..' A afa.1.. Ui' A i-l'ivJl SEATTLE TO SAH BIEGO, TME FIR.GT PACIFIC GOAST NEWS SERVICE EVEii , ir JAUGURATED RE YOU GOING AWAY? Have "Journal Circulation It i a t ir .The Jovrnal follow you to tm you all the news Iron he: I ruts X Tha Weather Fair tonight and V .tomorrow, continued wwm. ,;; VOL. VI. NO. Ii4. Portland; Oregon, ; monday: evenino, july; 1 29, ,i907. twelve pages. f PRICE TWO CENTS; ; tTJOTiEl Attempt Fails. but Walls of Jail at Kelly Butte Are Cracked by Stolen Explosives .M a A. A ' 41 aL ' ' a. . . - U 1 ' I J I I m " " fil l. IYER Opl Mlt iillllE President of Western- Federation Re- . leased on Twenty-Five Thousand; Ool lar Bond Motion Is, to Be Made to ; COUXTT AND CITT. ntlSOXEKS AT; WORK OX KOCK' QtTAKKT .AT. . KElirS BUTTE IS 8 Release Pettibone Tomorrow Set for October Next Trial 1 (JonrniJ SpccUl ierrVw.) M07r. pridnt of to Weatem fm rstlon of Minors, aeeuMd Vlth W. P. Haywood and Gtoorr A. Pettlbon of ; th , murder of . former g-overnor ' Frank A. Stuenenberf of Idaho. - was thia afternoon ordered releaaed on ball of $15,000 by Judge Fremont Wood. The trial of O. A.-Pettibone was set for Tueeda-y, October 1. W. XX Haywood, who waa aeanltted yeaterdey, spent the : 4ay eoneultlnf with hla etterneye re a-erdlns the defenae of hla brother offi cial e. V ..... v r .. Moyer and Pettibone ( were ' brought Into court together. ' Attorney Clarence - Darrow made a alrnlf leant statement when he said, ."Appearances In this case are the same, only for the present time, as In the Haywood cane.' 7 Darrow then moved for Ball for. Moy er.' and Judge Wood fixed the bond at $35,000 which wiU be furnished before . midnight. It Is a continuing bond, sub- leet to his appearance on October .1 cr whn notified." i - 1 Darrow will make a motion Tuesday' morning . to admit Pettibone- to bail. This will be fought out by-connael for the state, who will oppoae.lt strenu ously; - WUl Proseeute Others. ' When the jury in the Haywood case reported, its verdict of not guilty at-8 o'clock, yesterday morning, there was a rumor afloat that Meyer and Pettibone wAra tn h relaaaed and further prose- cutions for the murder of former Gov ernor Stuenenberg aroppea. . oovernor Frank hooding silenced these reports, however, by declaring that, both would Onvrniir ClnnMWr ' Wa 'nlklnlV ' dlS-I ".'- - appointed when he heard the verdict of the jury and admitted that it was a areaf surnrisa to him. He said that the state would not dismlas the- charges against other federation officials so- euaeq or -conspiracy ana inai inair intu win o beidi as formerly piannea. ' (Continued on Page Two. '1 Advertising Record, for Week Ending July 28 The record of. advertising for the week just closed shows the following results: ' ' 4 ; 1 ' v journal.' ; oregoman. Telegram. J Local, inches 5. ........ . . . . ,414 6,266 : 5,444 Foreign; inches ............. 667 893 587 Uiassmea ana xtcai rsiaic, ins.,ou ,cro9 r A,px- ; - ;: ; 9,734 10,128 7,612 The volume of advertising continues large for summer months. More advertisine is done this summer thin anv"pre- f .vious seasonThe Journal gaining over 2,100 inches over the corresponding week of last year. No other Portland daily newspaper -shows such: a growth The fact that with very . uses, The Journal. , Advertisers have learned that to spread the news of their stores through the Oregon country they must use The Journal. ? Seventy-five; per cent of The -Jour-. nal a subscribers take no otner Portland daily paper and there fore the advertiser has noway of reaching these people unless he uses The Journal. . : ' ' ' rtWytHvvIM I I L jm . 1 . A T" fc-l - , 1 r ' . a n I 1- III e-. - je., " I '. RIFLES OF STO RUSH James Fagan, Who Has 'Al ready Made Seyeral Des perate Attempts to Break Out, Was Leader in Last Night's Attempt. Prisoners Had Worked for a, Week Attempting to Drill' Hole Into Concrete Wall, Using Spike; for ; Drill Heel of Shoe for Hammer FIGII TIHG FOR ITS TERRITORY 0. E. & N. and TJ. P. Will Add New Daily Passenger Train August 1. T " The first of Important defensive measures that : are bejes taken by-the O. R.. N.' company, and Union Pacific system against Invasion by the North Bank f oad was announced today. Ef fective-August,! a hew dally passenger train , will be put. on between Walla Walla and Pendleton, with close connec tions that will greatly facilitate traffic Deiween foriiana ana eastern v asmng- lon points. ... . - jaonna Trip sally. - The Walla Walla-Pendleton train will make the round trip daily and connect . , SanillAtmi with Ik. hw..K Aat trains between Portland and Pendleton. It will leave Walla Walla at 8:30. a. m.. and passengers will arrive at Portland at 8:20 p. m. Leaving Portland passen gers will take the Spokane Flyer at 8:10 m., ana reach; waiia waiia at e:to p. m. -. - '!- A through sleeper between Wtilla Walla and Portland on the night trains is already; in effect, - and - with the new . V SUBAIL , AT KELLY'S BUTTE FROM t WHICH PRISONERS ATj. i ICiMflHiU IV ii.HtIA.FiC, HOTEL AT LONG . . i -r- " beach mm Six Hundred Guests on Lons: Island Lose All of Their Possessions.. '.' day train eastern Washington will have complete and convenient - Portland service. ... .....::.. Undoubtedly a hard battle la to be waged between the north bank road and the O. R. A N. Co. for tha hnalnaaa nf eaaiern wasnmgton. The Hill roads have as. yet given no-hint as to the lime scneouies to be made bv thalr (Continued on Page Seven.) CHILD HEROINE IS REHBERED ' " V . V. " i f r ) ; , ALBERT rOLEMAN. V ; t,',-,,ii;i'. u l! Mouthful Slayer of Benefac- , tres Declared by Alienists r to Be Fully Respbnsihle.- , tvM. ' : (Mama rT' . Vi 1 t.VA.r.rtM ' nnV who shot and killed his foster mother, MrsfAyres, Bear S CHeleng last lntec ''' Is sane, according to the findings of the alienists who were commissioned to In- t 4uire into his mental condition. Drs. 5 W. T. Williamson, ,Ahdrew c. smith and WflUetn House composea tne ooara. . i"' The. report as agreed upon Saturday right and has been forwarded to i Judge VMcBride at Str Helens. The report states that young. Oleman is sane; that he Is as fully responsible for his acta as any other by of his age; and ' that he has criminal lenaencieav , inis; con tluston was reached by the lunacy com. mission after numerous examinations of hnv uid hearing a large amount of t testimony irom irwurtq .uh iimi. .Anion g the witnesses - who testified before' the board were Mft Ayres, hus band of the boy's victim, and the boy's sister, May Oleman. who lives at Salem, The examinations extended over several weeks, .'giving experts ample time to study tne ooy cioaeiy.; !! -",-yr' Xoung Oleman lived with a farmer Itameu Ayres nwr ur ww 01 warren, list winter for some misdeed- Mrs. Avres 'punished the boy, and he went iiDBtafirs, secured - a , rifle an coming affain snot xars. jarrea inrouan. tne J k& killing her. He then hid the rifle 1 r m whom ne saia tnai a strange man naq ' come to the Ayres house nd Killed Mrs. .A3Sherlff Whits' oi CoUmbia - eounfy questioned the boy closely and on noting several discrepancies in his statements pressed hUa aor closely, and at last Mysterious Admirer Sends a Priceless Gift to Ethel Johnson. LUnaCy , COmmiSSlOn, Alter of gold and sparkling with a princely ATiimAina .mjnU.a ot ciamonas, mue Etnei jonnson. Beaches Conclusion. the boy confessed that be had shot Mrs. Ayres. child heroine of the Columbia,1 disaster, is the happiest girl in Portland, ',. I The ' gorgeously winged i present was sent her Saturday by a mysterious ad mlrer. Who he Is may never be known. though there, are faint suspicions that Tot ihnnllnr vi. ilnn. vlih rifi.K. . . ... .... . ii-vm7iiSkrX"l..iiS -senoar y p me man wnose life money he had stolen from Ayres. He wm aared by . the little , girt ; who -also told .Ayres' that a- tramn had atolen the I reacnad Kffie Gordon. hrilM r-iA money, and Ayres believed his story sol from nerlahlna- lnv tha e v- confidently that the next night he lar I ra. Pn"mn i waters of the in wait with a srun to catch the tramn I acinc if he returned. . .s . ': Tonne: Oleman ' tola ' Avrea that nelahbor had irl vun him. th. r4t to the neighbors said that Mr. Avres and Is made of gold. had presented the rifle "to him. The butterfly is brilliantly 'designed rifle, and jw.iiis-awe xt 'is about two by two and a half Inohes in also, having Hh.Wff . TX'Kt. t MH , a and took young Oleman to 8t. Helens, f n'T1M or, tlnT. rMden arms and ten- mm wni ce neiq soon..' I cib, uu amuaaa wun, pernapa enough Ir lTtmirtti VTnarnTi i ! I T T ' w " ' -y-vui, , it 1 n. n. I A It Hi l.ll h WNH ; . : I xt was taien to, the.hora nf w. t iSIJJSVKT. .A'Ti'ttf :aTTJTntrwT. 1in1,?l0l BtTlfteinth,street;;where i&'VW", Xi'yf 1 ilJ th' atopplng, on Saturday . i ,, , , r . , , py.an. employe or jreiaenhelmer's jew- (Joarsai special Bervtee.) ? , ; leiry store. With It there was no note New Tork, July II. OoveTuor Hughes of wplanatlon, no signature telling who baa, signed the . marriage license . bllL 1 "niw?n'nc.,.L iT which was passed by. the legislature in the closing days of the. session, and the Dili. I There' were roerelv tha -mnrAm "Vmm Portland Admlrer.it z 7.-'-' t new law is hailed with satisfaction. : It goes Into effect at the expiration of SO days. ' The Tribune eaya concerning It: "At last Kew York state is to be rid or seeret marnaaes and their attendant evils. In signing the : Cobb marriage bill, .Governor Hughes ' has taken v the finals step In long : delayed -legislation against vouna fools " and old scoundrels. juvenile elopers and battle-eoerred - di vorcees. In this state they have-always been able to- find some unscrupulous or tnougntiess -man, ' clerical or ouierwise. mooest fee wouia coax out of LltUe Ethel Johnson' tfrwllt tv 'wl membered by those who read the news- papsrs, savea two, nnman lives at the time of the Columbia disaster. She resouea ner cnud companion. - Effie Gordon, and held her aboTe water until taacn a ooara a iire-Doat.- ' , While s stmrrllnr with' :' onmrutn- ito a man, wno oouia soarceiy swim, warn also saved by. her. He seised hold upon her and was also, held above the water by aer childish efforts. Perhans U waa thjs man who sent the present the proud possessor ' of a maenlncent present today. She does not know who Long Beach, Long - Island, July While 800 guests were calmly sleeping last night the Long Beach hotel caught fire and It was with the greatest dif ficulty that the. lives of all were saved. Senators McCarren and Reynolds were at the resort at the time of the fire and performed valiant service " in rescuing a number of women from the biasing structure. Two Cottages were aleo burned and two persona are reported missing. ' . The fire broke. out .in. the.. top story of the hotel. Two hundred guests were I is used for heatln steeping on mat noor ana mere , were many narrow escapes from death In the flames. Every guest at the hotel lost all his personal .belongings and all of them are telegraphing for clothes and money today. , It Is estimated that tha loss to the hotel will exceed 1,000,000. Dynamite smuggled In from tha jos4 ry where It had been used for break lng boulders xwas used last night by the prisoners at tha Kelly Butte rock . pile in an effort ts blow out tha and of the concrete subjail and affect aa escape. Following tha terrfflo concussion pro duced by tha exploding dynamite the prisoners, lsd by a desperate gang of , four men, rushed to the end of tha jail where the dynamite had been Placed.-but were forced to stop. Tbe. explosive had not made a breach in the wall and tne rifles or tne guards were trained on them before they could make any further effort. The four men who led tha dating at tempt to eecape are confined la the dunceon on bread and water today. Their leader was James O. Fa gen, tha - rrlsoner who was shot In tha hip about wo months ago. after he had broken through the stockade with a heavy hammer and waa running away through the brush. . - - . -, . . Dynamite XTsed at Sock Vila. ' Dynamite Is used at the rock nil fop what are known as plaster blasts. The - sucks or aynamite are piacea on top Of large boulders to shatter them ana are plastered with mud to keep them in place. A number of rocks are usual- ly blown at a time and occasionally one of the blasts, exploding before another, jars the other stick of dynamite off Us rock and it falls down Into the crevices. Br carefully wateblnsr their ODoor- - tun 1 ties, the prisoners nad succeeded , In smuggling Into the Jail three sticks of the explosive that they had picked nn after it i had , fallen . batwaan tha v boulders. For about a week mey had worked at the end of the jail tr-lng to drill a hole Into the concrete wall, using a spike for a drill and tha heal of a shoe for a , hammer. The noise of the drlllina- waa drowned by the roar of the steam that - isr watsr in the bath tub at the jail and the prisoners care fully cloaked their ,, operations behind their bunks, ..-.;' A - They had succeeded In drilllnr a hnla about an Inch deep in this way. Last night at 8:16 o'clock they placed their (Continued on Page Two.) Judge Cameron in Municipal Court Holds That Man Who . Passes a Flask of Whiskey Is Not Guilty of Vio- ;, lating Sunday Closing Law. A man may give a friend a drink from hla private flask without breaking the flundav closing law. accoramg to an ocinlon alven by Judge Oeorge H. Cam' eron In tha municipal court this morning. Cameron gave the opinion in the case of the aUta vs. Sam praegiey. cnargea with ha vlna given his friend, Oeorge Higgtns, a drink of whisitey yesteraay afternoon. Pfhealev was taken into euatody yes terday afternoon by Patrolman Jim An derson, In Blaslera saioon for navmg Oaorae Higglns a drink out of Els botue of whiskey. T"he policeman i7.5i ,k. t-mn man - In the lavatory of the iUee. and according , to Ws; testi monv Hlggins was .just handing the fUbailf to Pfhegley when detected in the act . Pfhegley in aeiatui oi. ta cash ball was- locked - up. ana tne case came up in the police conrt thia morn- Whom a bed In the wee small hours. The law reaulres that a license must! sent It. and bom nf h niailvu know. -.lbesour6(i Uve dsysbefOfe marriage, tjkai tuQse. at .the store refuse to taUv , . Oirentr Anotbe Ua:kf-- m.ina who was nut on' tha stand by therosecution declared that Pfhegley did not give him the liquor, but that the bottle was handed to him by another District Attorney Adams, endeavored to contradict this witness by the testimony riant-urn of Police Moore and Patrol. man Adams, - that Hlgglna was intoxl- Inadvertently Deputy Adam failed to bring any teatlmony to ahow that the liquid contained In the - two flasks ' in evidence contained any- : intoxicating liquor.- The attorney for the defense maintained also that as-the statute spe cifically provided that no In toxieating "liqnors" were to be sold or disposed of on Sunday It would be necessary to give or eell more than one kind of intox icant to come, within the meaning of the law. ;...-.. ...... . . The decision which' la the most im portant since tha Sunday closing law has been enforced la aa follows: . "Outside of .the testimony as to J5?-iher 0S.noA.th? 'ndant furnished Hlggins with the bottle to take a drink ZV,?fVhtii.??urt wm th? taat lat .th law. It was simply a case of a friend having a bottle, passing It ta "nd of hia'far the puw? SVtakt W,"- "anisylyajiia, 'iHriMiiX' "I do not believe that it waa tha nun pose of the framers of this itV t deal with casesof thU characterXThe vS- on a number of eajma e .ki. . . liquor liven.'lti. the order if h2 Detmtv DistHo . l.,t?4. i?t.i WM onJ' rontly that a iLH?-0f th Pco in Tillamook hU Cameron la absolutely wronr. unm i "a?1,"! to 1,0 determined what eumbnr Si S?? ouW onstitute a violation Qf the lawT'1 Adams waa aa nttl1 at rmivn' action in dlamlsslng the case tlmt be 1m.' ro-oiateiy asKea ror a fllamUaal of th-j case against H. L. Anderson, a bart-i-der arrested yeaterday afternoon bv I tectlvea Kay and Kienlln, for jl! ' -of beer to his frlen.la la a room i i Model lodglnir-hous'. Upon . of the Sirr.stlng officer A drew his motion and aa An not present when his )" the bail of 525 was v- ' A drras ault C . quart bottles of ber, n bv the detectives .s.-i t fiscaied, .