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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1906)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SATURDAY EVENING, AFr.lL It, IZZ2. ESCAPED LUriilllC A IS J. Broderick. Who Red From i X T Mount Tabor Sanatorium, ' t Found in Seattle. t ' ' ' ' ' BRITISH DEVELOPMENT SOCIETY ASSISTED HIM a.. 7 Was Trusty When He Left Institu- 4V, : don and Represented Himself - as English Subject In DiatrcM to the Portland Organisation, CAPTURED '7i s 1 st Salvage Corps Going Down Into the Mines at Courrierea, With Their ' ' v - (.; . Oxygen Masks. -,-, -5 WILD STALLION ON FRONT PORCH Mrs. K. A. J.' Mackenzie Badly y Frightened by Visit From & -, ; t Unwelcomi Beasts - MALL SON ALMOST : : .TRAMPLED BY HOOFS Horse Escapes From Keeper, Who Was Exercising Him, by 'Jerking Leash, Bolts Through Gate and " Tries to Get IntoHoase. ' Jerkins Its )ah out of the hand of ' lt kaepar jratrdar a fens' stallion, whloh wm blna exerolaad on North Twentieth atraet. bolted through the sate of Dt. Kenneth' A. 7.: Uackenale'a .yard fA Hoyt street, climbed the front - atepa of the house and frlshtened Mrs. . Mackenaie almost Into hysterics by walkina- around on the porch and trying to thrust the door and windows open with Its head. Playing; In the front yard "when the ' brute made Its entrance was Dr. Mac kenaie'a little boy, who narrowly missed being- trampled under ita iron-shod hoofs. Mr a. Mackenzie screamed to the lad. who ran to the rear of the .house and saved himself from harm by enter ing by the back door. The keeper of the horse hastened after the animal and caught It while it . was trying to get into the house. The step and porch were considerably de faced by its hoofs. - Mrs. Mackenxle called Patrolman Al den after the occurrence and informed him. that erery day stallions are taken from nearby atables and exercised on North ' Twentieth street In view of ' the .performance which she had. Just : witnessed and the halrbredth escape of the' child from death or Injury, ahe 'asked -that the stablemen be required to ase some other thoroughfare. , - A report waa handed Chief Orlti macher by Alden. The policeman was Instructed this morning by the chief to notify the proprietors of the Fashion - stable te exercise their animals where they will not be likely to harm anybody If .taey should get loose, and to take precaution to prevent them from get ting away from their . keepers. ANARCHIST CONGRESS TO BE HELD IN AMERICA (Joarnal -Special Serrle.) 7 Zurich, April 14. The police "have arrested an Italian' anarchist named Goettra, whe boasted that he was en route to America to kill at man In a high place. He atated that a secret interna tional anarchist congress la t be held In June In America, - THREE MEET DEATH - IN WRECK ON ERIE V3- (Ineraal Special Serrice.) " OreenvtUe, Pa,, April 14. Three were killed and three Injured In a wreck at Grand Groaning on the Erie road near Atlantic The dead are: Mrs. Maud Calrla and two Infant daughters. . . w , ' v ' JT. W. Alexander XO. v - - ' Mourn! Special Kanice.) . 'Ceerfleld. Mass.. April 14. James 'W. Alexander, former president , of - the Eqnltable Ufe Assurance society, has - suffered a relapse. His condition Is ee -Ttous. ..;,.,:, - - v - For overcominfr that tired feeling in thf spring, which makes you feel half sick all the time, the Bitters should be used exclusively. There's nothing1 else .near bo good. It also cures Poor Appetite, Sour . Stomach, Headache, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Colds, Grippe or General dlTTEhS (A Wi A v. I r." V Sa-,! iff Mrs. Nannie Langhome Shaw, Whose Serious Illness May 7 Delay Her Wedding to Young Mrt, Astor. ' IXIfENIOS IS BLOWN UP BY HIS Ol'N EXPLOSIVE Professor Wurtenberger Fatally injured in Perfecting Million Dollar Product. r (Joeraal BMelal Senlce.) New York. ' April 14 While experi menting In his laboratory at East Ches ter yesterday, Professor Wurtenberger, inventor of a marveloua new explosive, said to be 10 tlmea more powerful than dynamite, was latall y injured -by-anr-i plosion. - The unfortunate scientist waa taken to Mount Yernon hospital. On account of the dangerous nature of the ' experiments ths laboratory located In a desolate place in the salt meadows near East Chester. Ths In- ventor was alone when - the-explosion ooourred and It was an hour before his plight was discovered. It is undsrstooa froressor wunen- berger was engaged In perfecting his Invsntton so that the explosive could be set off by electricity, instsad of fuse. When -perfected Ms invention would have been sold to the United States government for 11.004,000. . TO PREVENT PASSAGE OF EXCLUSION LAWS (Ihm) Special Servlee.t Wuhlnrton. Anrll 14. Ktran In. nuences are at work In the house of representatives to prevent ths passage of any Chlnsse exclusion legislation. The bill it la proposed to report pro viding for the Inspection of Immigrants in China Is not particularly objection able to western men, . but they would rather not have any - legislation what. sver. House and congressional commit. tee leaars have been told that If th exclusion matter was let alone, the west was likely to send a solid Republican delegation to the sixtieth congress, but that If ths legislation Is passed th! labor leaders may become agitated, with results that some Republican congres sional candldatss wlU be defeated. - The warning Is being digested by the Repub; llcan leaders. MAY OPEN THtj GATES. (Continued from Page One.) ' built and paid for on terms that would not be any burden whatever to the tax payers and would then yield a steady revenue that eould be devoted to main tenance -of the -bridge and boulevards connecting with it on both sides of the river. - .. It has been estimated that, owing to great expense of construction snd main tenance of 4,000 feet of approaches to the proposed upper deck on the Portland a Seattle bridge, the city and oountv would find It a bad financial investment. The additional cost of ths bridge struc ture on account of the upper deck Is placed at $260,000. The building of iron approaches and paving of the roadways would bring ths cost up to a sum that would require annual payment by the . public of 120.000 a year l var interest o the Investment. . - 1 . 1 V 0m -uw jyy I , ' HSSMISPUVItll micT is sio - Margaret Anglin Strikes at End of Second Act and Holds : r Audience an Hour. ' f Journal Bnealal Sarrlca.t " Chicago. April lIt was long after midnight when Margaret Anglln finished the premier production of wujlim Vaughn Moody's new play, "A Bablne Woman," at the Garrlck theatre. At the end of the second act Miss .Anglln re fused to go on with the production until her future rights in the play were safe guarded by a written contract. , ; Lawyers were summoned to the stage and before the matter was satisfactorily adjusted there was a wait of nearly an hour, - the audience meantime manliest Ins its Impatience in no uncertain way. Both the playwright and the a tar Issued statements tonight saying that the Interruption was due- to a misun derstanding and that they are now at neaoe. Of th play Itself the local crit ics are agreed that It has possibilities of great things. n v ; :-.- INDICTED AT PENDLETON , ON PERJURY CHARGES I ' " (Mixelat Dteoateh to The looraaM Pendleton, Or, April.. 14. W- A. Bo hart and Jojin H. Garrison . were In dicted today 'by the federal grand Jury for perjury In making homestead proofs and held under $1,000, baU by United States Commissioner John Halley of this city Bohart la a well-known stock man of Uklah. Garrison- waa formerly a sheepman of this city and Is now con nected with a meat market. Arrests were made by Deputy United Btates Marshal Glenn Bushes of Portland. :- MOYER'S APPEAL REACHES FEDERAL SUPREME COURT ' t Tnttrtiatt ftttmaefal fXaitw4M 1 j Washington, April 14. The 'cases of Pettlbone, Moyer and Haywood. West ern Federation of Miners' officials. charged with the Steunenberg murder in jaano, ware docketed In the supreme court toaay in an appeal from the cir cuit court of Idaho denying a writ of habeas corpus. - , WILL SEEK RELIEF THROUGH MRrSMITH stow Bet sees, acultaomah County torts! Oaadldatos Mam ; sTonUMttoa. - . The ' exchanges ' from the Interior counties continue to Indicate strongly that Hon. K. 1 Smith wUl lead all of ths candldatea for the nomination for United States senator. The ssntiment seems to be universal that as long as Portland is divided between her own can didates that the country "cannot be rea sonably expected to take a part la that contest. The voters in the Interior think that Mr. Smith ought to be ac ceptable to the Portland people, as his energise have lor many years been dl rected In favor of the large enterprises beneflolal to Portland's interest. He Is a man to be depended on to represent the whole state and not merely any spe cial interest thereof. - Surely there can be no doubt that Oregon needs Just such a man as' that The country-and the metropolis tightly considered have no coafllotlng Interest. What Is beneficial to one is beneficial to the other. As open Columbia helps Portland, but It helps the whole tributary country. Every agricultural interest, ths vast enterprises of irrigating the arid lands and making them productive are all or the highest Importance to Portland's commerce. indeed, Portland s su premacy as the metropolis of the north west is aasured only by virtue of the productivity and industries of heretrlbu- No man has better exemplified by hi" conduct his thorough appreciation ' of this larger view of Portland's welfare and greatness. Can any other candidate so well snswer these requirements as Mr. Smith T Ths sdltor of ths Times-Herald, pub lished at Burns, Harney county, as early as March 4 predicted the election of Mr. Smith. In an editorial of that date the Times-Herald says: 'The decision of K. L. Smith, the prominent Hood ' River" fruit man. to enter the race for United States senator seems to have struck terror to the hearts of the Portland machine men, who consider the aenatorablp their spe cial - and exclusive, plum. Senator Oearln, th present Incumbent, will have no opposition among the Democrats for ths nomination, while it appears that every faction of the Republican party has a candidate. Hood River Smith doesn't seem to belong to kny of these factlona, therefore will likely carry the' independent vote of his party, which may be sufficient to make him the choice henoe these tears, - . , (BseeUI rnsDetoa to Tke JaenaLI Seattle, Wash., April 14; J. Broder ick, n escaped lunstlo from Mount Ta bor sanatorium at Crystal Springs, Ore gon, was arrested on the water front here this morning, handcuffed and taken to the city JalL He was located by J. W. McClelland, an attendant at the asylum, who had been aent to Seattle to look for btm. ' Broderick . protested against his arrest, but made no forcible resistance. Aooordlng to the story told by McClelland, Broderick, who Is a fish erman, becomes violent at times, and at such times Is apt to do great Injury to nimaeir aaa omers. or that reason It Is necessary to keep close watch on him. McClelland says Broderick claims to be a British subject and when he es caped he made his way to Portland. There he called upon the officers of the British Benevolent association and told them the story of his eseane and thev advanced him sufficient funds to make his way to Seattle . and across the lanaaian border., . . rj From Dr. OlllaanU at h vr nervous sanatorium is is learned that Broderick escaped Thursday after- a. a vim vrilffttUUe) aM luclnaUona and while he became vlo- at nmes ine aoctor states that he never attempted to harm himself or others. He wss brought her from Val des. Alaska, and had been at the sana torium about seven months 1- had him about cured," said the doctor, "ana would have released him In a few weeks, but he took advantage of the fact that be was made a trusty and dlsaoDeared- Th. vavammm. i.Mt4- w.w.uM.VU IHNII, us responsible for these patients and waen oiearaea mat be nad taken the train for Seattle yesterday afternoon I Immediately sent one. of our men after him, Broderick got his-transportation by representing himself to be a British subject la distress' and making an ap peal to the British Benevolent associa tion of Portland. The association, I wra, aw not snow as naa escapes from a sanatorium. They did not know he had even been there." MILLIONS OF GOLD FOR BANKS III KEEO . Secretary Shaw Announces Col : lateral Security Will Be Ac-0 cepted From Borrowers. New Tork.'Anril 1lsr.i. et,. of the treasury announces that sub- iriun wiii ao ranee gold In any amount up to $6,000,000 for each bank, to srold-lmnnrtlnv InttltuflAn- m - w ----"--- "" . WlU deposit with the subtreasury acceptable CU1I.KIU mwKunij. i ma collateral will be held as good and sufficient . security for the gold advanced for such time as may be required to secure Imported gold to replenish the bank's reserve. As soon ss the imported gold Is received the amount advanced by the subtreasury must b returned to. It immediately. - Local bankers state that the above announcement applies only to gold Im porting banks and ths money advanced upon oollateral security is merely s tem porary loan to relieve Stringencies pend ing the arrival of foreign gold pre viously ordered. -, "The announcement simply-' means,' said 3, Thorburn Ross of the Title Guarantee a- Trust company, "that banks importing gold may go to the sub treasury with' acceptable collateral and secure a temporary loan of any amount ef gold up to . 000,060 upon this secur ity. - i take It -from ths nature, of See-. retarv Rh.v. nnnnnn.m..t , .w ad ranees can be secured only when im ported goia nas oeen ordered but failed to arrive. . It is undoubtedly only a such instances of temporary shortage." AMERICAN MALTREATED IN Twelve Years of Horror Spent In ' Dungeon by Superintendent ' of Electric Plant. - El -Paso, Tex.i' April 14. Declaring that he spent 11 years in a Mexican Jail at Torreon, John Humphreys, formerly of Corsica na, Texas, reached here to- aay a human wreck. He was a strong, robust man of 24 years Of of are when arrested, and Is now barely able to walk. He was sentenoed because of four men killed by an electric power wire irom a piant or which he waa su perintendent, and declares that he slept oil the earthen floor in the same cell for II years without clothing, when his own had been worn te rags, without bedding and without seeing a soul to whom he could speak English, He declares that he was only half Tea, snowed no reading matter, eould appeal to no relatives, as they were all dead, aad Xq keep from going mad de vised a same with matches and cigar ette to Olstraet his attention from his plight. He had been carried from the Jail when released and brought to the border .by sympathetic railroad men. Americans here will-draw the attention of the state department to the ease. . New Merchants' Exchange. The doors of -the new Merchants' ex change, corner Fifth and Alder streets. open for business today (Saturday). The exohange lias changed hands entirely and la now to be under the management of the -well-known cafe man. Mr. A. Shapiro. Mr. Shapiro wishes to Impress upon the publio at large that the latest addition to his several cafes Is to be run strlotly as a merchants' and business men's resort, and in to eater to gentle men only. From T to If o'clock this evening a high-class musical quartet will render selections and the manage ment extends a cordial invitation te hi many friends and patrons,. ' i r- r For the rdlfbrstre the hot bread, hot biscuit, cake and other pastry light, sweet and exceUent in every : quality - rf? . STo other goodasRpya or holesomene. & r.',! AGED LUO SLEEPING enrEEii two cgf fins Poor and Without Friends, Mich ael Reardon Lives for Year ' With the Dead. (Jevnal Seeeial SwtIm.) - San Francisco, April 14. An old vault In Calvary oemetery was the home se lected by aged Michael Reardon, when he became too decrepit to work and knew not where to go, and he was found titer last night by Special Policeman J. J. Flanagan, snugly ensconced 1 tween-.two coffins that contained the bones of people dead nearly half, a cen tury, e '.- How long he has been sleeping In the place is not known, but as he has been familiar figure in the neighborhood : Give IK-Graves' Tooth Powder one trial and you will ase-no other. Makes yellow teeth white, clean : and beautifuL : "Society and your health demands Its use twic-a-day"; so the dentists say. I handy nsetal eaas a bottles, SS. D'-5rtiJ' Tcsth PocdtrCs Statement No. 1 Hcliet Shsll the people select their United States Senator?. ; '. Believing In this principte the following csndidates ' have chosen these words to be placed sfter their names on the Repub lican nominating- ballot: "Promises always to vote for PEOPLE'S CHOICE for Uni ted States Senator." "This" system Will eliminate the election of a Senator from legis lative matters. , . . ,1 , V : For Joint State Senator, - Clackamas and Multnomah: 51 GEO. M. ORTON. T For State Senator, Malt ,nomah; : 1 56 JOHN GILL. ' , ' For Representatives; 51 LH. ADAMS. ' " . " 59 J. C. BAYER. ; 62 D. C BURNS. . 67 J. B. C 69 .JOHN 75 W.-Pr-: COFFEY? . DRISCOLL. A. . KEADY. 79 S. A. MATTHIEU. 83 A. H. SANDSTROM. ' ' B5 EDWARD T. TAOOART. 87 1 EDOAR H. THORNTON. 8 WM. WANNER. , v-: ef ' ' i third of a ceritu baking powde V, Many low-priced bnltatloo baking; powders are upon the msa , ket These are roads with alum, and care should b taken to void tbem, as alum Is a poison, never to be taken la the food, aOYAf SAKINtt SOWDM CO, NfW VORK' for several years the opinion' Is that he has been begging meals by day about , the city and would return . at night to the strange habitat among the dead. His bed consisted of sacks and rags of old coats for covering and when arbused by the policeman he asked to be let alone, adding that he v. as fairly comfortable and had no de Sire to change hla realdence. The offi cer asked him If he did not fear to sleep amid such weird - surroundings with coffins for bedfellows, aad he said: - "Oh, the dead won't harm me; It's ths living that I am afraid of." . Hs was taken - to - the station - - and made comfortable for the . night, and wUl probably be sent to the almshouse Reardon. who Is 70 years old, has seen better days. . TRIES TO CHECK BABY AS PIECE OF BAGGAGE (Joorn.l Special Berrlte.) Milwaukee. Wis., April 14. Baggage Master Runyon of the union station has made another enemy for the railroads. SATURDAY mm mm T , Tea Spoons, per set S. . 'Dewert Speees, yet set S, '" Tablespoons, per set S, H9c 89c 99c 4 ; Regular1 price, 1., Rerular Utah Solid Metal Spoons are the same Th.r.f nr. h.v. nA nlstlns tA wear ntt x many years and will last a lifeUme. ; ; i.S W El r(5; s&j xgiS? . Jy FIRS T A H D JAY LOR- S TR EEtS OMMMf . I-'.,-.' V ust as ris but : established the. -rule "that babies cannot be checked as baggage. A young ' womaji asked him to check a baby car riage to an Interior town. . As he was lifting the carriage Into the car. be dis covered that It contained a big dimpled baby fast asleep. "Here, here, this won't do," he called to th woman. "Come get your baby." "On, he'll be all right. "Be ha Just been fed and; won't wake op for an hour," answered the woman. "Wo don't check babies as bag. You'll hare to carry him, retorted the baggage-master. - "Well, I think you aad your old rail road are hateful thinga," she snapped, but she carried the babjr.- ---- r- Blg work expected In Bohemia, this summer. " No pill Is aa pleasant and posltlv as De Witt's IJttle Early Risers.. These famous little pills are so mild and ef fective that children, delicate ladies aad weak people enjoy their cleansing ef fect, while strong people say they are -the beet liver ptlis sold.' Never gripe.- SPECIALs l w mm price, I1.TS. Regular price," t.00. T pure, bright metal "clear through. " ' Th.. kav. lv,n mmmt f.tfnfk fm , , , : Crystal Water Bottles -Crystal Water Bottles Pretty "Rose Cut" crystal water bottles; can be used . for flower Jugs. ' Regular value, 15c . . WcSpeclal-rWc: A: ,,M Ml r ,7 ?