The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, May 07, 1907, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 7. 1907.
11
PRINCIPALS IN BOISE TRIALS
BY HIS FAMILY
President of United States Stee
Corporation Is Reconciled
to Relatives. ,
:
WILL RECEIVE MABELLE"
1 , OILMAN AFTER WEDDING
II
if
' - '
Residents of North Braddock Believe
Conple , Were Secretly "; Married
: Some Time .Ago and That the New
v York Ceremony Is Farce. ',
.(Joaraal Special Serrlee. '
1 Pittsburg, Pa., May 7. WlHUm Ellis
Corey, president of the United State
Steel corporation, 1 reconciled to Ma
family in North Braddock and all ths
, trouble growing out of the divorce of
nis wife, Mrs, Laura Cook Corey, he
been bridged. i y;
A. A, Corey, father of the teleor-
poratlon president, and othen of the
- family, -will -attend : his marriage to
Mabelle Oilman. Mrs. Coray, hla moth
er, always sided with her son, and shs
, was the first of . tha family- to renew
iniimmcy f wun -.mm. Reconciliation
wwtna father followed. ' -
Several months befor . the marital
troubles of W. E. Corev and his wife
were maae public, Corey mads . gift
to his mother of 1260,000 In United
States steel bonds. She has since been
7-drawlng Interest and It la said may
realise on the bonds : whenever she
pleases. This gift became known only
:. a day or so ago..-", .i...; .'. ::-..
Braddock residents believe that Corey
. and Miss, Oilman have been secretly
. married and only plan to be remarried
in new Tork for the sake of appear
, ancea.
TRAIN HELD UP
(Continued irom Par One.) ,
of the holdup of IhT Burlington express
two years ago, when the express mes
senger waa shot. , i 4 .
. Tb bandits this morning evidently
sought to dynamite the through safe of
the North Coast, carrying currency conr
algnments from northwest cities to Chi
cago and the tmst. Four years ago
desperadoes killed an engineer on the
North Coast, escaping with a large sum
of money. -k :.
.Engineer Clow was one of the oldest
engineers on the Northern Pacific, and
is said to have ieen held up by bandits
once before. : . i s- ;
Boarded Train at Batta.
The holdups tparded . the train at
Butte, presumably, and crawled over the
tender Just after the train left Welch's
' spur, near Homeetake, and ordered En1
glneer Clow to bring his, train to a halt.
Tills be refused to do and waa prepar
ing to make a fight when the robbers
began -firing. Inflicting wounds which
proved fatal, these being bullets through
the heart and abdomen. v . "y
The fireman was shot with hla hands
'la the air. .?,. H ?;..:.,
.After the shooting the robbers pulled
the, amerganoy airbrakes stopped the
train and escaped Into-the hills, leav
ing behind the suit case containing the
dynamite, with which they had ex
pected to blow the safes in the a
press car, v . v V.':.'-' V-K'-:
The attack of the robbers waa most
cowardly, the engineer being , shot : in
' the bscar before being ordered to stop
the train. ' .. ' :
FORCED "TO PASS
(Continued from. Page One.)
story. He said that Morgan told htm
the bill eras fraudulent and give him
Others to' pass. .JMorgan. says that . he
refused at first but that Morgan used
his Influence over him and practically
forced the youth to pass the bills.
At one time Mclntyre struck Morgan
. over the head with a revolver for re
fusing to pass a bill, which ao VMIy
frightened the young man that ho of
fered no further insistence.
The pale , then pursued their , course
to Seattle and many other cities ana
towns in Washington, finally ; passing
a raised bill on a Chinaman la Pendle
ton who gave information that led to
the detection of the erlmlnaJe. Secret
Service Operative Thomas B, Poster
had been pursuing the men all this
time, however, but did not catch- them
until they got into Idaho.
Morgan made no resistance to remov
al to Portland and acted on the advice
of his parents, whom Assistant United
tates Attorney James . Cole stated in
court i were respectable persons living
at Poeatello, to come to Portland and
tell all he. knew. - Morgan did, ao and
guv testimony against Mclntyre, who
been indicted on eigni counts. .-.
MoTVran will have to pay -a fine of
$2fio in addition to serving two years
at McNeil's Island.
From Left to Right Attorney Fred Miller of Spokane; Sheriff Shad Hodglns of Bolie, Ada county;
William D. Haywood, secretary of the Western Federation of Miners; Attorneys Leon O. Whttaell of Ward
ner; Charles H. Moyer, president' of the Western Federation of Miners; Attorney Edmund F. Richardson of
, Paarert'Depnty Sheriff Erastus Beemer. of Boise, and Charles" A.' Pettlbone, aa honorary member of the
Western federation of Minors. The three attorneyi in the group are counsel for the defense. The boys In
front lire In Caldwell. V-'-;:fV;rv-V:!''V'Vf?!, 'S-: V- - "
STOLEH now
IIEIV SPENT
Embezzling Cashier of Virte de
( Paris Mad Good " Invest
ments With Proceeds,; ; )
GIRL TOOK THOUSANDS
' FROM TRUSTING FIRM
After Suicide of Miss Alice dheval-
lier at Los Angeles It Is piscoT
ered That She Leaves an Estate
of Sixty Thousand Dollars. -h
. (Joorael Special SetviceJ '
Los Angeles,, May 7. Miss Alice 'I
Chevallier, a former cashier i of the
Ville de Paris, whose tragic death, sup
posedly by suicide, was followed by the
disclosure that she had, taken thousands
Of dollars from the store,' leaves an es
tate of tSO.000. Her wilL scribbled on
a bit of note paper, shortly before shelsrove
LAWYERS F WASHINGTON
WOULD HEAR FAIRBANKS
' 7
To, This End It Is Sought to
, ; Data the Bar Association
" " Meeting Forward.
v vi (Joaraal Special Serrlce.) .
Olympia, May 7. It la probable that
the meeting of the State Bar associa
tion, -which la set for July 17, IS and It
at Seattle, will be held a week earlier
in order to permit the members to hear
n address by vice President Charles
W. Fairbanks. As soon aa it waa learned
that the vice president would be in the
state thla summer Secretary Shaffer of
the State Bar association undertook to
arrange to have him address the associ
ation. ' - ' ' : ". ' .
To this end S. O. Cosgrove. a prom
inent member of the bar . association
and a former collego-roommata of Mr.
Fairbanks, extended to him an Invita
tion to meet with the association. - The
vloe president replied that he had al
ready - made engagements which would
preclude his being in Seattle on - the
dates sot for the meeting of the bar as
sociation, but that ha would be in that
city a week earlier. -
This ' information, sent to Mr. Cos-
some days ago, waa confirmed
LIQUOR LACKS
ALL PROTECTION
Rev. Chapman' Says Whiskey
, Traffic -Lies Outside the v
, Pale of the Law.
died, was probated this morning. JBhe I m a telegram received today from Vice
leaves .all to her sister. Mrs. Louise I rresiaeni fmirnanas ny jusuce . u.
Holmes, with whom, she lived, entire-1 Crow of the supreme court, who a
ly Ignoring Mrs. E. Hartung of Ana-lalso a college classmate of . the vice
helm, another sister. :.,-w ; ,v president
It is . understood that restitution of 1 - Steps will now be taken by Secretary
nearly 150,000 will bo made to .the I snarrer to nave the bar association
Villa de Paris. . Miss Chevallier . was I meeting held in Seattle on July 11. II
possessed of excellent business quail-1 and in. The vice president is recog-
ties -rm invested advantageously the I nlsod aa one of the ablest lawyers in
money she toqk from the deparfment I the United States and the members of
tne state sar association are very much
pleased with the prospect', of having
nun nonor tneir oooy witn a formal ad-
dresa. -:: .;; .:, - r- :.-:.
store, of which aha was a trusted em
ploye. -,
STATE SUPREME COURT
SITTING AT; PENDLETON J. W. BRANDENBURG .',-
DEAD AT KLAMATH
rRoeelal MsDateh to The loornsL)
Pendleton. Or.. May 7. -The May term
of the supreme cour Is now in session
nere. ynier J usiice n. a. cean, j uage
F. A- iMoore, Judge Robert Eakln and
CommtMloners W. T. Slater and Will
R. Kins are present Attorney-General
M. Crawford and several ; leading
eastern Oregon attorneya are la attend
ance. Cases are being rapidly disposed
of and the entire docket will be clear In
few days. - v
' Washington's Orchard Acreage.
Olympia,,' Wash., May T.- AeeordJng
to the report Just made to the governor
by State Horticultural Commissioner F.
Huntley for the year ending March
31, 1907, there are in the atate of Wash
ington J6,607 acres of land devoted to
commercial orchards. - The horticultural
Industry is increasing at a tremendous
rate and will soon be among the very
large..pqea in. the state,j-i.y,;...
(Special Dliptteh to The TonreaL) - -'
Klamath Falla. Or May JJ' W.
Brandenburg, for 'over 10 yeara a resi
dent or Klamath county, waa buried
here Thursday, v. He was formerly em
ployed In state Institutions at Salem,
and came, here to superintend the Xe
nix Indian school. After six years la
that - capacity he x superintended ' the
Klamath Indian school for seven yeara.
Ha then moved to this city, where oe
resided till his death. - Four , children
survive him, Clyde K. and Floyd H. of
this city, Mrs. Maud Cox of Schun. Ne
vada, and Mra Aithea Pogue of Salem.
A Cincinnati Judge ordered a woman
to leave the courtroom because she wore
peekaboo waist . -That . fellow - will
bear watching. v - s
!.::":
Every element necessary for the
development of bodily vigor and
endurance is found in correct pro
portion in the foda cracker.
1
A
n
n
is' the ; perfect soda cracker, fresh,
clean, wholesome, with all the
crisp, flaky , goodness preserved.
to,
ft
.
3
In dust tight, . , -
moistun proof paekagit.
NATIONAL BISCyiT COMPANY
. Bnlldlng Permits. -permits
have been issued as fellow's:
R. A, Traver, dwelling, East Eighteenth
between- Holbrook : and Kllllngsworth
avenuesi' $1,000; J. ZUlnskl. repairs,
Union avenue between Beech and Fail-i
ing, ISO; Ernst Kroner, dwelling. East
Conch between- East Twenty-second
and East Twenty-third, tt.000; 'James
Jensen, - repairs, Madison between Sec
ond and First, 1300; W. Goosllrf, re
pairs , Tburman near Thirty-second,
$700: P. A. Engle, dwelling, Ebey be
tween Hlbbard and Mlsner, $1,800; Ore
gon Packing company,, factory, Kast
Eighth between East Tamhlll and Bel
mont, - $4,000;- . Donahue, dwelling.
East Seventh near Beech, $1,000; Jung
Bhong Tong, repairs. Second between
Tamhlll and Taylor, $600; N. Al Walker.
foundation, Montgomery between Four
teenth and Fifteenth, $300; J. H. Dakin.
dwelling, East Ninth between Karl and
Rhine, $1,600; D. T. Sherrett. dwelling,
East Sixteenth between East Madison
and East Main. $300; H. Schata, dwell
ing, Jessup between Kerby and Com
mercial, $1,600; C.mSmock.'V dwelling,
East Thirty-seventh v between East
Washington and East Alder, .: $1,660;
Froi:.XJndennanr- dwelling,- East 61-
teenth between - Wygant . and Alberta,
$500; Mra E. W. Russell barn, Kerby
between Simpson and Jessup, $100; Ia
O. Lenon, dwelling, Division between
East Thirty-first and East Thirty-second,
$1,600; H. and I Ehlers. repairs,
Montana avenue between Prescott and
Skidmore, . $340. i ' ;-, '
Rev. Ervln 8. Chapman, D. D., IXk'D.,
of Los AJageles, a noted temperance ad
vocate, delivered, hla famous lecture, "A
Stainless Flag," at the Taylor-street
Methodist church last night Dr. Chap
man puts the liquor trafflo outside the
pale of the law and gives it no footing
in our . government He referred to
court decision- in various parts of the
country, including decision by the
national supreme court. Which bore him
out in bis contention.
Dr. Chapman is the originator and
prune mover in. "Stainless Flag Sun
day," . a day set apart for aermons in
every .church - In the United States
which will have for their text subjects
following closely along the lines of his
lecture.- Pastors of Portland churchea
have taken , up the' movement and will
celebrate the day In this city June 80.
the day set aside for the celebration
throughout the country.
On that day a concerted action wiU
be taken against the liquor trafflo that
will be widespread In character and
concerted in action. Dr. Chapman says
that It will be the greatest move for
temperance . ever made in the world.
' Dr. Chapman is not only a minister
of the gospel but a lawyer as Well, He
has made a close study of court deci
sions in reference to the liquor trafflo
and says there la no authority in law
which m conflict with the claim
that the civil government is under the
most imperative obligations to prohibit
everything that is immoral. Because
of this obligation, lotteries and prise
flghting have been prohibited and Dr.
Chapman contends that the liquor traf
flo should be abated, one Indiana de
cision -which Dr.' Chapman quotes la
where the court declared that a place
for the sale of intoxicating liquor as a
beverage Is a nuisance per - se and
should be abated as such.
After his lecture last night. Dr.
Chapman left for Seattle, accompanied
by Mrs. Chapman. He will lecture in
Seattle tomgnt.
fpr
Jow i Spirit Was Laid.
From BlackwelFs Maaailne, 1
A ghost, a. vague white form which
flitted about a small neglected graveyard
In Oalway, much to the alarm of those
who lived near by. one of the gentlemen
of our party undertook to lay. ' Oolng
out not far from midnight he did, indeed,
soon become aware of r, white figure
looming toward him through the, dark
ness. Our friend, . however, held on his
way undeterred. .- ' -
'Ghost " he said in sepulchral tones
when he came jienr, "could you drink a
"I could so-your hohor." blithely re
sponded the ghost, taken off his bal
ance by1 the- unexpected- offer ahd. Stand
ing revealed as the principal poacher
of the neighborhood, who had availed
himself of this Spectral guise to set his
night lines and carry on his other dep
redations undisturbed - - - ;
, Before the Spring.
; By Laura Ackroyd.
When, like a weary king.
With penury of gold., the sun delays
His proud apparelling.
Sadly the earth is held
With frosts that numb, and wlnda that
- few shall praise,
Tin winter's doom is knell'd. ;
Tet. wondering. I am 'ware .
How. beauty thrills the melancholy
,-hours,
A spirit In the air
' Kindled by distant seas, -
Against the tlfne of rosy tamarisk
flow'ra, , ,
- And wood anemonea. .
' Bleak are the skies and yet.
Hearts shall not bow to lawa that, may
f. ; . witnnoia
- . Wlnd-floW'r and violet I
' Neither can walls constrain
The dreamer's Joy, who tells, when
-,,' earths aold. , ... ; -.,
How June shall come again. .
So winter, that appears -
Loath to be gone, are hawthorn buds
. . are red, ,i,v v. -
I spurn with lta old fears I '
While on starvd senses fall
Murmur of waves and swaying trees
Instead, "
'That shall atone for all. -
Deer Rid Its Head.
. last winter some of the Berlin MIHs
company's men caught a deer and fed it
In an abandoned ' camp for a few days.
The way the deer waa caught was rather
peculiar. - -1 i :'';:
They chased him in the snow and the
foolish deer, instead of running away.
tan to a trainioad oz logs and stood
with hla head sticking under the logs
between two ears. - Like the ostrich he
probably thought thataa he couldn't see
he couldn t be seen.
Maybe the president will yet consent
to Teoay and Tan. -v-..,
I M""llllt!lB
COFFEE 1 .
You cn buy somethinp;
called "coffee" at 10c lb
with 3000 miles ' of ,R . R
freight-from; the roaster;
don't v - y
Tear rreear returns year steser if yea -deal.
He SchUUag't Brstc ws far eiaw ,
r . : MP -J .
Mt -: , tl '
I
eW0KA iwiisaaiii n nti'mMWCKirt tTt- iinnrriTraiiin,J - - "
Reliable Juvenile Apparel
LLIABIX to the extent that mothers, can not go amiss
in accepting as a guide to correct fashion the numerous
Suit and Reefer styles we arc showing for Summer; Reliable
also in excellent workmanship and pure fabrics. Our Juvenile
.Department insures every shopping convenience. Our prices
are less than those of other reliable shops.
Children's Wash Suits College Brand Clothes
'V-
Undoubtedly the choicest assort- I Designed exclusively for; ; young
ment in the Northwest. Many " fellows and college chaps. They
new effects in the Peter Pan, Sailor
and Russian Suits. ;-1.v:
WASH SUITS !s0c to $6.00
have all the little features of fash
ion that a voung man is certain to
want in his clothes. We are the
sole agents., . " ' '
Deailrable and valuable present jjlvon free with every
Suit or ' Reefer at or over. , A variety from which
to choose. ' ' -
"Record BreoKer
Proof - that we deliver the
goods. Thanks to a gener
ous public Without quesv
; tion we are giving a better
selection of styles ancj good
values that wear at
03.50 and $4.00
than any shop in town.
Every kind c of leather for
gentlewomen and gentlemen
Come and see the good Shoes
Come and See the Good Shoes
WWW
V ' ; ; '
SoiiTiJqlb
29IMorrlsoa St., near Fifth
USE GIRL
(Continued from Page One.)
"1
tired of hla sweetheart, for ha suddenly
disappeared. A few weeks later Miss
Walker ran across - him - in Seattle, i
Whipping out a revolver aha took five
shots at Shuman, one shot - going
thrnnrh his left hand . and the other
hrough his 'left arm. :r;
Homln to Portland. Bhuman 'secured
work at the Park Inn saloon, lit Wash
lngton street, and later wrote the letter
for which the autnormes aspect to con
vict Wm.iIZl,tl.z:
Miss Walker turned Jtha letter over to
Postofflce Inspector- O. C Rlcharda
She was subpoenaed fiefora tha federal
trrand iunr and came to Portland laat
week, and slnco has given no end ' of
troubla Finally whan sha waa wanted
yesterday to testify aha could not be
found. Later sha apepared and cava her
All this time tha , authorities were
trying to find Bhuman. They relied upon
Miss Walker to furnish them wnh this
Information our sha kept putting them
off wlttKevaslva answers until they
nnauy aeciaed to follow , her, believing
that Miss walker - waa meeting him.
Nicholson followed her about ths city
until sha met Shuman downtown last
night, when ha stepped up and arrested
mmmmmm
r, ; iCTiITiN 1 ; tnv r-HM fTF WP
1
J3 m
:l-j:
RASMUSSEN (SCO.
DISTRIBUTOR!?
Second and Taylor Streets, Portland
r o TOtr xovb
our babyt You wonder why he cries. I
ur a Doiua or white s cream vermi
fuge and ha will never cry. Most babies
have : wormn tnd - the mothers don't
know It White's Cream Vermifuge rids
tne cnua or worms ana oies,ns out its
system in a pleasant way. . javery moth.
er should keep a bottle of this medU
nine In tha house, --with it,: rear ni
never enter her mind, , Price 25a. Bold
WOMAN'S CLUB WILL -
.AID FAMINE SUFFERERS
At tha last'meeUng of tha Woman's
club a committee was named, with Mrs.
'N. Mv'McDanlel aa chairman, t con.
slder tha matter of raisin a fund for
tha fa ml m sufferers in China. That
committee has dtded to report tha ad
visability of askln m member of the
Woman's club statlont-d at some central
location la t! e city to receive sucn
contributions, and also ' augsta t'
soma prominent banker be .-k 1 to i
celve subscriptions from out of t
Such a motion will be presontl f
the consideration of the Woman .; ,
at the next meeting.
The Los AnyUm local of
tenders Internatlonftl u-!.-j
members. Tlie avr j i
121 a week m-lth A J
lntematior-l r- ' '' !
a grtM 1. i
oy H orugrsuk . .... -