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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1906)
Art plentiful every pa t has something that will' please and instruct bur the" -t: jihinjs titrate calculates to attract attentt6rt"ife-some6rihe "many pretty-cMf dren in the Baby Contest," the colored funnies and a capital .story by O. Henry IN - THESUNDAY JOURNAL" ,- GOOD EVEiMHG - o THE WEATHER. -.. Jcurnal Circulation vcsuruy -i -FairtonightrFridiyiairand warm- tr; northwest Find, . - , T y..f .... - VOL. V. NO.' 74. ' ! PORTLAND, OREGON. ' THURSDAY '-EVENING,' MAy 'si, , 1906 SIXTEEN PAGES. "i ; PRICE TWO CENTS. S?A?iSP,M5,cStS NOTABLE LF E AT.U115 " (llU)v irfc ifrWD CONSTRUCTION toSeSts . subsiding reatJDamage Done tp :Cities of Eastern Of -gon Many - People .Are Homeless rra7ftcrUTtrBridg - Washed AwayOver Hundred X Passenger .in "; Pendleton -Damage. Reaches" in the Hun . dreda of Thousands. - s " r " tRpeelal DUpatcn to Th lour!.) ' " rndlUii.'r... May SI. The bit flood. has Abated, Th . water began ' going down at o'clock yesterday, af ternoon and eentfnned to recede, until la"BW PAT 111 1H I1IWH T HUM city. 7 Bl ! block of tba lave was '- washed Wna man Xlian-l.SO ra- k'id'ent f the lower section of the city ' were 'compelled to leave their home. Many are now' preparing to return. t Phe prperty loaa,; thourhftijot J" jretentirely estimated. , i - Although report came of another big .flood last, evening the people -held 4beir nerve, and watched until -this morning. when -sign Indicated that the flood la LjOi:nrer.iid .th. sua-is.shlnlrtr brleKt Farmer . Jl vine alone the . . Umatilla river were compeiiea to aeeert.tneir homee. Many (amlllea are camped at . Pendleton. .. . . . . , . ' ' ' '"" Xallroad meavleet ZoBer. - - -The losa of llveatock will be.' treat O. R. AN. llnea are deatroyed and no train will arrive for ' nearly a week, i Th railroad wlU be the heavleat lo- fR , y- r TheTbwr plant of the Northweatern - Oaf Electrto company, located on the : Little WaUa Walla near Milton, and furnlshlna power and light for Pendle . ton and other town, were partially de troyed Thl city will have no- llfhta tor a few wwu - Houaea were aeen floating down the river. Several famtllea will be left aU moat pennlleea. Had the levee above lh c1ty,whtchwa aaved only- by bard wrk, been broken the entire city would 'hav been flooded.' Many alfalfa field (Continued- on .Pag Two.) -OIL r.lAGHATE Zjotiri.Dv Rockefeller,-Wife; and : Friends : Leave for Europe in Palatial Apartments on the Deutschland u -i -i- (Joaraal Special rl.') ' ' ' TTork. May ai. MrrkndMt John D. Rockefeller Bailed for Hamburg 1 today. RockefellerUnd hi friend oo- rupy th flneat quarter In' th Deutach- land. Everything that th multi-mill- lonalre could poeBlbly wirh for may be ; found In the. grand suit Rockefeller will occupy during the week he will be on the water. .'-..'' L- The Rockefeller huHK I praotloally a hotel apartment of everal room, with all lhe comfort of home within eney reach. Rockefeller will have a splendid ; bathroom, with shower . bath, electric " bath and everything els he may, wish In th bath line. He may aleep either "1 In ar luxurious bunk or on a. bed made nf brass. There are settee and lounge In plenty end draperies will shut off any SMOTHERED TO DEATH Til PLAYING IN A TRUNK . S ' (Jearnal Snerlal Srvle. ' Kankakee, 111., May ai. Three daugh tera of Mr. and Mrs. Adelord Vanslettet aged . and I year, were found smothered to death seated Upright In a trunk In the -home of the .family last J. nlftht. .The clroumstanoe of the death are mystsrious. ; ' The trunk I nolj of th self-locking kind and th oldest girl wit strong ' enough to hsv raised the Ud had It not , been fastened. . The coroner Is making an Investigation. He sayai there are several mysterious point In' the ces. There sre 10 children In the family. JVanslette l tcamater. Tho mothr H the c ! -nt to an upstair r - t '. t !i l i tr.ernoon, rre- Uhiet txecutive ot iRe ?State Will iSpeak to Citizens" at -Empire Iheatre lonighti ClrmaxT'Csm)paigJiJVyillte Reached Bands Will Furnish ": Music PromlntntCltlzenfto Be on: fiatfomi Candw ' dates Will Be Present. ' " ' . r - ' ' ' V Governor Oeorje E. Chamberlain will be principal speaker at the big Demo cratic rally tonlaht at the Empire the atre. , Aa tbla I to v be the goyernor'a only i nilltloal. parh, in, hi ..lyinie f during the. campaign, creat; criwd.la attre-te-e fa Wnlacei AHhotich 'the preixtmttona for th meeting Jtare.beea rnade- bjr ther-Deniocra'tlc' county com mittee, under wnoae auapicea it win oe held,-, hundred of Repnblican will be preenf Tocheerrh- off Ictar- wtioae- ad ministration of atate affair ha won their aupport Several band have been ngaged, and , every-, ptreon who find hlmnelf at. or- near Twelfth and lor rlaon -atreet tonight -will get 'a good Idea'rrtheenrhuslawthartiak'tieen' a marked feature of the Chamberlain campaign.' '' -. There will be three apeakera In all. Rupreme Judge T. O. Hailey, who la a candidate for the -election ito the ofllee he now hold. wlU make a brief ad-, dreaa.. Charlea K. Henrya prominent bualne man ef thl city, - will apeak a the peraonar representative of United State Senator John M. dear in, who, when-appealed to by hta friend to make a campaign tour' of the atatc, choee to remain at hi poat of duty In Washington. ' ; -- " .'.'Z' OlUaeM WIU Tin anatfono. rT- Many 1 prominent ctttaen have been appointed vlce-preildent of th meet lug and wlU occupy seata on th plat- LXornv.Amotif. them , are the following: Mayor- Harry-Lane Fred V. Holman, Cl R.BJtxyAJMict ArtonieyjJohn Manning. Alex Sweek,-Judge - Thoma (Continued on Page TwoJ SAILS ABROAD , e. - -v: . ' view of the Atlantic if the sight tends to makethtTaveler feel quaky.-: : A apecial steward haa been assigned to wait on the Rickefeller party and on no one else during the trip across, A special deck steward' will alao await the pleasure of the Rockefeller coterie when It I, on deck and. ae to It that hi charge ar made a comfortable a possible. - - All efforts to see the Standard Oil magnate proved futile. Mr. Rockefeller decided to' go to Europe to see his daughter, Mrc. Charles A. Strong, who waa said to be dangerously i ill at Cannea - Mr. Rockefeller I enjoying his first experience of the kind, for despite his .vast wealth he ha never yet been abroad. ' umably to play.; -Th remainder of the family was at supper and no Inquiry waa rnade concerning the missing one for an ' hour. 'Then, after a frantio search, th mother, found them In the trunk. . ,-. ... :.k , " - All member of th family agree that no sound were heard from th upper rooms. It Is hinted broadly by th authorities that arrest may, follow a closer Inveatlgatlon of the affair. The mother at, first said th .trunk had a self-locking clasp, but this was dis proved.' It Is considered 'remarkable that the children Should die without any effort to ssve themselves, which would nave hen successful had the trunk been ui.:oc'...x - -. PENINSUL A INDUSTRY TO BEGIN . MADRID; MAY' 31(BULLETI BRIDAL, PARTY WEKK HURLED-AT; THEMr- BOTH:ESCAPED"UNHURT,THOUGH -BYSTANDERS WERE i INJURED. .THE 60MB 'WAS THRQWN,FROM A BALCONY AND KILLED. TWO 1 tTrrCT?c ATTi'rwrn Tn'THff ViMr.' r AOTJTAr.T? ,iMn A ' PWTTJl A Rnv WAS litVK'Mb? ar dt rs)iaWAvwabair af - a a w - w viaia a m w "w ' w ARRESTED 'IN CONNECTION WITH THE' BOMB THROWING. - ".rV:-V. e Madrid in. Holiday HtfireHVilnesses-a Brilliant Pageant pf Royal r Splendor- (Jouroil Special Srtic.) ' XHarTS7fWay " I AltorisorXIITTTnng 0 Spain, and -Prince Ena of Ratten berg today were married with ell the pomp and ceremony prescribed by. the Roman - Catholic church ' and ,8pan1sh etiquette. The spectacular part of the wedding, consisting of the royal pro ceaalnn to and ,frcunJLhft..,ctiurf blwaB witnessed by-the largest assemblage of people that ever crowded into the streets of the capital. , The early morning hmr--witnessed an Interesting and pretty" Spanish cus tom. In strict tnoognlto Princess Ena Bmiiiuaiiina uniy nv 'liar inmiji'i'. if a the Pardo-palace for. Madrid. .At fhc city (tat the bride-to-b was. yrnet' by a lqn..fcorsan. ' Thi-waatji yvuth ful king, who galloped In frost, of the coach until . the senate bouse was reached. Here- Alfonso left the- bride, who entered thfe senate "house 'to don' her bridal attire, , The bride's party joined the bride groom's cortege on the Plasa Orlente. At 10 o'clock. l!nhedisttncerwasaa--denly heard the grand swelling strain or ths national anthem and air along the . route the multitude uncovered In anticipation of the approach . of , th bridal party. . : ' . , ; - Ta moyal rrooassloa. . " ,T The - royal . procession - waa" a- spec tacle of medieval magnificence. . Eight groom.'' on horseback, - led -the .march. They- were followed - by four bugler.. and cymnat players, on norses with ori ental trappings." led by haftd; riding horaes -of th, king and future queen, ready saddled, led by grooms,- and six other royal hone. . covered with hand some velvet cloth of red. blue, green and yellow, embroidered with armorial (Continued on. Page Four.) . King Alfonso f.llNERS TRIALS POSTPONED UNTIL NEXT AUTUf.TN : StBk.BBSBBBlSBBBSSassassssaSBlBta-aBBBI , L Caldwell Court prants Motion of Prosecution to Await Su- preme Court's f Action. - Rpeela1 pupates, to Th Journal.) Boise. Ida., May ll-When court opened atjCaldwell . tnia . morning at torney for the prosecution presented motion for tb continuance of the Moyer 'and Haywood murder caao on the ground., that the habeas corpus pro ceeding bad net ba determined ia the PRINCESS EM. PMRRIES ... -XMG R LFONSQ OF SPAIN If ' 1 . ' ff sAt ('' ' - ' ' ; : . I K. TUKN1IM U r KCJM . TfiJtj. !t tJA i nmrn ommmmmmmm t I I??i ' - v mim.&&'-it :? v ; K "K.O"-' '-Ktl 'i,.i'; A't.::'': ..-..: '.?w ti.?::;.- .' Queen Victoria, of Spain. ; , t UPrsrpe Jf ourtj)fthe United State, wtilcb, made it impossible trrfoceeA Judge Smith granted th motion, which waa excepted to by the defendant, who Instated that th ground for th court' action . were .Insufficient. Th court, they claimed, could not take judicial no tice of something, not In evidence. The application was renewed for ball of Moyer, Haywood and Pettlbon and was refused. Thla.waa.also excepted to by Attorney Richardson for th defense, who stated that th supreme ; court had set October for. - argument , on . th habeas corpus appeal and that three or four months woutd elapse before a de cision' and asked if the continuance of the' present case would be for the terml The court said it would not adjourn the term until the rase wa, tried. Jf possi ble tb avoid such' action. , . " :i ";ic-AJKAJ- At 11UMB WAS the Royal Bride. Traveling Men and Others. Grow Enthusiastic - Working for . Reelection, pf Honest Sheriff. 7 Tom Word, now and all the time." la the slogan adopted-by the traveling men and carried from business house to business house by their committee of enthusiastic workers today. The Traveling Men' Tom Word club turned out' In' body today and for several hours called upon the commercial fra ternity and urged them to enlist under the bannar of Tom Word and a clean rlty. And the commercial fraternity enlisted right heartily. ' "It's nothing less than an avalanche," declared one of the committee. "We sre received with open arm every where we go. We are tickled to death over the reception we are getting. The men. wa.AaYeaalrraiicd Jipon-aai eajr anything too good for Tom" Word We ar meeting with -absolutely no opposition except' In the saloons. We predict that the reeult of the election will be the biggest kind of a surprise, even to5 burrriendt:" - - Most of the day's canvaaalng was don In the wholesale district, but be fore, the-vnd of the week It I Intended to. call upon every prominent business man in th city. ., .... . XOquor Ken Work Again SUsa. IJquor men are doing their utmoat to tern . the rising tide of Word' cam paign, but without effect An Instance of their work 1 found in th recent pub lished statements of A.-A.; Cook, presi dent of the Oregon end Washington division of the Traveling Men' association.- He asserts that the association haa not indorsed Word' candidacy, th evident purpose being -to create the Impression that the' traveling men are! ho longer .supporting. Word. , Cook travela for a wholesale liquor house, and. 1 said to be th owner of a saloon Continued on rag Three.) AMITE. AS SOON AS POSSIBLE PACKINGS HOUSES THREE AND LARGE STOCKYARDS -' WILL BE CONSTRUCTED Plant-Will Be, Modeled Afterv Onei at St and All Modern Tadlities WiiniInstalled btTstrtrctiOT Opened as Soon as : Be" Used in Erecting V'Work'on construction of h penin sula - packing-house , -and stockyards plants will b commenced within the next. 19 da ye. If present plan do not miscarry. The work of architect and engineers I completed, and everything Is , In readiness - for- breaking - ground. Th . packlng-houa district haa been laid put for three large plants, - te be bulK 'by Bwlft A Co., Armour A Co and Nelson t Morrl. Th Journal baa received absolutely authoritative ad vice from the east 'that the Portland tripl plant, will' be patterned after th packing-house center st St: Joseph, Mis souri, which sraploys $.000 men, Includ ing -stocky arda employe. - . avtrtkiaar za s-u. ..,'" ' A. It. Fay, wh Handle "th railroad problems of Swlft-A Co.f JULCL Qardf ner. architect and engineer, and. R.-Vsa Pease, manager of the Bt. Jo plnnt of Swift A Co., left Portland for Chicago twQ.day ago, after making a thorough toirof every detail of th plan drawn-and th ground that 1 to be occupied. It I aaid they hav concurred In praotloally every feature of tb plana Tb Swift plant, which will be the first under "construction, will be built along' plan laid, out for th entire scheme of three-plant and a stockyards-jlantto f be Independent of all and serve each one separately. The whole aggregation will be built on the north aide of the peninsula, on ground lying along. -the waterfront opposite Hayden Island: The packing-bouse district will stretch- out between thl point and Maegly Junc tion and be connected with the tracks of the . Hill and Harrlman line, and Wallace McCamant and Other Prominent Republicans Said Senatorial Candidate ""Was Uniit4oerenommitterr "The Oreg-onian never questioned the honesty of Mr, BourneTt motives.'' Oregonian, May 26, 1906. Who could have thought of such a thine;'' All it did was to devote nearly two columns of its issue of luly 7, 1896, to warning- the Repub lican party that Jonathan Bourne, as secretary of the Republican state cen tral committee, might take iBOt ion t6 betray his trust and do Populist poli tics from Republican headquarters. It printed numerous interviews de manding that Mr. Bourne resign at once. In the list were the following: M. C George, formerly a member of congress from Oregon and now s circuit judge. - George A, Steel, now - Republican nominee for state treasurer. Wallace .McCamant , : " ' --7 " T. B. David. T. W. Meldrum.1 W. S. Mason. - - Rufus Mallory. . B. P. Cardwell. ' - William M.-Jack. A.-IJoTpn. .... . . - The interview with Mr. McCamant, now a defender of Mr. Bourne, sug gests the thought that his recent apol PREACHER CONVERTS CHURCH TO GROCERY ! ON BUSINESS Lir.T- .' , :'..-; (Joe rani Sperlal Servtea.) Coahocton. Ohio, May St. "On busi ness principles" waa the terse remark mad by Rev. B. Dillon, when aaked whether he w-s poln to ran a new grocery rt' r 1 v.. I eatabllah, "ltk Christ v. a business res 11 would. - ' - '--1 project t 1 t into a prof!- ' ere; . Possible Brick Will Buildings11- with - deep 4 water transportation thal wlU be secured by areoging tne siougn. kit Win Be Oomylat. - It will be the completeat and most modern packing district In th, world. y Th latest . Improvement from every packing plant In the middle wet will be incorporated in th Portland plant. A nearly a may be advisable tho Swift plant to b immediately "con structed will be modeled after - that ' company's St. Joe plant, and th other will follow, auit-v- William H. Daughtrey, president of the Portland X'nion - S took yard com- pany, returned yesterday from a thre' week- trip of Inspection of the best stockyards In the mMrtle .t, -r thl industry has reached tke Highest point of it development. H visited Chicago, Kansa City, St, Joseph, Oraa-. h;and-flloux City., - V , f : , St. Jo Tarda aa Model. "The St. Joe yard' will be used as our model. They ar the beat planned yard -In th country,"- he said "Wt wlU ultimately occupy O ta; to acres. At the beginning -we -wilt construct ' yard covering 1 acres and add a block or two 4locks at a time aa demand warrant. I wlab The Journal u,i to"th farmer and atockman of -tb Pa cific .northwest that after thl season there will be a market In Portland for all th hoga they can ral. If they be gln now they can have a aCock of hog coming on next spring." He said there will be three : largo packing plant In Portland. He wa (Continued on Pag Two.) ogy mighthaye been s little-stroBcerel. -In. 1896 he saidL "Air. Bourne is a L, pleasant gentleman, but I regard him' v as utterly unfit to be an officer in the Republican state committee. He is ' notoriously opposed to the position pf the party on one of the two great issues of the campaign, and besides he has just been elected to the legisla lure as a Populist. If he holds his present position .thousands of voters will suspect that McKinley is beinir sacrificed by the Republican state committee. Unkind Mr. McCamant! How could you Rufus Mallory indulged in a little sarcasm. He said: "Mr. Bourne should be required, If he desires to manage the campaign of the Pop ulists, to do so from Populist and not ' from Republican headquarters." ' J- B: .Dril trifle impatient. "Fire him out." he sstd "If he haa not the manhood to resign, fire him out Bourne is a man who will dc stroy more in a rmnute than coud be built tip-inr a year. : -r - - - Now who dares to sav that the Ore gonian ever questioned Mr. Bourne's motives? .- ,...;'' ' "Thl running tb" la a misnomer," ' would hav rv to it limit tn of It r stble. " r k i ; ""'.' ....