THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, TUESDAY EVENING, - JUNE , 1907. . REPUBLICANS rELECTED COUNCILMEN-AT-LAEOE REAL TRIAL .(Continued from Pag On.) 1 1 "S , V If ''v ' " ' ' '"' A I .If. J, Drlscoll. , J. B; Cellars,, . c '' J. Aanand. , NEW CITY COUNCILMEN ELECTED 'YESTERDAY TEIUMPH OF MAYOR !.s j- 4 ' - l' . . 1 (Continued from Ftfi On.) Prtclnct 47 ...10J Precinct 48 48 Precinct 49 ,. 8 Precinct SO ............... .H Precinct II ...... 101 Precinct S3 1M ! Precinct SS 114 Precinct 64 , .,.U8 Precinct IS 74 Precinct 88 .111 Precinct 47 t..t,118 Precinct 64 Precinct St Precinct (0 Precinct 61 Precinct 61 Precinct. 61 Precinct 44 Precinct ,66 Precinct 66 Precinct 69 Precinct 74 .146 4 A at ....146 .... Ill Ill 114" 71 66 T .16 67 ToUl ..................7.177 Summary: iWeat elde .. 4.601 Eut Bide .....1,176 114 1 111 174 lt i . 206 131 146 104 170 164 140 118 176 148 . 611 16 162 147 14 141 166 8,507 1.283 6.114 SLEUTHS CAPTURE A. . G Rushlight, Rep.i, Councilman George L. Baker, Rep., Councilman - , Seventh Ward. , . i , J"rom Fourth Ward. (Continued i'rom Pace One.) : m - r ,; - ' ' ' , S . ij . L t - - ' - t - ; " V j r i ; sy I ' ' "v " - loon of Bob Nelson In Ten Strike and necured the monex. Mathleaon, erldently fearing deteo- tlon. gave out the atatement that Johan- aen had cone to Oregron and. In com pany with Hana Johanaen.' the brother of the dead man. atarted for th coaat Believing ImpllclUy In the atory told by Mathleaon. Johanaen not' for a mo ment auapecting that hie traveling com panlon waa the murderer of his rela tive, cam to Portland, trlth th fellow. I Darrow the warm, shaded room they seamed dull and uninteresting. It waa dla appolntlng.' We felt that his alow, low, endless words were almost rocking ua to sleep. '''-; ,- . .'Beada Begin to Wed, ' ? ' At five minutes paat 10 o'clock w felt aa though Hawley had been dron ing on for hour and sleepy hours. He was saying something aoout th West ern Federation , of Miner. Something that w had all heard before In th dim past There was a secret "Inner circle,' he said, there was a scheme deliberately developed to establish a western ampir of labor. . ,;- v v. .William t. Haywood and Pettibone and Moyer were to be th "benevolent despots", of . that- western empire of labor and they planned to gain r-.d hold that empire in part at leaat by a reign of terror and a polldy of assassin atlon. . Steve Adams and Harry . Or chard and John U. Slmpktna were th hired murderers of that polloy of blood. He spoke on and on and we were weary. We had heard It as of tea before. One or two heada Inside the railing did ao tually nod. It seemed alnr.oat that HaW ley would talk himself to- sleep on hla feet and atand Bleeping. There, worn out with words, the court yawned. It waa ao warm and drowsy and bang! r Clarence Darrow rroieata. Darrow waa on -Wa- feet thumping a nook, his vote husky with protest; Hawley waa at the other table hammer ing back . retort 'passionately. Loud words rolled back and forth In angry tumult. The droning court room waa suddenly crackling, electrlo with ex citement. Darrow waa proteating at aomethlng Hawley had said, Hawley re peated it amldat Darrow" s protests. "I say, your honor, that thla defend ant at bar and the other three men In cluded in thla Indictment, not only mur dered Frank Bteunenberg, but ordered and committed a number of other mur ders a well." Hawley thundered It out again, through a hall of Parrow'e pro tests. "You hav no right to make rhetorical atatementa here that you ars not going to put in evidence," Darrow shouted. "I am saying a great deal leaa In my opening statement than I am going to prove in evidence," Hawley hammered back. . . They glared at each other fiercely. Th ateady voice Of the court was heard through th tumult. - v Barrow Defeated. - "Go on Mr. Hawley, go on Jlr. Haw ley, go on Mr. Hawley." 'There is nothing befor ' th" court Mr. Darrow." . , "Oo on Mr. Hawley." , " 'Sit down Mr. Darrow, sit down Mr. Tear Second Crime. After arriving here . Mathleaon ad- dresaed a letter' to th poatmaater at Ten Strike algned John Johanaen, to aend all mall to - Portland. He also communicated with, Nelson relative) to sending two grips by express to him her. Thee two letters furnished the clue to Mathleaon' whereabouts and Chief Grltxmacher was communicated with by telegraph. . . Absolutely no trace can b found In this city of Hana Johanaen and th da- Mr. Darrow sat down. Th peopl in th court room laughed. .Hawley pro ceeded. And everybody waa ' finally awak.i , It waa an old story that h fold. Told deliberately in court It took upon Itself a tragic and bitter algnlflcanc. Coeur d' Alene; the Bunker Hil and Sullivan mines; Cripple Creek; Teliorlde; th kill ing of Frank Bteunenberg; were all re cited, coldly, deliberately and without passion. And having been recited they were Just aa coldly and Just as dellber- S ' ' ' ' . ' .. ',' ' f.f It"': ':' ' '.' , '-' '"u .",; r? ":y-w'? 4.V' V -i- yS-$ 11'' U'- ''( i I Clothing Men's Superior Summer Excelling in Smart Style, Fit and Quality IVfEN who have not yet fully prepared themselves with com 1 f fortable Summer Wearables, will find it both prof itable and a pleasure to inspect our superb assortment of Summer Styles. Our enormous stock still offers complete range of sizes. Only the highest priced custom tailor can produce garments of equal merit. Outing Suits $10.00 to $25.00. , . f lrivanile hpnarfltlPnt 0ur Juvenile Department offers JUVeniie Uepanmeni CVCry possible advantage. Most comfortable place to v shop, greatest variety of desirable styles from which to choose, prices that arc extremely modest. Wash Suits 50c to $6.00. teotlves fear that Mathleaon may have ately and Juat aa much without passion H.7 X ''"JaJUttoc" Jtssu CtoaraajCbBEttrank SMBennett,yRep. Councilman y Sixth Ward.- Photo by Church-' r Eighth Ward, ley. " " : V '" "" .'. ruthlessly slanghtered his victim's brother, fearing that th latter aue- pected him of th murder. The search for th missing man will be continued but aa yet no cine has been found to his whereabouts. : Mathleaon maintains that he has not seen ,. Johanaen for months.. , . , , DOUBT VALIDITY (Continued from Page On.) . i gatlon." i.'.-..'u'i "r-- Ralph R. Don! way said: i "Th failure of advertising th lec , tlon properly-not only . Invalidates th . bond voted , but also Invalidates every amendment to th charter attempted to ' be passed and th new ordinances voted. If 1 this matter 4s properly taken Into ' court and 1 not cured by acqulescenoe and friendly 'suits it is vry serious, 1 I predict that people who seek, to profit by the bond issuea and amend menu to the charter ? wfll . promptly V frame up a friendly suit in which there will b no real. affort made to get the ,. law,, correctly decided, but thr will , p an effort mad to; get the. courts " erroneously to declare that what was done waa .In th sound discretion - of the city officials and a " substantial comnlianee with th law. , .r ; The court will not lnterfer and thus ret. br violation -of the law, the same r?ault aa ii tn jaw naa oeen ooaervea. 1 ( Xin: other words, th old' gam will be played again of getting 'the courta, by ' reason fot their power, to construe (n . law erroneously and thua bind every - body to pardon th violation of th law -on th part of city, officials under th erroneous claim that public policy so requires It. v v. ' REAL TRAGEDY , ; (Continued from 'Pag Opa.) : n constantlv In her eyea a There 1a time, before a word Is spo ken, to see and . note each man and woman separately. There la a filter near . the railing, where a blg, bronzed deputy stands - sentinel at th . green - bais dbor. Th water drips from th tap 'into, the pall, marking the silent seconds dismally. Clarence Darrow sua with his head between his hands a pa- thetio man: seeming burdened with sor- rows. J K solemn air has taken posses sion of the place. It seem to hav come suddenly sine the morning. The v Ion waltlns for the Jury has ended. The Impatlenc and th speculation and the Ivlirhter have gone. . We - hav Ched th Skirt of tragedy at last. IVf "Mr. Clerk, read tba indictment. Th . uru o r ox ins cuuru in iiuw qvvii kviivo, . aeems to shock the alienee, ' W find it hard now: to realise that a man Is ac ' tuany on triaf zor nis in. " g Hlocutlon Attempted, j ' Th' clerk, Otto- F. Peterson' Is young man, wearing a blue serge suit. He walk from his desk and stands fac- : : : COFFEE - " . Bcginniingf with ? good, 1: Schilling's Best goes, on ; to, the finest: all money J " back.' . ' . Tar grocer whim y f sisgaf U r t C an v gair aiaa. .: .. ; ; : lng th Jury, holding th "Indictment In his hands. He begins reading in a low voice, th long, precise finding of th grand Jury of Canyon county agalnat William D. Haywood, Georg A. Petti bone, Charles H. Moyer and John I Blmpkins, tha they dd Jon the 40th day of December, 1805, . feloniously murder and kill Frank . Bteunenberg, on tlm governor of the state of Idaho. 'There is no ;"locutlon"f in th reading, It is meant only for the ears of the Jurors. Th-. voice, under ordinary circumstances But th alienee is so heavy that every word -is. clear. . . v--.:, n- W remember again the story of that quiet afternoon m Caldwell when Bteun enberg was killed., Hla wife and daugh ter sat at th window watching for him. Ever sine th Coeur d' Alene af fair he had been a man of strange hab its, . coming and going '. no on . knew when. ... In Boise he never went to his hotel twice ; in on ;day by Xh same road. H disappeared often ' for days at - a time, The night befor he was killed , he was restless, and could not sleep." He awakened his wife and they read i the Blbl together for an hour. His daughter saw him ' first and ran shouting - to . meet him. . He v passed through his gat and th bomb exploded and - they carried him into his horn to die. - ' ' . i . Memory of taw. Th bald, exact words of th indict ment bring the actual, tragedy ; to life again, - and we understand again -vividly that though the law in America b slow it has a long memory. ,rr The clerk finishes reading and moves back to his desk and the silence falls once mor-:':i-'?'''"''C,V'i Th tired eyes f Haywood's wife are filled with tears. Richardson turns to Haywood and talks to him cbeerlngly. Darrow still sits sadly, seeming a man greatly alone. ' The "court charges the Jury that" they, ahall not discuss the cage In any way, and they tile out heav ily, i Ha wood kisses hla younger daugh ter and leaves th room. The sheriff. at a sign from th Judge cries his for mula. MivviiVf,;'--; -V.'V.h. Hear ye. hear y, hear ye, this honor- brable - court of Ada county stands ; & Journed - until 1:80 o'clock tomorrow morning." " ': '-::--- .-. r.y.'... We lekv the room heavy- rooted and sad.V f James Hawley ' Is "to make hi MiATilnr statement In th mornlnr. W hav ceased from laughing and linpa tlent frettin f at tne laws delays EIGHTH GRADERS WHO PASSED Iff MALHEUR (Special Dispatch ta The Joora.t) Tale, Or June 4. Of th 11 pupils who took th eighth grade county exam ination In May- nine wer successful, as follows: Paulina BUllngsley, Emma Mcuivern, Clarice canfleld, Hazel Lackey, Ruth Puroell and George Hard- man or Ontario; Claud Coward and Harmon Lovelace of Nyssa and Carri Hill of Mosquito. Lillian Tipton, Suby Stansberry and Fred Tregaskls, pupils of the Vale school, who passed their examinations last February, received, eighth grade diplomas at the closing exercises of tu Val school last week, v OREG0NIAK CASE IS CALLED THIS MORNING thew WM Jt h, pum. honeat, rrrr AAlAO iU.UiiAiVf heartyman, .Juat "Big Jim Hawley of charged to the "defendant at bar," Wll 11am D. Haywood. Again and again Hawley impressed upon th Jury -th existence of this lnner-Tlrcle seeking to reach dominion throuQ th blood of men. Again and again he emphasised th existence of "another group of choice spirits,'' who "made .murder trade," and killed, "under th, orders of the defendant at bar." It was a terrible Indictment. Th very unpretentious plainness of Hawley'a at tire and manners, his honest, kind face hla slow, husky . voice, all helped to make it the more terrible. ; " : &ek of Jomn. . M'h lack of pomp and ritual In th furniture and forms of th court, th democratic informality of everything, th presence there of Haywood's crip pled wife and young daughters, the sometimes hesitating speech of the big prosecutor, Impressed the horror of the calendar of crime Hawley was reciting very poignantly upon the minds of all of us. We had expected from Hawley a carefully arranged and purposely im presalve and dramatlo statement We had looked forward . to some rhetorlo and not a little blood-curdling narra tlve. We expected ' a fierce arraign. ment of Haywood, bitter denunciation. even a call for revenge. Ana, instead, Th trial ' of th ; suit of Harlow against the Oregonlan Publishing com pany was begun before Judge Ganten beln in the circuit court this morning. Th forenoon session , was devoted to drawing a Jury; Taking testimony was begun at , 2 o'clock. The Harlows ask 140,000 damages for an .alleged breach of contract referring to the circulation of the morning paper on the west side of th-river south of -Alder street DAN CUPID IS BUSY- , REAPING HIS HARVEST Dan Cupid has already begun to show his partiality, to June, the. month of brides. In the first two days of June, last Saturday , and yesterday, fS mar riage .licenses were Issued by County Clerk Fields' deputies. During the first two days In May only 11 licenses wer Issued, : giving to June a record more than double that of May. Strenuous Chase for a Witness. ' (Special Plapateh to The Joaraal.) Aberdeen, Wash., June 4. After a series of mlsadventurea, including being turned , back -by a forest Are, and a runaway which wrecked a vehicle and left the occupant to pursue the chase on horseback, officers have . returned her with the man, named Benson,- who wak with Gabriel Aneated th night he disappeared and who waa wanted as a witness at the inquest." Anested's body was found In th Wlshkah river laat week. Benaon wafl brought in on horae- We hav touch p th skirts of ; tragedy at I back, handcuffed.. last.. i-';v-g vrt :-''-.,;.;."v---'' vr; '.y . r i. , . . .. v.j ' 4? Reed Jury Drawn. . MULKJ3Y TO ADDRESS ; A- Jury was drawn in Judg Fraser s aepartment oi ins circuit coun uiu it,. s-r f - nmnrvTiirfivi anpariraani vi m circuit vuun uiib ilV; OF. 0. STUDENTS morning to hear th trial of Grace J . . i Ri i colonel vomin. irho is charred tJnlvtrslty of Oregon, Eugene. Jun Pf S11".1, Mwla, also colored, with and when he returned other men had Idy-Ho" talking quietly to the Jurors as a plain, honeat man talks to plain, hon est men. face to face.. s , Murder of murder; murder of mur der; , murder of murder, he named spe cifically, labeled, all so quietly and un ostentatiously, and then as quietly as unostentatiously he told these Jurors - a plain man talking to plain men tnat all those murders had Deen camea out at the command and by th connivance of "the defendant at bar," William D. Haywood. sawley Hot Dramatlo. It would hav been leas tragical If Hawley had been more dramatic. But Hawley seemed so Innocent of stage craft so much a man talking common' nlace. that In the end he presented a case that for th Jury will b mem orable. -;"r; . "... ,-..-,,' :'v;.'.--- At lt-o'elock he stopped, ended with out anv oeroration. and sat 4own, wiP' lng , his - face lustily with his large whit handkerchief. Then immediately afterwards, without any pause or pre amble. Senator Borah called . the first witness for the prosecution, W. F. Wayne. - - - Wayne is a resident of Caldwell, and, under examination by Borah, he sat In th high witness chair near the railing and ' told what he knew of the murder of Bteunenberg on that night or Decern ber 30,1905. - , " Wayne nrst on Scan. ..' - . Wayn was. the flrat man to go to the aid of Bteunenberg after th bomb exploded. Steunenberge right arm. Wayn said, waa mangled; hla left arm waa broken: both legs wer mangled. Th explosion had stripped him of clothing. 'Wayne tried to lift him and carry him into th house, but Bteun enberg was so mangled that he feared to try It alone. He left him lying on th snow, near the gate, with Mrs. Bteunenberg kneeling by him holding his head. The snow was soaked and red with blood. He went for assistance. .Ext-hlted States Senator V. W. I swaung iaa rrom Anarew jonnson on ?;..,f:i,i - th TTiv.r4 April If ' at Fourth and Flanders MUmV aa w v. v . mm a , ' sk.s a m ili. n. els., of '4. will address tha streets, iesumony msing ow iu atudeCts tomorrow morning In Vlllard afternoon. hall, i Invitations hav been extended I to the- Commercial club of thla city and other ilmilar organisations. He will be th last speaker here this year befor commeicement- - His subject has not been snounced. ' ; . " Terf fin gooseberries ar grown ' at i Xrrigot - - alfre's Oood Advlc. - -O. S. Woolever, on' of the best known merchant of Le Rayavllle, N. Y., aaya: "If you are ever troubled With pJes, apply Bucklen's Arnica Salve. It cured me of them for good 20 years ago." Guaranteed for ' sores, ' wounds, burns or abrasions. 2So at Bd Cross 1 Pharmacy carried Bteunenberg Into his own house. where he shortly died. ; It was a terri ble story, affecting in the simplicity of the man who told it The defense did not croas-examln Wayne. , t Bands Bed With Blood. . Dr. G. W. Gu of Caldwell, the phy sician who attended Bteunenberg when he died, followed Wayne, He described Bteunenberg as. having been frightfully mangled. He went Into details of anat omy. Tou fancied him at th bedside with Big coat off and his sleeves rolled back and his hands red. He seemed to bring th antiseptic odor of iodoform into th courtroom. ; H also left th chair without cross-xamlnatlon by th defense. - I. W wr glad somehow when h left Th atmosphere was too surBicu. Atnrn me of Caldwell also fol lowed th doctor. H. had not bn toivin nv , minute before th room waa clanking with interest Koran Is Orchard, IThen did you first see Thomas TTnnn in Caldwelir' said Borah, who 1 examining for th state. T NnnmMr. 1UUD. saia id. "Thomas Hogan" Is "Harry I n.mrA - . who els "Harry orensra may be we do not at present know. As soon as "Hogan" was mentioned coun sel for the defens took exceptions to Rlc retelling a conversation owwn himself and "Hogan." It was not 'an Important conversation. But defense tnnir mrention to It. Defense objected h h ftmrt overruled th objection. Defense "voted exceptions." The records ar already half anowea unaer oj imi exception "voted" by the defenae. Rtrhardson cross-examined Rice. Ble . mwm I told Richardson that h saw -iog-an-nroh.M" in th bar-room of th Sara toga hotel on-the Monday following tha death of Bteunenberg. It did not pro duce any new fact or ahak th atory of Ric. Ana Kice wens M ness to b disposed of within half an hour. .. N. B. Ellis or caiaweu aiso, iuuuwcu vim Ha told of the sunns ox Bicunen- bera- and the goings and comings ofl Hogan-Orcharo." V Kystrlons Flffar. tTAMn-Orchard" Is beginning to d- velop as figure of strange and sinis ter : mystery going up and down the .treet. of oulet Caldwell. We ar ex pecting him in the witness chair on Thursday to be brou-ht from th pen itentiary and lodged in tne Dasemeju of the Jail where Haywood and Moyer and Pettibone ar lodgea. mm. rtnucrlhed "Hosan-vrcnara as wanderlns- about Caldwell using spy- classes incessantly. xucnarasun mi croaa examining uui m that . Hoean-Orchard" Instead of con cealing : himself went about the town with those spy glasses. It did not seem Important Borah reexamined Kills to nrnva that "HOSan-urcnaru ubwu ui. SUunenberg'B house without attracting too much attention. Ellis left the chair and court adjourned at noon. . '5y i 7 I V--r R r3 Ml. , f Mr Minil- I 11 li ' lit 1 1 i a1' '"'! ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. Ae(abkRtparMlotilarAs slmitatln foFbotfaMItouk )j:.vaTiTyrn!!B ftoraotes DittonOtteifla- ncssandResLContalnsiKifliff. Opiurulorphine norHiacnl1 NOT NARCOTIC - fc asa4MamiBsaaBBBBSBsais-'. " jk&tirordJkEMiznicm :. m imtifMimm vra him Sen - Anprfect Itemedv forCbnsftpa-i nnn . nur Mnmacn.uiamaaa Worms jumvuisKmsjCTEnsB- ness andLoss OF SR laCS'mate Si$iaftirof ; NEW YORK. UllU : For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature sT W W M . TmV - In Use For Over Thirty Years ESBllnnY 111! Exact Copy of Wrapper." 0) 111 tms esavaus immv. hi rr. NO OPPOSITION (Continued from Tag On.) ballots were cast for Cellars and Dris coll received 8.790. Robert Andrews, th Democratic candidate, whose name thrnurh an error waa given xourtn plac on th ballot instead of first re ceived 4.S94 Votes and L. M. Davis, the Independent candidate, pouea oniy ,oo. tnhn P. iCavanauKh. Republican can didate for city attorney, la anotner wno. when th final count is mane, is nice ly to b In th contest for honors on th. ktrh vote held now by Judg Cam eron and City Treasurer wenein. air. Kavanaua-h received 10,?8 votes. Just 80 votes less than Mr. Werlein. Oueas- lng la even as to wno wiu neaa tne lief of highest vot received when the nrriAia! ount la oompleted. All three of the candidates will hav their ma jorities heavily increased when th re turns from th flv .missing precincts com w. -: ' ' . L. Barbur's race for th city au- dltorshlp was materially cut down by S'SSI JOURNAL WANT AD3 m:hartier for youh ' Working on a small salary? Not an expert Stenographer? Then study the wonderful Chattier System of Shorthand, which will positively make you a better Stenographer in a few .weeks' time than any. other system in as many months. "Night'and day classes now forming. We will place you in , a position when competent. School open the year round. Ring up Main 590 or A1596, or call at Seventh and Stark Sts. W'' iii?-' y?yt. . y y. y y . ,' J : ' Bchnkc-Walkcr-Lcadlnfl easiness Cc!!: HyWrite for Details of Our Free Scholarship Offer ft , z : .f;;' 't y -k vH-i yy, ;y:;; s