THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTOIilA, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 19119, teeeee JUST ARRIVED IMPORTED LIMBERGER (Adler Marke) Imported Swiss FINNAN HADDIE Newpchatel German Breakfast A. V. ALLEN COFFEE TELLS NOW THE MOB UEI0J1 DETAILS OF LYNCHING OF FOUR CATTLEMEN MONDAY IN OKLAHOMA DALLAS. Tex, April 2a In a special Joe Carter, one of the four guards on duty at the time of the lynching of four cattlemen at Ada, Okla yesterday, it quoted as follows: "The first I knew of the presence of the mob was at 2:10, when six masked men suddenly appeared at the waiting room in the run around the cells and covered me and Jim Mc Carty with their guns. McCarry and I held the watch for this part of the night. They told us to step aside and hand over the jail keys. I told them we hare no keys; that a gentleman in another room had the keys. "At this moment about twenty more men appeared thronging through the hall of the courthouse and from every where else, it seemed to me, saying. "Keep quiet, men, and give up the keys.' "The men were all masked- They kept me and McCarty under cover of their gnns and proceeded to wake up Guards Walter Goins and Bob Nestor and took the keys away from them. "Nestor rose from his bed with his gun and the masked men hit Kim over the head with their gun and left him stunned. ,The men forced Coins to open the heavy doors to the cells. They then took Miller from his cell and fastened a rope around his neck and bound his hands at his back with wire. I01R flDDITIO TO JUDD BROS. EXCLUSIVE LINES OF MEN'S FINE WEARING APPAREL Gothem Pajamas AND Underwear FOR Summer. 1 iriiiiiiPrlVi iBliirV1' JUDD BROS., UP-TO-DATE CLOTHERS AND FURNISHERS 157 Commercial St . . . Sole Agent for , . . Barrington Hall Steel Cut 40c CAN "Jesse West was the next man taken out and the mob said, 'Tell us what you know about this.' "West said: Til tell you nothing. They then hit him over the head with their six shooters and said: 'D- - n vou, tell us what you know about it' West repeated, "I'll tell you nothing and gave fight to the mob. "The rest of the prisoners then be gan to plead for their lives. "Then I rushed through and went out on the street after help, where I met the two night policemen and all went back and got one third of the distance down the hall of the courtroom when we were again held up and compelled to retreat and I never saw any of the mob leave the courthouse or jail as it was totally dark on the streets." NEWS OF THE DAY IN BRIEF. SAN FRANCISCO. Cal., April 20. The Walker-Otis anti-betting law. which it is believed will stop all rac ing in Californiawent into effect to day. SUMMF.RVILLE. S. C, April 2a The annual meeting of the South Car olina Medical Society met today at Pine Forest Inn and will continue in session until Friday. NEW YORK, April 20.-The Most Rev. John M. Farley, a Roman Cath olic archbishop of New York, receive ! numerous congratulations today on the occasion of his 67th birthday. SAN ANTONIO. Texas. Aoril 2a San Antonio's annual spring carnival, in celebration of the heroic defense of the Alamo, opened today with a mag nificent floral pageant BOSTON. Mass., April 20 Repre sentatives Ransdell of Lousiana and Davidson of Wisconsin are to be the chief speakers tonightat the annual banquet of the New England Dry Goods Association. BROOKHAVEN, Miss.. April 20. Representatives of forty-six clubs were present today at the opening of the annual meeting of the Mississippi Federation of Women's Clubs. The gathering will remain in session three days. NEW YORK, April 20.-A hand some memorial to the late Henry Chadwick, known as "the father of baseball," was unveiled today in Greenwood cemetery, Brooklyn. A number of men prominent in the base ball world attended the exercises. MILWAUKEE, Wis-, April 20.-A number of spiritual mediums and lect urers of prominence were in attend ance torlay at the opening of the an nual convention of the Wisconsin State Association of Spiritualists in this city. The convention will last three days. RALEIGH, N. C, April 20.-Inter-esting ceremonies accompanied the presentation to the North Carolina supreme court today of an oil paint ing gf former Chief Justice Hender son. Former Judge Robert W. Wins ton delivered the address of presenta tion. , VICKSBURG, Miss., April 20 The eighty-third annual session of the Episcopal diocesan council of Missis sippi convened in this city today, with Bishop Bratton presiding. Rev. C. B. Crawford, of Biloxi, preached the opening sermon this morning. CHARLESTON, S. C, April 20. Secretary of War Dickinson sailed on the United States steamship May flower today for Colon. He plans to spend several weeks on the isthmus in order to thoroughly familiarize him self with the progress of work on the Panama canal. SPARTANBURG, S. C, April 20. Vfusic lovers from several States are lere for the fifteenth annual South Atlantic States music fes'hal, which will be held here during the remainder of this week. The New York-Symphony orchestra, the Converse Col lege Choral Society of .100 voices, and several noted soloists are among the attractions. CLEVELAND, O., April 20.-A special election is being held today in the Twenty-first Congressional dis trict to choose a successor to Theo dore E. Burton, recently elevated to the Senate. The Republicans appea confident of the election of their can- Astoria, Or. didate, James H. Cassidy, former sec retary to Mr. Burton. M. B. Excel1 is the candidate of the Democrats. C. S. JORDAN ON TRIAL FOR KILLING WIFE HAS BEEN IN JAIL SINCE LAST SEPTEMBER AND MADE A CONFESSION. BOSTON. Mass, April 19,-Chest-er S. Jordan of Somerville, who has been in jail since last September, when he was arrested and confessed that he killed his wife and cut her hnAv m nieces. honins to hide the crime, will be placed on trial tomor row in the Superior Court ot Mut dlesex County. It is believed that the defense will base its case on a plea of temporary insanity. Jordan, who is a young man of about fhirtv years of age. is a brother-in-law of Jesse R. Livermore, the New York cotton speculator, and it is under stood that the Livermore millions will be used freely in an effort to keep Jordan from going to the elec tric chair. Three of the ablest crim inal lawyers of Massachusetts have been engaged to conduct the defense. The killing of Mrs. Jordan last September attracted widespread at tention owivr to the circumstances surrounding the crime and the sub sequent arrest of the young husband. The murder was one of the most gruesome with which the Boston police ever had to deal. The victim, Hcmorah Jordan, was an actress, aged twenty-three years- Jordan killed the woman in their home in Somer ville. Then he went out and bought a butcher's knife and a saw. with which he dismembered the bod. He severed his wife's head, also the legs. Then he tried to destroy all trace of them by burning them in the furnace of his home He put the rest of the body in a trunk and came into Boston with the ghastly burden, stopping at a board ing house preliminary, to taking a steamer for New York. It was his intention to get rid of what remained of his wife by throwing the torso into the water while the boat was en route for New York. The cabman who took Jordan and his trunk to the boarding-house be came suspicious about its contents while carrying the trunk into the house. Its weight made him think it contained stolen silverware, and the nervous manner of Jordan satisfied him the man was a burglar. There had been many robberies of silver ware recently. The cabman, be lieving he was on the trait of the thief, went to the police and told them of the mysterious trunk. Officers were detailed to go to the tn.irHini7-hoiise and investigate. When, they reached the house Jordan was not in, but the policemen were shown the room Jordan had engaged and found the trunk. The police did not open the trunk. About 5 o'clock Jordan returned Accosted in the hallway by the offic er he at first denied his identity. Later he admitted who he was. Ask ed about his trunk he denied he had one. He was ordered to his room by the ojScers, however, and commanded to open the trunk- Jordan did not appear in the least nervous or alarm ed, but hesitated to open the trunk. It was not until after considerable argument on the part of the officer that he produced the key and inserted it in the lock. Turning his head to one side so he could not see inside the trunk, Jordan threw up the cover and then sank back on his knees, burying his face in his hands and sob bing. The police staggered back aghast at the sight disclosed. In the open trunk before them la a sickening mass of hacked flesh, a woman's torso fill- jing the greater part of the trunk, ! while pieces of flesh from other parts ;of the body were stuffed into the cor Iners, the entire interior of the trunk i being bespattered with blood. j Jordan submitted without protest to the handcuffs and was taken to the ! station. There he speedily regained ; his composure and made a full confes jsion of the killing. He said that after jhis marriage he and his wife went on ! the vaudeville stage. On account of I his poor health the gave up their en gagements and returned to Somer ville to live. Mrs. Jordan, according to the husband, had taken to drinking and he said, was associated with other men and he became jealous. It was in a jealous quarrel that the trouble started which ended in the death of the wife. Jordan declared that his wife struck him first, that he then knocked her down and was errificd to find he had killed her. That happen ed at 7:30 o'clock in the evening. Fearing discovery of his crime, he conceived the idea of cutting the body up, taking it away on one of the steamers and throwing the parts overboard and then reporting to the police that his wife had left him. Jordan, according to his confession, while dazed at the awfulness of his deed, went about in a careful manner carrying out his plans, which were frustrated twenty-four hours later by the suspicions of the cabman. During his long period in jail Jordan has maintained the same comparative calm that he exhibited when he was arrested and apparently feels confid ent that he will get off. POLITICS AND POLITICIANS. W. C. Davis, of Jasper, Ala,, has announced his candidacy to succeed Congressman Richmond P. llobson of the Sixth Alabama district Mrs. Alma V. l.afforty, the only woman member of the Colorado leg islature, has introduced fifteen bills, all of which have passed the House. In the recent elections in Connecti cut the city of Hartford went license by an over-whelming majority, great ly to the surprise and disappointment of the prohibitionists. Grant B. Dimick, a prominent law yer and politician of Oregon City, has announced himself as a candidate for the Republican nomination for Gov ernor of Oregon in 1910. ' Friends of ex-Governor J, Frank Hanly of Indian say that formal an nouncement will be made soon of his candidacy for United States Senator against Albert J. lieveriuge. Mr. Hanly, it is asserted, believes his bat tle for temperance will give him a good lead. The Connecticut legislature has taken action which makes Lieutenant Governor Frank B. Weeks acting governor during Governor LHleyN illness. Hitherto no provision for such a contingency has existed in Connecticut . , Former Vice President Fairbanks plans to sail from San Francisco on May 16 for a trip of one year's dura tion, to include In his itinery Hawaii, Japan, China, the Philippines, Aus tralia, Africa and a large section of Europe. His family will accompany him. The Republican State convention of Pennsylvania will meet at Harrisburg Tune 16. but with quite a reduction in its representation. The number of I delegates is based upon the vote pol I led at the last presidential election, j when there was apparently much less i padding of the ballot boxes than in 11904. j Normal E. Mack, chairman of the I Democratic National Committee, has I completed arrangements for the pub lication of a monthly magaiine. to be known as the National Monthly, and : which will be devoted to the interests ' of the Democratic party in the nation. jThe first number of the magarine will ! make Its appearance under date if 1 May 1. i Thomas Rudolph is -still a practis ing lawyer and local judge at the age of ninety-five, in Shippensburg, Pa. He was recently nominated for his (judicial position by the Democrats land so popular was he that no candid-. ! ate was put up against him by the j Republicans. If he finishes his term jhe will be ninety nine years old. I lames R. Mann, who prevented the introduction in the House of Repre sentatives of the. petition of Chicago women for a reduction of the duties on leather gloves and cotton hoisery, j has represented the Second Illinois i district in Congress since 1897, and Ifor several years has been conspicu ous i nlllinois politics. He has serv jed as chairman of the Illinois State I Republican convention, and for four years he was a member of the t,hi cneo city council. There seems to be a very general a ' imnresinn in tne inner circles 01 Tammany Hall that the organization (should nominate next fall William T. j Jerome for district attorney. Four I years ago Jerome, single handed and alone, won a re election to the district 'attorney's office by over 16,000 patr iality, defeating the Tammany, Inde ' pendente League. Republican and So cialist candidates. It has been fre jqtientlv said that had Jerome been 'renominated in 1905 at Tammany's : hands there would have been no Dem ocratic State convention nominating I Hearst in 1906. 1 . j The pilfering of a full set of per jfectly good patriarchal whiskers I the first crime of its kind ever rccord jed here, according to police court rec ordshas just led to all sorts of com plications. The man who took them jis in jail and the man from whom j they were taken is without a home. The loser of the hirsute adornments is particularly sad because of the fact that he had worn them for 40 years. Recently he entered an East Side barber shop and having given care ful instructions that his whiskers be trimmed, took advantage of the op portunity for a nap. On awakening HYOMEI CURES CATARRH. Ml W S SI u n ' D7TVHNI WTVHW HI M DHOAH iSUIHDNOWl "" VWHISV 0V3H 3H1 ,3Nmona Mffica L 'ivokhi V "oi "snunw Vnwviw HiwvivDi Hyomci is nature's remedy. It is vaporized air, produced from the mighty eucalyptus trees of inland Australia. 1 You breathe in this antiseptic air through a hard rubber inhaler that comes with every outfit. It is guar anteed by T. P. Laurin to cure ca tarrh, asthma, sore throat, bronchitis, or croup, or money back. A complete outfit is only $1.00, and extra bottles cost but SO cents. Anyone who suf fers with catarrh after this offer, must enjoy it CANINE PRINCE DOES THE WINDY CITY FAMOUS ST. BERNARD DOO FROM SEATTLE SUCCUMBS TO A BAD COLD. CHICAGO, April 20.Pritce. a St. Ilernard dog. belonging to Francis Dritxe of Seattle, started from New York last week across the continent to see his master. During a few days' stop over in Chicago he contracted a bad cold, which quickly developed into pneumonia. Although E, C. Sul livan, under whose care Prince was seeing the sights, summoned a vet erinary surgeon, the big St. Bernard died, Mr, Sullivan immediately plan ned a funeral for the animal, which had saved no less than nine lives and had taken prizes at shows through out the country. Prince has been laid away in a copper-lined coffin decorat ed with flowers. Services were con ducted by Mr. Sullivan and a party of friends. NEW YORK LETTER NEW YORK, April 20.-Armsed over the killing of more than a hundred persons by automobiles dur ing the past) fifteen months in this city, and by the rapidly increasing number of serious accidents caused by the recklessness of the drivers of cars, a number of prominent citizens have inaugurated a movement for the vig orous prosecution of offender against speed laws. It was f!t that a condi' tion of afTjiir under which more per son were killed on the streets of N'ew York than during the entire Spvnisli American war was one that demand' ed a remedy. It is intended to make the movement jut initiated . nation wide in extent and to keep it up until the speed-criminal is exterminated or reformed. The great majority of sit tomohilUts who feel that as a class they have suffered from the excesses of a few reckle drivers are joining heartily in the crusade against the modern juggernaut. The Automobil" Club of America, which i recognized as the most influential body of motor ists in the country, has taken action to discourage carelessness and violation of speed laws. One of the firt re suits of the agitation that has been started has been to stimulate the metropolitan police force to unwonted activity, while the local judges have done their part by dealing severely with all cases of overspeeding brought before them. Altogether It begins to look as though the diversion of run ning down pedestrians in N'ew York streets may soon become too danger ous to be attractive even to the most ! hardened automaniac. N'ew York seems to be invention mad. F.very new device in the field of scientific advance from flying ma chines to needles find quick and en thusiastic reception here. This is in marked contrast to the attitude of only a few years ago when the city's attitude was one of skepticism which laughed even at the telephone to say nothing of many other inventions which it now uses. Father Knicker bocker has experienced a change of heart in this respect which bids fair to make this city the scientific center of the country. Already for example, two companies for the manufacture of commercial aidships have been organ ized here, and the Hotel Astor will soon have in operation here on its roof an airship station where the visi tor who cares to drop in for tea by the aerial route can draw up in his air carriage. The enthusiasm for wireless telegraphy, having captured the city, has spread to the suburbs. At the Hotel Oramatan, in the fash ionable Westchester residence district outside the city, the business com munications incident to the operation of the hotel arc conducted by wireless and the wealthy persons who make it their home have also taken up the fad of talking to friends in cities equipped with wireless stations or on board in coming and outgoing steamers. An other craze is for the use of carrier pigeons, many persons preferring to use these birds for the interchange of letters instead of the regular mails. Although the city seems to have been seized with a desire to live in the air as much as possible, and it only re mains for some one to dnscover a way of living on it as well. he was horrified to find that the bar ber instead of a trimming had given him a clean shave. To add to his trouble his wife, who like himself is a believer in the Hebrew faith, refused to admit him on his return home, holding that the Scripture forbade his being shaved. He was hooted in the street and finally took his trouble to a magistrate. The barber was finally found and lodged in jail, but no solu tion of the problem has yet been dis covered, Only nature can restore the whiskers and the barber does not ap pear to be guilty of any crime yet tabulated. The only resource of the whiskerless and homeless patriarch, say the lawyers, is in a suit to re cover damages, in which" event a com mercial value in beards will be es tablished here for the first time. Poor Digestion? This to t'lto f f the t'u st signs of stonv nt h wc-Ancw, I istics after eating, (tour eructations, sick headache, lil kniH conditions me nil indicative that it is the stoninch that needs assistance. Help it to regain health ,and strength by taking BEEGEWS PILLS for they are stomach remedy that never disappoints. They act quick ly and gently upon the digestive organs, sweeten the contents of the stomach, carry off the disturbing elements, and establish healthy con ditions of the liver and bile. The wonderful tonic and strength ening effects from Ileccham's Pills, make them a safe remedy they Help Weak Stomachs la tout with full dtrttlioM, ttt. udtt. USU.JU-JUI. 'i-U '-.J1 JL.JI.J-. U""l The Quality of every drug, chem ical or medicine In our More Is guaran tted. Purity U ftlway found here. Let us fill your prescriptions. Central Drug Store Ernst Rlndell.Prop. SCO! BAY mil & IH IIP AM OKI A, Oltl.OON Iron and Bratt Founder, Ld and Marine Engineer!. Up-to-Date Sawmill MacMsa Prompt attention given to all repair Utr and Franklin Ava. work. Tel Main Ml Join Fos, Pres. F. L. Bishop, Sec Astoria Savins , Trau Nelson Troy, Vica Pres. and Supt ASTORIA IRON WORKS DESIGNERS AND MANUP4CTUKEKS OF THE LATEST IMPROVED . . . Canning Machinery, Marine Engines and Boilers COMPLETE CANNERY OUTFITS FURNISHED. CerrMpondtnca Solicited. Foot of Foavtk I treat. I THE TRENTON First-Class Liquors and Cigars 02 Commercial Street Corner Commercial and Uth. ASTORIA, OREOON Willsell cheap round trip excursion tickets to Denver May 17th, July 1st and August Uth On June and & 3rd, July and & 13rd audi August uth and lath, very low round trip rates will be made to St. Paul, Duluth, Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago and'all eastern points, Through Rad'and Steamship tickets sold to ;.all parts of the world. For full 'particulars cali or address O. B. JOHNSON, Qen'l Agent A. & C. R. R. 12th St, ner Commercial St ASTORIA, OREOON. Thoro Is Only Ono "Imfno That Is USED THE mHLO OVER TO Always remember the full name. for this signature on every box. Look 26o. lot a Dull Spot in thc My EVERY BODY'S MAGAZINE. That's why it holds the undoubted supremacy. Even if you are not ft mag azine reader, try it. There is an unusual line of fiction this month. Read " Grimaden Mouse if you like a " thriller." O. W. WH ITEM AN, 8VEN SEN'9 BOOK 8TORE, AND UTZINGERS' NEWSSTAND Saturday Only ! 1000 Sheet Roil ' Superfine Toilet Paper ONLY 7 Cents per roll WHITMAN'S BOOK STORE SPECIAL & COLUMBIA RIVER 11 Quinine" CURE A OOLD IH OHK DAY. SWA