THE JtrGIt3IXG OREGOXIAX. FRIDAY, JT75CE 21.11912.
15
ROBERTS' MOTHER
TRIES TO SAVE SOU
Woman Bares Own Weakness
and Other Family Skeletons
in Murder Case.
"dark of the moon." she testified, hit
I aispesmon is exactly the opposite. He
naa frequently threatened to kill her
during- the "full of the moon." Thus
did the country woman drag In an
Iclent superstitions to account for wnat
the physicians say they would describe
I as periodical mental lapses occurring
without references to the moon or the
elements.
She said that when at home last
Winter the defendant had persisted In
1 a delusion that a neighbor was going
to Burn the bouse some night while be
was asleep, that he was constantly
talking; to himself and that he estab
lished a reputation as "Crazy" Robert
by his strange wandering from one
I subject to another while taking part in
debates which were held at regular In
tervals in the community school house.
The witness raised the second laugh
4 when she said:
"Jack refused .to take- part in one
OLD SUPERSTITIONS TOLD aeoate- yg that the subject was toi
" ' silly for argument. The title was. "Re
solved, That a Man Will go Further, for
l've Than for Money."
"Do you call that evidence of In-
I sanity?" demanded Special Prosecutor
Logan of the defendant's attorneys.
"You understand, of course. Mr.
Parent Cains Sympathy in Court
room as She Unfolds Story ef
W ayward Boy and Peculiarities
of Prisoner's .Relatives.
ELKS TO PROVIDE
AMPLY FOR WOMEN
Two Buildings Are Connected
to Give Quarters for
"Open House."
REGISTRATION ON JULY 3
I Logan, that every man baa lucid in
tervals." laughed back Attorney Whit
field.' .
A Heals ta Take Kotea.
During the course of Mrs. Pf el Iter's
narrative and those of other relatives
I of the defendant who bave related
family history, four alienists have sat
taking notes. They are Dr. E. M.
ITOmwti vitll.lriinwii alinni.t nf Ta.
neys that her son Is Insane. Mrs. Mary Lonla Wash., and Dr. Splro Sargentlch.
t-uen t-reiiier, motner or JacK Roberts, I of Portland, for the defense, and Dr.
on trial In Judge Morrow's court for
the murder of Donald M. Stewart and PORTLAND PHOTOGRAPHER WEDS TEACHER IN IRVINOTON
. Anxious to be of assistance in sup
porting the contentions of his attor-
Ronndnp on Multnomah Field Is Not
Sanctioned by Commission Local
lodge-Prepares "Party" for
Kew York "Xewlyweds."
A large force of men went to work
yesterday morning to cut arches be
tween the Elks' Temple and the Ore
gon building, adjoining It on the north,
George Hastings in an attempted auto
mobile holdup March 2S, last, yester
day afternoon took the witness stand
and ruthlessly dragged the family I
skeleton from the closet, divulging. I
among other things, that she never tiad
been married to Jack's father, although
she bore him three children.
Mrs. Freirror. now the wife of a
small rancher living In the hills of I
Clackamas County, nearly to miles
southeast of Oregon CJty. traced the
family history on both sides of the
house as far back as the defendant's
grandparents.
.According to her story, every an
cestor and relative of the young man
on trial for his life has either been
insane or peculiarly eccentric.
Mother Uatn. Sympathy.
. So lacking In stature Is Mrs. Pfeiffer
that when she sits In an ordinary I
chair her feet dangle a foot or morel
from toe floor. She has the stoutness I
of middle age. A wave of sympathy I
swept through the courtroom for the!
diminutive figure in the witness box.
In the course of her narrative she even
said that people had declared that they
had doubts of her own sanity. The
mother is making a brave effort to I
save her boy from the gallows and
evrryone in the courtroom appreciates I
mat tact.
Mrs. Pfeiffer referred to Jack's ua-
ternai grandmother as "tricky." She
testified that her own father, Joslah
Johnson, had died in the insane asy
lum at Salem and that her mother.
frarah Johnson, was subject to unrea-
SCHOOL.
p.-.:
V
friyfr'isssM
tiitir
1
-. - 7
- r I ' i i i
' ' MR. AND MRS. ELBRIDGE W. MOORE.
At the First Methodist Episcopal Church yesterday Elbridge "W. Moore,
sonable hallucinations, among which the well-known artist and photographer, whose studio Is in the Elks build
was one that her father was in love ing. was married to Miss Florence M. Beane by the pastor. Rev. Benjamin
with several other women and bad Young. After a banquet at the Ira perlal Hotel in the evening, the ooupla
th-m hid In the woods nd n-,r,vnr,. left the city for a short wedding trip, part of which will be passed at the
of Washington County, where she lived seashore. Mrs. Moore was a teacher In the Irvington school and is also an
as a girl, on one occasion her mother, artist or no mean aoiiuy,
she said, bad driven her father from
their farm and he had remained away
land at C o'clock the following morn'
lng.
The Walla Walla train will include
eight sleepers. It will leave Walla
Walla at 11:30 P. M., July 8. and ar
rive here at 7:30 the next morning.
The train from Pendleton will be one
of the largest, an order having been
placed lor ten sleepers, a steel coach
an observation oar and a dyjiamo bag
gage car. This will leave Pendleton
at 3:30 A. M, July 10, arriving here at
the Union Depot in Portland the fol
lowing morning at 9 A. M. The night
will be spent at the Country Club, near
IHtrtland.
The special from Spokane will be
filled with Montana Elks. The train
will be run from Butte to Spokane
over the Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget
Sound line and be transferred to the
O.-W. R. & N. at Plummer. It will
leave Plummer at 6:30 A M.. July 7,
and arrive In Portland at 11 A. M.
the following morning. It will cos
sist of seven cars
In the orders issued for the specials
a request is made that as many of the
train crew as possible be Elks.
COLLEGE UNION PLANNED
PHILOMATH AND DALLAS IXSTI-
TCTIONS MAY JOIX.
Tnlted Brethren Favor Merger of
Two Schools Into One Strong -Educational
Body.
three months, fearing that If he re- A- E- Tamiesie. assistant superintend-
turned she would kill him. and this I nt ot ,ne Oregon state insane Asyium.
for no real misconduct on hit: Dart. and Dr. W. T. Williamson, of Portland,
' Religion Qa.rrel. Recalled. to VL FJ?"..- Zt'L".
She related that when clergymen tlve lldes to 8ay what conclusions they
came to their home to remain over L... . n th mental enmna-
wSUSh! faiher,.C1'"',"ntIJ. lurrR'ed tency ot ancestors and relatives of the
" rell'ou subjects: that deIeJdant from i,.t.ning. to. the teati-
, ,;r" ," " r mony of Roberts' relatives.
ill IJV? J,y,.Weas "i"" th"n Va Mrs. Pfeiffer created a third burst of
Rmi.v .iwJi . J .V . '"""y merriment when she said that Jack had
?.mo .. i,J'nCJ 'JL.aK 1 invented among other things a new
wlf- r.., "early choked bis ,ype of boat and had named it "Satanic
MrPte'.'f'f'er. continuing her story i" h0?n"'to ."har'rtdJ VroSJ
onn.Cfr0thi05iPf"eUrr- te,8ti,le.d hat 'cearwHh'himT: it wien hVha"
haS delibertelv a,"-.rn"1 completed It. but that she had demurred
coM which r.sJlted in ne?d?ath w on cround tnat "Satan miBht clalm
5rJ!; -l" "T heJ his property somewhere on the deep."
vance b.inV to .J T h-V iVJT 8h. spok. of his having told her of
vance. being to end her life by thisL ... "1 . ..wmii tlmekeener over the
means: that a second paternal aunt
waa weak-minded and had such a poor ' V V , . . . rtVl . . . K.,
memorv .tuI w. .ki., . fc the timekeeper had cheated him. He
of absent-mindedness that the witness
believed her mentally Incompetent, and
that a third sister of Jack's father had
I had fled to Seattle, fearing arrest. The
mother insisted that Jack waa always
afraid that someone was cheating him.
attemnted .ulrlde bv irlnlcl rhl. n regaraeu pruoi . .... u.-
form. It was brought out that this Mnlty' . T ... .,.,.
aunt was Jealous of the man she aft- Family Phyaleiaa Teatiae
erwards married. Mrs Pfeiffer raised Mr- P'eiffer was preceded on the
a laugh to replace the sober atten- stand by Dr. Brown, who waa the at-
tlon which had greeted her story when tending physician at the time of the
she said of this aunt: ' defendant's birth. Dr. Brown related
"After she recovered from the ef- that the mother was In poor health at
fects of the chloroform the wedding that time, and that her surroundings
date was advanced a month and she were deplorable. He recalled making
said that she wonld willingly take It
again if the date could be still fur
ther advanced.
Jack's Peeallarltlea Related.
After expressing the belief that
Charles D. Roberts, brother of the
defendant's father, also had been in-
the statement that the "baby would
have been much better off had he died.
The witness could not recall from his
independent recollection the exact phy
sical shortcomings of tne cniia. At
that time, 30 years ago, he was prac-
ticlns- at Hillsboro. Or.
The first witness caiiea yesieraay
sane. Mrs. Pfeiffer came down to the wa8 Frank h. Curtis, superintendent
time of the defendant's birth. She , th . stat e Penitentiary at Balem , who
stated that when the child was born. testlfled to the punishments received-
--"" j. " " by Roberts while Incarcerated there,
age. and that Jack was four year, of h punishment was proceeding,
age before his ski. 1 had grown. Three c , )d BoDert, WOuld yell and
Physicians M Wen her up to die ."cr although he waa aware that
".'..riS'i;"! k th baby " bT,th- h. " aich conduct Invited still more punlsh-
testlfied that she was unconscious for witness said that several of
three week, about that time For two " rs whom ,t had been found
months after Jacks birth he showed to correct a, much a. the
such slight signs of life that the "f".., w. .. . the asv-
mother was unable to tell whether ha
was asleep or awakn.
lum. No examination of Roberts to
p or awann. ... ; 1. 1 m.nl rnmntnrv or
The mother then skipped to th tlra k "J T. .j, Anrln
when the baby was two years old. tell- ! , ' M ' . c. I iu, r,.rti' book!
ilCUlBT vquBBii ii n il grew in ins obcii i " . : . , . . , , , . t - v.
yard. Every day. precisely at 3 o'clock, by prisoners during the time Bfjerts
she said, the child would serenade thi " ' V7. VIT.o.V.
unintelligible) "rl ra 1 n. r iuudb ui i e - - . j -
neighbors and relatlvea. and would tending that the Jury was entitled to
fondle It affectionately. He was brok- compare bis punisnments witn inu.e ro-
enhearted. she said, when the squash celved by other prisoners.
was cut Jack next centered his at- The defense finished
tentlon on a saucer. So persistent did Mrs. Pfeiffer. and the state wtll start
v. - w t. t.1. .H.niAn. tn H fAM..amlnatlon this mornlnff. one
cer that the mother hid It. Jack will probably be succeeded on the stand
learned of the hiding place and day af- by Dr. Brown, who will be recalled to
ter day. precisely at 3 o'clock, he made tell the results of his examination or
a demonstration before the box that the defendant for indications of Insan-
contalned the saucer until the mother lty. The state -proposes to put Dra.
was forced to deliver the piece of Tamiesie and Williamson on in re
crockery. I buttaL
Theft Father's Mania.
Changing to a oiscussion ot me ae- . nrlirno fTIPUT
fendants father. Illls Roberts, she de- REALTY PAnTNcHo rlutll
ciareu tnat no oiien stoie, iw me wir .
love of stealing, articles for which he G jj Durham Seeks to Have Philip
had no use and which ne tnrew away, i
She declared that she eloped to marry . V.. W. Fry Denied License
him. but that the marriage ceremony
was not performed and that thereafter Charging that Phillip V. W. Fry had
she was afraid to leave him because cheated G, H. Durham, his former part
he threatened to kill her if she deserted. ner ont of h)g gnare 0f commission on
She was barely 17 when she went to the M,e of tn Bowera Hotel proper-
nve who nim. sne wsirawi. ""i i ttea jast winter Durham, representee
until he was sent to the penitentiary b R w Montague, yesterday after
in 1S8 did she secure her release from DOOa pat "up a fiKht to have the license
uu ""J- committee of the City council reiutt
father at th home of the tatter's moth- F a license to conduct a real estate
r, for whom she had gone to work as on.CSk
a domestic when between 18 and It Backed by the recommendation of A.
years oi e- reiaiea m j . It. Mills, president of the nrst national
cidents in the life of Jacks f"1. Bank: TV. C. Alvord. president of the
tenains w iimi no wu Willamette Iron A Steel works: nen-
firmed criminal. Ladd Corbett, a capitalist, and T.
Getting down further towards the Broolte. fc wealthy realty oper-
present day, the witness said that ater FrT stood by nia guns and de-
Oeorge Roberts, a brother of the man n,ed the charges. No action was taken.
on tnat -is m me innni M the subject must be sent to the coun
Blackfoot. Idaho. She testified that
ell, it being before the committee) in-
wnen jaca was oeiween ana s ywro i -n.
of age ehe caught him Just In time to Durham sieged that he paid 3200 for
prevent him splitting the head of his an JnterMt ln tne business and that
grandfather with an ax. when the Bowers Hotel deal waa car-
Old SapeTstltloBa Broasht Ont. rled through he should have been given
' She declared that -during the full half of it. but was not. Fry denied
of the moon" the murder occurred dur- that any part of this sum should have
lng the full of the moon the defen- been paid to Durham, as he said that
dant Is not responsible for his actions the deal had been worked up long be
and. in her opinion, cannot at such fore Durham entered the office ana
times distinguish the difference. b- that he did nothing toward its con
tween right and wrong. During the summation-
. 1
so that additional space will be avail
able for the entertainment of the
thousands of lodgemen who come here
to attend the Elks' National conven
tion next month.
The spacious clubrooms on the third
floor of the 3 Iks' building wll'i be con
nected by means of a wide archway
with a dancehall 100 by 100 feet In the
Oregon building. The combined space
will be used to conduct open house
throughout the week. Free refresh
ments will' be served to every visiting
Elk every day of the week.
The fourth floor of the Elks build
ing will be used for women's recep
tion rooms and headquarters of the
committee of Portland women appoint
ed to entertain visiting wlvea. mothers.
sisters and daughters or Elks. The of
fices now occupied by Harry C. McAl
lister, secretary of the convention com
mittee, will be converted into a rest
room for women.
Registration Begins July 8.
Within the next few days McAllister
and his staff of clerks and stenograph
ers will move into a ground floor room
near the Elks' Temple. The number of
people having business with the con
vention commission has grown so ln
the last tew weeks that maintenance
of quarter's on the fourth floor is con
sidered impracticable.
Registration headquarters will be
opened on the first floor of the Oregon
Hotel building on Wednesday, July 3.
The same day will witness the arrival
of a large number of delegates. Fred
C. Robinson, grand secretary, will ar
rive about that time.
The grand lodge officers have aban
doned their plan ot coming together
on a special train. Each will come
separately. Most of them will head
their respective . lodge delegations.
Work on the court of honor on
Seventh street is progressing. Sulli
van & Considine, who are erecting the
new Empress Theater, at Seventh and
Yamhill streets, have arranged to
build a temporary sidewalk on the
Seventh-street side of their property.
so that the court may not be broken
by the fence that now extends to the
euro.
A. Simmons, . a cigar salesman and
an enthusiastic Elk, baa rented a box
at the Orpheum Theater for the en
tire week of the convention and will
entertain various parties of friends
each evening.
Roiiiif Wot Sanctioned.
At a recent meeting the commission
refused to sanction a proposed dupll
cation of the Pendleton Roundup on
Multnomah Field. They did this upon
request of the Pendleton people, who
expressed the belief that the proposed
exhibition ln Portland would create
a wrong impression of what the real
Pendleton Roundup is like. While the
commission is powerless to prevent the
exhibitions if the promoters desire to
stage them, they refuse to make them
a part of their official programme.
. Advices from various lodges yester
day continue to bear out the fact that
the convention will be a reoora-Dreak-
er for attendance. "We will have the
largest crowd bere for the reunion
that ever assembled ln Portland In a
single week." declared Secretary Mc
Allister yesterday.
Among the Teturns receivea yester
day was one from the lodge at Water-
town. N. T advising tne local com
mission that George A. Lawyer, the
official delegate of that lodge, left
home and was married a few days
ago. He will bring nis oriae wnn nim
to Portland. The boys bere are pre
paring a little entertainment for his
especial benefit.
More Specials Cosalar-
Notice was received yesterday by
the general passenger department of
the O.-W. R. N. Co. that arrange-
menta have been completed lor xne
handling over that line of five more
special trains of Elks. These trains
are all from the Northwest and. ac
cording to the reports, will be heavily
loaded. They will be from Aberdeen,
Wash.; Pendleton. Or.; Walla Walla,
Wash.: North Yakima. Wash., and
Spokane. Wash., a&d win onng to
Portland not only the ElUs from those
cities, but from surrounding territory
to the number of probably 2000.
The North Yakima tram will leave
there at 3 P. M., July 3. arriving in
Portland at 7:05 A. the following i
day. It will include seven cars. The
Aberdeen train will Include seven
sleepers and will leave Aberdeen at
10:30 P. Jd. July 10, arriving in Port-
Union ot Philomath College and Dal
las colleges may result from the action
taken yesterday by the Oregon Con
ference of the United Brethren Church,
in session at the First Church, East
Morrison and East Fifteenth streets.
Bishop Bell, Professor Drury and S. M.
Jones were appointed commissioners
to confer with like commtsioners from
the United Evangelical Church and the
Evangelical Association and seek a
basis on which the' two Institutions
may be united. Rev. C. C. Poling,
Professor Metiser arid H. Barendrick.
represent the United Evangelical branch
and Rev. J. A. Ooode, J. C. Luckel and
Rev. S. A. Slewert represent the Evan
gellcal Association ln the movement for
union.
The Philomath College is the official
school of the United Brethren Confer
ence and the Dallas College is the of
ficial school of the two Evangelical
branchea. Both are old and established
Institutions. The joint commission held
a meeting at .noon, and adopted a ten
tative plan of union. The sentiment
of the commission was unanimous for
consolidation of the two schools into
one strong Institution. A subcommit
tee of Bishop Bell, Rev. C. C. Poling,
D. M. Metzger and Professor Drury,
wa, appointed to complete the merger
plan and present It to the conference
today or tomorrow.
Social and Industrial Unrest" was
the subject of the morning address
of Bishop Bell at the conference yes
terday morning, and he pointed to the
struggle ln progress at the Chicago
Republican convention as showing the
desire to destroy and disrupt that has
developed in the Amerloan people. He
declared that the spirit of unrest per
meates all classes, social, political
and religious and that It had be
come extremely dangeroua and must
be met by a complete readjustment.
In the afternoon Rev. P. O. Bone
brake was re-elected district superin
tendent for the conference. Mrs. R. N.
Lewis, of Everett, Wash., received two
votes for superintendent. On motion
the conference was made a single dis
trict. Mrs. Dora Young, who has the
Beaver district, submitted an extended
report, and announced that she would
write a book entitled "The Range
Pilot." relating her experiences ln that
district. Mrs. R. N. Lewis submitted
a report on publication. James Ewlng,
representing the American Bible So
ciety, addressed the conference. Rev.
00I30000JM0EO&0M0M0)M0M013Cora
10
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The Owl" is a store of satisfaction giving all
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ESTABLISHED 1802
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EIGHTEEN STORES ON THE PACIFIC COAST
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M010M0M0M0M0I000M0M0M00
C. a Poling, of the United Evangelical
Church, and Professor Metzger, of Dal
las College, were introduced.
Alderman's Suggestions Asked.
SALEM, Or., June 20. (Special.)
Superintendent Alderman, as head of
the schools in Oregon, has received a
request from the trustees of the es
tate of O. S. Johnson, of Scranton. Pa.,
asking that he give them assistance ln
mapping out a proper work of charity
In establishing a manual training sys
tem for the children of that city. The
Johnson estate was over $1,500,000, and 1
the entire income of this with the ex
ception of 325,090 a year will be used
for the purpose, this additional income
to also be used at the time of the wid
ow's death.
Amor and the surrounding country have
been in close touch with the Philippines
for about 300 years.
- - "V
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NO ASH
Delivered in sacks and left in sacks if customer so desires
20 Tons or Over - - - $8.00
5 to 2Q Ton Orders - $8.5Q
Less Than 5 Tons - - - $9.00
Orders for 10 tons or more will be delivered in five ton lots,
subject to your order. Over 500 satisfied users last year
PORTLAND GAS & COKE COMPANY
Phone Main
6500, A 6274
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