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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1908)
-r r y r: " , . A. 0VfmmLLBE,'D0mmLlJ0PORTLMD"OHBOTHSWtS OFTnERIvER-r-VHtN THENORTH BANK ROnDRUHSiNJO PORTLnlw i SOLi'tNAL JOURNAL CIRCULATION h TESTERDAY AVA. 29,925 Tf help, to rent N'r boarders, Jour a jr. pay best. Fair tonight; it so warm. PORTLAND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY 1, 1908. EIGHTEEN PAGES. PRICE TWO CENTS 2 thaihs ahb vrvn xrn.iiz. x vw vimj.o. stands, five cents! -7 LOVlALL M BAY , PADT1IDC nD ' I , , ; '- . f .1. OS; RED caro Is h Mys y Dis f Lodp:- 3e Back (1 Vic i I lave Of (1( 0(1 Some Drytown Days Reflections In Old Marion. High o'er the fence Jumped Johnny Jims, He sought the spheres With crystal rims. But when he found the town was dry He eschewed beer and took to pie. Now Johnny Jims no longer "trims," He pays his debts and saves his limbs! TH FFI 'ith the r tightly her neck, 'f mouth jdv of a Mrs. K. a pool of n a local .et and d with a hod, and wi'l that eked and jefore he :rime. inted the; is being ities. iowi se ll e warn- positive im is of jewelry Mrs. E. :, a sub n a frc vy Bros, recently ng for a le ditfer- , landlady the mur 1 the body oman had la vs. last Week, t s rif t ben as belli, d-lnok lug.. I explained in. i.-.u'ni,lnup ,., had no or- , ,,anf,1( j., w IIRTI I I'll I I n'.'T5 to. lay. j tge.lv. she wife had Poor "Old Jackson." Now Med ford was a lovely place It bought the beer and set the pace And then "old Jackson" closeti about Tapped all the beer and nfugged the spout! Dut Thirsty Judge without compunc tion. Uncorked the bot with an injunction. Union's Ilesolutlon. La Grande, Once Full of Hops and hope, Admits the "Prohls" have the dope.' Said every Prohl, "Make n bot, This dry town here will ne'er gn wet." "Drink water," I. a Grande said at length. Put faith in Union's temperance strength. FIGHT IS PORTLAND UHI IUIL Ul DEATH WILL n Encroach inont of .XI., 31. & St. I in X. P. Territory Stim ulates Hill Interests to Build Jlu.ire Warehouse and Docks Hero. PHBITIO Immense .Rejrion Will Be Drained Down Columbia to Portland, 3Iakinff City (ireatest Wheat Port in I'n i ted States. A great dock 900 feet long, 170 feet wide and two stories high, for handling wheat. Is being rapidly con st rue by the Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway, on the Weidler tract, fronting on the Willametto river. he building of tho Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway to Ta roma nfis proved to be a TeTT-striko fOr Portland, as the Northern Pacific and Great Northern are inaugurating vast plans for competition that will levvjloii the Port oi Portlaud as a grain handling centor, and are pro jecting nearly 400 miles of new r'all- road In eastern Washington territory a i , a T, to be drained down the Columbia U nited Itpimi Ial TCIri ) Med ford, Or., July 1 -Saloons andJrlyer fioute to Portland, breweries today went out of business In j Tho 1.1k dock Is being buljt by tho all southern Oregon counties except Paclfl.' Engineering company and Is Jackson, where the rftent prohibition I designed on the riont modern lines, election wa declared void by the circuit I with machinery of the most approved MAKES DEBUT Dry Town Days Down in Va rious Thirsty Cities of the State. 8E CERTAIN Clove Uogers' Father, One of the Posse, Finds His Son "Was One of Edna Domen tfine's Kidnapers Part ner Fooled Sheriffs. The Girl's Father Donates $5,000, Sum Demanded as Hansom, to the Men Who H rough t About Peseue of His Daughter. court heraiiRe the order for election Included the city of Med ford, which wan "xemptod from the 'sphere of the local option law by a special charter.' patterns for loading and unloading ves sels. The Wekiler dock when completed I will be prot.aLly tho best of Its size on the north coast. Judire Jf. K Ttnnr.a vcstrd-iv Issued an Injunction on application of R. il l Smith and r: V. Kelly, ntt.unevs fori county liquor draleis, restraininu the eountv court from deelarlnp proh'bttii.n In effect in the. county. The perma nent Injunction alreadv secured ir. vented t he enforcement of prohibition In Medfj.rd. From the Jackson county boundary to Marion county, a stretch of nearly 3"0 miles, find from the coast to Lake county, a distance of S00 miles, all Is dry territory. Th Roseburg brewery . will make near-heer and the Giants Pass Brewing rompany denatured alcohol. Hiloons have been offctlng. their stock at sac rifice prices and will ship the remain ing stock back to wholesalers. Medford Is the onlv larce town south of Salem that remains, wet. t 35 years I. In the committed a diamond for J Sai) monds ad , Chicago," covered. murder nlvlng the imminence 'wo.) )0Ut ion? d, INAL ITK Po-respnnd-d-Herald vspapers. he JoUr-stMnmar-ntertaln- d Press to the features on. Mr. ed Press 'ON'VKN M'RNAIj V AND of 11- orts RNAL Douglas and Uoselnirg Dry. (Sp.cll Dlspntch to The Jour:-.nl ) RosthMrg, Or.. July 1. Last nicht at 12 o'clock Roseburg and all of Douglas county mounted the "water-waeun" and from now on the county will be legally dry. Of the 15 saloons that have been running in this eltv onlv five will c.m- buslness. These five wIM ft drinks, cigars and "nor ..eer' or prohibition beer." a beverage that Is onlv 1 per cent alcohol. There will be no attempts to test law. In regard to selling "booze." Tb. r. will be no "blind pigs." and the onlv way of securlti" Intoxicants will he through a druggist's or doctor's pre scription fine of the proprietors of a r-aloon 1ij-q Is going th encatre in the Inig business, and about six others will i l.itu oln county Portlmxl First In Country. It is expected that the wheat traffic of Portland, already the second largest on the American coast line, will ex ceed that of the port of New York with in the next few years as a result of nat ural advantages possessed by Portland as a railroad terminal. The building of the Chicago. Milwau kee & St Pat.l through eastern Wash ington and fcver Uit Cascades to Ta eoma hag bcetv-Ofccijy responsible for enlarged f'.c-fffties now being provided hy th.' rfltl and Harrirnan railroads fur handling gr; ly In I'm t land. The Milwaukee is imttlng out spurs in the territory he-otofore controlled hy the 11111 and 1 h.rrtninn roads and there promises to he some lively com petition for the traffic of all these lines throughout the Inland empire. Tho 11111 people afe surveying a north and south line from Adrian in a con nection with the north bank road at a point near Pasco. ani propose to tap a vast region thai Is prolific In pro luctbm of grain and livestock, hut now without railroad transportation. This region, comprising about S.Oml square miles. Is second e'llv to .southern and central Or"Botv- as an a without rail road transportation. The Milwaukee read has bult its main line through the long way of the dis trict, arid is surveyiuc; branch lines north and south. It la an empire, and the Milwaukee was about?.- to reach out and clutch the whole of It. Some years ago the Northern Pacific hullt a branch about 1 5 0 miles long from Cheney to the westward through ind south to Aoiian on Summary In remarkable case of Kdna 1 lonicng.r.e. .Stolen from tier parents by desperadoes early yesterday niormng. Hurried awav to hills and secreted. Five thousand dol lars demanded for her ransom. Posse of citizens and deputy sheriffs close on trail of fugi tives and follow- fo close their tracks that th', ,ave no timo to' halt! Posse rfctertakc.s outlaws. on of whom eseaies and the tier IS arrested. Me!j threatens to lynch hlrm Gitl rescued and sent home. Miss DomenKl ie arrives home and tells the s'ory of her experience. GIRL TELLS STORY JOURNAL f? OF WILP FLIGHT DESCENDANT OF BRIDE OF BOLD YOUNG LOCHINVAR CoMllnga, Cal , July 1. Tony Loveall, loader of the kidnaping yes terday of Edna Domengine, the 18-year-old . daughter of Adolph Do menKlne, is at bay today In Warthan canyon, 15 miles from here. He Is surrounded by a pnsse of determined men. heavily armed, and his death or capture Is expected to be reported at any time. Edna, tho girl who under went the tragic experience, is at her honip. slightly bruised, but not se riously jnjured In any way. Her feet wore badlv cut hy stones when she was forced to walk over rocky roads, hor sole garment being the -nightdress which she wore when dragged from her father's house. Clove Rogers, the younger kid naper, who was captured last evening by a posse, after being traced to a lonely mountain cabin and after us ing tho girl as a shield against bul lets from his pursuers, is in jail here. Feeling against him does not run high as the girl says he offered her no affront. A pathetic "feature of the remark able case Is the fact that one of the leaders of the posse, which captured Rogers, was his own father. The old man had nn idea that It was his son, whom he was following with a gun h III! J w 1 ). :vt-.-. -... . I B I In1y Kliiilx'th Grliiit-ton, mt P.i iile of l auious Novelist. ...I ie- : Tl .. . , !..,. rt-t . Il-...e '.IS- " t:.. 1 is: i.a.iv i:: . , ,..(.r,( vs . . AI t r,. iillit "!' th' b: :d" . ' I TRAMPED IN BARE FEET) One of the Iliofliwaymen 1 Leaves the Party Other Takes Kefure in Hut 'With 3Iiss Edna Doinenjrine and Is Captured. The above picture was rerei; The Journal today fiom I.on ion . Verulam's daughter. I.ndy Kllzal."ihi Grlmston. who June 1 became I.ady Elizabeth Ilesketh Prichard bv her marriage to tho famous, novelist nlvi traveler. Hhe Is declared to be the prettiest brldi of the London seasi.n HIIM TUlKl7 TO CHAMBERLAlFf completed ''-'.. .nra iiad just .ring !t'i. the . arly history .' uh'.se .ater a.l vrntures as :e n known to Prlohard's rna:. lands He has also f Lis i,,. mi in. a play of which ' ' 'a J lst l. eo comi.leted. i L. ,-. IJ: v s a niece of the nrn is n nescena viiuni; I.ochlnvsr. L.rrnt new locations to engage In bust- the main Hn." of the Ore.it Northern ness. lt is now proposed to continue this line Brewery Keeps Banning. (south from Adrian to Pascow. about 200 The Roseburg brewery and Ice pla n! i miles, cutting through the center of th . Rnj when he saw the boy he Col- WIII Continue. 1n huslliess. as It h.Hl"ral " .tuoui ill uc yiceini'ieu u oer 300 contrasts for beer, the smallest : "'e Milwaukee. not less tlmn 36 dozen cases One! The Northern Pacific will pass through organization tTT'TIrhT eltv has nlacerf in I the Moses lake region and skirt order for 3'' k" This Is done bo .Hie east end of the Saddle mountain fore the loal option law goes Into ef fect, so tbfit there win he no cause for disturbs nee or lnlnUnir the law n re carcl to selling beer after It Is unlawful. Ay, There's tits Bub. There wUl be some people who will have tngo drv on account of not hav ing ordered ejuniKh to do them through me dry spel4 but It 1s not generally believed Jhnt many wilt suffer, rs n : miles of productive country that now vast, personal supply has ben iat, In. ' sends its products over' the Great A great manv believe that hunps -will I Northern and northern raclfic to Pugst he still better under prohibition law. I sound cities . 1 , ! range The survey is being run through Othello where It crosses the Mil waukee's main line, and will head di rectly south," connecting with the north hank road at Pasco, or with the North ern Pacific a few miles east of that point. ' The result wll be to bring down the Columbia river to Portland the grain ind livestock trarnc or 8,000 square lapsed. The resentment of the community Is directed agi'.nst T.nveall, who is alleged to have planned the daring kidnaping and burning of the outhouses on the Domenglne place. This feeling has been increased by the discovery that when Ioveall -sent Rogers ah. ad w ith the girl he fell back and tli.'l the posse, avoiding suspi cion until the girl was rescued. Then Escaped "Crazy" W,alkiiv on (iovernorLjHciVi'rw Ends AWftfrly. WILD FOR JUNGLE BOOK BY TEDDY PjiJiTi'.s.Tliiiik It Will Be ' t lie likrhtthe Year, and Are St'itij-fihlinir. (Sulem, Bureau ef The ClVTtnnJ m the Insane asylum walked away froci r the Institution yesterday moi ntiiK and . Interviewed Oovernor ( ."'hainl.. r LBn Ie-' spite the fact that he was already . s- , caped the dippy puny wished tlie i;,,... ' ernor to use his Influence to yet lnn. II out of the asylum. Me toid the mt ernor that he was a Very tuuch-atc.se.l person and that the food served at i: the Insane -easy luni w as extremely po's- t w onous. He was unable to a.a oar i ! ; ' n. being alive, lumen r after ,is l a diet of poisonous foodstuffs. In the mldat of the rnterestirt n; versation two attendants appeared are! after a short struggle mana .-led !... "crazy." The three wended llw a u a '. back to the asylum. if he f.n. promised to visit the unfortunate and do what he could for him. S Mc i o r of 'sident 1 1 JAfAX PATSES IX XAVA'L (OXSTRrCTIO.N I-V a a y-j , I.e4r Wire.) -t'm y.:, ', . July i s a'.i i '.isper "Wliittiey, ;e t'.iav gTifsts of I' - :i at Sagamore Hill The pub . ., ire endeavoring to arranse for publication of Roosevelt s account is hutitir-g trip In Africa. is undrstood tliat President . t lias alreaely arranKed to w- .! 1 ' e n.'i'"nnt of Lis travels for a ri.i.i.tLlv rnaeazine. wldch is paying l::i:i.si.ncly for contributions, besides tin-i'ii iiig the tri. Aiiulh." rumor. Is that the publisher of a weekly- magazine Is to pay Roose velt jinn.OOO f"r an account of his ad- :i I ' i res. There is a mad rush of publishers to in.-!.-,- Pay. every publisher realizing H i', the story of the i. resident's hunt- mK trip will be the literary beat of the'-i ear. It Is understood that tho presi dent has been ten.leYed. the biggest sum v.t offered for a singlo series of ar ticles bv one magazine which wants tee -erics exclusively. Just what ar : a neine'Ti ts have actually been made, if any. is not known. I 'or tinned on Page- Two. ) IDAHO PARDON BOARD COMMUTES ASSASSIN Boise, Ida.. July' 1 today earned the prlc in the Haywood and when his death sente by the board of par ment for life. To th. pressed ,the. hope th tence of .the. court w fered with, but In spl lions Frank "Wyman, coiiit to look after Fred before Cue skd that "the life spared. , , Wyman argued tl?l a leifal standpoint, eeptlng U tictlmd nd legally bound to ex- .ndatlon made by Judge -time Orchard was sen presented. Judge Wood, eing sentence, made an ment, in vVhleh he ex inlon that Orchard had e full and exact truth sentence, which he was he law to Impose,' should y the state board of par- tppeared before the board ind the clemency, asked tly given, ending the' last i famous cases resulting .sslnatlon of ex-Opvernur berg at Caldwill, Deconi- jprnXAE WANT ADS PIUXG RESULTS LOST- LOST axi rouio UKAVV GOLD P.RACKLKT, Sundav morning, engraved Cla'ud and i hitler return to Ila- Marle on inside zelwood cream stoje. Liberal reward. LOST .-MONDAY KVENING ON PORT land heights, ft 1!nck and white 10-mnnths-old pointer doe- collar, without name Phone Main 61H7; reward. WATCH AND FOB ON' Phono Kast 677. Ask PDPM Will rams ave. for Tu i ner. i 8TOI.KN PO!'HJ,K-BAH Johnson wheel. No. 132684. Main or'A-2i75. Reward. . IV KR Call up ALL HELP WANTED, SITUATION WANTED, WANTKIl TO RENT. FOR RENT, AND LOST AM). VOUND CLASSIFIED ADS. ONI? CKNT TKR WORD, THREE COX8FXTTIVE IN SKRTIONS FOR THE PRICK OP TWO. VNPKH OTHER CLASSIFICATIONS 1 CENT A WORD, SEVEN INSERTIONS FOR THE PRICE OF SIX. Costs only 1 cent a .word. See classified1 pages 15, 16 and 17. Saloons' K nfl I Sounded in .Union. Toklo. July 1 Two battleships mi two cruisers under construction In Jap aneso nav y vards will not oe conij L te.j immediatelv. lif.-flaso of the postpone ment of th' naval development pro , .Siwelpl Iilnfinh to The Jnurrml. ' ' gram, according to report here toliy : I. a Crande. Or. July 1. I'nlon conn Repairs of the ships captured tr.uiijty's saloons closed at midnight last -the Russians will be rushed, however, ; ijttht. Two arrests were made here so they will be" In condition to part let-! last nleht for drunkenness. No attempt pate In the naval, maneuvers to be c..n-,has been made. In this county to keep ducte! this tall. open, so far as Known. TAFT TEMPORARILY OUT OF JOB; FIRST TIME IN 22 YEARS (t'ulted Press Leed Wire") Washington, July 1. WlUlam Howard Taft at noon today formally trans ferred the Office of secretary of war to Luke E. Wrrght. Ah informal reception peridd be has held eight different ap pointive offices, lie was never elected to any office. , His first work was iat of court- re porter on the old Cincinnati ' Commer- lai-uajzette. then he became reporter (t'nltoa I'res leaned Wire.) " CoalinKa. Cal., July 1. Seemingly none the worse for her remarkable experience, Miss Edna Domenglne. who was captured early yesterday : morning hy two bandits now knayfn to have been Clove Rogers and T6ny Loveall, is at her father's homo to day, chatting interestingly of' her-' rapture and subsequent rescue. To The Journal and United Press repre sfiOtative she related the story of her e.;cfirjg" rata with trie highwaymen "chrt tfth,, .tfritfe .country-girl spirit .went' into details 'of what some Jessy j.wuntrlfled" p.ersctftr. might call " nltfht of horror." ' . 4 JJ,if. Domesglne Is pfrtfy, very pret-'t.r.- S4ip Is, a' '''.eml-hruuette. graceful, i;nl-k'wtfed eVaS '.wlf poised. She was used as a shield agalusl' bullets, but when asked wbut wore her thougtttt on realizing that before her were two . score of the best shots il. the valley" and -that they might pour a deadly fir In mistake upon the kidnapers, sh, replied: "1 wasn't afraid. I knew that th boys wouldn't, shoot many shots when . they knew that I .was In danger. The only thing that did bother me was the fear that the robbers might fire on the boyt, and kill someone'. They did shoot but only at Iouk range. Vpeaki-ig .! the attack on her fath er's raiic'i, the tiring af th.- ham and her fill .'iufiil kidnaping, Ml.-s Dom-engir.e- Bets Carriage-Home Born. "I was awakened rfmn a sound sleep ' by a glare of ligni and the sound of guns." .she said, "and without waiting to dress ran down stairs to see what., was the matter. Father anfl mother were "on the po.ro h watching the car-1. rlage-house, wMrli was a' mass of flames. Two men were- sitandiri be tween the house and the barn snooting . rule nuiiets lrrio the air. "All our men employes were securely' bound ami the bands thae-Ti told papa: iiiai ne must pay tnem jo.uuo: We r, plied that there was no money in the house."' They wouldn't believe him and Rogers grasped me by the arm and forced me to help him search. the place. "After Rogers had ransacked the house and satisfied himself that there was no money here, they hitched up our buggy, placed papa and me in it and drove down the Coallnga road. After driving a few miles, during- which time ' Loveall continually repeated threats t j kill me unless $6,000 ransom was paid before ft o'cliv-k Tuesday night, they al lowed papa to alight. "At l oalinta we stopped at the pet house and turned the horses loose. We." didn't meet a soul as we passed tnrough the town After we had walked about! three miles Loveall left us. My feet,, were getting awfully sore. They lid, : not allow ms to dress before we left" the house. I hurried alonsr as beet ! ; could and sometimes Rogers helped ne over the rough places, but at others be swore at me for being so slow. "Finally we reached the little pond ft called JAck's Springs. There is a hut VI here and Rogers told me tvr go inside- I We sat in that place the rest of thf nittht and through the next dav until ,1 the posses came. it was awfully hot. and lonesome, for Rotters aid not talk io me, except once, wbetl he Bjild: '1 iuess we fooled 'cm.' "Suddenly I heard the noise of an RU tomotille and Rogers dashed to the door Just as a bullet crashed Into the jimi three Inches from his head He picked up his rifle, grabbed me around the waist and shoving me In front of -him pened fire-on three men who were eom-i ing ur the hill on a riin. Dr. Seebery, m 'ho was with he posse, saw us and fired two shots. Then Rniy7- tflM "tits " gun across my shoulder and hgan ' to shoot. It seemed tp me he fired a mil-, lion shots, and my ear hurts) . 'yet from . the noise. "As the rescuing party .approached and hU bullets failed 'Jo tfike effo Kngers Fhovcil me .heliTurT jf "rock, and, iing down, again beiu--flrlng , In - tew moments ne threw down his Xlffe ind " hou ted : , 'I surrender."' '"Then the mr.ri wrshed Up to me and falrly shouted 'Are you hucty and when l said ,NO,' Dr. Seeberry saJ.l: ThnK " lod.' " . ... - . . was held, and Taft. acting as master of;0I the Cincinnati Times, which is now ceremonies, introduced Secretary of the Times-Star, owned bv his brother War Wright to the officials and clerks of the department. secretary vv right received many mes sages of cnngratulatiorf and a number Of bouquets Ink honor rf the' occasion. Taft finds hlnself off the payroll for the first time In 2a years, .During that His first appointment to public, ofttcf came whe'n he was made assistant prosecuting, attorney of Hamilton county. Ohio, Hlnce then he lias been continually In Service until tdday, whe.v he ilnda hiipnelf temporarily out of m J"b. - , - ' w ' ." - - - " ' ' ' r ' WILL MVJTTOTAKK " 3IAXY PKIXKS YET (United llfei tenet Mlrf. " San fanclsco, ; July I Doctors the battleship Kentwtky tfUv nouneed that'M. S.' Corny,, a, Bailor, Vl.c stabbed-iiimself Jat itiifhl, ,wyi Tcovf-r from his wound,-1 Corny Mtertli s ioort, took a tirltik tnd shouted; . 'This fs the. lust." Thn Ii . fr. dued a knife and Mef'trs any one o.i'i -i interfere plutid it Mmo htn, tresst. i i was taken k.j tie i nntrsl f bospltal and -later rmifl trv t..r tucky,. Jlf came tcj'.a iHnwast Bold, by aaiccdtl , .- Iibrary'Assgciat