f f WAR WITH JAPAN PROBABLE HUGE PROFITS OF OIL TRUS7 - -v- J 'fef pas xssu af 3;:-t T''"i.::,'f; .v.-. .. r ' m ..-..- - w , - '-... " 1 11 . 1 1 '. , . ' 1 -?.:jvt.?' ' jia Journal Circulation it iwcV . w n i,m y pi ignM; m r n n mm - Thd . Sunday J ournai : r Vi!,';" CoaWASOa ."-'vfi'-'j.' 5 Sections 52 Peps Tb .Weather fair andanner J today northwest 'wrtada.,';'- t- r V- you NOf: Z ' ' ' 1 -T-J x T ' 1 !. .11 SH. II H .1 - J '-.I .1- ! I....... ! n.-.ll i . V;..::': ; , rv' PORTLAND,,; .OREGON,; SUNDAY MORNING, -. JULY , 7, 1907. yf .pRICEFIVE CENTS.. !! V III llll'll II j a rcn on WINNERS QUEST: IN NEW POSES iiim in 1 1. n no H First Officer, Steward and Four Other Members of Boat's Crew Die in Water of Canadian Stream at Dangerous Point Captain Johnson Displays Great Bravery and Saves All Passengers Vessel Goes' Down Off Beefs in Kitsalas Canyon. (flptrli! Dtopitch to Tt Joaratl.) Vncouver, O.. July . six mem brs of th craw war loat in th wreck of the Hudson Bay -company'B steamer Mount Royal on the Bkaena rUer. in Kltaalaa canyon. Captain Johneon and all of the paasena-era neaped death and were landed aafely upon an Island In the middle of the river. Thoaa who loat their Uvea were: " William Lewla. first officer. A. Willis, steward. j.'Fryne, fireman. J. O'Keefa, purser. M. JUiaara, Japanese cnryrnr. ft Hlkltnl Japanese deck "hand. Tha Mo vnfor3'wa'an routs hoBB Port Esslncton to Haaaiton. It was loaded with paeaeners and freight and tot tor tns bravery of the crew ana . presefM of mtnd of CapUIn Johnson the deatk Itat would har been enor- Kitsalas eajiyon has lonr been known as a danf erous portion or me river.- ana only the most skilled navigators undfr t&ke to nflot a brtat through it. For many yaara Captain Johnson haa taken the Mount Royal, which is a stern wheeler, safely past the danger point where many ships have ben lost, but this afternoon the fates had their1 way and the steamer strucx a rocc Almont immediately after the catas rophe the steamer began to . sink, a ' large hole being torn In her side, and a panic was threatened. Crased men fought their way to the boata and be gan lowering them, with no thougit but their personal safety. Women and children were abandoned by escorts and trampled under foot by the fear-mad mob. Seeing what was about to occur cap tain Jonnson tnrew ntmseir into the breach and soon had semi-order restored and the disembarkment proceeding with the greatest rapidity possible un der the circumstances,' women and chil dren being sent ashore ahead of all others. When the last passengers had depart ed and was safe upon land Captain Johnson enu rod a amall boat and was taken to a plaos of safety upon the is land, t ' ; - Communication wis immediately opened up with the mainland and the rescued passengers and sal!ors safely landed., the loss being oonflned to the six members of the crew. s i -t W. It). CAKE'S EYE FIXED ON GOVERNOR'S CHAIR Fulton, It Is Said, Has Formed a Coalition With the Cake , Brothers, and H. M. Cake Is to Forego for a Time His Ambition to Be Senator. I ' ' ' V'- yii A Ib . , 1 " --fl Sioiis WTHHE-B ?IKJT VZVZ& PURSUES Hir.i TO HIS OLD HOME NEW LINE ALONG COAST- IS PRACTICALLY ASSURED British Capital JVill Construct Independent Boad From Portland Souh, Giving Bailroad Competition to Chicago and the Atlantic Seaboard. William M. Cake, chairman of the republican 'county central committee, has an ambition to be governor of Ore gon, according to the latest gossip of the politicians. Br the same token R. M. Cake, brother of the county chair man, has decided to nail fast the blocks under the cradle of bis senatorial boom and delay its launching lest two candi dates in on family prove the nndolng of both. Incidentally it Is said . that Senator Fulton is to secure the support of the Cakes in -return 'for what good hemay do tha gubernatorial race of tha senior brother. ' This is the most recent side light cast -upon the political canvas. Previous campaigns have seen W. M. Cake a. -candidate lor governor. At the time he held the offica of Judge of Multnomah county Mr. Cake laid; his plans for the republican nomination and tlPAllvll, nil VI A r , V B AtflalVA M A. H ties to the state convention instructed Mrs f; R A Tin WW RllPl trnT,-) for him. but at that time Joseph Simon h""3, V Mure" pUCO.iUI- mer Husband for Large Sum in La Porte. held the reins of political power and his dictate relegated Mr. Cake to the background. looking to the Vital. Since then the ambition has slum bered unsatisfied, but during the In terim Mr. Cake has been looking to the future. His election as chairman of the county central committee and his ac tivity in politics recently have brought him forth prominently before the party. It has-been a foregone -conclusion throughout the state that H. M Cake would again oe a candidate for the United States senatorial nomination at the hands of the republican party next June. Every political BAge In counting up the prospective candidates has in cluded Mr. Cake in the list. Up to this time he has naither denied nor affirmed (Continued on Page Eight) Detective Joe Day Beturns to America With Man Who Robbed a Cafe. Hsrst News by longest Leased WIps.) Now York, July (.After a chase of thousands of miles through the United States, Mexico and England. J. P. Town send arrived hero today a prisoner on the steamer vampania, which brought him from Liverpool Townsend is charged with having stolen- 12,500 from a Portland, Oregon, cafe under the name of John mompson. The prisoner vu found by Joseph Day,. Portland detective, ' living In London, where he was posing as a wealthy American turf man. i nompBun, or i ownsend,, waived extraamon- PP ana consented to come nero to n cunrar or uay. lieutenant W. J. Deevy of the central office went down the bay in & revenue cutter and met the Campania. It was not until Deevy went aboard the ship send as described on. the lists was al- jegea tu o. m oeidutier. lownsena had made quite an impression on the voy sge by his Uriah tips to the stewards, none of whom susvected that ha unoer. arresu lownsena, wno is said I to hfjs been chief bartender , of - the WlMufs cafa in Portland, does not look lf mixer or drinks. He has snow ilte hair. a. military anncarance. waara f gotd-rimmea spiaciea ana im aoout 51 ' Th story told by DetecUv Day U that After Townsend disappeared from, egon he fjd to Mexico and invested itie stolen money la a copper miner The flnvestment proved remarkably success- gui ana ' who aim prorits no went to Europe, cutting a big dash on "the con tinent, and finally settled in London. The detective learned of tha whereabouts of Townsend through) a letter which the prisoner , Mit- tof Portland asking that his mall b forwarded to Liverpool, ' 1 TO LOWER Secretary Boot Negotiating With Mexican Government For Acquisition of Magdalena Bay, Which Is Need- - ed by American Fleet in the Pacific (Hearst News by Longest Lg4 trire.) Washington .July gotiatlona are under way between the state department and the Mexican ambassador looking to the purchase by the United States of Magdalena bay or all of Lower Califor nia, If necessary, in order to secure con trol of the magnificent harbor at the lower end of this Mexican possession. This is a part of the administration's program of guarding against trouble n japan, me oispai tlo fleet to the Pacific navinx been already announced officially. .The negotiations in this Important transaction are in the hands of Secre t&rv -Root. For several days oast - ha has been sounding the Mexican author ities on the proposed purchase.. . : . Haxioaaa . atlsflad. y Imhttudmr Creel. Of Mexico haa as sured Secretary Root that hi -government entertains - the proposition with favor. .There are a number of- reasons Mexico ' would be willing to part with this harbor, provided It fell into the hands of' the United States. s Mexico- in Seeretanr Root will .visit September . and - when- he confers with ' (Continued ea Page Eight.) President Dlax, It ia expected, that the terms of the sale wUl be agreed upon. It is impossible to ascertain at -this time any of the particulars. - The United States Is prepared to buy all of Lower California if necessary The possession of Magdalena bay is loosea upon as a military necessity. It is even more essential since the govern ment, has decided to send the battleship fleet to the Pacific. The lack of naval stations and good harbors on that coast was one of the reasons that eaueod the president to hesitate in directing the fleet to sail. ' , , Will Strengthen jTary. The vastly parts.' natural harbors in the world, it been frequently used by ships ' of the American navy during . practice, the Mexican guTarnnieni nmving courteously permitted -its use, for this purpose, tt possesses0 points of great suncrinHt Francisco and San Pedro, and it la m. ItMM.u t stratea-M rendextraaa r (Jeerul Bpeeisl Bwrlrtx La Porte, Ind., July I. Charles . B. Andrew of Portland, formerly as at torney of this place, was today made defendant In a 136,000 suit for aa ac counting filed oy .Ella O. Andrew, from whom Andrew secured a divorce in Portland last March. Andrew returned to La Forte from Portland a short time ago, and the suit was brought at once He left town before the complaint was served upon him.. Sensational allegations were made by both parties In the suit for divorce. An drew charged that his wife had followed him Into a saloon, had crawled over the trans on. into his office, and had perse cuted him continuously for the purpose of securing his money. He said she had told him she would let him alone If he would give her all his money. Mrs. Andrew, in the suit for an ac counting, alleges that all the money Andrew has was given him by her to use In his business, and that he is seeking to withhold It from hen She says that she received the money from her grandfather's estate. An effort was made when the divorce suit was -tried -to have the property rights of the two determined by the court, hut no decree affecting the prop erty was entered. Mrs. Andrew came to La Port from Portland Immediately after her husband was given the divorce and has since- been preparing for' the suit which was brought today. Recent heavy purchases of terminal lands and rights Of way in the vicinity of Astoria and southward along the ooast, are believed to have but one meaningthe construction of a rail road that will give Portland railroad oompetltlon along the entire coast to San Francisco and to Chicago and the Atlantlo seaboard. Large purchases of water frontage between Astoria and Fort Stevens have been made by A. B. Hammond and as sociates. A Los Angeles syndicate has bought a large tract more than a mile of sea beach between Oearhart Park and Clatsop City, and while the rec ords show transfers only to the in dividuals concerned It Is certain they are interested In the railway project The latest to be recorded la a trans fer of 10 acres of land at Clatsop sta tion, from Joslah West to the Portland Oregon Seacoast Railway company, the consideration being 12.000. This land has been purchased for-terminals and shops for the proposed railroad from Portland to the coast and south to Eureka. Shops at JSMtJoa Vofatt. The location of tha -shops la at the junction point where the Northern Pa cific's Seaside line joins the new rail road. It is said the proposed road from this point southward win k th. most Important transportation project Tr. r we uregon coast It will not only, open up a vast virgin riKa ib umDcr, coal ana agrl vuiiuru resources, out It WUl com dw iransconuneniai line from Portland to 8an Francisco and ths east Under the name of the- Northwestern Paclfio Railway company, the Calif or 2,iUn. ot the-. AtcMson, Topeka A Santa Fe were recently consolidated, and construction work, has been eom- Miss Margaret Frey of Den ver Wins First Prize of Fifteen Hundred Dollars in National Beauty Contests-Writes for Journal She Has a Perfect Profile, Features and Complexion to Match Is a Working - Girl and the Daughter of a Poor Widow. (Bpedsl Dispsteh to Toe JeereaL) V ' ' Chicago, July . The prises la theT national beauty contest have beea awarded by the judges as follows: ' ' First prise, $1,600. Miss Marguerite Frey, clerk, Denver, Colorado. :-. - .. Second prise, Gabriella Worsley. Mil . r waukee? Wisconsin. Third prise. Eola Rica, Washington. IX'C. , i Fourth oris. Lillian Tiu PlltAnra . Pennsylvania. . Six things which the judges decided" make Marguerite Frey the most , beau. , tiful girl in America' Ne. IfHer nerfeat nntffla N 1 Her roses and cream skin. (Continued oa Page Two.) B01VIB TO PROVE FALSEHOOD Haywood's Attorneys to Show That Orchard Lied When He Described Manufacture of Infernal Machine He Claims to Have Made. By J. 8. Dunnlgan. -(Baarst Nsws by Longest Leased Wbe.) NAKED MEN" FATALLF SCALDED BY STEAM FB0M BB0KEN.PIPE acquisition of Magdalena bay win I T r strengthen the navy in those I This embraces one of the finest f MUCH -'Ai-AT.t t. ,i ' '" 11 i i ii ii i i ii mii jrii- V , ' 11a fltoertat tMsaatea laTW loaruLI : ' ''J Bkagway. JuHr t. Postmaster Satnn- son lsTiearty frantic, with nearly . OOO.Ooa in gold on his handa Miners have refused to patronise the express companies because of .- their - hich charges and liave beea goading cold by matt, tf. For the past week it has beea coming tn la rye quantlOea. - ' . - The steamships Dolphin and City of Seattle refused to take it. because they have- a facUIUea Their refusal may result la troubla with' tha postofac Butte, Mont, July . By the e bursting of a steam pipe in the e dry room of the High Ore mine . 4 tontght ' six men were scalded, e two fataUy. ' The . fatally hurt e are: 8. G Lawrence, aged II and e John Rooney. The seriously in- '4 Jured are:. Hugh 'Terry, 'George ' 4 Kirby, . Michael SuUlvaa - and & ' 4 Jeitt,. 1 : ' V. The pipe earrylng a aeavy'e) pressure of steam ,for the puis - 4 4 - pose-ai aryinr ?t Be -wet: crothes .; 4 4 of the miners, suddenly burst , 4 4 as tb men were undressed pre . 4 4 paring to change their ; clothes, 4 4 'preparatory f- to going oa the 4 alght shift fr Tha . roona la a . 4 twinkling was- filled with bUad- 4 ing. scaioing steam; oatning-- the-. 34 men until .tbelr.(iirabs; were ver- "4 Itably cooked.' Lawrence and . 4 Rooney . Inhaled-:', th blistering 4 fteam and ara now. dying. -' i 4 4 Boise, Ida.. July f. Harry Orchard's bombs with which he saya he tried to kill Judge Ooddard of the Colorado su preme court and Governor Peabody. are to be used to demonstrate that he falsi fied his testimony. , The Haywood defenaa has just conv pleted some experiments which they claim will convince . the Jury that Orchard told too v much ,' when h de scribed how his Infernal machines were made. An exact duplicate in blse and material of the Ooddard bomb-a small wooden box about, tha 'sua of a starch box haa beea made and .special Illustra tions are to be presented to Drove that Orchard nor anyone else could have put 40 aticka of seven-eighths inch dynamite in a receptacle, the. size of the box. in evidence. He said 40 sticks of dyna mite had beea placed la the box. It now develop that- Ki is - impossible to put that quantity of giant powder-in a box the else brought-hera by- the Pinkerton and identified by Judge Goddard as the om dug up at his gate. When the defense puts in its refuta tion of the story that Orchard tried to aynamite Fred Mradiev, experts oa ex plosives are to be called to prove that 10 pounds of dynamite enclosed In lead ptpe would have wrecked the flat ana xiuea an the people in the building. The state's rebuttal witnesses are ar riving by the score. Men who Were' In volved in Cripple Creek strike wara are coming nere to testiry mat tner was great violence on the part of the unions and that the drastic measures taken by the mine owners ana tne, muitia were com Dell ed by the conditions resulting from the strike. . : :. ..' . -; . As the trial of Haywood abnroaehea the end there Is much speculation con cerning the testimony Haywood- and Mover will give when they are called to the witness stand. No one can foretell what admissions they, may : make when they are under . cross-examination a slip, by eitner one wouia do disastrous, no matter how it should come about Next-.weea win prooaoiy see tha fin- a tne coming the testimony travail for all con. corned m thl great trial. , , t lah nf daya will be full of " - v i -iVfl. 1 TRAIN. MUST BE, REM B '..- fig 1 ? r5i;af a v.-" -T. -tsoecial Paipstcb ."taTWe loaniaL) --Salem. Or July .The, state rail road commission today filed chargea of Insufficient r passenger train., service against tha Southern Paciflc, particu lar complaint being made that the aft eraooa overland, koowa aa tio. X2, has been late nearly months. .The h 10 a. m. July 2 cor'r;i -! n in tliit t 1 ;-.ut!;rn t. u, 1 Iti-J I . . '-ry 3"v 1 for n fr-t 9 0 ' sx f"r - ,Xo. --Mer large.' malting blue eyea, J it V-dielr frlnkley, brijrht Voldea' mmmm v najr. . No. e Her perfect, white teeth. No. Her purity of expression. ' ' ... U Werklag Wa''', Denver. CoL. July . Miss Mirrnn. rite Frey, the moot beautiful woman la America, lives la a mod sat iitti kmu in a auiet little street in tha faahimw - able part of Denver, Colorado. - - ene is it years old. Her father was a hard-workina man. Who saved his dav'a aivw ud a pleasant little cottage for his wlf ' and babiest.-- -- ,...--J-j.rr "Now." he said to his wife. wh HaA worked hard to hela him save tha to buy tbe-lHUaaome, "Now. wa'U be gin 'to live." In a few daya ha was dead and hnHAf . ; and his widow was left to face tha - world with two boys and two girls. Th boys were eturdr fellows, full . courage and resolution, and they beta, . found work to do, and did it Margua. rite was the youngest sister, she was aa pretty aa a peach from tha very tlm she first opened her forget-me-not eye ' oa a world full of gentle admiration, but she didn't seem to know It "Marguerite must as to achonr" Mi the elder sister; "she must be welt edu- - caiea, ana to scnool Marguerite went. -with her corn-silk hair in a rebellioua tangle down her slender shoulder, sh graduated from th East Denver High school a year and a half ago. read tha . usual essay on "Beyond the Alps Lie Italy" or What of th Future?" re ceived the usual pathetic little bouquet, made the usual scared little bow. went . home, hung up her simple whit gradu-. ; ating dress in the closet for her littles bedroom and went down town looking for work. , She found it befor ah looked very long; She studied hard t understand what was wantait a k. tn a very little whn sh was earning) . IS a week aa bookkeeper of th Bank ers' Snpply company. - - - , - Xutered by Xsv tUbak 3 ' On fin spring mrnlng, whsa tha 2r KJaJna were beginning to shine white through their veil of purpl clou.l Mrerlte'a elder sister picked up the Sunday paper and read about tha. , (Continued ea Pag Twa)s OPERATORS 11,7 10 CALL STRIKE T ' " I I.' - "V.'-. 1 Caiicago Teleaphers Beady, fc , 10 uommence War On V-WeSteillTrniOlL' ';" (taellslMwa iVtai'vav.'Bbeefai tA.aAi WMt Chicago, July The telegrashera ara expected ta vot. to strike la OU eagOA '-A meeting to take a strlk vot baa beea called fo I o'clock Sunday aft ernoon, ".For a week th situation hse beea acuta and a walkout' at any- moment - -j-'-' -'' - - . William Malnv an operator, copied a list of non-union employes of ths 8.trt Francisco office and wa. discharged. fur. . the act. The grievanoe commuwe f the local union could not ,-t an ence at the headquarters of the until this afternoon. The r-' i " 1 local superintendent trxt t 1 rltated the men and t',y mediate - actiun. srantlrB- of a lieur sea tne suiKiM l'i Sf-ntimfnt t t ;;t M utct'S f lV,.tlf I ! I i I :