The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, June 06, 1909, Image 1

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    72 Paes
Pages 1 to 12
VOL. XXVIII NO. 23.
PORTLAXD, OREGON, SUNDAY 3IORXING, JUNE 6, 1900
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
GR1DGEDR0PSWITH
TRAlHs 17 ABEHURT
AIRSHIP DROPS
PILOT, SAILS AWAY
STRANGE ADVENTURE OP OXE
LEGGED AVIATOR.
FESTIVAL MUG TO
TAKE UP SCEPTER
CHICAGO SUBWAYS JKVll Dfll IPV Til I PURE FOOD LAWS
FIVE MURDERED lii
SLAUGHTER HOUSE
Crazed Employe Runs
Amuck With Knife.
TO COST FORTUNE
U S MlRr NFiini iu iuliui iu, appi icn to cnnic
m i uiuu iv uuuiVO
BE CONCILIATORY
PRACTICALLY EIGHT . PLAXS
SUBMITTED TO CITY.
LIBRARIAN" PROPOSES TO LA
BEL INACCURATE WORKS.
Crashes 40 Feet Down
to River Below.
WRECK NEAR COTTAGE GROVE
Trestle on Oregon & South
eastern Falls.
SOME SERIOUSLY INJURED
Knglne Stays on Track, but Tender
and AH Other Cars Drop Engi
neer Ostrander in Worst Con
dition Rescues Are Made.
COTTACE GUOVE. Or.. June 5. ( Spe
cial.) ffhtn on the middle of Kern
bridge, spanning Row River. on the
Oregon & Southeastern, a mixed train
crashed through and fell, all but the
engine. 40 feet Into the stream below'
at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon. Seven
teen passengers were hurt, all of them
more or less seriously.
All the available surgeons from Cot
tage drove have been rushed to the
scenn of the accident by special train,
nd the report from the wreck is that,
while all the passengers are still alive,
it is believed several are fatally hurt.
The list of injured follows:
List of Injured.
William Ostrander, engineer, ribs
broken and head hurt.
r". H. Hall, timber buyer, leg broken.
Judge W. B. Foster, timber buyer,
leg broken.
Price Kogers, leg broken, hurt in
ternally. L. Haney, hip injured and hurt in
ternally. J. B. Protzman, auditor of the road,
legs and hands cut.
Mrs. M. P. Oaroutte, back hurt.
Mrs. Garouttd'8 boy, legs hurt.
Claud Kime, 11 years old, hand cut.
Noah Forrester, bruised on head.
Leslie V lcks, face cut and bruised.
Albert Stocks, bruised on body.
Brother of Albert Stocks, also bruised.
Gld T. Ellis, traveling salesman, leg
and face cut.
Daisy Gross, body bruised.
Mrs. Foster, slightly hurt.
Mrs. Houthworth, slightly hurt.
Fireman Swims Out of River.
John Ooates, the fireman, went down
with the train, fell in the river, 6 warn
out, hurried to the nearest telephone and
phoned for assistance and all the avail
able doctors.' The work train had Just
arrived and having steam up, a relief
train was hurried to the scene.
The wrecked train was due here at 5
o'clock and the engine had Just cleared
the bridge when the center span gave
way. The activity of Engineer William
Ostrander saved the engine from piling
on top of the "other cars in the ravine.
Ostrander set the brakes and the train
parted at the tender, twisting the rods
and the engineer Was spriously injured by
the reversing lever. The tender now rests
on top the coach, 12 feet of which is
under water.
The Garoutte boy pulled Claud Kime
out of the watery thus saving him from
drowninjf.
R. W. MoRby, a farmer living near the
scene, saw the train go down. He had
a horse near by and rushed with all pos
sible speed to the scene. He
Portland Man Hurt.
Gld T. Kilis is the only passenger
from Portland on the wrecked train.
He represents tne K. C. Atkins Co., and
his residence is Stuart Station on the
Mount Scott line. He says be is badly
bruised but not seriously, and will reach
home tomorrow.
At 8 o'clock the timbers In the fallen
bridge caught fire. A train crew was
hurried from here, but the flames had
gained such headway that all hope of
saving the structure had to be aban
doned. The fire burned the timbers support
ing the engine on the track, and It
toppled over on top of the mass of
wreckage beneath.
THE CITY
Some other thing- than roars arrow
Apf Just now round here, en,
Joet
Zellers Drives Damaged Craft to
Earth, Slides Down Rope and
Ship Sails Away.
EAST ST. LOUIS, III., June 5. (Spe
cial.) A castaway'In the skies through
the breaking of his guide rope, which
formed his only connection with the
earth, and later an aeronaut on the
ground, with, his ship floating away
through space, pursued on the ground
by an automobile, Claude M. Zellers, a
one-legged Inventor, tonight contribut
ed new pages to the- history- of aero
nautics. In a machine of no type known to
aeronautics, invented by William Smith,
a cattle-dealer, and described as the
largest aeroplane in the world, Zellers
flew from East St. Louis this afternoon
at 5:30 o'clock. ' When 100' feet' up the
guide rope became entangled' in an
apple tree and snapped, leaving the
aviator a castaway. He sailed 40 -miles
in a zlgzas" course and succeeded- in
making a hazardous -landing- at- Bell
ville. 20-miics from -where -he started..
Zellers was unable to stop his ma
chinery, but pointed the nose of his
craft toward the ground and allowed it
to shoot down like a meteor until the
end of the broken rope trailed on the
ground. Juht as Zellers slid down the
rope, a distance of 70 feet, it broke and
the dirigible, its engines going full
speed, soared into the sky without a
piiot.
Zellers pursued the bag for a time in
an automobile, but could not keep up
with t.
POWER-PLANT WRECKED
Explosion Causes' $300,000 Loss
and Ties Up Trinidad.
TRINIDAD, Colo., June 5. Virtually
every branch of industry in this city and
neighboring towns is at a standstill, as
a result of the destruction of the new
powerhouse of the Southern Colorado
Power Company. An explosion in the
transformer started a Are which wiped
out the plant, causing a loss by reason of
the destruction of the building and ma
chinery alone of more than $300,000.
The Are is nothing short of a calamity
to Trinidad and dependent towns, as it
cuts off the power which operates the lo
cal and Interurban electric lines. lighting
plant, newspapar . plants, foundries and
factories. The- blow will be severely felt
by the Colorado Fuel & Iron Company
and by the Victor Fuel Company and
several small coal companies, all of which
will have to cease operations in many
localities.
BLAST AWAY HUGE HILL
Seven Tons of Dynamite to Jar Mile
of Dirt Near Aberdeen.
ABERDEEN", Wash., June 5. (Spe
cial.) Everything- is in readiness for
the firing- of the big blast that is ex
pected to blow away a hill a mile long
on the Satsop River, near Elma, on the
grade of the Grays Harbor branch of
the Union Pacific. The dynamite and
powder will all be placed tonight in
the caches that have been made in a
tunnel in the hill, and the explosion
will probably be timed for 10 o'clock
tomorrow morning.
All farmers have been warned, and
all roads near the scene will be care
fully guarded. It Is expected that
about 100,000 yards of earth will be
blown away, and that much of it will
be thrown into the river, with the con
sequent overflow of the stream. Seven
tons of explosives will be used.
AUTOMATIC SPRINKLERS GO
Spokane Fears Water Famine and
Cuts Down on Water-Users.
SPOKANE. Wash., June 5. (Spe
cial.) All automatic lawn sprinklers In
the city will be discontinued today.
This is the order issued from the
Mavnr'a office after a conference of th
1 Mayor and Water Commissioners. The
order will be continued all Summer, and
any one violating it will be subject to
a fine. A limited time will be desig
nated each day when lawns may be wa
tered with hose held In the hand.
This action has been taken to pre
vent the unnecessary waste of water,
and thus aid in preventing a water
famine, which threatens the city un
less drastic measures are used.
CAMPAIGN SUGGESTS SOME THINGS FOR HARRY
FrlfBdi, don't pursue the faithless
light
That hovers over swamps at ittarht.
Reign of Roses Will Be
gin Tomorrow.
TAFT WILL USHER IN RULER
All Portland Ready to Join in
Annual Carnival.
WEEK ONE OF SPLENDOR
Millions of Choicest Blooms Will Be
Displayed in Six Days Crowded
With Gorgeous Pageants
and Speed Events.
Portland will cease to be a municipal
ity at noon tomorrow and thenceforth
during the full week, will be an abso
lute monarchy completely and abjectly
at the will of His Imperial Majesty, the
Festival King. Mere earthly things will
be forsaken that full homage may be
paid the King of Roses who comes into
his own in this his domain by right
of conquest.
The President of the United States in
person, will deliver the city into the
hands of the Festival .ruler. When the
second-hand on Mr. Taffs watch, set
according to Portland time, indicates
the arrival of noon, the Nation's head
will press a small button that will give
a city across the continent Into the
hands of the new and festive ruler.
City to Sound Welcome.
The touching of that button will set
off a perfect bedlam of welcome from
the thousands of loyal and willing- sub
jects. For it will be circuited right into
the Portland Fire Department and the
gongs will begin striking throughout
the city. The signal will be taken up
immediately by scores of sirens and
hundreds of bells throughout the city.
i-ortiana, on the eve of her third an
nual Rose Festival, is already putting
on the finishing touches of her gala at
tire. Streamers of pink and greed
cover nearly all the big- buildings
throughout the business district. The
National colors are everywhere' and
in many places the decorative designs
have been planned with great care and
put into execution with artistic skill.
AH through today and tomorrow morn
ing the work of decoration will con
tinue and by noon the city will be
ready.
Levy to Fall on All.
Thousands of amateur rosegrowers
are anxiously watching their gardens
and taking most solicitous care of their
buds and blooms during these few remaining-
hours. For the new ruler will
demand a mighty tribute from his sub
jects. Millions of choice roses and buds
must be culled and delivered in honor
of his reign. The levy is made on every
man, woman and child who enjoys the
bounty of the rose country and since
most everyone grows roses the tribute
will be farreaching.
Stupendous In its entertainment fea
tures will be the week of the festival
reign. Such pomp and splendor and
pageantry never marked the coming -of
any monarch into his own. The good
word has gone out far and near so that
thousands of people are planning to
come to regale themselves in the bounty
and beauty of the festival spirit.
Visitors Already Arriving.
Visitors are already flocking into the
city by scores. Those who are coming
early are mostly relatives and friends
of loyal subjects who wish to be on
hand for home-coming- day and the
reunions of friends and families that is
set down for tomorrow, the first day
of the Festival.
Following the noisy welcome to the
Festival Spirit at noon there will be a
lull of several hours in the programme
that the populace may adjust itself to
the new conditions. Then, with the
coming of night, the Festival activities
will be on In earnest to continue
through the week. Intervals being al-
(Concluded on Page 8.)
When candidates nrr Issue-lorn
They search through files ere they
were born.
By Expenditure of $1,000,000 Traf
fic Can Be Taken Care Of
Until 1031 or 1D50.
CHICAGO. June 5. (Special.) A
complete system of subways for Chi
cago will cost from J100.000.000 to $112,
000,000, and be able to transport from
506,960 to 529,120 passengers hourly,
with seats for all; and with the present
surface and elevated lines will -supply
adequate transportation, until .1931. or.
1950, according to plans adopted. These
are the conclusions of 'City Engineer
Ericson and Subway Engineer R.-C- St.
John, submitted today to Commissioner
of Public Works Hanberg, in a supple
mental report on subways.
This report has four distinct plans
for construction, with two variations
of each, and with the exception of "col
lating engineering details practically
completes the city's report on tunnels
for passenger' traffic in downtown' Chi
cago. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS
The Weather.
YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 70
decrees; minimum, 40 degrees.
TODAY'S Fair and warmer; northwest
winds.
Rose Festival.
Portland's Rose Festival, which opens to
morrow, will be on area'.er scale than
ever before. Section 1, pae 1.
Order of formation is announced for open
In festival pageant. Section 1, pajce 8.
Fifteen thousand lights will be used In
electrical parade. Section 1. page 8.
, National.
Ballinjrer refuses to send McFatridjre bark
to t'matilla and will not reinstate wife.
Section 1, page 3.
President Taft abandons trip to Coast be
, cause of wife's illness. Section 1. page 4.
Senate disposes of cotton schedule, Aldrich
winning, though assailed by Doltiver.
Section J, page 2.
Politic.
MacVeagh explains Taffs policy at Chicago
banquet. Section 1. page 1.
Gibboney almost defeats Philadelphia Re
publican machine for District Attorney
nomination. Section 1, page 4.
Dortmttlc.
All sections to -Join in dedicating statue of
General Stephen D. Lee. Section 1,
page 3.
Los Angeles librarian- labels Inaccurate
books. Section 1, page 1.
Chicago plans to spend $100,000,000 on
subways. Section 1, page 1.
Maniac in slaughter-house at Somervllle,
Mass., kills five men and wounds four,
two of them fatally. Section 1, page I.
Ambassador Jusserand presents medal from
France, to , San Francisco. Section 1.
page 4. . " , .
. Sport. .'
Northwestern League scores: AberBeen 6,
rornand o; Seattle 3, Tacoma 3; Van
couver 1-3. Spokane 3-4. Section S,
page 3.
Washington High School victor In lnter
scholantle track meet. . Section 2. page 2.
Course in perfect rondltiort for auto road
race next Saturday. Section 3, page 8.
Oregon athletes make notable showing on
track and field. Section 3, page 10.
McCredie again has luck with team on home
lot. Section 3. page P.
Coast League scores: Portland 1. Vernon 4;
San Francisco 12. Los Angeles 1; Sac
ramento 3, Oakland 1. Section 2, page 2.
Balloons start from Indianapolis on distance
and endurance race. Section 1. page 4.
Illinois wins Intercollegiate track meet at
Chicago, Stanford second. Section 1.
page 6.
Pacific Northwest.
Marquam man blows up family, killing self,
wife and daughter, fatally Injuring an
other. Section 1, page 6.
Train crashes through bridge on O. & S. E.
and 17 are hurt. Section 1, page 1.
Raging Columbia damages docks at Van
couver. Section 1, page 6.
Cumbersome method of Washington's legis
lative appropriations described. Section
3, page 10.
Union Pacific expects to run into Seattle by
July 'l. Section 1, page 7.
Huge irrigation project - involving 200.000
acres in Malheur County starts. Section
1, page 1.
Aberdeen strike closes down lumber camps.
Section 1, page 4.
King County Sheriff In row with Commis
sioners. Section 1. page 6.
Real Kstate and Building.
Values in Portland very reasonable com
pared with other cities. Section 4, page 6.
Bufld'nar permits for past five days of June
amount to $109,340- Section 4, pas T.
Big carbarns are under construction at
Sell wood. Section 4, page 8.
Third and Washington corner cleared for
skyscraper. Section 4, page 9.
Portland and Vicinity.
President McCrea. of Pennsylvania Railroad
system, discusses Pacific Coast railways.
Section 2, Page 12.
Dan Kellaher withdraws from Mayoralty
race. Section 1, page 10.
Grocers end convention, choosing Spring
field, 111., as next convention city. Sec
tion 2, page 12.
Court orders Lane to buy tire engine or show
cauw t or reiusai. jeciion A, page 12.
Mayor again declares Ellis G. Hughes had
HRrcBraeni wnn Diaaer on paving. Sec
tion 3, page 12.
Committees complete plans for welcome of
the Oregon Pioneer Association here June
11. Section 1. page
Mazamas will scale Mount Baker soon. Sec
tion 3, page 11.
Woodmen of World to hold memorial serv
ices today. Section 4, page 10.
Important Masonic gathering to be held
this week. Section 4, tage 10.
Seventeen cups offered for scholars par
ticipating in Gast Side children's parade.
Section 4, page 7.
MURPHY TO DRAW PICTURES ABOUT; AND INCIDENTALLY, HE DROPS INTO VERSE.
The man who votes perhaps will say
That both these chaps are In his
way.;
Stands by Principles
and Promises.
WILL RESPECT RIGHTS OF ALL
Roosevelt Policies Safe, but
Other Issues Are Up.
REVISE TARIFF DOWNWARD
MacVeagh, In Defining Taft's Poli
cies, Says That Does Not Mean
Down and Out, but People
Will Be Satisfied.
CHICAGO. June fi. Fmnblin u..v...t,
Secretary of the Treasury, and Secre
tary jjicKinson, of the War Department,
were guests of honor at , .
the Chicago Commercial Club tonight. In
,,:s "Peecn Mr. MacVeagh outlined the
characteristics of the Taft administration
and emphasized the fact that it would be
as distinguishable from the Roosevelt Ad
ministration as Roosevelt's was from
McKInley's. Mr. MacVeagh said In part:
"This Administration will be concilia
tory, if you do not ask it to give up a
principle or to go back on Its promise.
Neither of these things will it do. It will
stand by its principles and it will stand
by its policies."
Keep President as Leader.
In the mind of Mr. MacVeagh, the lead
ing and controlling note of th nro.ct
Administration was a determlned.tendency
toward regularity of decision and of pro-
v i ure.
President Taft.. he said, would admin
ister his office within constituted boun
daries. The effect of this, he declared,
would be to keep the President the leader
of the party organization. Mr. Taft, ho
said, was the man of progress.
He referred to the President's defer
ence and respect for the formal privileges
of Congress, adding:
"And what is more significant and in
teresting at . present Is not the actual
non-interference, but rather the fine dis
position shown to respect all rights and
to meet everybody half way in the hope
and Interest of a homogenous party of
progress a disposition which can only be
interpreted as statesmanlike action and
which it would be a fatal mistake to con
sider as a change of actual policy or
purpose."
As to the Roosevelt policies, Mr. Mac
Veagh said that they were as safe in the
hands of the present administration as
they were in the hands of the last.
"We are not hearing much about them,"
he said, "but that Is partly because the
President has his own way of arriving
at results and because other Issues are
now associated with them in the activities
at Washington, issues that before left to
the Roosevelt policies the whole stage."
Revision Will Satisfy People.
Upon the question of tariff Mr. Mac
Veagh predicted that- the revision would
be such that the people would accept.
The demand for tariff revision, he in
sisted, was not for a radical and not
for an impracticable reduction, because
everybody understood that the Repub
lican party stood for and would continue
to stand for protection.
'What the people expect," he continued,
"is what the protectionist Republican
party promised in its last year's platform,
as interpreted by its candidate for the
Presidency, and while it is talking against
the wind to argue that the revision ex
pected is not a revision down, it would be
equally futile to say that the revision
down was promised to be a revision down
and out."
C. P. R. Hurries Cut-off.
MONTREAL, June 5. It was announced
today that the work on the new connect
ing link on the Canadian Pacific Railway
between Thief River and Duluth, which
will connect the Canadian-Soo lines with
the Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic, tut
ting about 300 miles off the present short
line between the Atlantic and Pacific, Is
being pushed.
This Is a worthy pair we think;
As for most others let 'em
sink.
Lummls, of Los Angeles, Brands
Literary Falsehood, and
Others Back Him.
LOS ANGELES, June S. (Special.)
Public Librarian Charles F. Lummls has
framed an intellectual pure food law
for library use, and hereafter will
paste "poison labels" In all inaccurate
or "tainted" library books.
He contends that, if it is important
for people to know when they are
drinking acids that would eat nails
when they think ttiey are consuming
"strawberry flavors." it is. also im
portant that they should know they
are reading only pipe dreams and
romances when they believe they
are absorbing, solid history; that the
public should be warned against wormy
science and polluted history as well as
against bad sausage.
Mr. Lummls has asked 75 of the lead
ing libraries for their opinion with a
view to co-operation, and the replies
of most of these are favorable, Indicat
ing that the scheme will become Na
tional in scope.
Among the works Mr. Lummls will
label "inaccurate" is the Encyclopedia
Britannica.
JEERS FOR ELECTION BILL
Wisconsin Measure Provokes Mirth
and Much Disgust.
MADISON. Wis.. June 6. (Special.)
There -are Jeering and scoffing and not
a little laughing at the election bill
which the Senate committee has seen
fit to recommend for passage. Tn effect,
the measure has a tendency to scare
politicians off the road to jobs. It pro
vides that no meals, liquor, . tobacco,
cigars or cigarettes or even lodging,
can be given by a candidate to electors
while a candidate is running for of
fice, relatives not even being free from
this provision, and in addition toall
this the candidate and his business
manager must file at' the end of each
week during the campaign a detailed
statement of their expenses and no
candidate or manager may receive or
expend vmore than $500 In one week.
PACKERS IN LAW'S GRIP
Pay $2000 line, but Liable to
$695,000 More.
TOPEKA. Kan., June 5. That the Cuba
Packing Company had paid $2000 to the
Government, this being the amount due
under the Indictments' secured against the
company for alleged violation of the in
ternal revenue laws, was announced by
United States District Attorney H. G.
Bone.
Indictments on 695 counts were pending
against the' company. The company was
charged with putting a one-fourth cent
revenue stamp on oleomargarine that re
quired a 10-cect stamp. The paying of
the amount due does not end the case.
however, as under the law the company
is subject to a fine of from J10 to $1000 on
each of the 695 counts.
N. P. BLOCKS GATEWAY
Temporary Injunction Granted
Against Interstate Ruling.
ST. PAUL, Minn., June 5. The United
States Circuit Court, on behalf of the
Northern Pacific Railroad, granted today
a temporary injunction restraining the
Interstate Commerce Commission from
enforcing its order compelling the North
ern Pacific to participate with the Har
riman lines in through and Joint rates
from Eastern points to Seattle, via Port
land. The order was to have become
effective July 1.
In the temporary order issued today the
court differs with the Commission as to
whether there existed a reasonable or
satisfactory rate prior to May 5, when the
Commission handed down its decision.
DEMAND FREEMAN RESIGN
Orange Sons of Revolution Cannot
Stand for Anarchist Friends.
ORANGE. N. J- Juno 5 T3 i
invited Emma Goldman and Alexander
Berkman. anarchists, to a luncheon re
cently given by fhe exclusive Mayflower
Descendants' Society, Alden Freeman, of
this place, has been aeked to resign from
vyiiiiB vnapwr, eons or the Amer
lean Revolution.
vCRR 700N FOR TO 5 DAY MORNING.)
We print this now, so not to
mix
Our festival with politics.
FOUR WOUNDED: TWO FATALLY
Somerville Packing-Plant in
Shambles After Attack.
300 WORKERS IN PANIC
Pig-Sticker, Maddened by Sight of "
Blood, Turns to Man-Killing ,
After Days of Morosenesa.
-Many Have Narrow Escape.
SOMERVILLE, Mass, Junt K. John
Murphy turned from pig-sticking te
man-killing . in the North Packing
Provision Company's slaughter-house)
today, and driving his fellow-workmen
before him. slew five of them and
wounded four others. I
Two of the wounded vera reported!
later to be dying. - ;
The dead: ,i :
Hubert Smith, colored, Cambridge..
James Catro, colored, Cambridge. i
Thomas Crowe, Cambridge. i
Michael Janicus, Somervllle. ''
Unidentified white man.
The - unded:
Dr. Daniel G. Hayes, Government in
spector, of Waltbam.
John Cheevus. Cambridge.
John Lewis, Cambridge.
John Patterson, Somerville.
Hayes was terribly slashed, and ha
and Cheevus were not expected te sur-
vive.
Man Evidently Demented.
Murphy had been acting peculiarly
for some days, but he returned from
his dinner today apparently in a normal
condition. One hour later he sprang '
at Dr. Hayes, brandishing his 15-inch, j
razor-edge knife. He cut Dr. Hayes a .
deep gash on the neck, stabbed him '
over the heart, and disemboweled him.
The terrified workmen rushed for the
door, but Murphy ran after them, slash
ing right and left. Every man whom
he struck went down. The crowd
plunged downstairs, with Murphy in
pursuit, and at every landing he cut
somebody.
On the second floor one of the work
men, an Italian, seized a heavy bar of
iron and felled Murphy, but he was
quickly on his feet again and wounded
another man. On the street floor he
was given another heavy blow on the
head, and his knife was wrenched from
his hand. Two policemen came to as
sist the workmen, and Murphy was
given a terrible beating before he
finally was overpowered.
Was Giant In Stature.
Murphy is 50 ye..rs old, weighs 200
pounds and was regarded as one of the
strongest men In the plant. He had
been employed at pig-killing; for some
years by the North Company.
Witnesses of the slaughter said to
night that more than 300 employes
were driven from the plant when Mur
phy started on his wild rush through,
the six floors and basement, and not a,
few men escaped death by a narrow:
margin.
Greets Doctor as Friend.
Dr. W. E. Clark, of West Somerville,
a United States veterinary at the
plant saw the attack on Dr. Hayes, and '
at Hayes" command hastened to find a,
doctor. Murphy followed Clark, and I
the latter ran into a side room. Mur
phy followed, completely blocking the)
doorway. A sudden ci.ange seemed to
come over the lunatic for a minute, J
and he stepped to one side with a 1
pleasant "Hello, doctor,", allowing Dr. .
Clark to pass.
Employes who worked nearest Mur
phy said that he seemed to pay par
ticular attention to his slaughtering
knife recently, and had sharpened It
much more frequently than was hi
habit.
Tonight Murphy Is in the padded cell
(Concluded on Page 4 )
Well, sood-bye, Harry, thin parting's
nd;
Your ihow was rot-t ahem! not bad.