THE SUXDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, NOVEMBER 2G, 191G. V K V N SUSPECT IN TRUNK MURDER CAPTURED George Bartholomew Says He Put Unci's Bodkin Trunk, but Denies Killing. YEAR'S HUNT REWARDED rishernian. Well Acquainted With Suspect, Travels as Hobo Through Underworlds of Coast as Agent of Police In Man Hunt. fConttnu'"! From First PaKP. OREGON LEGISLATORS 48 -49-50 -51-52-53 ' A . : ' - " S f w - ft fisherman was connected with the mur der. the police obtained the fisherman's services in tracing the fugitive. The fisherman was well acquainted with Bartholomew's habits, and assured the police that the man was a denizen of the underworld, and a person of de generate habits. Detective Know later accompanied the fisherman to Seattle, where they spent several days in the underworld of that city. They learned that Bar tholomew was well known there, and had been seen there on various occa sions between December 10 and 12, ISIS. One of the fugitive's associates, known to the police as "Rio," one day hailed Bartholomew on James street, but the man fled without replying. Chase Kollowed Along Coast. Henry Whipple, a close friend of Bartholomew's, was visited by the de tective at the home of his stepfather, John Salerjus, who lives near Water man, Wash. It was through this friend that the police hoped to locate the al leged murderer, for they felt sure that the two would communicate with each ether. The police learned that Bar tholomew had received mail at 108 James street, but found that the man had left the city. Then the fisherman, lured by the hope of the $500 reward which had been offered for Bartholomew's ap prehension, took up the chase by him self. The District Attorney's office paid his expenses,' and "he traveled up and down the Coast from San Diego to SfHttle. Once the man made a trip to Bar tholomew's old home in Minneapolis as a hobo. While the police have received no details as to the arrest by the Seattle detectives, it is believed that the fish erman, who still was on the trail, fi nally located Bartholomew and pointed him out to Seattle Detectives Hayden find Peterson, who made the arrest. These were the detectives Introduced to the fisherman by Detective Snow when the latter visited Seattle in con nection with the case. Detective CxoeK for Suspect. District Attorney Evans was so sure of the fisherman's connection with the case last night that he predicted that the man would get the reward offered for the suspect's apprehension. Detective Snow left last night to bring Bartholomew back to Portland. The police received information to the effect that the man would not fight extradition. Others to whom -especial credit for the. capture is due are Detectives Price and Mallett. The body of John Lind. crushed, mu tilated and blood-stained, was found In a trunk, picked up in the Willam ette River at the foot of Flanders street, near the plant of the Vulcan Iron Works, late on Friday night, No vember 13, 1915. Fred Hartman. 254 First street North, found the trunk when he brought to its moorings a rowboat in which he had been riding norfh. of town. Laundry Marks Identify Body. laundry marks on some of the dead man s clothing led to the establish ment of his identity as John Lind, a man of unfixed habits and unsettled place of residence. This same clew convinced the police, too. that George Bartholomew was the man responsible for the murder. One laundry mark was "2021." An other was "77." A handkerchief bore the mark "F. B." A picture, believed to be that of the dead man, was an important discovery among the contents of the trunk. T'.ie trunk also contained a straw hat. a pillow, a sheet, which was partly wrapped around the body, a window curtain, a collar box, several small sponges and other personal effects. The police theorized that the murderer had sought thus to dispose of all pos sible clews that migit lead to his dis covery. A number of women's effects, .such as handkerchiefs, a pair of gloves, a handbag, collar and a few buttons also were found. Name Found on Ribbon. On a black ribbon, two Inches wide, the name "F. Lind" was worked in red thread. In the sweatband of a man's soft black hat, aluo in the. trunk, were perforated the initials "G. B." . With f.tose meager details the police started out to trace down the murdere. Detectives Price and Mallett made the rounds of the laundries and soon learned that one of the laundry marks corresponded to that of a customer who had been living at 407 Stark street. About the time that the detectives arrived at the place Mrs. DeCorsey, proprietor of the lodging-house, was telephoning to the police that one of her rooms was topsy-turvy and that blood-stains were on the wall. She be lieved that a murder had been com mitted. From then on developments came thick and fast. Rev. John Ovall, of 548 Mill street, having seen the picture of the murdered man in The Oregonian, RUB YOUR BUCK! STOPS LUMBAGO Don't Drug Kidneys! Rub the Pain Right Out With Old "St. Jacobs Oil." Sam H rown (Rep.), RepreMentattve-EIert From Marlon County. Re-elected. W, At J one (Rep.) Repreaentatlve-Klect From Marlon ' County, Re-elected. 't i - ? 1 J liaJWffllnl. RcprcwnttiTC-t:icct From Marios County. ' xf ' 1 jr. -' 1 1 -pi aAdmfaitfa ifi! nii i nW&fcw li Seymour Jones (Rep.), Representative-Klert From Marlon County. Ivnn Martin (Rfp.). Repreftentative-Klect From Marlon ' County. Frank B. Tlrhenor (Drm.) Represent a tlve-Fleet From f-ooa and a Curry Conntlea. SALEM. Or., Nov. 25. (Special.) Of Marion County's five Representa tives in tiiA lrtunr Vnnun nf th. next Legislature two were members of the 1915 Legislature Sam Brown, of Gervais. representing Marion County In the House, and W. Al Jones, repre senting Wallowa County. The other three members-elect are Charles F. Elgin, Ivan G. Martin and Seymour Jones, of Salem. Sam Brown, who led the Marion County legislative ticket at the re cent general election, has lived in this section all his life. He is owner of a large farm near Gervais. W. Al Jones, who now lives in Salem, was born and reared in this vicinity and is owner of a large farm near here, as well as another near Enterprise, in Wallowa County. Mr. Jones was formerly secretary of the State Fair Board. Charles F. Elgin was born at Sclo, Linn County, Oregon. July 18, 1865. He has resided in Salem at various times since 1870. For the last eight and one-half years he has acted as deputy and City Recorder. He also was a deputy in the Marion County Clerk's office in 1908. For four years he was in the employ of the Corvallis & Eastern Railway and for six years was with the Forestry Service. lie has a farm near Salem. Seymour Jones was born on a farm near Springfield. 111. He taught school for a time and afterward practiced law for 18 year About 10 years ago he retired fromhe law practice, and since then has engaged in farming five miles north of Salem. Ivan G. Martin Is 35 years old. He was educated in Willamette University and the University of California. He is now practicing law in Salem. He is also active In fraternal circles, and Is a member of the Salem Commercial Club. MARSHFIELD. Or.. Nov. 25. (Spe cial.) Frank B. Tichenor is the first Democrat elected to the State Legisla ture from this district since R E. L. Bedillion was sent by Bandon in 1908. Mr. Tichenor resides at Port Orford. the home of the pioneer Tichenor family. He is elected as Joint Representative from Curry and Coos counties. Mr. Tichenor was Indorsed by the pro hibitionists, since he made a declara tion for that principle. The election of Mr. Tichenor was due largely to his method of campaign. He made a house-to-house canvass in the cities and visited every section of both counties. His grandfather. Captain William Tichenor, an Indian fighter, represented this section of Oregon in the State Legislature in, the early '60a. and with one exception the present Representative-elect is the only legis lator sent to the capital by Port Or ford. His family lived In Salem some years, and his father, J. B. Tichenor. died there in 1889. Frank was the first newsboy to sell papers in Salem. Mr. Tichenor is 41 years of age and has always been a consistent booster for Curry County first and Coos sec ond. The newly elected Democrat has a wide acquaintance in Oregon and Washington, since he was engaged in lodge organizing for several years and visited many of the cities in the Northwest. Back hurts you? Can't straighten tip without feeling sudden pains, sharp aches and twinges? Now listen! That's lumbago,, sciatica, or maybe from a strain, and you'll get blessed relief the moment you rub your back with soothing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Oil." Nothing else takes out sore ness, lameness and stiffness gp quickly. You simply rub it on and out comes the pain. It is perfectly harmless and doesn't burn or discolor the skin. Limber up! Don't suffer! Get a small trial bottle from any drug store, and after using It Just once, youll forget that you ever had backache, 'lumbago or sciatica, because, your back will never hurt or cau"se any more misery. It never disappoints and has been recommended for 60 years. Stop drugging kidneys! They don't cause backache, because they have no nerves, therefore cannot cause pain. Adv. went to the morgue and established the body as that of John Lind, who had attended his services at Salem the week before. Rev. Mr. Ovall was positive in his identification. Rev. Mr. Ovall also described Lind's companion of the Sunday before who had visited the church with him. Through the police at Salem Lind's companion was established as George Bartholomew. It developed that Lind had made some inquiry among real estate agents at Salem and at Albany regarding the purchase of a farm. He told these agents that he had $2000 to invest and that he wanted to buy a chicken-ranch. C. C. Schmidt, an Albany banker, also identified the pair. He reported that the men had visited him relative to' some land purchases. Like Rev. Mr. Ovall and others who had observed them. Mr. Schmidt was suspicious of the good intentions of the man de scribed as Bartholomew. Meanwhile the police worked on an other clew, which, however, proved fruitless. They learned that the mur derer had taken his victim's body from the lodging-house at 407 Stark street to the wharf in an express wagon which was -procured from the Model Livery stables at Fifth and Davis streets. An unknown man was engaged to help in carrying the trunk from the house to the wagon and from the wagon to the wharf. The police of fered rewards for the appearance of this man, promising immunity from arrest, but he never put in an appear ance. Subsequent communications with po lice in other parts of the country re vealed that the much-wanted Bartholo mew is the son of Mrs. Rita Hopkins, of 711 East Thirty-fifth street. Minne apolis, and that he formerly lived at Aberdeen, S. D. All further efforts to find Bartholo mew failed. A few weeks later Wil liam F. Smyth, a waiter, was arrested at Cheyenne. He resembled Bartholo mew in appearance, but was able to prove an alibi. He was released. HIRING OP WAGON ADMITTED Body. of Lind Placed in Trunk; and Curried to Ttlvcr, He Says. SEATTLE. Wash., Nov. 25. A man answering the printed description and photograph of George Bartholomew, charged with the murder of John Lind in Portland. Or., November 19. 1915, was arrested on the street a block from the Oregon-Washington passenger sta tion tonight. He was taken to the po lice station for interrogation, and, ac cording to the police, admitted that he was Bartholomew, for whom search had been made for a year. . The police say that the prisoner ad mitted hiring from a Portland livery stable a rig on the day after John Lind's disappearance, but denied that he had any connection with the murder. The police say that Bartholomew late tonight admitted that he placed Lind's bddy in a trunk, loaded it into a livery rig. which he had hired, drove to the Willamette River and dumped the trunk into the stream. According to the po lice, the prisoner insists that he was not in the room when Lind was killed, and that he did not touch the body until after Lind was dead. According to the police, Bartholomew said he and Lind had been together several weeks before the murder, and went to Portland from San Francisco. On the day of the murder Bartholomew and Lind were in the room on Stark street when a third man entered the room and struck Lind several times on the head with a club, killing him Then, according to the police version of Bartholomew's story, Bartholmew decided to dispose of the body lest sus picion should fall on him. Bartholo mew, the police say, told them that from Portland he went to Colorado and Utah and arrived in Seattle today, only a short time before he was arrested- ROAD RESORT RAIDED Three at Claremont Tavern Taken by Police. LIQUOR VIOLATION CHARGED Manager, Assistant and Waiter Are Held Dozen Women and Men Found at Parly, but Xone Arc Arrested. A squad of police, led by Lieutenant Harms, of the moral squad. Lieutenant Jenkins, of the St. Johns station, and W. H. Warren, secretary to Mayor Al bee. swooped down on the Claremont tavern, on the St. Helens road near LInnton. about midnight last night and placed under arrest the manager, as sistant manager and a waiter. All three are held on a charge of violat ing the prohibition law. The three ar rested were i'hil Polsky. manager; Harry Miller, waiter, and Artie Navear, assistant manager. A dozen men and women were sur prised In the place when the officers appeared, but the "party" appeared to be peaceable, and no arrests of patrons were made. A small quantity of liquor was seized. The officers acted last night in pur suance of a report received about the taVtern several days ago. They declare that they "will clean the place up" if a uniformed police officer has to be stationed there. The Claremont tavern, in its palmy days, was the rendezvous for merry makers of all classes and ages, but since prohibition became a law in the land was supposed to have been con ducted as a wayside inn and for ac commodation of hungry automobilists. MRS. B0ISSEVAIN DEAD (Continued From First Page.) opinion by her radical social views. One of her acts during this period was to hold a suffrage meeting In a grave yard at night when permission to hold the meeting in the college chapel had been refused her. She also made a name for herself as an athlete, being captain of her class hockey team, which won the college championship, and a member of the 1909 track team, at which time she established a new rec ord for the college in the eight-pound shot-put at 31 feet 8 inches. Aside from her college activities, she worked among the poor children in the city of Poughkeepsle. and had herself appointed court probation officer. Dur ing her first college vacation she visit ed London and there Joined the I'ank hurst suffragettes, making several speeches and being once arrested. During the 1908 Presidential coro paign she won new fame as "the girl who broke up the Taft parade." While the parade was being held in New' York City, she stationed .herself in a win dow and shouted "Votes for Women!" through a megaphone. Some of the marchers fell out of the parade and gathered around her to hear her make a speech for the suffrage cause. Following her graduation from Vas sar College she attempted to enter Harvard Law School,, but this permis sion was denied her on the ground that it was not a co-educational Institution. The incident gave rise to a heated newspaper controversy in which Inez Milholland and other prominent fem inists took part. She also became ac tive about this time In the working girls' cause, taking part in the shirt waist makers' strike. In the clash of the strikers with the police she was arrested and locked up, but after a controversy of several weeks the charge against her of leading an un lawful assembly was finally dropped. Miss Milholland finally received her degree in law at the New York Uni versity Law School in 1912. and during tats time she was active as a suffrage worker and speaker and organizer of woman's parades, being featured in them both in New Tork, Washington, D. C and elsewhere as "the most beautiful suffragette." At election time she was always a watcher at the polls and was among the women who went St. Mary's Home For Orphan Boys' (Near 'Beaverton.) Desires to announce that it will compete in the Greater Portland Association Contest on Tuesday, November 28, for one of the three prizes, amount ing to $500. They kindly ask the public to cast their votes for this worthy institution. Get the New Emerson Records Eight Selections (double-sided) for only $1.00 Three Selections (single-faced.) for only 35 If sent by mail, postage extra. Two Great Music Houses Morrison at Fourth Broadway at Alder Two superb main floor talking1 machine salesrooms. 7- ? ?n V a. ' J'5 : - $ . . . V-.. .:. ..i . , . X- .. .' ? . ' . s I i i I t x i I f V i I, -t f K . I 'I - ftlt Oil cT-iTrt! " " What and Where to Buy Your Thanksgiving Wearing Apparel Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits and Overcoats $20, $25, $30, $35 A Suit or Coat a man prefers. Manhattan and Arrow Shirts The newest colorings. Arrows $1.50 and up. Manhattans $1.75 and up to $6.00. 4 Interwoven Hosiery The best men's hose made. . Double heel, toe and sole. 25c, 35c, 50c and $1.00 Pair Gloves In Dent, Fownes, Wash-Rite and ' Oliyer. $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00 Fine Neckwear 50c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 Union Suits Vassar, Cooper, Superior and White Cat $1, $1.50, $2, $2.50 and up to $8.50 Hats Best Quality. Stetson, Trimble and Multnomah at $3.00 to $15 Copyright limrt Srhtffnrr ti Man Patronize the specialty man, That's the Greater Portland plan. $500 in gold given away to charity Greater Portland Day, Tues., Nov. 28 Sam'l Rosenblatt & Co. The Men's Store for Quality and Service Southeast Corner Fifth and Alder to Albany to demand of the Legislature woman's rigrht to vote. She beftan the practice of law In 1912 hs a clerk In the offices of James W. Osborne, her first case being the de fense of "Ked Phil'" Davideon, chraroil with the murder of "Big Jack" Zeliir. Her next case was the defense of llee Poy Yung:, accused of murder in a Chinatown long war. and she was suc cessful In obtaining his acquittal. In July, 1913. she married, by a civil ceremony in London. Eugene Boisse vain. a. wealthy Hollander, to whom she had been introduced by William Marconi, i Inventor of wireless teleg raphy. She returned to this country and continued her practice of law and suffrage activities. In 1915 she wuo denied permission to make a suffrai? speech at the fiftieth anniversary cere monies of Vassar College. Later tbe same year she went to ltijy as a war correspondent and was forced to leave, that country by the authorities there because of her pacifist writings. A Philadelphian Is the inventor of a paper bag, the top of whi h is rein forced and so cut that it forms a handle. i 100,000 Died From Bright's Disease and Other Kidney Troubles During the Past Year Insurance Company official Smjn That HlO'o of Thrac Death Could Have Been Avoided. The increase. in fatalities from nright's Disease and other kidney ail ments is causing grave concern to health authorities. A leading life in surance company states that 60 per cent of the fatalities could have been avoided or postponed had the proper precautionary measures been taken. Thousands of people who have kid ney trouble do not know it. They do not realize the important part the kid neys play in our daily life. If the kid neys fail to act as nature intended, good health is impossible, as the pot sons created daily are retained in the system, which causes backaches, con stipation and many other distressing ills. So to avert serious kidney illness, Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Reme- dy invariably helps these Important organs back to normal action. Its heal ing and soothing action on the kidneys aids them to do their work of elimina tion of poisons from the system. That is why Warner's haa helped thousands of sufferers from backache, weak kid neys and bladder troubles, and why it is so uniformly successful. Then remember. Warner's Safe Kid ney and Liver Remedy Is no experi ment of today, but is a most depend able medicine for the kidneys that has been a blessing to thousands of suffer ers for the last 40 years. You can get it all at druggists In 50c and $1.00 bot tles: or & sample will be mailed free If you write Warner's Safe Remedies Co.. Uept. 265. Rochester. IS'. Y. Today matinees, except holidays evenings, 15c The Star 10c r days only starting this morning Mabel Taliaferro the star of 1000 charms and thrills, in the gripping new Mefro wonderplay of supreme appeal "The Dawn of Love" Written bv Channing Pollock and Rennold Wolf beautifully picturized a fascinating tale of the love of a smuggler's "tomboy" daughter to round out this splen did programme. ha! ha! a new comedy "Nearly a Deserter" the second of those screamingly funny new Black Diamond comedies. See that funny new comedy today at The Star la this program! 10OO Thrills. f lOOO Laugh. By Request, "Where Are My Children?" Starts Wednesday." tar In this program lfHMI Tbrillk. I lOOO I.aut(h- WASHINGTON STREET AT PARK "Ask Those Who Go; They Know" Take the' Whole Family TKa.nksgiving Day. j