r. m 9 1 1 1 mil mo W Am M ii S i 4 il iiii is m io 1 Mil IIII ...I. ... ' 'I J J- -- . Jf 1 kj LJ V- - X . -0 i- ' 1 ' i : . : ! : -! " nrur- n M i Miff With Her Flits Mr. Dunsmuir Hot Times in Old Towns En Rcule Real Mrs. D. Qan Do as She Likes About It. (?ielal DUtvilrli t Tbt Joonul.l . San Francisco, Cal.. May 28. In the f icturesque old cities of Mexico and Central America, Dorothy Russell,, the .beautiful daughter of Lillian Russell, Is challenging the popularity of bullfights and fandangops with her dances and gay pongs. With her Is Robin W. Dunsmulr. eon of Lieutenant Governor James Duns liiutr of British Columbia. ', Tha two are journeying to Peru, and on tha way they are cutting a wide swath. They are eloping, and while the .merry voyage progresses Mrs. Robin Dunsmulr, daughter of Mrs. E. Shoobert of Saur.a Jito, is' awaiting word from her hus band, undecided as to whether she , should bring her suit for divorce or continue to be separated from her pleas ure loving husband. Ha is Indifferent as to which course his wife pursues. JMndexvous at Maaatlan. And the clever Dorothy, whose hls trlomo star shone with Intermittent bril liance during a brief career in a local cafe, ia entertaining the natives of the south and a few straggling army and ravy officers with a few select dances, the steps of which she acquired when her much praised mother consented to allow her 'to enter the .realm of musical .comedy. ;.-' . , Passengers arrived in this city' from the south tell interesting stories of the escapades which make Dunsmulr and his pretty, companion the talk, of Mexico and Central America, Tha pair began the swath cutting pro- port on Dunstaulr's Itinerary. They met at Mazatlan, Mexico, whence Miss Rus sell bad - hurriedly . gone when a good friend told her that Mrs. Dunsmulr was In San Francisco on the- trail of her hus band. ' , , , . Tropical Dance in the Tropics. ; It was In, San Jose de Quatama that Miss Russell created the furore wblch made her a welcome guest in the cities which the pair visited later. She ac compllshed a graceful dance there whle"h every eye witness say was in harmony with the temperature of tha southern climate. ' Though the spectators-- were mostly Indians and the pavilion an open air afair, young Dunsmulr reveled in the plaudits that his , fair companion won. ' ' ; : : "It was a spectacular affair," said one of the eye witnesses who arrived In San Franclnco on the steamer San Juan, "and Mies Russell and young Dunsmulr ( drank and' drank champagne. Traveling as Mr. and Mrs. Dunsnrolr. Dunsmulr. is going to Peru ' to look over some mining property and the fair Dorothy has promised to brave the ter rors of the Andes with him. Of course, few of their hew acquaintances know that they are" on a "romantic escapade and that the real Mrs. Dunsmulr Is anx iously awaiting word from her husband. Only those who met Miss Russell and Dunsmulr in this city and later ran across them in the south smiled when the couple were Introduced as "Mr. and Mrs. Dunsmulr." Miss Russell left this city early in March. She traveled incognito. to Matat sn, Mexico. On March 2 Dunsmulr left San Francisco on the Kosmos line steamer Itaurl and he was Joined at Mazatlan by Miss Russell. ; ' Fnrsnloff Wife Tost Misses Him. Dunsmulr was swamped with troubles before he left the city. Ills wife in an endeavor to head him off, arrived in , Klrtll J J SilVIPCU 1MB flay 11(3 RttlltfU. JUlillH- mulr learned of her arrival as the Itaurl was passing through the Golden Gate. He offered the skipper of a pilot boat $20 if he would take a letter back to Mrs. Dunsmulr, but a satisfactory ar rangement could not made and Mrs. Dunsmulr did not know where her hus band was until friends told her that he and Miss Russell had been seen together in 'Mazatlan. '' . . It was reported that Mrs. Dunsmulr had brought suit for divorce, but her mother, Mrs. E. Shoobert of Sausallto, denied the reportjulmitting, . however, that her daughter , and Dunsmulr had separated. . Dunsmulr, while a guest at the Palace hotel, told acquaintances that he and his wife had agreed upon a separation. "There will be novreconcllatlon," he said.- "My wife Is free to do as she pleases." . . ' 15 GRADUATE FROM , THE DALLES SCHOOL (SpecUt Dliptch to The Journal.) The Dalles, Or., ; May 28. Fifteen young people were graduated from The Dalles High.' school this year, the com mencement exercises being held in Vogt onora house last evening, when the di plomas were presented by Circuit Judge W. U Eradshaw. .The graduating ad dress was delivered., by .Professor J. S. Landers, city superintendent of Pen dleton, formerly superintendent of The Dalles schools. The class" consisted of Luclle Boyd; Georgia Cross, S. Marion Driver, Hazel M. Donahoo, Lewis L, Fal nier, Cella Gavin. Tracey E. Griffin, EUna C. Harriman, Nellie H. Harrlman, Iva Hixson., Charles A. Huntington, Mil dred Milllkln, Virgil A. Rawson, George F. Banders, Victoria M. Thompson. Miss Celia Gavin was class valedictorian, and George F. Sanders and S. Marlon Driver each delivered orations. TWO PERSONS KILLED IflfUrM TDAIMO rn m 1 VVntlV I M Ainlo UKAon (ITntted lri Iam Wire.) Wllkesbarre, Pa, May 28. Two, per sons were killed and at least three in lured at Stull, 24 miles from here, to TiiKht, when a passenger train on the Lfhlgh Valley railroad was wrecked, one ciir full of passengers was hurled ('mil an embankment and crushed by Mother car crashing into it, Tt. d'-nd: -' ; W 1 LL I A M POLLOCK, of Courtdale. JACOB LFPLEY, Cider Run. Tiie injured; Mrs. Moses Stull, Nox!i, iff t . hip broken, internally ln J rf.1; Mrs, C L. Meeker, Doran, head rut, Lack injured; Mrs. R. D. Warren, A Ui'inon. crushed about the body. !'r-M.lfiil (-lnmsJi.lolr- ' (f-vv-!.i citrii to The Jnit) '' :v: i1irH'ri(y of Oregon, Iigene, May f.Victor Vo!fct "11. of Vancouver. B, IrT.8t!C CJU pt J.'? annual ill 1 5 uiiu BE Hi BY IBB OP STATE Federation of Labor Files Pe tition Proposing Amendment to the Constitution of State of Oregon. (Saltm Eur.it of The Jooratl.) Sal era, Or., May 28. An amendment to the constitution of Oregon abolish ing the poll tax and making it necessary that all tax laws shall be approved by the people and removing therefrom all constitutional restrictions has been ini tiated by the State Federation of Labor. A petition containing the neighbor hood of 12,000 names was today pre sented to- the secretary of state' of fice for filing,, which proposes such an amendment to the constitution. The pe tition will be filed a soon as the names can be checked over and their validity affirmed. The text of the proposed amendment follows; .. . "Section 1. No poll or head tax shall be levied or collected In Oregon; no bill ' regulating taxation or exemption from taxation throughout the state shall become a law . until approved ,by the people of the state at a regular elec tron; none of the. restrictions of the constitution shall apply to measures ap proved. by people declaring what shall be subject to taxation or exemption and how it shall be taxed or exempted, whether proposed by the legislative assembly or by Initiative petitions; but the people of the several coun ties are hereby empowered ana au thorised to regulate taxations and ex emptions within their several counties. fcubject to any general laws which may be hereafter enacted." Submitted to People. - Aside from abolishing poll tax, .this amendment makes it necessary that all tax measures shall be submitted to the people for approval and when once ap proved, are above question on consti tutional grounds. 1 ' No measure once approved by people after this amendment is adopted: can be declared unconstitutional ' by the courts. It becomes a part of the con stitution." This taxation amendment is the eighth measure already proposed to be passed on by the. people at the next general election in November, including the referendum on the increase of salary for Circuit Judge William Smith of Baker county. OtherB are proposals for the creation of the counties of Nesmittv, Williams and Otis, the former two overlapping each other in an attempt 1 absorb portions of Lena and Douglas counties, Otis, to be greated from por tions 'of Grant, Malheur and Harney counties; the ptopositlon to charge thi boundary between Clackamas and Mult nomah counties, , the equal suffrage amendment, giving the "ballot to women who pay taxes, and a state normal school to be located at Monmouth, UNION TAKES FUNG AT THE POLITICIANS At the regular meeting of Local No. 87, International Union of Stationary Engineers, the following resolution was unanimously adopted: " Whereas, certain engineers of this city are trying to have an "ordinance passed by the city council to license engineers; and. ". - : . v, Whereas,' articles appearing in ttv public press make It appear that all engineers of this olty desire such law enacted; therefore, be it ' Resolved, By the members of Local No. 87, International union of Station ary Engineers, in general session, that we are not in favor of such a law, for the reason that, being, as we are, affil iated with the 'American Federation of Labor, places us In a better position to better our condition than any license law possibly could do, enforced as they usually are by some unscrupulous ward politician, : ;;' .... ,-- PERSONAL S. Benson has lust returned from long tour through central and southern Oregon In his 15-30 Stearns auto. He drove through Prlnevllle to Klamath Falls, from there to Medford and then through the vstlley to Portland. He re ports havlng an ideal trip. Mr. and Mrs. George, A. Vogt and daughter, Luclle, leave June 2 for New York on an extended trip through, the east during the summer. , Fred W. Graves, president and mana ger of the Graves Music company, re turned yesterday from an extended trio up and down the Pacific coast, during which he visited nearly every city of any consequence irom Seattle to Los Angeles. Mr. Graves says - that the only coast city outside of Portland that shows any activity 1h the building line is Los Angeles, and that by actual computation Portland has more cublo feet of down town office buildings under construction than all other Pa cific coast cities combined. Mr. Graves spent several days at Catallna Island, on., the Jower ..California coast., where, he says, a man's standing and useful ness as a.; citizen . is . measured by his ability as a fisherman. There every body's highest ambition is to land i big ; "tuna," and the fisherman who succeeds in capturing a large speci men of this gamey member of the finny tribe is a hero. ' -.; NO CLUE TO IDENTITY OF COUNTERFEITERS No clue to the identity of members of a so-called gang of counterfeiters. 1 verreQ Dy lne ponce to nave parsed la number of bogus coins in North End resorts Friday night, has been obtained. Strangely, none of the counterfeit coins have been turned over to local secret servtce agents, who are investigating the reports of police officers,' Merchants and business men have been warned to use care in accepting coins from strang ers;' - -. i . -':;,.' NeVr Society at V, of O. " v . , (Special DUlwtoh to The Jonrnnl.) ' tJnlverslty of Oregon, Eugene, May 2 8.r Announcement was made today of the organlxation ot the Skull and Chain society, an honor society for the senior men f the university. The new organ ization is composed of nine of the most prominent seniors In college and it is their intention to make it a nermanent 4 hwxw-eoototyf nKthae xtwt Trrw-1n other colleges , throughout the United States.:-,:--;--".;, --;. :- ;??: K -- -- , The membership is as follows: Wil liam Klltx, Glen Briedweli; Dean Good man. Ormotid Rankin, Ralph , Dodson, Dudley Clarke, Oliver -Huston, Harper Jamison and William. Cake, ; The first five are charter members.' . s li''l i!i:i;iii RIB:! Oil iilTO THAT HE HAD QUIT Gossip Said to Have Been Given Impetus by Interests That Are Hostile to Theatri cal Magnate. (By the Intornational News Berylce.) 1 New York, May SS. Positive denial was made today y John Murray, rep resenting A. L. Erlanger, of a rumor that Mr. Erlangei1 had resigned as the executive head of the theatrical syndi cate. The rumor was sent along the Rialto by interests' hostile to the syndi cate and Was published ' in a weekly newspaper representing the independ ent. According to the report, Mr. Er langer - announced his resignation at a meeting of the syndicate Thursday hlght at the New Amsterdam theatre build ing. This action, so. the rumor went, was the outcome of pressure' brought to bear upon Mr. Erlanger by members of the syndicate who have not been In sympathy with bis policy as the syn dicate's head. ' ;? Charles Frohman and Al Hayman, are among those supposed to have been dis satisfied with Mr. Erlanger's way of running the organization. The syndi cate sometime ago lost the 'booking of a large number of houses -throughout the country and the Independents have been saying that Mr. Erlanger was blamed for it -No member of the syn dicate will admit that any friction ex ists. Ten Cars Take Ba"Bas From Gilliani County to Wyoming; Band Is Valued at Fifteen Thousand Dollars. 8dc1 DliDtteb to Th Jonrnal.t Condon, May 28. Four thousand sheep belonging to Andrew Patterson, A. M. Smith and Mac Smith, were shipped to summer range in the Big Basin country of Wyoming -yesterday, A train of 10 cars was necessary for the band and three men accompanied them. -:' ;. . This is one of the largest bands that has passed through Condon : this yar. although many of 2500 have gone through to summer range in the Blue mountains. At attempt was made to secure grazing in Oregon, but it was unsuccessful. It Is owing to this lack of land that sheep raising on a large scale is gradually being given up In mis section. ? - i . , , w The sheep In this band are mixed yearlings and are valued at about $15, 000. ; They were wintered in the May- vllle country just soutn oi uonaon. "PORTLAND'S BEST" TO BE INSPECTED BY PUBLIC "The public Is invited to the annual inspection of the police department next Thursday at-the Armory, captain jonn Moore has been drilling the men the past two months for the event The men have undergone a thorough course In drills, and the Portland police have been credited with being the best uni formed and best drilled of any west of the Mississippi river. Few of the larg er cities in the east can equal the local department for such work. The inspection is to be made before Mayor Simon, the police commission, the council and the general public. The band will also be inspected, and a musi cal program Tendered. The mounted patrolmen will be inspected at their parade grounds on the east side. No admission will be charged. Chief Cox has extended a cordial invitation to everyone to be present and see what the local department can do. The program, .scheduled to begin at 10 o'clock, will last i one hour. The spectators will occupy the gallery seats During the inspection the special pa trolmen and plain clothes men will look after the city, as well as several men Who will be deputized for the occasion Medals will be presented to Patrol men - Stahl and Croxford. Both - men have been commended for killing two of the most dangerous holdup men in recent years. Both patrolmen took their own lives in their hands while tha. holdup men were In the acts of robbing saloons. ; -j ;....;.;,,. WOMAN DROPS DEAD V AFTER EATING SUPPER Mrs. Fannie Barry, 188 Caruthers street,' dropped dead last' evening while clearing away the dinner dishes.' The woman was the widow of James Barry, at, one time city detective, who has been dead' several years. She was 47 years old. Heart trouble was the cause of death. " 4 Mrs. Barry and he' daughter, Mrs Katharine Fisher, were alone in the home. They had Just finished dinner, when Mrs. Barry arose from the table and walked across the room. She gave a sigh and sank into a chair. When Dr. S. H. Sheldon arrived the woman was dead. Mrs. Barry was a daughter of P. G. Baker, an early settler and a capitalist in ills day. She was also a sister of Jbhn Baker, sister-in-law of John An- nanu and Abe Tichenor. She has been in falling health the last few years, Funeral arrangements hfcvs not been made. ............, . 0. R. & N. MEETS RATE OF NORTH BANK ROAD White Salmon, Wash., May 28. Hood Rlvert berries no longer come; over the Columbia at 6 cents per crate to get the benefit o reduced rates. The O. R. & N. has finally met thp special rate" ac corded the fruitgrowers' unions1. T!t North Bank was giving them a &Q per cent better shipping charge, 4000 SHEEP TO GO TO IMGESU'n RAHGETN BASIN 1': :i (' ;:: r's. ' It hrs b-ft) a cil.-in.vl ,f;i;ht, this hartli conflict for Jus Joe and tha' truth, and it Is not a pretty thing to force presi dents avii attorney K'.-noralsunwIIllngly to be candid with congress and tlie peo ple. We are accused of wishing to In jure the administration. . Those who have followed, since last August, our campaign In -vindication of Garfield, Glavia, Pincliot anV Roosevelt and in defenne of Alaska and the water power inheritance cf us all, know how cling ing was our confidence In Taf t. how unwillingly we concluded that his credu lity must bear its full share of blame for what Balllnger has been allowed to do. Why did the attorney general of the United States heed to misdate a docu ment in order to deceive the public about the amount of investigation made before a public servant was dismissed? The "Eternal Way." - : Why did th president of the United States 'need to tell the senate he had based . bis decision partly on a report of the attorney general which did not exist; and whv did he conceal from the senate a document which would have shown that the '"exoneration" of Sali nger was prepared not by Mr. Taf t, but by the interior 'department? ? " . .: The ' reason that the president, the attorrfey general, and th Interior de partment struggled so hard to suppress, by shameless trickery, the essential doc uments in the Balllnger case, is that the LawlerBalllnger report, on . which the president founded his so-called ex oneration, Is a wicked document; a false, cruel, cheating document; a report so full of lies and oppression that it Justi fies our term, "The American Dreyfus Case."- If the president believed this evil concoction, no wonder he discharged Glavls and allowed Plnchot Shaw, Price and Hoyt to be sacrificed also to the serpent-slaying Achilles. Mr. Taft wrote a few months ago that he had seldom gone so deeply into any matter as into this. Then alas for him! 7 7 ' r Finohot Opinion. ' ' It is no wonder Glfford Plnchot made up his mind there was too much crookedness in Washington for him to remain , quiet. - It is no wonder the administration worked so hard to secure an investiga tion committee which was bound ahead to whitewaehrOnly-tte-defeat of -Cannon thwarted this pretty scheme. Only the fighting powers of Mr. Brandels, who understands' the system and de tests lV'dragged the necessary docu ments out of their hiding places. Only the presence on the committee of a few free men enabled Mr. Brandels to suc ceed In his herculean effort to stand out against -a majority which bullied him, fought his witnesses," and acted as per sonal counsel for Secretary Balllnger. Why." lndltmantlv asks Mr. Mortran's able friend, the 'New York Sun, "is this shown by the system newspapers every where, although happily the free papers far - outnumber the others - In number and in influence. The future belongs to- such journals as ithe Kansas City Star, the Philadelphia North American, the Portland (Oregon) Journal, the San Francisco Bulletin, the Los Angeles Ex press, ihe Newark News, the Louisville Courier-Jonrnal, the Columbia State, the New Orleans Item, the Richmond Tlmes- Dlspatch, the Emporia "Gazette, La Fol letts'sj the Commoner, Life, the Out look, the American Magazine, McClure's and the other newspapers and periodi cals, fortunately numbering hundreds. whioh, refusing to be shackled, give to the people undisputed facts about the political and economic controversies of the day. -"The Sun s interest in the (Balllnger) affair," remarks that Jour nal, "is purely academic" Indeed, and indeed! Mr. J. P. Morgan's interest is far from academic. Very real is the In terest of Senator Piles, Senator Suther land and Senator Flint; of Mr. Cannon's probable successor, Mr. Olmsted; of the president's friends and 1 counsellors, Messrs. Hammond, . Aldrlch, -Sherman, Tawney. etc.; in fact,... of the -.whole grand old combination of "big" busi ness men. corporation lawyers and pli ant statesmen who are now threatened with the end of their supremacy by an angy people , ' 1 Bis Beoord. Of course, when ' this Investigation began, the administration thinking It could name the ; committee, never ex peoted that the public would learn such Why, Mrs. Cfaghead-Cox Did Not Even Know Name, of Husband She Now Sues. Forced to live In.' cheap lodging houses by a roving husband, with meals uncertain and ! companions ; whose lan guage scandalized her, was the fortune of Mrs., Ines Craghead. She told the story to Precldlny Judge, Bronaugh in the circuit court yesterday on the trial of her , divorce .case against John W. Craghead. ." .-'-.- V Mrs. Craghead is the daughter of Dr. Allen, a pioneer physician -of Portland and Troutdale,. who died about seven years ago. : . She and. her mother have been school teachers. She said she was dragged over the country by her hus band, who was an , Impecunious solici tor. At Sacramento they wandered, the streets without money, hunting a cheap lodging house that. would receive them. At San Francisco, she was lodged with a ,i family where, the mother : smoked cigarettes and the daughter lay about the house in a stupor from drlnkv Mrs. Craghead said "Itrtj did not, care to re peat the language they used. A " 1 ' : ; At Brigham City, Utah, she said, she learned her husband had been married to another woman, who had divorced him after leading a half starved exist ence for some time. He told her he had never been married. She also learned his . true name was John W. Cox, Craghead being his mother's name. When 'she was sick her husband neg lected to provide a -physician, and he disgusted her by his leaning toward the doctrines of Mormonism. - w iQ vii. wcii, iiiai,icii Mrs. Craghead said, her husband gave her 15.30 for her own use. This was during a period of about three years, they were married in Troutdale in 1906. Judge Morrow took the case under ad visement, Craghead makjng no defense. : "'' Boone Ca Progrwsseft. V ' (Spertfil Dtepateh to-' The Journal.) ' " CiraT,'-Wash.,"Mar'2S. Little bjrtrt: tie the, lines of the state's case against H. M. Boone for .embezzlement of $22,000 - wnlle v president of the Palouse State bank are appearing from the mass of technical testimony advanced by the witnesses... Only occasionally do points develop to awaken the lagging Interest of Jurors and spectators. SCAMDAUZED AIJD -STARVED HER PLEA facts es t!:f ;. r:?'.-!:n ajsre-tnt Senator On; c.-r.hfini'S i::t n-st in the in terior depart rn.-nt, llltcheock's rnlt J'-al-lln.i.';-''r's previous record and Wss con-ceolun-nt cf documents, Wiekersaaru's misdating and his surpresglon of the Hoyt interview, tiie president's permit ting the department to write the "Ju dicial'' opinion In its own casta. When people complain of the length Of this investigation, let them remember that every step has been a struggle against the majority of the committee; that the most important evidence has been sup pressed; that the "goat defense", hjjs used up much time; that Balllnger' whole plan was to refuse to answer squarely any questions, treating them all as "persecution," and to He with in credible freedom. . It was only at the end of weeks of struggle that Mr. Brandels obtained absolute proof of Wlckersham's duplicity and iLawler's authorship of Tafts decision. Kelson's Tight. , Nelson, chairman of the committee, fought as hard as anybody to suppress the truth, and his failures were what caused the fiercest of -his many attacks on Brandels, Nelson's behavior through? out was such that Mr. Graham,' mi nority member of the committee, was compelled to say to him:' "I will not adopt your suggestion now, because I do not think it was honestly made." Here are two samples out of the mass of lies with wTiich Mr. Brandels was compelled to deal:' Mr. Brandels Do you wish the com mittee to understand Jhat you - had no interest in that .except as a friendly act for Judge' Hanford? - ' : , , - Secretary Balllnger- That was the po sition I took in connection with it Immediately after this answer Mr. Brandels faced Balllnger with a letter which forced him to admit he had him self owned stock in the company.' Who la Brandels f In pursuing, his usual goat defense. Mr. Balllnger denied any personal knowledge of a certain telegram sent to one of the Cunningham claimants, whereupon Mr. Brandels, by possessing the ''original document, promptly drove mm to admit that he wrote it with his own hand. ! - - ? Now, by the way, we will answer, in a brief Who's Who, this question of Mr, Morgan's indignant crony. Mr. Bran dels is ihe man who, more than any oth er, is responsible for a system of sav ings bank Insurance which put Massa chusetts ahead ; of all other states In the effort to make old age easier for the poor. He is the man who, something over a year ago. won the Oreeon -case 4n the : supreme court of the United btates, and thereby settled the prin ciple that laboring women may be pro tected by state law. against long hours of employment He , is the man who, only a few weeks ago. left the Ballln ger investigation to run out to Illin ois and win, before the supreme court, a victory similar to the one in the Ore gon case., He is the man, who, in the well known gas controversy, defended the interests of Boston, which now has a better arrangement with hef gas. com pany man any other big city in Amer ica, Ha Is the nan who went down to Cooper , Union, In New York ,City, some, years before the : Metropolitan Traction company tailed, and explained In figures exactly how the frensied finance of that company would bring disaster, He Is tbe man who, almost single handed, conducted the- campaign against the New Haven merger with the Boston & Main a He is the man whose attacks are always on the predatory powerful, and who ; Is ever ready In defense of, the undefended many.' He is,- we hope, a man who has ahead of him long years in which to arouse the fury of papers Influenced as the "Sun" is influenced. ' Tis Spokesman. . The , New York - Tribune, official spokesman of the administration, sees fit to be outraged by the discovery that we are legally protecting our contrib utor. We are glad to serve warning on the Tribune and on all other forces that when we invite a citlsen to use our columns for the purpose of giving information to the public we hold our. selves responsible, Our eye were not shut when we undertook to force this investigation, i We Intended to see it tosa finish. , We knew the odds, ana we fully planned to take such steps as might be needed to secure justice In the end. - - BERBER IBIS OF ALLEGED PLOT Prosecution In Doxey Murder . Case Scores When Victim's .Sister Testifies.1 . (tTnlted Press tmied VTtr. St. Louis, Mo., May 28. Between sobs, Miss Kate ErdJr. whose persist ence In gathering evidence led to the Indictment of Dr. Loren B. Doxey and Mrs. Dora Doxey for the murder of her brother, Willlam J. Erder. told on 'the witness stand today how Mrs. Doxey attempted to induce her to correspond with Dr. Doxey with a view to matrimony.-" ' " , ' The prosecution is- elated tonight with the testimony brought out during Mrs..Doxey's trial today, believing it shows conclusively that Dr. Doxey and Mrs. Doxey planned to slay Erder. The alleged attempt to draw Miss Erder Into marrytng Dr. Doxey !; considered part of the plot by the state. This ad vance was made to Miss Erder after Mrs. Doxey's bigamous marriage with her brother. Doxey was represented as a relative by Mrs. Doxey, said ,Miss .Erder." j.-',--- - :L :-,;,:.,..--. ; . Mrs. Molley Brimmer, a neighbor of the Erdera, testified that Mrs. Doxey mentioned the fact that Erder's rela tives had demanded that a post mortem examination be made and remarked, that even If they did find poison in Er der's body, then they would have a hard time proving who gave it to him. ' This remark was made before any mention bad been made of poison, Mrs. Brimmer declared. 1 i i i m ' ENORMOUS DEMAND ' , FOR BOURNE SPEECH (WmthlnKton Fur.at of Tbg Journ.l.i ' ' Washington, May 88.- Kenator Bourne today recelved.addltlpnal orders for cop ies of his speech- on the Oregon laws, making it nacessary to print a total of 860,00 copies, and orders have been grven tJ-"thenpnnterTor-thnt' numbor; I?feree Is Chosen. v (United prfim f.eatod Wlra.t ' Chicago, May 28,--Doek Fleming, who is the official referee of the Empire Athletic club, was tonight Chosen as the referee , for the Gotch-Zbyszko wrestling. match on. .June .U.... .: . ., nnmrp tsTtm n , Mlmn.O liXlli h t r 9 t- n ft w f" o f" San Francisco Woman h Crit ical Condition as Result of Pet Dog's Bite When She Caresses Chicken. ' . (Special Dispatch to The ionrnnl.l . ' San Francisco, May 28. Prince, a prize winning c'ocker spaniel belonging to Policeman Luke Livingston, Jealous of attention Mrs. Livingston was, lavish ing on a sick chicken, Jumped at-her throat at the family residence, 2518 Mis sion street, this mornlng, ,and burled his teeth in her flesh. Mrs.. Livingston fought frantically to br,eak the, grip of the infuriated canine, but only aggra vated the fury of the beast, and had it not. been for the arrival of neighbors, attracted by .her Cries, she would have been killed. When tha dog. s hold was finally broken- she fainted from Weak ness and loss of blood. ' r ', Mrs. Livingston's throat was tornln a frightful manner and it took seven stitches to reduce the lacerations. ; She Is in a critical condition. Policeman Livingston had only left home a short time before. - Both he and his wife are great chlck, en fanciers and have a number of young thoroughbred fowls, of which Mrs. Liv ingston takes personal care. She went out In the yard to attend to some of them this morning, after her husband's departure, and Prince, the pet cocker spaniel, which she raised from a puppy, accompanied her. - Bhe stopped to pick up one of the chickens that appeared to be ill, and while she was making an examination Of the fowt, the pet dog, without utter ing a warning growl, pounced upon her. Prince won a medal at the dog show and is rated one of the best of his breed in the country. His value Is nil now, however, for he la doomed to immediate execution. 'v. ,l ? 4 (8pe!l DUo&tch to Ti Journat.1 Hood River, Or., May 28. The apple growers of Hood River take exceptions to the Statement of Horace W, Day, of the commission firm of Scobel & Day, of New York, that the YeUow Newtown apple will soon become almost obsolete. Hood River is setting heavily to New towns. In many cases the orchards are being set solid to this variety. When attention was called ta Mr. Day's statement at a recent meeting of the White Salmon fruitgrowers, sev eral of th Hood River growers inter preted the motive to mean that New York wbuyers desired the White Sal mon, Mosler and Hood River districts to grow more red apples for the east ern market and less yellow apples for the foreign market.' - , , The Hood River Newtowns sold last year for 12.40 per box f. o. b., and a fewdays ago were selling in England for ' $9 per box. Further exception is taken to the statement that the bigger the- apple the better. Hood River has been better able to seoure large markets and higher prices for the medium sized apples than for -the extra large ones, Sixteen aDDles to the box never hrln as hlrh nrlce a. lrttl , . . . 1 - ... H0GAN WILL HOLD AL CARSON TILL FURTHER Walter McCre'dle bas received a tel egram from Happy Hogan of the Ver non team stating that Al Carson, draft ed from Portland by' Chicago, has re ported to him by purchase, and that he will use Carson until the national com mission' says otherwise. ', - McCredle has wired Hofean and Pre!. dent Graham that ' Carson belongs to Portland, and that the national commis sion has nothing to do with it. Mc Credle is anxious to get hold of Carson. He has a chance ' to get Pitcher Boice, drafted by Cleveland from Oakland, but prefers Carson.; ;; .-. , ,'. . , ANOTHER RAFT READY ' Benson Lumber Company Will Send ', One to San Diego. . ; In tow of the Shaver Transportation company's steamers Shaver, Sarah Dixon and M. F. Henderson, the large cigar shaped raft belonging to the Hammond Lumber company will be'due to leave Stella tomorrow morning : for Tongue point, where it will be picked up by the steamer GeO. W. Fenwick and towed to San Francisco. .'. Toward the latter part of the week an other raft of the same, description will be taken down the river for. the Benson Lumber company. This raft will be towed to San Diego, probably by the tug Sea Rover, as the Hercules Is how under charter to the Ocean Barge & Towing" company and on the way up here with a cement barge, s The raf tjt contain about 6,000,000 feet, of material each, -.',-, .,....-. .. ' , Teal Unable to Pass Locks. . Due to the rise In the river, the iteamer J. N. Teal could hot get through the Cascade locks yesterday and accord ing to the last reports received by the Open River Transportation ' company, the- steamer had tied up at Bonneville to lighten her cargo before making an other attempt to got through. Her passengers were sent to The Dalles by train. . Range Light at Westort. Authority has been secured from the lighthouse board at Washington by Com mander J. M. BUtcOtt, lighthouse In spector for the. Thirteenth district, to establish a range light at Westport as a guide to vessels coming down Grays harbor and .crossing Whttcomb flats. The light will be located near the Inner end of the Jetty trestle and will be the front range light, with Grays harbor lighthouse as the back range. f . i . ; Graduating Exercises at Toledo. : (S?eoIt Diptch to The Journal.! " Toledo, Or., May 2 8 Commencement exercises of the graduating class of the Toledo High school were held Friday, night. This Is . the first claims Xcl, graduate,. Jtiera, troax, a-lout-jr ears' 1 course, professor Jtlessler of O. A. C. delivered an address and presented the diplomas. The alumni tendered the grad uating class a reception Tuesday eve ning. It is the intention of the board to erect new high school building during the coming summer -. Journal Want Ads. bring results. .... .. HOOD lER GROKi DISAGREE WITH DAY 1 1 U ill i t;i k I i u i iiiL'1 CiiititL Li UlD So Harked Has C:cn the Prep ress in Recent Years as to Foretell Completion 'of .the Waterway in 1914. ' " - tTnlted Preai ItiM W1p.V '. '" Washington, , May 28. The sixth year of the stupendous work of build ing a canal across the Isthmus of Panama to connect the ' Atlantic and Paciflo oceans ended on May 3 arid In that time so much has been accom plished that the costly waterway may be opened to the -commerce of the world In 19H. ' The official estimate places, it 'a year later In order that there may be rib miscalculation.. The progress of the work may be seen in the Important features of the canal. : These are the cut through .Cule-' bra, the locks at Gatun, MiraTlores and Pedro Miguel, the building of the Gatun dam and the creation of Gatun lake, t The excavation record by years since May, 1904, 1b as follows: . May 1 to May 1.. . Cubic Yards. 1904- 1905 ' 648,911 1905- 1906 . 2,964,993 1908-1907 7.365,438 1907- 1908 24,197,267 1908- 1909 38,038,898 1909- 1910 32.672,665 Total 105,888,073 Of the total remaining, the amount to cublo yards, and the amount by steam shovels is 88,827,617 cubic yards. , Of the 18.051.278 cubic yards excavat ed in the central division, J14, 888,427 cu blo yards ere taken from Culebra cut. Iharecord i ot- excavation In the - cut since May, 1904, follows; ; May i to May 1 ,;; .:.;--;-;r: Cubic; Yards. 1904- 1905 , . . .,,,;...;,. v.. v 648,911 1905- 1906 , 1,250,570 1906-1907 . 4.86U90 1907- 1908 . ... 11.285,217 1908- 1909 ... A. ...... 13,980,430 1909- 1910 ................... 14,886,427 Total . . . i ... . .1 46.913,450 There yet remain to be excavated from Culebra cut 31,128,845 cublo yards, and the work Is advanclng'at the rate of 1, 240,000 cubic yards a month, that being the average monthly excavation since May 1, 1909, The work of dredging is practically confined to the Atlantlo snd Pacific entrances of the ctnaL ' Building Oraat Sam. !' 4 . The construction of the dam. across the Chagras river at Gatun was contin ued during the year In three sections the dry and hydraulic fill of the eastern half of the damt the lining of spillway with concrete, and the dry fill of the western section. T parallel ridges of rock and earth stretch across the val ley, from hill to hill, and between these ridges the hydraulio fill is being made. In the east half of the dam the hydraulio fill Is at S3 feet above sea level, whioh is within 62 feet of the final height. Ir the western section the" hydraulic fill has Just been begun. Of the total ap- proximately 10,000,000 ' cubic yards' ot this fill to be made, 3,000,000 cublo 'yards have so far 'been placed In the eastern section. All the old channels of the river are closed by the dam and the water Is flow ing through the spillway. Low water in Gatun lake is at 10 faet anove sea level, which l's 10 feet higher than the' original surface of the river at Gattin. The first concrete was laid lh Gatun ,0?RB xno """..'" locks with, the permanent handling vnd mixing plant on AUgusi Z4, uur.ng I 4U 4Ipb4V 4Fmi m tnAnthi if Irsi AnnratiAn the plant underwent a - number of changes suggested by the working con ditions, and by January 1, 1910, It had reached an efficiency hot anticipated be-s fore July X of this year. An indication of the Way in which the plant gradually found llselt is given by the amount of concrete laid each month since the work was begun, the working day being from 8 to 12 hours: Month Cubic lards. August 1.298 September . ... . . . . s i . t. , , . 13,294 October 29,378 November 30,270 December ...................... 42,833 January 54.136 February ......i... ............ 55,604 March 60,998 April ... 3,2Z7 Total ; ,..360,129 ; The laying of concrete is advancing at the rate of 2500 cubic yards a day, and there yet remain to be, placed about l. 850,000 cubic yards. . The first concrete wasJald in the docks at Pedro Miguel on Beptember 1, - 1909, , when a temporary mixing plant was put in operation. The installation of the permanent mixing and handling cranes has not yet been completed, only three of the eix cranes being in operation. There remain. to be placed at Pedro Miguel 807.00 cubio yards of concrete, and at Miraflores 1, 506,000 cublo yards, i '.At Mlraf lores the lock ette is ready for the placing of concrete, and preparations are in prog ress for the Installation-of, the canti lever crane mixing and handling plant. In both the locks at Gatun and Pedro Miguel the iron' work is being placed as the concrete laying advances, a large quauilLjr UL 1.JIQ i-aoitiiga n I rj Jll Vila ibiii- mus ready to be set, bids havo been asked on the gates, and plans for the operating machinery are nearlng comple tion, i. ;-.! ;"-. -j-- -' PAID MONEY, BUT FAILS TO SEE ANY HOUSE L, T; Rehear; building contractor with offices in room 415 Rothchlld building, Fourth and Washington streets, was ar rested last evening on a charge of lar ceny, Jacob Fisher, living in Rose City Park, made the complaint to, pep nuty District Attorney Garland. ; FKsher claims Schear agreed to build him a , house on a lot In Rose City i ark. and a deposit of $150 was paid on the contract. . The contract was made three month's ago, but Fisher has been unable to i:-e any house. Further investigation-showed no lumber - had been ordered, an J that a deposit made by Schear on tr.e lot, which he bought before selling it ' Jo . Fisher, - has been withdrawn, Schear is a contractor, also. The name of, his concern is the Unit Building & Loan .company. He was held in the city Jail over night, ' Pa trolmen Montgor -ery and Ennts'tnade the arrest, - , ; '''''' .',...-'; -.'-,. ' . , Hermlston Couple Wed. . , (Riicclal Dispatch to The Journul.) J. Jlenuiston,. QuM9Y2&9k. May2l at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F.. Whiting, their daughter Bertha Whiting and Wal ter E.Barmore were united In marriage. :The ceremony took place at 10 o'clock In the morning in, the presence of a few close friends. The bride and groom U-ft Immehlately for Portland, After a short stay there thty will return to Ilermis tuu to make It their future home. r: ....... .. .. .,,... ' " - I