THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX. PORTLAND. SEPTEMBER 11, 1910. , - stroyed the Arcade Hotel, owned by J. O. McTarnahan. Miss Sadie Lawler. a well-known Portland professional nurse, was seriously burned about the fare and hands. Phe was at home visit ing her mother. Mrs. McTarnahan, when the fire broke out. All the tocupants escaped from the hoteL but Miss Lawler. fearing; several children were still up stairs, rushed Into the burning structure through the flames and smoke, only to find the children had been removed. She became bewildered and. In turn, had to be res cued herself. She was badly burned about the face and hands. Miss Sadie Lawler graduated from the St. Vincent's Hospital about five years ago, and for some time worked In connection with Dr. A'. K. Hockey. The managers of St. Vincent's Hospi tal state Miss Lawler was one of the most capable nurses they have ever GOVERNOR REFUSES fjjT e JL .... fe . A Patterson, of Tennessee, Re tires From Race in Interest of Harmony. i Tc1 v Hi7 PARTY SPLIT THREATENED 9 .w5 THIRD liQ M I J AT 7 W Caustic Letter Furniflu'S Sensational Climax of I.onc; and Hitter l-rud Enemies Hefue l Abide by Tcm. NASHVILLE. Tcnn.. fent. 19. Uov ernor Patterson tolay withdrew from bis candidacy as the Democratic nom ine for (Jovirnnr of Tfnnsi. fur nishing a senatlonal climax to a luinj and hitler preliminary campaign. The Governor already has served two terms and nnnounced his candidacy for a third irm. In compliance with the wishes of the Hate committee, which declared htm the Democratic nominee without opposition. The upponcnts of the Govfrnor declined to enter a pri mary, preferring to nil. mil the lsue to a convention, and the governor, to arold the threatened epllt. withdrew :n the Interest of harmony. Offer of Test Kefuei. In a signed statement the Governor says: I became a candidate for GnvrrmT for the third term contrary to my per sonal wishes. renditions have arl-en. however, which appear to m.ikc my further cand'dncy an Injustice both to my friends and the Democratic pnrtv. "When the opposition to me assumed the shape of a refusal to enter a pri mary called by the e'atc exei-iitlve committee. I proposed that If any gen tleman would offer to run against me to allow him .to aelect his own methtd and time of nomination, with an equal division of officers of election. There was not. and could not he. the sllctest eseuse to refuse this. If the party was to preserve its organization and not disintegrate into schVms and factions: but the proposition was rejected. I was declared the nominee for Governor without opposition, arid since them I have offered to yield mv nomination ao as to test whether it wns the choice of the majority. Nomination I ltd n mod. "Put to the minds of my umrenerous opponents all things were fair as means to the end of my political destruction. Kven then I did not believe that any considerable number of Democrats could be betrayed from their allegiance, but now It seems certain that the con tinued appeals to passion and credulity have found a lodgement which neither fact nor persuasion can chanite. and that so Ionic as I remain a candidate, a considerable numher of Democrats will not affiliate with the pnrtv. and while not large comparatively it la cnouaclt lo Unperil lexnocratle success In No- ember. I do not wish It said that my desire for office Is responsible .for this condition, or aa furnishing an excuse to Indorse a Republican candidate by the so-called Independent Iemocratic campaign toon to be held In Nashville. "My conclusion Is that I can best serve my party and state In this emer gency by voluntarily oolng what my enemies have so persistently demand. d. I therefore return my nomination to he Democratic party." BLOM DIES OF INJURIES Brother Seoul Suicide Theory, to Which Polleo Adhere. TACOMA. Sept. 10. Captain F. D. Blotn. found with his throat slashed in Wright Park yesterday morning, died at 4:30 this afternoon. His brother this morning related .what Captain Blom had told him during a brief period of consciousness at the hospital yesterday afternoon. Accord ing to the brother, the captain said he was followed Into the park Thursday night by some man whom he did not know and who struck htm. He did not know he had been slashed until his brother told him. The brother announced that he would give 12000 reward for the discovery of the captain's assailants. The suicide theory held by the police, he declares. Is untenable.. The captain was happy, he said, over the prospect of bains reunited to his wife, who left ., ..... . ...1 . I Norway. The police still Insist the case is suicide. FIRST PRUNES ARE SENT Mjrtle Creek Shipment Probably Breaks All Record. MTP.TLE CREEK. Or.. SepL 10. 4 Special. The K. I- French Co.. of Myrtle Creek, shipped today the first car of Oregon prunes that has been sent from this state this season. The car was sold to George Petljohn. of Chicago, and will undoubtedly be one of the first cars of new-crop prunes to arrive In Chicago this season from :he Pacific Coast. This car was packed on August II nd as far as Is known was the earli ,st car of new-crop prunes ever packed n the history of the industry. The long Irv season caused the fruit to ripen err early. The usual early shipments made from his state do not go forward until after .he middle of September, and a great nany seasons run far Into tjctober. The K. I French Company expects lo thlp about 2. 400.000 pounds of prunes 'rem their Myrtle Crek plant within he next 00 days. DANGERS LOSE STATION Vturn From Fighting Fire to Find Their Camp In Blase. EUGENE. Dr.. Sept. 10. tSpeclal ) JVord wss received from forest rangers at Bis; River, east of the Cascades, that upon their return to their station from fighting forest fires they found It on fire. Evidence showing that the fire was of incendiary origin was found. The consensu ft opinion among the rangers Is that some one baa a grudge against them or does not like the Gov ernment's policing of forest districts. PORTLAND NURSE BURNED lls Sadie Lamlcr F.nters Blazing Hotel to Save Children. LEWISTi'S. Idaho. Sept. 10. In a fire last night at Kamiah. which dc- ; 1 1 ; ' - :' t-. ! I Miss die lawler. rortlaad Miss tadle lawler. rortlaad nnr. Who Was llnrfly Darned la lnlston, Idaho, Tire. hud at that Institution. The young lady W not a resident of Portland, her parents residing in levlston. BENSON IS IMPROVING i:r.Mi:s or ill-iiiai.tii pf. I. KK.I l'Ol.l TICAI. MOVE. Friends Are Anccred Over Krports Suid to Be Circulated to Injure Hi Ciiiicliducy. SALEM. Or., Sept. 10. (.-Special. Friends of Governor Frank W. Benson at the Capitol and throughout the city are Incensed and up In arms over a report which spread broadcast through Salem today that the Governor Is In a dangerous condition. Kvery one who has been In communication with tiie Governor at this point declare it is untrue and put It down as a move for political effect against the chances in his candidacy for secretary of Slate. C. N. McArthur received a personal letter yesterday, written by the Gover nor. In which Mr. Benson states he Is getting along nicely, but to 11 m the time, seemed long and the progress was not as rapid as hn wished for. as he Is anxious to return to the state. It is declared by friends of Mr. Benson that such rumors as to his Increasing 111 health have been circulated In various parts of the state by his political enemies, believing that s.u-h stories would mate rially affect Ills candidacy. THIEF SHOOTS "PAL" DEAD Quarrrt Over Spoil.- Results In Mur der In Seattle. ' SEATTLE. Sept. 10. An unidentified man 43 years old. known as "Cua" was shot and killed today In a room In the Uussell House. 80S Seventh avenue South, by Gust Kckola. a bartender. L' tola escaped. The police say the dead man was a thief and that he and Kckola quarreled over the division of the proceeds of two recent robberies. In one of which j!0 was stolen from a young woman' In a Sixth avenue hotel, and in the other 145 taken from a logner In the saloon where Kckola worked. This afternoon the proprietor of the Uussell Hou.-e ruahed up to two po licemen on tho street and said two. men had been killed In her house. The po licemen found the man lying on the floor still alive, but he died In a short time. Mrs. HIU. the proprietress, said the shooting took place In the morning and was witnessed by her husband, Isaac Katasalto and Herman Olsen; that the wounded man asked that the police be not notified. She said Kckola was in the room and that when the stranger entered Kckola accused him of nut dividing honestly, whereupon the man struck Kckola In the face. Kckola then drew a pistol and shot his assailant through the arm ajtd head. Mr. and Mrs. Hill and Katasalto were arrested. The dead man's hatband was marked "August M." REDMOND TO TOUR STATES With Other Irish Leader- He Will Visit This Country. NKW YOKK. Sept. 10. A notable party of Irish leaders will leave for America on September 17 on a tour which will take iu most of the large cities of the South and West. The chief figure of the mis sion will be John T. Kedmond. the leader of the Ir'wn party. He will be accompan ied by Joseph Devlin. M. P.. secretary of the I'niled Irieh League in Ireland; Dan iel Boyle. M. P. for North Mayo, and oth ers. New York and Chicago will be visited, but the f:rst meeting at which all will attend will be In Buffalo, where Co years ago the fitst convention forming the Irish organization in America met. There the delegation will divide into three par tus, each taking different router): Red mond to the Middle. States: Devlin to the South, and Boyle to the West ae far as ban Francisco. PRUNE DRYER IS BURNED Rosehurg Building and Fruit. Val ued at $8,000, Destroyed. RiWKBl'R'i Or.. Sept. 10. (Special.) Igniting from a defective flue, the large prune-Uryer owned by Morris Webber and situated shout six miles north of Koseburg. burned shortly after 7 o'clock torltfht. The dryer was filled to Its capacity with fruit which was to have been shipped to Tortland and Seattle markets next teek. The building and drying equip ment was valud at about $. while the l iss of fruit will probably bring the total close to J-" We 3 53 r. 'S One Shot in Three. Hits Mining Broker in Arm. HER FIRST TRIAL AT MAN Mrs. Kranss Says She Did as Well as She Kxjiected Kducator'e Wife Sought DiTorce That She Might Wed Another. U03 ASQKLES. Sept. 10. Mrs. M. Krauss. wife of Dr. Krauss, said to be a well-known educator and physician of Memphis. Tenn., shot and slightly wounded Franklin H. Griffith, a mining broker of this city, today. Mrs. Krauss charged that Griffith had obtained money from her and failed to keep a promise of marriage. She fired at Griffith three times with a 32-calIber revolver; one bullet passing through his right forearm. Mrs. Krauss is la jail. Mrs. Krauss had known Griffith for several years, and, according to her story, had advanced him considerable money for the purchase-of mining stock which she says she afterwards found to be worthless. She said that Griffith had promised to marry her as soon ab she was able to obtain a divorce from Dr. Krauss, but that ultimately he re fused to do so or make any return of the money she had advanced. Today she went to the broker's office In the Storey building. She carried a small bulldog revolver Inside of the lapel of tho coat of her tailor-made suit. When ahe again demanded the re turn of her money. Griffith slapped her, she said. 8he then drew her revolver and fired at him. "I am a good shot, and I didn't aim to kill him." said Mrs. Krauss. "It was the first time I ever shot at a man. but I only tried to shoot him through the arm." Griffith asserts that Mrs. Krauss came to him and represented herself aa a WOMAN POOH HI 35 7A single woman, and that when he found that she was married he broke off their engagement. He denied that he had taken money from Mrs. Krauss. Mrs. Krauss gave her age as 29 and Griffith's as 42. She said that she had married Dr. Krauss nine years ago in Memphis, but that they were incom patible and she had left him with the understanding that she was to be al lowed to obtain a divorce. This di vorce, she believed, had been recently granted In Meniphis. WOMAX PROMINENT IN SOUTH Snit From Bacteriologist Still Pend ing In Tennessee. MEMPHIS, Sept. 10. Mrs. William Krauss. who shot and wounded Frank lin H. Griffith at Los Angeles, Is widely known throughout the South. She was married to Dr. William Krauss, a noted bacteriologist of Memphis, sev eral years ago. Mrs. Krauus and her husband have lived apart for some time, having Bigned an agreement of separa tion. The couple figured In a sensational court trial at Vlcksburg. Miss., several months ago. when Mrs. Krauss brought suit charging Dr. Krauss with non-support. The name of Griffith was brought Into the case. A divorce suit brought by Mrs. Krauss Is now on the dockets of the local courts. Mrs. Krauss was formerly Miss Daisy Turney. and Is a niece of ex-Governor Turney, of Tennessee. BOSTON BEATS ST. LOUIS Census . Gives Advantage to Hub by Few Thousand of Population. WASHINGTON, Sept. 10. The popula tion of Boston Is S70.H5. an Increase of 109.(S3 or 19. per cent a compared with 560.893 in 100. Tonight s announcement leaves Boston the fifth city In point of population in the United States. A decade ago St. Louis outranked Boston by 14.4S and the pres ent census leaves Boston ahead by 16.444- There was slight change In the rate of progress1 In the two cities, St. Louis increase from 1900 to 1910 being 19.4 per cent. Boston beat that by two-tenthe of 1 per cent. The population of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., is 27,936 an Increase of i"7, or 1. per cent, as compared with 24,03 In 1900. The population of New Rochelle, N. T., is 3S.7, an Increase of 14.147 or 96.1 per cent, aa compared with 14,73) in 1S0.. CHOOL SUIT OF UNUSUAL.MERIT AN ENTIRE FLOOR devoted to the display of the largest assortment ever shown in Portland QUALITY CLOTHES that are entirely different from those shown in other stores STYLES exclusive. Every garment made with the same care and attention to detail as are men's clothes. Prices are no higher than the ordinary sorts sold elsewhere7$5 to $15. MOTHERS WILL DO WELL TO PURCHASE HERE LITTLE WOMEN'S COATS and DRESSES on THIRD FLOOR will surely interest you. NOVELTIES arriving by express daily. DISEASE RILLS 2 INFANTILE PARALYSIS STRIKES MONTANA SIINING CAMP. Physicians Are Puzzled by Cases of Women Stricken with Strange Malady. HELHNA, Mont., Sept. 10. (Special.) A new disease which has broken out at Radersburg, a mining camp near here, within the last 10 dayst In two cases resulting fatally, and by its strange symptoms baffling physicians. This Is the first outbreak of the supposed Infan tile paralysis In Montana. It is expected that the Board of Health will make an Investigation to determine h there Is any thing that can be done. The first case was that of Mrs. Ed Spangler. She was 111 a week, the first symptom being the swelling of the large cords at the back of the neck. Then paralysis of the respiratory organs oc curred and death resulted. The baby born while Mrs. Spangler was 111 also died. Mattle Kempton in the same household was also affected. She has been sick two weeks, her case manifesting the Bame as those of Mrs. Bpangler's. Paralysis from the hips down occurred. Amos Kempton is likewise affected, but he Is paralysed In one arm and shoulder. A son of George Pease, of this city. Is another victim. He is 10 years old. The disease was first manifested in the muscles of the spinal cord system, and paralysis of one thumb resulted. OREGON . CROPS IMPROVED Report Gives 6 Per Cent Increase Over Ten-Year Average. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington. Sept 10. According to a state ment Issued today by the Department of Agriculture, Oregon crops on Sep tember 1 were per cent better than the average condition on that date for the past 10 years. Washington crops on the other hand are reported 18 per cent below 10 years ago, and Idaho 8 per cent below the average. - 9 Retired Capitalist Kills- Himself. kam -FRANCISCO. Sent. 10. B. D. Talbot, a retired capitalist, shot and j TT alL-dii Leading Clothier killed himself in his apartments here today. He left two notes, one be queathing his body to a medical college and another addressed to bis sister. Miss M. Talbot, of Los Angeles. The Meier & Frank Store ANNOUNCE That through the courtesy of the Oregon Hotel, they have made arrangements with the famous Hawaiian Orchestra to play in their 7th-Floor Tea Room every afternoon from 3 to 5 P. M. r--. :--. it :t :v.- x 1- DR. A. P. DeKEYSER CHIROPItACTOR AND OPTICIAN. GLASSES' will aot be prescribed nor treatment advised unless I can assure yon decided relief. 704 Deknm Bid.. 3d and Wash. St. IT IHI Get This Catalog Read our de- And Other Minwork note the quality, fully guaranteed BUT DIRECT FROM FACTORY uy vs. omim the prloea with 4hnu that others ask for the saoia quality. 'Save mid dlemen's profits for the children.' Ask lor CaUlML x-n. S3. Send us'deaT' or your own list. Ask as about freight rates. We pack , carefully. ship promptly, anywhere. to anybody. O.B. Williams 1043 FIRST Seattle, Wash. Light Your Home the Modern Way Safe Economical -r Satisfac tory AcetjUene gas Is brilliant, white, steady, cool, clean, odor less. I install acetylene plants large or small. 300 satisfied cus tomers In Oregon. The Model Generator is permitted by all in surance companies without extra charge. Write today for particu lars. P. A. BRYANT ISO Madison M., Portland, 1 Blocks From Or. Elec Depot. NG 1 SAVE On f SASH, DOORS j A 1 PI AND 0 0 O H & ms www j I "-' I B Visit Lsurelhurst today. See what I H 26 miles of streets in one realdenos I park means for Portland. D fGT 106.2