JtWflllttl UlLltHKt PULL AMOOIATID RIPORT COVERS THK MORNINQ FIELD ON THS LOWE COLUMBIAN 0 T ' PRICE FIVE CENTS VOLUME LXI NO. .103 tfTORIA, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1906 HM Z INDICTED Abe Ruef Also Caught By (he Grand Jury. EXTORTION CHARGED Ruef is Arrested and Admitted to Bail in Sum of $5,000. SEVERAL INDICTMENTS FOUND Mayor Schmlti Wilt Be Arrtited at Soon Ha Ralurna from Hit Eu ropean Trip, Probably Next Week. SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 15. The Brand Jury which him boon In aoaalon the past week In Ban Francisco, un- 1t the tuition of Francis J, Heney, thin afternoon found separate Indict ment against Mayor Eugene fiehmlts and Abraham Ruef on charges of ex tortion. The flint alleged crime wm committed "In connection -with "the Poodle Dog restaurant, and the In dictment recites that Abe Ruef and Mayor Schrnltx demanded money from Tony Wnnoo, proprietor of the res taurant, and his business would be cloned unless he compiled with the demand. A thla demand. It la elat ed. wn mnde on two occnalona, two Indictment were returned. Extortion In also declared to have been practiced upon Ed Marchand, proprietor of the Marchand restaur ant, and the demand wna mnde twice and two Indlctmenta were returned. Demand were alao made upon Joe Mnlfuntl, another reatnuranter, and were made frequently, nnd for thin nttompt, fifty Indlctmenta were re turned. After rending the Indlctmenta Ruef wna arrested and arraigned be fore Judge Murftahl. who fixed hla ball at $10,000, or 15.000 cash. As aoon as Mayor Rrhmltz returns from hla European trip, probably next week, he will be met at the train by the sheriff and arrested. The grand Jury are atlll continuing their Investigations of graft against Ruef and Schmltz and It la antici pated that over one hundred Indict ments will bo returned. The grand Jury are taking an Interest In the graft scandal and will probe every charge to the bottom. At 7 o'clock this evening Abe Ruef proceeded In an automobile to the home of Superior Judge Murnaky, where he surrendered himself to Sher iff O'Ni'll, who met Ruef by appoint ment. Representatives of a surety company nccompnnled Ruef to Judge Murasky'a home and qualified on Ruef's bonds, which amount on five counts, to $50,000. An order to re lease him from custody was then made by the Judge. When asked for a stntement, Ruef snld: "John D. Rockefeller was Indicted yesterday and I am Indicted today. The matter Is too absurd to bo worth a statement from me. All I ask Is an Immediate trial on the charges on which I have been Indicted by the grand Jury." In the presentation of the Indict ments against Schmltz and Ruof, As sistant District Attorney Heney hns fulfilled his promises that the first action taken by the grand Jury would be to accuse Ruef with felony. This prophecy was made in open court two weeks ago, but nothing was said then that the mayor would be drawn Into the scandal. The Indictment of Ruef was expected by the public, but the people were not prepared for Imme diate action against the city's chief magistrate, who Is now on the Atlan tic, returning from a visit to Europe. There has been great complaint against these restaurants during the past two years from pulpit and press, the accusation being made that they were Immoral and a menace to the FRISCO CRAFTER8. Large Sum of Relief Money Unao counted For, BAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 15. James D. I'helnn, former mayor of San Francisco, has been elected president of the California branch of the Amer lean Red Cross society. He has made a strong defense of the relief method following the fire, The total subscrip tion were fixed at about $9,000,000, Of this, only about $6,000,000 was received and a trifle more than $4,- 000,000 expended. The puzzling deficit between these figures and the glow Ing estimate of $20,000,000 sent out when the money wn being collected apparently will not be straightened out. FORGED CHECK3. Two Young Girls 8oure Money From Seattle Firm. KVERETT. Wttith., Nov. 15. The managers of two Everott .business house are anxious to learn of the whereabouts of two pretty and styl ishly dressed young women who worked them to a frazzle yesterday. The young women succeeded In pass Ing two forged checks on Mann Bros. for $8. When pursued they fled to the brush on the outskirts of the city and effected an escape. STORMING IN IDAHO Big Warehouse Blown Down at Napa by Severe Wind- THREE MEN ARE INJURED Water Is Three Feet Deep in Wallsoe, Idaho, Trees Uprooted and a Number of 8mall Residences Demolished. SALT LAKE, Nov. 15. A brief dispatch todny reports a windstorm of unusual severity at Napa, Idaho, where the big warehouse belonging to the Western Idaho Sugar company, caved In at both ends nnd was un roofed. Three men were pnlnfully ln Juretty Telegraphic communication with Napa nnd Rolse Is cut off. Wires between Glenn's Ferry and Mountain Home are ' down. The storm Is be levedl to be general in Snake river valley and western Idaho. A telephone message to Missoula from Wallace, Idaho, says that the water Is three feet deep In the streets of the city, the rain having been fall ing for the past three days and was accompanied by a terrific windstorm this morning. Trees were uprooted and considerable damage done to small buildings, several being demol ished. BOYS PLEAD GUILTY. Murdered William Powell Near Cot tage Grove. EUGENE, Or., Nov. 15. Thomas Reeves and Hugh Snxon, of Portland, who killed Wllllnm Powell, an aged peddler, near Cottage Grove, one night last August, were brought Into court again yesterday and their plea of not guilty to the charge of murder In the second degree was withdrawn and they entered a plea of guilty to the charge of manslaughter. They will be sen tenced Friday morning at 10 o'clock. welfare of th public '..u-called restaurants were combinations of eat ing houses, lodging-houses nnd liquor resorts, They wore destroyed by fir In April. They were suppressed two year ago, but later were reopened with "some restrictions" Boon thejr were running again along the same old lines. Koine of the newspapers made charges at the time that a fund had been collected amounting to thousands of dollars to Induce the officers to lift the embargo, The accusations fur ther allege that a monetary tax of $5,000 was paid by the restaurants for protection. It has never been di rectly charged that the mayor was connected with the payment of the so-called corruption fund, but no hes itancy was used In connecting Ruefs name with obtaining the Illegal money. T IN OF CATLIN SWEPT BUT OF EXISTENCE Two Saw Mills and Store and Every Building is Swept by the Flood. FORTY FARMERS MAROONED ON COWLITZ ISLAND Train Traffic Between Tacoma and Portland Entirely Suspended and Passenger Trains Reach Castle Rock and are Compelled to Return to Portland With All the Passengers. RESIDENTS OF CATLIN RECEIVE TELEGRAPH AND TELEPHONE W IRES ARE DOWN IN EVERY DI RECTIONSTORM RAGING IN EASTERN WASHINGTON AND CITIES AND TOWNS INUN DATED, WHILE RIVERS ARE CONST ANTLY RISING. PORTLAND, Nov. 15. Several lives are reported lost; forty persons said to be marooned on an island In the Cowlltx river, Washington; the town of Catlln Is entirely swept away by the same river; railroad traffic be tween Puget Sound and Portland Is at a standstill and entirely suspended. The railroads of western and north western Washington are In the same condition. The O. R. & N. company Is temporarily blockaded by mud slides at Dodson. The telegraph and telephone between here and Seattle are out of commission and wire traf flce to eastern Oregon and Washing ton is almost at a standstill. Hun dreds of thousands of dollars damage has been caused In the districts back of the Sound country. In Yakima county the damage will run up Into the thousands. In southwestern Washington much damage has been done to the logging Interests. Up to tonight It Is Impossible to estimate the damages wrought by streams and creeks of Washington which are thun dering torrents as the result of the great torrential downpour of the past three or four days. On the Cowlitz, which tonight Is the most serious mennce, the town of Catlln has been washed away. Happily In this case, the Inhabitants had sufficient warn ing to get to the highlands. In this same district there Is a rumor that forty farmers who have taken refuge on an Island are In serious danger, unless the Cowlltx stops Its raise. Regarding storm conditions In east ern Washington, Wire Chief Wlngate of the Western Union, says a portion of the state Is not suffering from the effects of the storm except by loss of train and telegraph service: "I have received a report from We natchee In central Washington, that the railroad and county bridge are all gone and the lowlands are flooded along the Wenntchee river. Trains ar rived In Spokane today practically on time except the Seattle trains. I have heard no reports of trouble north of Walla Walla," """1 According to statements made by passengers who arrived here today from Tacoma, the Cowlltx valley Is a vast Inland ocean for miles, the rail road grade stretching like a ribbon across it, being the only land In sight. These passengers state that at Se attle little or no damage has been done by the storm, It being in the rural districts to the east and south where the storm has wrought the j most havoc. According to a telegram from Saturday until Wednesday, since which there has been no communica tion with the Sound, the rain poured down as If shot through a pipe. Ac companied by heavy winds, made it hazardous for people to venture out. They give the Northern Pacific rail road high praise for the efforts "to keep Its traffic moving. Passengers are brought from Tacoma by boat and from there brought to Portland over the normal route. Even this Is no longer possible since the bridges at olequa and Kelso have been swept away. WARNING AND FLY TO HILLS The north bound passengers which ; left here on these roads were unable 1 to get by Castle Rock and most of ! them returned to Portland. On the I O. R. & N. railroad a mud slide at Dodson today threatened to tie up traffic indefinitely, but reports tonight are that its size Is greatly exaggerat ed, and the Union Pacific and North em Pacific will leave here on time , tomorrow. The telegraph and tele phone lines north of Portland are prostrated, there being no communl- ! cation whatever with any point fur ' ther than Kalama. This afternoon apparently a serious break occurred In the Western Union wires east of Umatilla and Spokane, where It Is understood are cut off from commun icatlon east, and are threatened with complete Isolation. This evening the wires were recovered with fair pros pects of normal conditions obtaining within a few hours. According to District Forecaster Beais of the Weather Bureau, the center of the storm has passed the Rocky Mountain range and It Is the after effects which are now doing the damage. The forecast for the district for tomorrow is occasional rains, with much lower temperature, which por tends a speedy cessation of the floods. At Vancouver, Wash., the Columbia river has raised four feet during the past twenty-four hours. WIND AT EUGENE. Trees and Fences Blown Down Riv er High Little Rain. EUGENE, Or., Nov. 15. A heavy wind storm occurred early this morn ing, but no great damage resulted. Several windmills, trees and fences were blown down. The river is eight feet above low water mark, the high est this year, caused by the warm wather of the past few days melting the snow in the mountains. But lit tle rain has fallen here. TANNER FILES ANSWER. Claims President's Pardon Releases Him from Disbarment. SALEM. Nov. 15. In his answer to the disbarment proceedings against him before the supreme court : this morning, which was received by mall, Judge A. H. Tanner, by his counsel, W. W. Cotton and C. E. S. Wood, admits the principal allegation in the complaint, but denies that the plea of guilty amounts to a conviction of a felony involving moral turpitude, and that no indictment was ever en tered against him on the charge of perjury. That he was granted an uncondi tional pafdon by the President of the United States, June 26, 1906, which exonorated him of crime and ex empted him from disbarment proceed ings. That the perjury occurred be fore the grand Jury, as a citizen, and not in his professional capacity. He then recites the history of the case and the part he took in the celebrated Mitchell conspiracy case. GENEROUS BAKER. Will Make State a Present of Print ing Plant, PORTLAND, Nov. 15. Frank C, Baker, ex-state printer of Oregon, will. at the coming session of the leglsla ture, make the state a present of his printing plant at Salem, used by the state since 1886, when Baker was elected state printer for the first time. He states in his announcement of the fact that he can well afford to make the present to the people, since they, by his election, gave him the oppor tunity to make the value of the plant many times over He say that for eight years during his incumbency of the office he made $25,000 a year net out of the plant and that recently he offered Willis S. Dunlway, Incoming state printer, $20,000 a year for the state printing and the offer was re fused. CASE DISMISSED. Tillamook Tollgato Case Thrown Out of Court. TILLAMOOK, !Nov. 15. The onlyj criminal case that came up this term of the Circuit Court was that of the parties who destroyed the Wilson River toll-gate. Indictments were re turned against J. F. Reeher, W. B- lingsworth. Will Hadley, Earl Stanley, and Ernest Belitz by District Attor ney McNary for this offense. The case was thrown out of court on a demurrer to the complaint, Judge Ben nett claiming that the gate was real property and not personal property, as alleged in the complaint. So the case was dismissed against the accused. POOR PITTSBURG. PITTSBURG, Nov. 15. With detec tives from neighboring states here in the hope of finding crooks of Interna tional reputation, there has been no apparent cessation In the crimes that have stirred Pittsburg, within the last two weeks. ""' During last nlgh and early this morning scores of people were arrest ed on the streets as suspicious charaC' ters. T Man Who Killed Two Ashvile Pol icemen Killed. TOOK REFUGE IN A BARN On Hundred Men 8urrounded the Barn and Opened Fir Upon the Negro Who Attempted to Es cape the Posse. ASHEVILLE, N. C Nov. 15. Will Harris, the negro, who killed two Ashevllle policemen and three negroes Tuesday night, was shot by a posse today near Fletcher, about ten miles south of here. At 8 o'clock this morn ing, word was received that the ne gro had been discovered in a barn near Fletcher and aid was requested. One hundred men left Ashevllle and upon arriving at the place surrounded the barn. Fire was opened by the posse upon the negro, who attempted to escape several times, returning the fire, until he was finally killed. He was a desperate charaoter and has been a terror to this vicinity for sev eral months, and there was a large re ward for him, dead or alive. "IDES OF NOVEMBER." Hon. Bourke Cochran to Trot in Double Harness. NEW YORK, Nov. 15 The marriage of Miss Anna Ide, the eldest daughter of Governor General Henry E Ide, of the Phllllplne Islands, to Congressman Bourke Cochrane, is to take place to day at the Hotel St. Regis. Misslde's trousseau is said to be unusually beau tiful. The gowns are all from Paris and made by the best dressmakers in the French capltol. Mr. and Mrs. Cochrane will start Immediately after the marriage for a prolonged honeymoon abroad. They will take a trip up the Nile, Paris and London will be visited on the way back to this country 1 HO FISHERMEN RESCUED Men on Cowlitz Island Rescued By Steamer. KELSO UNDER WATER Towns of Castle Rock, Lexington and Oslrander are Submerged By Water. BUSINESS IS ALL SUSPENDED Greatest Danger to Life Wat in the Town of Lexington, Whir One Hundred Inhabitants , Had a Very Narrow Escape. PORTLAND, Nov. 15. A special to the Oregonian from Kelso tonight states that eight families of fisher men, living In houseboats at the Junc tion of the Cowlitz and Columbia riv ers, who were reported today as be ing marooned and In serious danger of being swept away by the raging tor rents, were rescued this- evening by the steamer Burton, which had been sent from Portland for that purpose. Another special from Kelso filed at nine o'clock tonight, states that the towns of Castle Rock, Ostrander and Lexington are submerged by water, and most of the Inhabitants have fled" to the hills. Every bridge In that part of the country has been swept out At Kelso, the water Is over twenty feet above low water mark, and Is rising at the rate 'of half an Inch an hour. Business of all kinds is entirely suspended, the people be ing engaged In trying; to save their household property and moving It to places of safety. The greatest danger to life was at Lexington, which Is at the Junction of the Cowlltx and Columbia rivers. The town was submerged during the afternoon and about one hundred In habitants were in considerable dan ger. Boats were sent to their ' res cue by people from the surrounding settlements. Lexington tonight Is under seven feet of water. There Is not a single person In the town. Build ings and stores have been swept away and the damage to the four towns will amount to a quarter of a million dol lars. NEW EXPRESS COMPANY. North American Company Controlled by the Rock Island. NEW YORK, Nov. 15. The Tribune says the North American Express company, which was incorporated in Maine, with an authorized capital of $25,000,000 has been organized by the Rock Island interests, it is now learned, and designed to operate on the lines of the Rock Island system, as well as to carry on a general ex press business. The United States Express company and Wells, Fargo & Company, handle most of the ex press business of the Rock Island and Its controlled roads. It Is said that in deciding to organ ize their own express company the Rock Island management has taken the ground that the handling of ex press matter Is highly profitable, Is as logically a part of the business of a railway as is the handling of freight traffic. The Gould lines and the Hill roads have their own express com panies. FINE STEAMER BURNED. DETROIT, Mich., Nov. 15. A spe cial to the Detroit News says: The Canadian ' steamer Strathmore was burned November 8 at Mlchiplcoten Island, Lake Superior. The crew was saved. 1