, th only occupants of the car. were slightly injured. They are Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hunter, a bride and bridegroom: Mildred Smith, a school girl; W. R. Wlcherhead, the mo, torman. and A. K. Walker, the conduc tor. . A cigar store In the basement of tha bonding Into which the car ran was half demolished and the steps leading to th Los Angeles School of Art and Design are a total loss. Failure of the emergency brake to operate was given aa the cause. FAMINE THREATENS FEZ Moroccan City Besieged by Rebels In Hard Situation. FEZ. Morocco, April SO. The city Is quiet, but the stock of provisions is low and famine threatens the populace. Ther have been no further attacks by the rebels among whom dissensions appear to be springing up. ALLEGED DYNAMITERS fiat ' - i;.-'f-3:l 1 " iTh ill v ii. teorn SNAPSHOT OF ORTIE M'MIMGAI, SHIELDING HIS FACE FRO M CAMERA; POBTIIA1T OF J. J. M'SA MARA ATVD SXAPSHOP OF JAMES W. . M-KAMAKA BELOW. C. H. 1IOYLH, WHO IS IU1M.G DEFE.VSG rU.D SUEHIFF W. A. HAMMEL AND CL AKESCK DARROW, WHO 19 EXPECT CD TO DLBECT DEFEX S . .. - . . ( , " . PORTLAND, DARROW DELAYS DYNAMITE CASE NotedLavvyerHesitates to Lead Defense. UNION MEN AWAIT DECISION Prisoners Spend Day Reading of Dynamite and Death. STRIKE SITUATION SERIOUS Conditions In Los Angeles Grow More Difficult for Labor Leaders to Handle) and General Walkout Is Imminent, LOS ANGELES. April SO.-larencs Darrow haa not promised definitely that he will undertake the defense of John and James McNamara, and, lack ing such aasurances, those Interested In the case of the accused dynamite conspirators said today they were "up In the air regarding the arraignment of ths prisoners. ' Labor leaders who are arranging the preliminaries do not want the men ar raigned until Darrow Is on the. ground, and tha best information they had to day was that the Chicago attorney. Instead of coming personally to Los Angeles, had sent a confidential rep resentative to look over the situation before he would agree to accept the task of chief counsel in such a mo mentous legal struggle. Arraignment May He Postponed. . In oonsequence, the arraignment, which waa scheduled to take place not later than next Wednesday, may be de ferred, and the District Attorney is expeoted to consent to the delay, as it la understood that be la not averse to having further time - to adjust various technical points in the state's side of tha ease. These points are said to concern the tndtctmenta against the accused men which were drawn hastily after Burnt had taken James McNamara and Ma Manlgal into custody at Detroit. Assistant Prosecutors May Arrive. It was also reported In official quar ters that the arraignment might await the arrival of attorneys representing the National Erectors' Association, who, It is said, will Join District Attorney Fredericks and his assistant, W. J. Ford, in the prosecution' of the Mc Namaras. Since hla alleged confes sion to the prosecutor three days ago and his subsequent refusal to aee at torneya for the defense. McManlgal Is Concluded . on Pegs 4- UNDER ARREST AT L03 ANGELES, OREGON, MONDAY, INDEX TO TODAY'S NEWS Tbe Weathae. TEETERTAY'B Vtsxlmum- temperature 70 degrees; minimum, 41 degrees. TOPAV8 Showers. cooler, southwesterly winds. Foreign. Insurrecto politics! leaders decide upon terms of ossce to bs presented to Msxl- csn government- Psge 2 Uprlslng In Csnton tskes desperete torn and troops' loyalty Is doubted. - Fsge X. Mexican rebels accused of wrecking train and killing three passengers and negro porter. Pegs 4. National. Bsnsts slow In organising and only meainre taken up Is Canadian reciprocity Bill. Page 2. Rut'ber and woolens Interests accused of ccn--trlbutlng to Lorimer slush funsV" Psgs 1 Census Buresu completes revision of Orgon census and publishes new table. Psgs a. Paclfle Northwest. Tarema voters show little Interest n com ing recall slsctlon on C.tr Commission ers. Psgs 5. Nearlr million dollars' worth of stssl ordered for completion of Short Line between Spokans and Portland- Page 1. Vmatilla Indian reservation may bs opened. Page ft. Domestic. California Guardsman receives coveted or ders from Washington few hours before drowning In bay. Psge 1. Tornado deals desth In Missouri; Kansas has snow storm. Psgs S. Police guard million-dollar baby." parents fearing kidnaping. Psgs S. Habitation of Clarence Darrow to agree to lead defense of allsged dynamiters de lays cases. Psge 1. Bangor, lis, swspt by t.000.000 fire. Page L Labor crisis Is due In Chicago today. Page L "porta. Paclfto Coast League results yesterday: fscramento 2. Portland 1: San Francisco 1T-1, Oakland 1-2; Los Angeles -, Ver non t-2. Page S. Northwestern League results yestsrday: Portland ft. Sesttls 8; Vancouver 4. Ta coma 2; Spokane ft, Victoria 1. Page a. Bo-peeps defeat Mutts and Champs win from Insurrsctos. Page 8. Mike Lynch ehargsa mob In defense of um pire.. Page S. Industrial. State college professor prepares history and explanation - of cbarplttlng of stumps. Psgs 14. Taeoma to dedicate $TSO.0Ot union depot today. Psgs 14. California Fruit Cannsrs" Association buys cherry and berry crops of western part , of Orsgon- Page 14. Portland and Vicinity. Chief of Police Cox reconsldsrs offer to re sign and decides to consult attornay be fore acting. Page 13. C. A. Gray, new bead of Hill lines, goes to hoipltsl to rest before assuming duties. ' Page 18. Lyric Theater to be torn down after T years of continuous shows. Psge IS. Dock Commission not rssdy to select en gineer. Page 10. John F. 8teTens. summoned by telegraph, leaves on short notice for New Tork. Psgs S. Sunnyslde Congregational Church debt re duced 17000 at dedication. Page 10. Candidates for Mayor plan busy week. Page 15. Per Insula psople oppose propoitd sewer out let Into slough. Page 10. T. M. C. A. to give swimming lessons t all man snd boys. Psgs T. 5 LEGISLATORS TRAPPED Three Detectives Arrested as Lobby ists in Ohio Reveal Real Mission. COLUMBVS. O.,' April 80. Admissions were made tonight by three men arrested last night as alleged lobbyists In the General Assembly that they had suc cessfully manipulated a trap for the leg islators suspected of bribery. Five leg islators were named, including one Rep resentative and four Senators. It Is admitted by Prosecutor Turner that a device to record conversations waa placed under a couch in tbe hotel rooms occupied by ' the detectives and that Incriminating evidence Is In process of presentation to the grand Jury. THEIR CUSTODIAN AND TWO LEADERS IN THEIR DEFENSE. r r ion TIFF PLOT SEEN IfJ L0H1MER CASE Big Corporations I re volved in Scandal. SECRET AGENTS FIND FACTS Rubber and Woolens Men Con nected With "Slush Fund." NEW WITNESSES CALLED Investigating Committee, of Illinois Senate Shows Determination to Continue Tntl! Results Are Obtained. CHICAGO, April SO. 8peclal.) Se cret agents of tha Helm Investigating committee are believed to have uncov ered evidence of a sensational nature which la expected to result In bringing Into the Lorimer bribery scandal the names of at least three prominent East ern corporations and their head officials. This was tacitly admitted today by peraons closely associated with the in vestigation being conducted by the Helm committee of the State Senate, follow ing the announcement this morning that persistent reports weta current that persons Interested In the woolens and rubber schedules of the Payne-Aldrich tariff bill had been mentioned In con nection with the collection of the 1100. 000 "slush" fund, alleged to have been disbursed to secure the election of Wil liam Lorimer to the United States Sen ate. New Witnesses Called. E. H. Hatfield, assistant sergeant-at-arms of the Senate, who arrested Ed ward Tllden, William C. CunTmlngs and George M. Benedict last Friday morn ing, returned to Chicago this after noon after a mysterloua absence during which he is reported to have been on a still hunt for additional witnesses. He admitted-having served several sub penas yesterday but refused to give the names of the persons summoned. "There U likely to be something pop ping at Springfield before long," he re marked. In Judge Petlt's court tomorrow morn ing will begin what is expected to be one of the bitterest legal battles ever waged in sn Illinois court by attorneys for Tllden,' Cummlngs and Benedict, who vere released on writs of habeas corpus Immediately following their arrests, and John J. Healy. attorney for the Helm committee. Senate May Convene Later. Realizing that unless it can secure the testimony or these three men during the next fortnight the Senate will hsve ad (Concluded on Page 4.) STRAH0RN RUSHES SHORT LINE WORK ORDERS FOR $950, 000 WORTH OB" STEEL ARE PLACED. Railroad Officials Anxious to 0?ea Route to Portland Sooa as Possible. SPOKANE. Wash, April SO. (Spe cial.) Orders have been placed for the ateel rails and other track metal needed to complete that section of the former North Coast line from Spokane to Ayer Junction, according to F. L. Pitman, chief engineer of the third district of the Oregon-Washington Railway Navigation Company, this afternoon. The total weight 01 the steel will be about 10,000 tons, and it will cost approximately $950,000 by the time It Is laid down in the yards ready to be placed on the grade. Speaking of the work being done, Mr. Pitman said: "Soon after reaching Chicago I re ceived Instructions from President R. E. Strahorn directing me to push the work aUn? the line with all possible vigor, to the end that the rails on the Short Line between Spokane and Portland will be In place at the earliest possible date. To this end I at once telegraphed In structions to ru3h the work north from Hooper, from which place the track will be laid north and south." NEW YORK, 'April SO. The steel mills reported a sudden Increase In or ders for railroad equipment and sup plies received In the last two or three days, making the total for last week nearly 70,000 tons, and for April 153. 000 tons. Export business was less. Railroad orders for cars was large, Including 91 engines for the Southern Railway, but for April the equipment showing was a poor one. Bridge or ders were especially light. FIRE APPARATUS WANDERS Yacolt Mayor Fears It Will Be Found in Town's Gardens. s VANCOUVER, Wash., April SO. (Special.) The town of Tacoit has lost Its fire department apparatus and Vasco Christy, the Mayor, Is searching gardens of the commonwealth bellev lng a few of the residents borrowed the hose and fixtures and forgot to return them. To aid him in his search Mayor Chris ty . has advertised In the town paper. The advertisement reads: "Anybody having any of tbe City's fire apparatus, or knowing where any parts are, will kindly return the same to the Tacoit Bulletin office, where you will find the keys of the fire hall." Tho fire hall Is kept locked, except when there is need for the fire depart. ment FIRE ROUTS ACTRESSES Bernhardt Troujpo Flees to Street In Neglige AUt'fc. SAN JOSE, Cal., April 80. (Special.) Fire early this morning destroyed a restaurant adjoining the Eureka Ho tel and sent a dosen members of Sarah Bernhardfs company scurrying into the streets In pajamas and night dresses. The tire did $1000 damage. Many of the spectators were guests at the exclusive Saturday evening co tillon at the Hotel Vendome, having Just left the hotel for their homes when the fire alarm rang In. Although the walls of the hotel were charred and several of the actors and actresses were drenched with water, there was no panlo -and exceptionally quick work by the fire department eliminated danger early. No one was hurt. SOUTH DAKOTA HAS STORJrl Fall at Dallas Is 2 Feet In 2 4 Hours. Nebraska Also Feels Storm. OMAHA, Neb - April SO. Reports from Dallas, 8. D., show a fall of two feet of snow on the level during the laat 24 hours. Heavy rain or enow storms also visited portions of South ern Wyoming and Northwestern Ne braska. Although the temperature has fallen, tt is believed It will not drop to the point where growing crops will be seriously damaged. In this city the temperature dropped from 64 to 39. MOTORCYCLE HITS TRAIN Bdler Meets Death as He Attempts to Cross Track. TACOMA, Wash., April 30. (Special.) -Lewla Priest, of Seattle, after racing across the country for several miles on a motorcycle of which he had lost com plete control, crashed into a fast inter urban train at Orllla near Kent, Wash ington, today, and was almost instantly killed. Both machines were going at a terrific .rate of speed. The victim was riding hla cycle from Tacoma to Seattle as he had been noticed during his ride by several people. NEW BEER FORMULA FOUND Patrolman Discovers Meaning of "Copla Ext. Humnlls. QU" "Copia. Ext. Humulis. Qt." Patrolman Mies learned last night that this prescription, in abbreviated foreign language, meant six bottles of beer, when he found E. Reed buying six quarts of the beverage at T. Ben nlnghoff's drug store in Kenton last night. Nlles Interpreted tho "Qt." part of tho prescription to mean Q. T., and left the other part to be figured out by the official Interpreters, PRICE FIVE CENTS. CRISIS DUE TODAY 50,000; Workmen on Verge of Walkouts. 2500 BRIGKMAKERS TO STRIKE All Kilns Within 50 Miles of City Involved. RAILROAD MEN MAY QUIT May Day to Be Perilous for Wlnffy City Employes of Six Lines Post Ultimatum Result Hinges on Reply. LABOR STRUGGLES ON IN VA RIOUS PARTS OF COUNTRY. Kev Tork Ten thousand or more men and women In thres trades, ma chinists, walntmaken and bakers will walk out today unless an eight-hour day Is granted, say labor leaders. Chlcaro Industrial war, afTect-lr-x nearly 80.000 men. lncludlns brlckmakers and railroad employes will begin today. It la said, unless a conference Is granted by the em ployers. Los Aneeles Instead of early set tlement of the various labor disputes that have been hanging Ore In Los Angeles for months, a general walk out In all trades unions appears Im minent. Employers have begun let ting out union carpenters, and the . labor lesders In other lines may con fer today regarding a general sym ' pathetlo strike. CHICAGO, 111., April 30.-(Specla!.) Industrial disputes affecting approxi mately 50,000 workmen In Chicago will be ushered In tomorrow morning with the first day of May, known throughout the country as "strike day." In all sections of the city labor meet ings and conferences with employers were held today, but except In one or two minor Instances failed to clear an atmosphere surcharged with strike talk. Brlckmakers representing all the yards within a BO-mlle radius of the city held a meeting today and voted not to accept the ultimatum of the manufacturers for a restoration of tho wage scale of 1909. which means a reduction of about 5 per cent from the rates In effect last year. Every yard in the district will be ldlo tomorrow morning, and both . sides are prepared for a protracted strug gle. Strike la Voted. Four special meetings of malntenance-of-way employes of t'x railroads enter ing the city were hold In the afternoon, and it was by almost unanimous vote that the men decided to quit work at 8 o'clock tomorrow unless the general man agers consent to a conference and a recognition of the union. In addition to track laborers, tha or ganization controls signal men, elec tricians and other skilled workmen, and It Is said a strike will hamper the rail roads seriously at terminal and transfer points. From 9 o'clock in the morning until 9 o'clock at night a steady stream of freight handlers visited the polls at tho International headquarters, on a plan to strike unless the railroad managers con sent to a conference. In other cities, where the freight hand lers are organized, from Minneapolis tj New Orleans, a vote waa taken Saturday, and reports today showed that It stood about 95 per cent In favor of a strike. The same ratio prevailed la the vots taken In this city. The freight handlers will ask for arbi. tration under the Erdman law before ordering a walkout, although It was ad mitted that a strike was a possibility before the week was out. While tho freight handlers have asked for a wage Increase, the stumbling block Is their demand for recognition of their organization. The strike against the Otis Elevates Company Is due to internal troubles of several years' standing between machin ists and elevator constructors. Two years ago the elevator constructors went on strike for Increased wagea. Machln lets filled their places and have beepX doing tbe work since. ' Pact Leads to Dissension. ' A few months ago an agreement wai reached through which the company would re-employ elevator constructors after tomorrow. The machinists and electrical workers will not give up the work, which they insist belongs to their respective crafts, and have ordered their men to quit wherever elevator constructors are em ployed. The machinery movers are to strlka in sympathy with the machinists, as they . have no direct grievance of their own. Another conference on the building trades situation wUl be held tomorrow,; but It does not promise results, as the plumbers will not listen to anything except that the steamfltters give up their union and affiliate with the plum, bers organization. i MAXY ITXION- MEK DISCHARGED Los Angeles Labor Crisis Approaches and General Strike May Result, j LOS ANGELES, Cal., April 9D. Though the organized carpenters Of this' tCooclifelsd on Fag-&; s3 ' LABOR C GO 106.2