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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1909)
1 . ." fZ4r AOA I" I JOURNAL CIIICULATIO;. viti:iuav WAS r II li It A I I. V, JO V H N A L Two Cents a Copy fcundiy Journal M rnt; or 15 iriti witk, for Dully Mini Kuitday Jour pal. ly carrier, delivered. t Th weather Fair tonight and Saturday." light westerly wjndg. vol: viii. NO. 215. n n Federation in Coeur d'Alenc : District Bitterly. Dc- nounces Alleged Warfare Upon Free Free Press. Speech., and l , (Spfrtal Dispatch to The Journal.) -' Bpokaas. v Waslu, - 12, Twenty ! thousand-mtn arc awaiting tha call to m v aiii r tha Industrial Wort- WW " VMV - . Jars of ths VTorUd la thslr fight t or frss i speech, declare isadsrs of that orr cation. It U 80 sympathiser! are on roofs from Chicago to spoxanw. Babtas corpus proceedings ar'binf laUnta ' 0r nan V cr of i easss . where ; ln4utrlUt . r f ohftrrod witb dlordf rly oondact la " itroot tpoaklnr. '".-v ' ?-'v-': r" 'Attorneys Bogers and Moore, counsel ' for the imprisoned men, are takins thelc cases ijlrect to the superior court, de claring they are -unatoie to get Justice before Municipal Judge ,Mann. ; ; " , The first Installment of Spokane's great cost in its -warfare against free speech and free press is due. . Her mer chants must net It Spokane, with her every single, Drof it' making product or ' her manufacturers and mercharits has , been boycotted by the Western Federa J tlon of Miners of , the entire Coeur ' d'Alen mining district, representing ' 5000 men, -who heretofore consumed 7 some of this city's merchandise- At the ' very least it means a toss of thousands i in.. wnmhintii hpr. i The res- ' olutloHB bearing ths seal of the Coeur ' d'Alens dlaM-tct ot the Western Feder I ation of Miners ara as falUyjs: , , . Besolutlons AgttnrsTTSpokaM. ''Burke, Idaho, Nov. 10. Members "VCeste.ru Federation Miners and Workers i th World Fellow Workers: The gttempi to : mrsogio 1 1 ugiii. speech and the right of assembly on tho ; streets by' the government of Spokane, Wash:; and its beneficiaries is to , !itt. Th riehts of the workers, of that city ar our rights; their fight is our fight;, their success defeat is our nuecess or defeat and deepest; concern. Blood was spilled for the right of free 1 Speech and free assembly, It waswrit ten m the constitution of Jthese United States by tlu blood of th working class, " and by the same force and fluid, if nec essary, it shall ; remain an inalienable right. - '', - "Lives there man so -dense as to not feel and protest the dastardly at 7 tack of the organized movement of Spo-.kane,- upon the liberty to speak, to. act, to think in unison. . Boycott" Srsry rxoduot -"Workers of North America, we call upon you to use the weapons now, in .your hands. Get out. your hammers, 'knock the city. of Spokane-the enemy of human kind. A government of, by and for those who have and toll not. Boycott per avery product, knock every (Continued on Pag Sixteen.) PORTLADDViO INJURED IN EAST Mrs. Daniel Entler Falls 7 Between Coaches of B. & 0. Train. tt'Bltrd Prn Wire. - Washington.. D.." C, : Nor. IS. Mra Dnlel Entler, .V resident of East Davis an Twelfth street. North Portland, met .with a serious accident at Shenandoah : Junction enrout from here to FledmOnt to visit relatives. - Standing on the platform of a B. O. train awaiting her son Paul, to board T the car. she fell between the.roacnca. Her ankle was crushed badry. She waa taken to Piedmont. W. Va.. where she was cared for jintll removed last night to leer I arn. ."- attended In the h"me or ner Mtner. Wllltam Hoye. Althoiieh the injury la erioua. the wound is being nucceMf oily treated. ' She was about to start home and intended to top at vral place on snort visits, rot i era!' months ' MOB ATTACKST f,Wliy MEJEIID CTattrd rrm tC WW I Paris, Nv. It A dlplch frotn Bom f -tht Fournlra S Sf-scy, wj-s rnxny r"T.a t.ava t-fn Kl'.;l in n.it'irrt T a mft to ln4e the riti-t c'j rr ! I (hTr, -Thr yrntn are (.! i. s-wfriir t i-d hr jrtft H th ttirV. lb, trwt r ." l !nfir " ...4 ,a b .1 rnt t fkiM 5000 II1ERS IPOKflil (!, - t f'T-1 ,tti k t 1 I if 1? h. s - . PATHETIC Al mm Washirieton state penitentiaries, testify , to the passing of Hang- . .. nt - AlA (! nnnn thr fallOWS'tO- day was 'due' to 'the clemency of Governor Benson, who last nicht commuted the death sentence of, Harry Daley, charged with the killing of Harry Kenny of Portland, to life imprison ment.' . - -'' ' V' ' '' ""''' i , At 12:30 this afternoon Janves A. ;Fmch, former Portland attorney, went to his death in ;the prison af Salem, and there ended one of the most desperateffights to' evade the gallows ever made in Oregon.. v 1 ' 7 At 6:25 this mbrning, in IheAValla AValla Ute- prison, t trao was Porune under 13ud Barnes, slayer of the aged - Al Aldrich, and within lV2 minutes James A. Finch' Who Was Hanged at IBflEF P ' (lilted Pre lid alem, Or, Hot. X8. Tinea left e.U a iaaW, left chaps! at H:2S. At he was dropped and prononnced dead. Just 3i mlaatss from ths Mm ths trap , was droppsd. This beats all Oregon records by . 8 minute. Salem, Or, Nov. 12. At 12 :S0 o'clock today James Anderaon Finch, an attor ney at law, newspaper man and pU tlclan of prominence In Oregon, was ex ecuted by hanging at tha Oregon peni tentiary ' ror shooting to dvath Ralph Fisher in his law office at Portland on November 2. 10. Flslwr had been appointed by h Orrgon Bar associa tion to proaevute debarment proceed insa aaalnet Tlneh for drunkenneae and conduct unbx-ontng to the pmfeaalos nd It did not appear lh trnl !l,t 'there -waa any otiwr ui Tor irnnw btm tne two men. l-ianer w -man rf blh ehTicter. a brother-in-law cf Senator T. B. Kay. of Saln- The artrnt made a atubborn flht t save Finch to the last hour, bringing bis asl mother ard wife to lem. and b ,l,rln Oavemor B-nrwi with petitlona frtm jrm!nent Wfmtri -f tne bar. Oovemi.r Iknunn 14 llmnt nothtnc the rt week, rtar and rtRht, bnt outsider flor-vmenia ber1r..nii the caee aoJ re lr the teetimnny- ' fm waa In h's final deli'n if lr,ttfre -miih the- ectl(rtl of Fie?- r lolH-t Attomr fameron. t-e tr'al J'J"''". id tv a'rretn covrt I m Fte t-.te"!l ) , . 1 y i , 'I 'mi1:" . 7 --'Jf7l7il 73I7 BEISOl ill BARHES LIVES USING ARDOrJ PORTLAND, mows- - - nin . fllinn mn nninnmn IYA 111 PPFAI vllr lilli oUl rUlt ISb b HA 11 OF NO AVAIL IWm ROBBER IS v nni imnniA n AimiiT the rs. bc was pronouncea oeau. Salem Toda7 for .the Murder of HI WailaV7 Walla, Wash, Hot... 18. Un oonfeaaad amd ahowlng bat ft signa of waakanlnr. Bud, BantM wan. to U aeatb om tha scaffold at tha stata Pnl taatiary hara this morning.. At f A tha trap was sprang nd mln Barnaa was prononncsd daad by tha doc tors. Barnes was confident to tha last moment that a pardon woald soma from tha rorarnor, and 6a al way to tha scaffold ha had ot lost hops. pent laat night writing lettr and was given hia last meal at U&O, aftax which ha refused to gs to bad antU ho had had a smoke. At daybreak a largo crowd had aa aembled in front of the. prison trying to gain admission. - but non was al lowed entrance aavc the newspaper men. physicians, clergymen and officer. The morning was chilly and cloudy.. Baraea, accompanied by Father Jonea. a Catholic prleat. walked with a nervous step. an,I when going up the staira to the acar fold. MumWed twice. On the trap he wayed an ha wu bound, but needed no aesletance to aland. The officer went tnrough tha exe cution hurriedly, evidently fearing a breakdown.. Barnea fell clear as the trap was Sprung by five guards eimul taneotly, and his neck, wan broken by the fait. " Xistorr f araas' Crtaia. It waa on April bst Bare en lired Mr Anna AMrjch. a mamn tlntn ued. tu rt Mten. ES OREGON, j FRIDAY EVEN?NG. NOVEMBER 12, 1909. TWENTY PAGES. Colonel Marshall in Annual Jteport Outlines AVork ; for Kiixrs andJra'rVbrs-of ; Pacific Coast Oregon Is iii the Lead.4 (UnlUd Praia teiaed Wlra-I Waahlnaton. Nov. it. Colonel W Marahall. chief of the ITnlted SUtas en- glneerlng department, in hla annual re port made public today, recommends that 11.680,000 be appropriated for the Improvement of the mouth of the Co lumbia river: that J1.000.O0O bo appro priated for work on the Columbia river between the toot of The Dalles rapids and the head of Celllo falls and that $315,000 be appropriated tor . me im provement of Oakland naroor. Many xeeommsnaauona. Amonir other . Important recommenda tions for appropriations affecting the Pacific coast atates are the following: me Ban T ula Obiwoo harbor, 1100,000; for the Columbia and lower Willamette below- Portland, $175,000;: for Puget aotind and tributaries. iau,uuu; ior me San Joaquin river, $35,000; for the Sac ramento and Feather rivers, $30,000; for tha Columbia river and tributaries above Celllo falls to the mouth of the Snake river, $90,000; for the inner por tion of Grays harbor. $16,000; for the WlHametter Ttver above Portland and the Vamhiii river. ow,uui ii io ir.Qi at the Columbia river between Vancouver and the mouth of the Wil lamette. $1,5,000;' , for a waterway, to connect Puget sound with Lake Lnion inO UiKB vvajiungiyih ."'y-iv- - i Columbia :.,rtw between Wenatchee- and Bridgeport. $25,000; ror an juieso bor, $30,000; for Wilmington ? harbor, $45,000; for the JMokulump river, Meta liima creek and Napa river, $20,000; for Coos river $3000; for Tillamook bay and bar,. $10,000; for Snake river, $16,000; for Cowllts and Lewis rivers, $5500; for Wlllapa river and harbor, $5000; for Grays harbor,-$500; for gauging the wa ters of the ColumDta river, Swlnomlsh s;ougli, $10,000. Money for California. . TK.r.r,rnnelatinn asked for the San Tannin river la to include $5000 for the. Stockton Mormon channels. TVi.mnnrt recommends that $1,319 000 be expended on improvements for fortifications and sea coast batteries In the Philippines. The following .pp nriatinna nr also asked- for the Pnli lpplnes: For searchlights, $139,200; for repairs, $14,000; for repairs to torpedo structures. $1000; for supplies, $iuuu. . tt-.- titt hend of rivers and harbors. ho wever-, It -Is recommended . that,,; half a million dollars be expended, at once i h tmnrovemeht of Pearl harbor. whtirh.. accordinic to the announcement made yesterday, is to become the main ...i.i Koeo In the Pacific. Also It is recommended that $600,000 be expended In the Improvement of Hilo harbor. ' J ' Alaska Appropriations. The report asks for $100,000 'for the improvement of the St. Mtehael canal In Alaska. For Yellowstone Park $160,000 i. ..uj hut nn mention la made of i n .pmu - - - , - . Tosemlta Park. ; ", For the road to Mount Rainier an, ap propriation of $125,000 is recommended. c.nt, Dickinson cut $2.000,000 , of f the original recommendations made by u...h.n fnf Vrnrtificatlons and harbor giaiDiiuu v - - improvements. ' Ths heaviest appropriations for wa terway i improvement on the Pacific coast are recommended for the Colum bia river and the lower Willamette, which aggregate - nearly $3,000,000. Other Pacific coaat rivers and har bors not mentioned In the list received no recommendations for spproprlatlons. IF RED WIDOW IS Goverumenr Will Investi gate Olunlers of Which 7 ?; She Is Accused. Paris. Nov. 1J. If Madame Stelnhell Is acquitted, as appears likely today, the government will Immediately re sume an Investigation f the murders of the "red widow's" artist husband and stepmother, Msdame Japy.' The gov emment Is convinced that there are grava secrets of national Importance behind the aarrotlng f Madame Steln hell and the authorities trt anxious to g-t at the bottom of these. -j On several Instances when the proae c J tors were pressing the woman rloe ly she threatened to dl( loae aecreta that would cause sensation nnleaa the prosecutors dealstel In every Instance the threat bad the dealred effect and the prosecutor general started on an ether line of naeatlonisg. Xorth tU-nd Elcctk Uer!ir I . Marabfleld. Or. Nov. - 11 Th tiif tnancil ef North Kend baa catt-d a rtu. rua for Nnvemher . at nnn tim eandlJatea will b boe to ran piTf.r and fther ettv off'rea at t elton fe. rH MJ-?r I. I. Kinney and t-i'T Irrle a " rn l'it' for marr w talked et , i MM William Pinkerton Says One of Five Thieves Arrested nt. Omaha Helped l(ol i:ast Side Bank in City. , This (United Prena Lied Wira. Omaha,- Neb., Nov. ( 12. A motion for a new trial is being argued today by tha attorntys for the five men who were cunvlcted last night of holding up the Overland Limited last May. The con victed men are Wllltam Matthews, Fred TorgKrison, Daniel Downer, Frank Grlg warcs and Lawrence Golden. The , men hall from Colorado, Washington, Idaho and Oregon. ' If the motion Is overruled the men will probably be sentenced late today. Each man Is liable to a sentence of life Imprisonment. William Matthews, missing robber In tho v.MKt Side bank robbery of a year ago. Is at Omaha and faces a life sen tence for train robbery. Last night he was convicted on, six counts of an In- dictment charging him and four others with robbing a unites states mail car on the Union Pacifie railroad at Omaha, May 22, last. Tho conviction, says William A. Pinkerton, veteran chief of the Pinkerton National Detective agency, who is now in Portland, means life Imprisonment for all- r' "A church, three loose tongued sweet hearts, small boys, a school teacher, the police of Omaha and Denver, ths Plnk eptons these -were the agencies that caught and convicted tha robbers, and not least anions tht3e werd th'e'Pinkcr- ' Chief William Pinkerton Is ' In Port land on his regular tour of the posts of his agency. This is the story of the five who were caught as told this morn ing to The Journal by the famous de tective: '' v ', MaU Car Bobbed, "Six months ago a mail car on the Denver & Rio Grande Just? on the out skirts of Denver was rifled by masked men. They succeeded in getting away with their loot, consisting, of $30,000 taken from the Registered mail sacks. Soon after a similar robbery occurred at Spokane, on the Union Pacific. Six months ago the Omaha robbery took place with apparently the same success that attended the others. "It was not at first a case for the Pinkertons. 1 It was a case for the gov ernment to handle, since the mail had been robbed. But the Omaha robbery caused, the VntenJtecmaJtoUQt--. ward of $5000 for the capture of each of the five marked robbers; this In ad dition to the, recompense --'.which they proposed to make for our services, "When we took the case I arranged for General Superintendent Philip K. Ahern to go from Seattle with a corps of operatives to the. scene of the rob bery. -". ':. '.'.' Iiot In Church. "At the same time I reminded them that robbers often leave their loot in a church, under the pulpit, under the pews, " or up among ; the rafters. Our men went to Omaha, t- "Small boys playing . near a school saw a string. . They (pulled on It. Out came a revolver. They told the teach er, the teacher notified the police. The police watched near the brushheap (Continued on Page Sixteen.) LA F0LLETTE SAYS REF01M IS NOT DEAD IN TWO CITIES (Cnlted Prrai Leaned Wire.) Madison. Wis Nov. 12. t'n- - der the caption, "Defeated but Not Beaten." the current issue of La Follette's Weekly says: "in tbs defeat of Tom L John son for mayor of Cleveland and Francis J. Heney for district at torney of San Francisco, wa find nothing disheartening. "The struggle to - wrest- the 'government In cities, states and nation from the clutchea 'of ep- . cial privilege has been marked by many setbacks." Tha article states that It is a long struggle, but the leaders of tha people's cause' must meet aome defeats and this will simply-make them fight all the harder. It also declarea to lead eta of the people who are not aevktng personal gain and rlorr. that defeats are but Incident, and continues: - . - -To euch men defeat never " means surrender and so with Johnson and Heney. Theee men labored faithfully, unaelflalily and well for the public good. They aifomp!1ehed great- thin, far greater than the tangible fe aulta tbat tray he et down on the credit aH of their leJcrra -"The efforts of Jhnon to Irak a free Oerelan L owalng Ha puMk- utlUikea la t he Inter est of paMie aot. anif the ea deavera of lienor to make a tleea Tan Kr nrfg ind tn-ins to Juatke tKe ri-h. powerf'il and -ret. lMe rorrvipvora of c.tf aoverwment. kave ou'ewed tte ptilee rf ovtwtwraf r. nw bai wn PT-rM'T and rely tn nattri." PRICE TWO (TROOPS HOLDSEfiBS NOTIGr CONTROL AT CAIRO Several Companies Already in City Entire Regiment of Guards to Be Assem bled as Anti-Mob Measure The Double Lynching. (Cnlted Pref Leased Wire.) . . Cairo, 111., Nov. 12. Although the aeveral comnanles of militia which ar rived here early today ' have the city eomnietelv under control this afternoon, the entire Fourth regiment will arrive here later in the day and go into camp. MOB HANGS TWO AND THIRSTS FOR BLOOD OF ANOTHER VICTIM Cairo. 111.. Nov.' 12. With the arrival here of state troops . at dawn today, n.m 4a nractlcallv under martial law. after three days of mob Bpirlt, culmi nating last night in the lynching of two men.;' V:'.'';." . -''''; ; In tha presence of 10,000 , cheering men and women.. mob Jateriast night hanged, Will James, the negro accused r ,,oHn7 Anna Pel ley. a white omon riddled the body with 600 bul lets and then dragged It along the streets for a mile and burned the re- mntna r hmii mei with the lust for blood, ths infuriated gathering closed in on the jail, battered Its way through the steel bars, dragged out Htnry SaUer, a white man accused of wire muraer ana naugcu him. Authorities Demand Troops. . . Tn the meantime the authorities com municated with Governor Deneen- ana state troops were rushed to the city. All night long the mob surged through the city streets clamoring ior more vicumn. Fearing a repetition of the scene at SnrlnirfleM of two VPHTS SCO WhCtt S mob ran amuck, shooting and hanging negroes, the blacks of the city stormed the various police stations pleading for protection. Although the troops have partially restored order today, the negroes are still in a state of frenay-and are afraid to show themselves on . the - streets. Great difficulty WaB experienced by the 11 companies of state troopB in dispers ing the mobs, and more trouble is ex pected, . The lynching of James followed a sen sational chase of many hours, in which a stolen freight train figured. When a mob formed Wednesday night with, the avowed intention of . lynching Jamos, Sheriff Davis , saved the negro's life temporarily by spiriting him out of tho city. , . ..' . " Davis and his prisoner alighted from a train at Dongola with the sheriff hop- (Contlnucd on Page Sixteen.) L0SAN6ELES TilAY MAKE A RECOUNT ' -77, ' ' " : : ; -i V -". A Uerpt Irregularities in One Precinct Cast Doubt Upon the Result. fi'.iti PrM. 1 mtA Wfra.l 4 Ta Anaeles. Cal.. Nov. Ii. Alleged Irregularities in the returns from the 45tli precinct of the Fourth ward in Wednesday's primary election may re sult in the institution of a contest by the adherents of William C. Mushet, candidate for mayor. After a revision of th returns late yesterday It was announced at the office of the city clerk' that George A.Smith led Mushet for pltc on the final ballot, which will be voted December 7, by the narrow margin of 51 votes. It waa claimed then by Mushefs supporters that there had been an error in the count in the 45th precinct. According to the returns, Mushet did not receive a vote In that prectnet. but.U.W. Boswell and Alfred Bon ham. ballot clerks in-the sam pre ilnct. declared today they were positive that Mushet's name appeared on many f the ballots. It waa proposed to the Smith leaders that they consent to a recount. If this request is denied, the Mushet men may makd good their threat to contest th election. Mushet said today: "Naturally. I am making an inveatl gatton e-f tha ballots. If there la any regularity. alleged, there ahouM b a recount Thla sliould be dona in or der t Siva ur new primary law a rair teet. If for n" other tison. j win lane1 no siepa ntll the wffklal count la ver ified." PHYSICIANS DISITSS' INFANT 3I()i:TALITY " ffM-d Te Le-d H'tea.! N Hrt. t"iic-i . Nov It Ka " , phvat. lans ttstm f.inta tfcr',ffHot tte jrwiitltr are In aM"t.r.i Hif at A ' ttte f tona rf t A r -s n A tWV f WMUm i.e t-t i'-e i jeve'eia of 1K Jr a -f-rn. Avn tte a f te pr- n' (f In- if,r,t V "1 - ' CENTS. ON TR-tlkl ANO WrS tt AN HVlb Ctil ffl Mm U' Special "Inspector Hutcliin soii Calls attention to Law Forbiddinjr Sale of - Milk Carrvinj? More Than JM, ,000 illth Geniis. 'The law forbldsths sale of urclcon milk" is the distinctive sentence used by Milk Inspector Hutchinson. in cbmniunl catlons he is sending to dairymen who have failed ta meet the pure milk test. The refusal . to allow unclean milk to be disposed of In Portland considers neither Jhe source of supply nor the purchaser, but merely the fact- that If the product contain mora than 400,00ii filth germs, to the cubic centimeter It Is by law named unwholesome and un salable. . Consequently. Impure milk which goes' to creameries in the-city Is barred in exactly the same way as milk ' which goes direct from the dairy man to the private family. . The announcement of . the special milk inspector Is expected to have a disconperting effect on dairymen who have planned ' to- evade the law by ingenious pretexts. The letter .reads : , r"777.77' Copy - of' I.sttsr. ; ' ' ! "A sample of milk taken by me on -, 1909, from the supply which you, were about to serve consumers or deal ers in Portland shows by' test of Dr. Ralph ; C. Matson, state and .city., ba terlologlst a count.' of bacteria per cubic centimeter allowed as a max imum count by , an - refinance of the city of Portland regulating :JesJ2.,of milk" within Its" corporate limits. In the terms of. this ordinance the milk which you are supplying consumers tn Portland must be declared unwholesome and unsaJableWand the law forbids you to make further, sales until you have satisfied the city board of health that you have made such correction in your methods of ' production as will insure milk of legal cleanness. Very sincerely. EDGAR W. HUTCHINSON.' "Special Milk Inspector." " Dairymen notified." V he ' following dairymen were ad dressed by the Inspector as being among those whose milk Is too unclean for use as food:. ' " ' . . . Kaufman &'Toney, 2,000.000 bacteria per cubic centimeter, sample taken Oc tober 25; Dairy delivery,; 1,000,000 bac teria per C. C, from sample of Octo ber 26; X'. S. dairy, 1,000,000 bacteria per C. C, from sample of October 27; F. Cadanau, 1,400.000 bacteria per C. ".. from sample of October 27; A. W. Suhalts, 2.040,000 bacteria-per C, -... from sample of October 28; O. A. Peter son, 800.000 bacteria per C. C, from sample of October 28; , Slauterbai U. 1,200.000 bacteria Per C. C ,from samplo . of October 29; P. Hergen. 2.000,000 bac teria per C. t.. from samplcof October 30; Beghlinger, 600,000 bacteria per C. C. from sample, of November 4; J. H. Charlton, 450,000 bacteria per C. i. from 'sample of November 4; C. .W. Conzler, 500,000 bacteria per C. C, from sample ' at f November ii W. G. L-, f.000,000 bacteria per C. C.vfrom sam ple of November 5; JS. C Gedempka, 650,t.OO bacteria per C. C. from sample of November 6; Pete Gilham, 600,0t) bacteria i per C. C, from sample of November 5; Bellinger, flOO.OOO bacteria per C. C from sample of November 5; K. M. JJCUriCK. ouu," ubi ici im j" ' " . ., C, from sample of November 5; E. H. Olson, 1,000,000 bacteria per C. C, from sample of November 5. Several of thefcrtijrynien found tt l selling milk below standard -operat in Washington, They . are made ..subject to the same restrictions and regulations as those who have, dairies' in tliis state. engineer" doe scalded: dies Not Seriously Burned, and Death Probably Due to Heart Failure. "Il'hlfed Pre l-ee Wlf.) ' &ut Framlsco. Nov. 12. The t-m-er St. Croix arrived In port early t1ay. 12 hours late on her run from Pedro, bearing on lord . the IkxIv f Otis Doe. thk f engltifr of the ve.- !. who died prexuinHbly from heart fi.: ure. few minutes after he Iim.I I" i painfully, but not seriously s-al.l-l i steam, Wednesday night. f The mr ident ntin red a ti'l- r Steamer n-ar Sant Ilstlm-. ' enalneer was bv.klng f'r a lk I - -whintl- alve when th- t.tiin t " i -ralve hkv out and f'l!. 4 it.- !; flrerrotn wHIi a t.!io.:m t Um I t , pet-lwatcJ l-am. . guffrrisg - from th t-jrum wti !. had efled. I"" fai fiom T-arlment, died r-- . ,h ' tart Brln-r a.d " - . ' t'Tfat'o'.d r r: ' M "- a' , i i-u tl dii. v waa ' )" - H ' ' ' t r I .. ,. .-.'- ' - !, I ' 1 - - - t .. DAIRIES