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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1911)
1 ?a M ;AG00li HABIT r'.f j' It's a good habit to man It a point to , kMp' potted regarding th Wants.. Jour- ( : 5 eat Wants eost bot llttl. i ' .' ; -it' j t . i ' "" ' ' 1 " 1 ' The watbrFa'lr and continue ; warm; variable east wind. ;, v ; M . nzs; utm o : . THo Sunday Journal ' oovrauna 7 Sections-74 Pages P'4 VrV,; Portland; oreoon; sunday : mornino, ; june n. mi. v. PRICE FIVE. CENTS- ;vQL.;vnr.;;NO. n.v rat 1 REYES Kill III PROVISIONAL PRESIDENT DE IA BARRA- IS SVELTERIHG; STILL AT LARGE; PEOPLE IN FEAR SUFFERING GREAT v y t MinniciTO IDENTITY Of REX. 0REG0NUS REVEALED ilFii SliSPFCT IUULL HLUI for noncr I ----- ' ;: Genera! Reyes and Provisional ; President De La Parra Now 7 Agree', to r: Leave Mexican i Field Clear. to, Madero... IMPRESSIVE CEREMONY,; , AT- OLD CHAPULTEPEC In Role of Conqueror, Former - Rebel Leader Reviews Ca detsMakes Speech. 1 ' Mexico City.-"Mexico, via Galveston, Texas, June 10. Tomorrow ' at noon General Reyes, lately returned from hit ' exile abroad, will announce that he will not -b a ' candidate (or the presidency ' against.. Francisco- I. Madera Jr., and that' be will hot accept the nomination lf.lt la tendered him.- y . Thle statement wax 'planned at, a se eret meeting today at Chapultepec caatle between Madera. Reyee and provisional . Prealdent xe la vBarra, and ' remorea Reyes and De la Barra, the two strong- cat jwaalble candidates from' Maderos path, i ' -t, ., . . Reyea, the Idol of the army, rod- to the caatle today In the same automobile wth Madero. 0 every hand the crowda ahouted for Madero, overlooking Reyea, who, until 'tonight, had been regarded as .the man who would beat Madero at the polls. U ' s Reyes, beloved of the nation, -was so powerful that piaii to get .rid of film. sent him abroad on a aecret miaaion. Hla abaence during tb revolution made It Imposalble for hint to take sides and . hfa popularity was,1 therefor,, undlmln lahed. 'For. this reason,-It was thpught he would easily defeat Madero. ' Under the neW arrangement. Reyes will become minister, of war If Maiero Is elected at the approaching elections, , while De la Barra wti become secretary or state. - . i Madero , tonight .Inatructed his hew provisional 'governors to institute -crim Inal proceedings against all ousted offi cials agalnat whom charges or, tnert or murder would hold; " 1 . , ,."Send fvery guilty official tftiftil. ' ordered. J "Th revolution will not hava been a ucceasf uk- unl eaaf we; Aoeompllsh mis." . ' : , . , ; rtsstdeatUlOampatgaBeiua. " ' The transformation from Madero, the . lnaurgent. to - Maderoi' the- conqueror, waa completed with Impreasive cere . monies In historic Chapultepec castle at sundown tonight. - - There on the balcony on which Dlai had stood to receive the plaudits of th Mexican people so often, Madero smil ingly, reviewed the cadets of Mexico, the flower of the vaunted army and heard them, at the command of office ra, I I II llll I S j III I ' a.. i j i :" Vr:-5 -v- ; V4 , , Unrelenting Sol Continues to Glre Pitilessly Down Upon Suffocating Country A " Light Breeze Relieves. " LIVES SACRIFICED; NUMBERS PROSTRATED Precedent Set in Federal Court--"Coats Off," Says Landes, Removing His. Kiddle west Temperature 6maha Des Moines .... La Crosse, Wis. Milwaukee. Wla Racine, Wla... Portland Or. Chicago Lincoln, Neb 8t Louis ........ Peoria. . Ill Springfield, 111... 81 .'.'.100 ...100 Provisional President t 1 Barr 'pi. Mexico, rh will not oppose Madero for thff presidency, and whose admiidstration U , proceeding satls- factoriir to. tne unuea siaiea; . t .nr -vv: . 7 ;-u (Continued on Page. Seven.) GRAND JURY GETS AGAINST TRUST Lumber : Trust Investigators v Will Recdmmend Monday, It Is SaidThat True Bills Be Brought Against. Many. FormalTdrders Issued ) (or Removaljof. Marines From Guan- ' " . ' t j '.: .i. :.. i ' n . . .1' J lanamo j roops iwoDiiizea itisewnere -10 ae- uispersea (By the iBternatlooal New Rerrlre.) Chicago, June 10.- A cloae rival of Its predecessor Friday, June , llll, new bolder of the hottest June day in Chicago -record at tS.t degreestoday brought a continuation of the seaaon's lateat "boiling wave." Trembling at 90 at S o'clock today the meroury appareatly escaped the leap made by Friday's temperature between I and 4 o'clock from IT to It.S de . Sreess Tarns Tias. - But a light breexe..the forerunner of the northwest wind that Is expected to drive away the heat tomorrow, drifted Into Chicago . and turned the tide of battle. At 4 o'clock the mercury bad fallen to 17 and still waa on the de scent " - Four lives were sacrificed to the heat In this city and reports from other cen ters of population Indicated a death list. Nineteen persons In Chicago were over come. The heat ovet whelmed a precedent In the United States district court today, a place where precedents are uauauy sturdy and stubborn. Costs Off la Court. In the midst of a session of the dig nified tribunal ; Judge K. M. Landis mooned his brow for the hundredth time, sighed and then made thla Inter ruption in the case at bar: 'Gentlemen., It s mignty not. wn do you sajthat we take off our coats t" The-Judge set the example and tne witnesses ana spec- W. C. Bristol, prominent attorney, and former United States district at tornejr, who reigned over Rose Festival and who abdicated bis throne last night. r . . I j , THOUSANDS CHEER AS FESTAL MONARCH SoonNew Renime in Mexico Resnectful of Wishes "mf hurors, attorneys. ti.sa.j r. -i- . i. n. J r - (Continued on Page Seven.) . unueu ouues Jctpan is Ddireu. (United Prens LDtd Wlre.l " Chicago, June 10. The federal grand Jury that- haa, been la veatlgatlng the lumber trust will reconvene Monday with ' sufficient evidence, it Is said, to Insure the return of true bills " against a number of corporations, several asso- N clations and at least a acore of lumber officials. , "- wAt a secret ! conference- of r the gor ernment. attorneys, held tonight: It was , found that during the first weeks of Its life ' the, "mysterious v grand J jury, v which Judge Landis shrouded In such aecrecy.' has discovered v That sufficient evidence exists to in- . diet scores of individuals and corpora . - tlons 'and societies.' '-uA -r ..f r That th method employed by the lumber trust, was the same ss that employed by the meat trust, in . com pelling producers to observe regulations laid down by the trust, reatrlctlng sales and creating artificial scarcities to rorce consumers to cay higher prices, i x ? Thst persons who incurred the 'ill win of the trust were boyeottlsd, Ut That ""secret.7 meetings " "were :held " to fix prices and force competitors out of business by underselling them, eren at '"a loss- to.'tli ttvtui-':? J-H -'. ? . Already, it is said, J there have been ' abundant suggestions that the trust . maintain', lobbies In several states, by means of which ' Immense land grants have . been . secured.-. -m : i - A ': i- v'i":"? tv vffy. j- - ijrfM' fc- "s i Abundance. of TTTldenceit-' Detroit. June '.X0. Tha United St tea government It In possession of evidence . . that i has convinced ' the officials that there has . been a . first class lumber combine In Detroit ' for the past seven years. , f . '-r- y"-' - ' '-; i. . v, - Tha agreement ihder which the deal ; era; who -i'.were Jn the combine . nave been operating provided for pooling and f dividing the lumber trade amon them- selves at. prices, to be jrixed by them selves, according to the statement of an official. ,i (Dalted Press Xeesed Wirt.) . ' Washington, ' June ' 10. The. curtain waa. rung 'down' today on th great In ternational war drama which culminated in the mobilisation of. troops In Texas, and held, the attention of all the world power for many weeks,' 1 ' The signal that the performance had ended came with' the issuance of formal orders for the 'Withdrawal; of 1200 ma rines, from , Guantanamo.- where -they have waited since the middle of March. ready to strike at an instant's notice, through Vert' Crux, "th gateway to th capital ef Mexicor ;,f ' ' .- ; ' x At the same itlme. ' it became known definitely that the 10&0 troops at Gal veston, Texas, and a similar number at San Diego will b withdrawn about June It. Thla ' will , leave th 11,000 . troop forming the division at San Antonio and about 1000 forming a cavalry patrol of th northern, boundary, of, Mexico. These may remain all summer, . The marines and troops, however,- at i Ouantanamo, 'Galveston and San Diego constituted th actual threatening forces the. ones -which were, read jr. to strike on shjrt notice.- The movement of the dlvlalon from 8an Antonio, would have been a ponderou action in comparison. Th explanation Is that Unci Sam is satisfied with the new situation in Mex ico, and is dbnvinced that h has deter mined his ability to handle the affairs of this continent without Interference by any power.; 1 -' :. - Th threatened activity of Japan in Metloo - was - effectually blocked, and. with th Information of .his agents In Mexico and the orient,. Uncle Sam is con vinced that for the present the mikado will confine bis ambitions to th orient The . influence of the United State jras powerfully felt throughout the re organisation of: affairs In Mexico, and in the new regime this country will be even stronger than it, was .with: th eld Dlas government , Provisional President De la Barra is the close friend and pr- - (Continued on Page Seven.) L0R1ER PLANS GREAT FIGHT TO Illinois Senator' Directs Print ing and Distribution of Mil- Pamphlets:. Reviewing and. Defense. 'T (rabllshfcrsll.lpress teased Wire.) , Chicago, r June la. Senator Lorimer la havinr printed 1,000,000 pamphlets containing thej speech he i delivered to the Senate in hi own defense when the report of ; the flrsev Investigation. Into hi election was under consideration.,. Tha work Is being done by a Chicago printing house. The pamphlets ar in tended for distribution 'tnrougnoat-th stst in order to Influence public senti ment ;laf the; senator's favor.1 r -Jwr t - JTlrst Scheme Abaadoaed. ttfVj . It was rumored a month ago th "sen ator had put in a requisition with the government printing office for LOOe.OOO coplea of his famous speech. In which he- related his own history from : boy hood, his feud with Joseph. Med 111 and (Continued on Page Seven.) COW. SHOOTING COMMITS SUICIDE Wyoming t Puncher, Fearing ' Sweetheart's Affections Are .Being Won By Another, At tempts., Murder. " ' (Doited Ptm. LMMd Whw.t Sheridan, Wyo.. June 10. After shoot ing his . sweetheart. Miss Amelia - M. Maler, and perhaps fatally wounding C. C Vorce, whom h believed wss trying to win the young woman's affections. George W. Chapman, a cowboy,. sommlt ted eulcjde by ' blowing the top of his head. off. with a rifle. Miss Maler will recover. ' Vorce waa shot through th abdomen and no hop Is held out for his recovery.'. ..jVse,-: , 4 'r-i'-j'- The wounding of. Miss Maler took place at the Denlo ranch, near Big Horn, 10 miles south or uui city, early today. Chapman entered the young woman's room while she was asleep. ? He awak ened her and told her that he had come to kill her because she had been recelv- (Continued on Page Seven.) HOTTEST DAY OF YEAR RECORDED; ONLY 87 AT THAT RIDES THROUGH STREETS IN ELECTRIC PARADE THAI CLOSES ROSE CARNIVAL Rex Oregonus, Revealed as W. C. ' Bristol, Everywhere Hailed by Admiring Crowds as Ruler of Most Gorgeous Floral Spectacle Ever Given Last Night's .Pageant Is Said to Be Even More peautiful Than on Tuesday. r: Rex Oregonus V, in the person of W. C. Bristol, rode through crowds of his cheering subjects last night at the head of the most spectacular parade ever seen at a Carnival 'In this country,. More then 200,000 people tnrongea me, aownown streets to pay their respects to the monarch who. has ruled so genially over Portland for one week, and the turnout was even greater than on the occasion of the first elec tric parade Tuesday night. Oregonus Bristol's regln over the city of roses having been so Indulgent a one, acarcety a' Subject but cheered as the royal float passed, with tha king. himself unmasked for the first time since th beginning of the festival, bowing graciously to right and left in response to the acclamations of thou sands of Oregonlans and their guests from every part of the country. If anything,- last nlght'a parade sur passed that of Tuesday night although in a way it was a repetition of it The same gorgeously' decorated and Ilium. lnated floata were shown, but they were more beautiful last night' . Many were so Intricate and elaborate ; In their schema of decoration as to make the second view more attractive; even, than th first This was true, particularly, of th floats symbollo of various fea tures of life In Oregon.' Exclamations of . admiration and delight were heard on all sides as one ' magnificent float succeeded another on the route of th parade. . Th warmth of the June evening, (Continued on Page Nina.) Terrorized by, Thoughts .That; Fiend May Commit Another Atrocious Crime, Families . Flee From the Scene. . ' a- SLAYING IS WORK OF . , : A MANIAC, IS BELIEF Number of Arrests Made But No Tangible Clues Are ; " ; Obtained, Even Then It Might Have Been. Worse, for L&t Year and Year jBef pre on" Same Date Twas Much Hotter. 'testerday's Temperatures. I a. m.... i e m. ... 7 a. m. ,.E7 .18 1 a-'m......sl i a. m... .. .5 10 a. m 8 11 a, m; 7J 75 11 noon. p. m .83 I p. m......86 4 P. m. 88 1 p. m......7l 5 p. m.. 87 With-the thermometer standing at 87 degrees at 6 o'clock laat evening Port land and Its .thousands ot vumors sweltered yesterday In th hottest weather of the year, ' Hardly had Old Sol mad his appear ance yesterday morning than the weath er prophets about town predicted a sis- ling day, whicn tney said wouia .mass up for all of the comparatively cooi weather that has fallen to the portion of the Rosa City during th last week, fol lowing a month of almost continuous rain nr cloud. "i.: v : ' Three hours after th weather bureau reports started at 8 o'clock yestsraay morning.- when the thermometer - stood mk it decrees, the temperature began to Jump t th rat of thre and fourd. frees an nour unui it reaenca ina rouc mum at o'clock; . , : ;: f-.M'- '"-. 'i After ' t o'clock, in wnicn tim tn mercury rose a degree an nour. u ne gaa alteratlng between, thre and four derrees in every nour unui-Between. a mnA t o'clock when . It followed ; three degreea by another-tore degrees, arter which It climbed at xn rat ox a oe gree an hoar, as In th morning, up to fi O'clock. ' -t v.-.-iy i?!', ".x-y A: ' Whll the temperatur recorded yes niv was the hlshest of the present year It w exceeded on . June JO, 1801, when th mercury stood it M degrees and again on Jun 10. 1110. with the thermometer at It aegrees. wnicn is uie highest recorded by the local weather bureau. i - SUFFRAGETTES TO HELP STRIKING WOMEN Pledge Made By Militant Or ganization 7000 Gar ment Workers Right to Do Picket Duty Is Up. GREAT NORTHERN TO SPEND BIG SUM With aeveral auanerta .under arrest In neighboring cities, but with no duel that offers much promise of results, it 1 Is apparent that th manao who mur dered th entire Hill family of four near ' Ardenwald . atatlun Friday morning 1s . a till at large. Failure to secur the . murderer haa left th entire district bordering on the eastern section of the city in a state of I error. . In aeveral Instances families resldlnc" in lonely pieces in the general neighbor hood of the spot where th murder took place have deserted their horns alto gether and com to Portland for protec tion. Every hour adds to th belief that the murders was the work of a maniac who may break out again without warn ing unlesa his capture id' speedily ef fected. ,- , , , ' Zscape rront Asylum. -The peculiar character of th crimes, the fact that the head of each of hla victims were beaten ; almoat beyond chance of recognition and th outran; frig of two ef the bodle after death, fixe th murders not as th work of any ordinary degenerate, or even ordinary lunatio. The ferocity of the affair grows more apparent na new facta concerning It are dlacovered. - " .. ; , 'r.'r A feature that developed yesterday and that appealed with- considerable force to the officers 'Who -are Searching far the murderer. la t..U a month ago a1 manlao named Wallace, an inmate of Dr. Henry 'Waldo Coe's sanitarium for the government inaan ot Alaska, escaped from th sanitarium at Russellville, on mil and a half beyond Montavilla, and not, far from th place where the HUl family was murdered, and has not been recovered. V y ' '; : ' Offloars Saroh BUIfently, Wallace. It is said, murdered a man in Alaaka during a fit of insanity. He was so palpably irresponsible mentally that the government committed him to tb asylum, which la in charge of Dr. Co and his asalstanta. He seemed to be a model patient in spit of his homi cidal mania and was allowed some lib- (Contlnued on Psge Nine.) BYRO TRAPPED ON MORRISON FARM, HUNTERS BELIEVE Desperado .Hails Woman in 'a Berry Patch and Gets, His Breakfast; ; Meisaer ; Dies, Making Death List Three. (Dntttd PreM LcMed Wlre. Cleveland, June 10. Cleveland's striking garment workers," whose ranks were Increased today from sooo to 7000 by th walking out of the employee of 48 additional firms, will have the help during the remainder of their fight of the Cleveland suffragettes. This was pledged to them late this afternoon at an executive meeting of the officials of , the suffragettes' organ nation. - An especial fight- will b put up by them In behalf of Miss Josephine Casey, national organiser : of tb gar ment workers, who la under arrest and whoae trial will- establish' the right of women to do picket duty In strikes. With 1 arrangements " all completed, however. - for settlement conferences Monday, th strikers are confident, to night, that an. amicable settlement will e reached early next week. In the .meantime, they declare every effort will be made to prevent any repe tition' of the rioting of early today In whlchs George Zmic i was shert -by a striker, and . killed.. . Th strikers point out. however, that nearly all of the clashes bo far have been between the strikers and the police and not between the strikers , and : strikebreakers and they, therefore. Insist they have not broken thla announcement and that no violence would be Used in carrying on the strike. . . ti Proceeds From First Blocks of Bonds of Large Issue to Go Toward Completion of the Fargo Cut-Off. (Ootted Press UMd Wire.) Minneapolis, June , w. Some of the plans under way by the Great Northern to spend $20,000,000 of the bonds sold a few days ago to the First National bank of New York, which . Is the first block issued of the $600,000,000 author ized, were outlined tonight by President Louis W. HI1U. . : "We have ordered 25 engine, 8600 box cars and rails for the "'construction of the" Fargo-Surrey . line,-, said HtlL "The work on the cut-off,- which was suddenly stopped last summer, .Is to.be resumed. - We are now. making prepara tions to start In and expect to have the line finished and ready . for operation next year." ' .- ' , , - Hill also Intimated . that the Great Northern may build its .own line Into Winnipeg. " ' I -.' '. iK', ,i . Hill -declared that- the - crop situation Is excellent and will tend materially te Improve conditions, ' . . , ' . 1 'i "' "' ,i i ii m iT'i.i 1 1. ii ii Miii in ii i j V I. y . : ,i i- i . - - .. . . .. - r", ; i!. ; v :? : Panne 'Boomed. ' :f '-,:: ,-. . iv. (tnltwl Pre Lf4 Vttit.i : ; Chicago, June 10. Former Judg artd ex-Mayor Edward ' F.. Dunne,, was ut In nomination" for governor tonight by 80S Democrats at a banquet in bis honor at th LaSalle hotel, v i Special Dlspstcb to The Jonrml.) .' Lane. Wash., June 10. With a bat tle to the death with "desperate Bill Byrd imminent. Chief Deputy Sheriff A. H. Jell sett, leading a posset of nearly 30 heavily armed men near Mica, Wash,, sent a hurried call for volunteers to night jByrd is believed to be. hiding in the underbrush on the-Peten Morri son ranch, one and a half miles west of J., W. Best's ranch,- where a man an-, swerlng the general description of Byrd procured breakfast this morning. - , Justice of the Peace C. W.tMelsner of . Disman, the member., of the 'first poea shot through the lung by Byrd immedi ately following the double murder, died at C o'clock tonight. So- officers . and farmers of tthm countryside are redoub ling effort to.; run the,?dsperado to earth.. . v. tAj'-ylii Clearer detaUs of th manner in which the supposed murderer secured break- fast at the Best ranch , tbls morning were secured tonight and disclosed that - Mrs. Best ran across the stranger in her berry patch while she was picking ber ries." H carried a heavy (rifl and po litely asked; for'somethtpgto eat,-4 , aidh atifla.Vstsws4 Jaiajfea "Com - Into th ; house and I'll g t von same' breakfaat the woman san'L The stranger followed and at tb don? ; turned ' the v weapon over, to nr." Het. whd operates a saw 'mill near by. Whll Best was ".morally ..sure the stranger waa Bvrd. h ao leareq jor n aacciy of hia famUy vMst ,he m?rl y tik.l commonolaces. . while. - - uis u-fcl mi heartily of th viands Mrs.Best pl 1 before mm. : - , Following, the - stranaer , . dfpdrti r Beat ran a mile for telephone tommun icatton with the sijerlff. UtoodlMMiti'! i and ven men hsv be scourlnu li .. adjacent country hiki xi wchjik t a result following th trail wM-h n- and redoubled many, time u ' ' - : became certain that H - : tb murderer. , Answering Jll.iPt i s (Continuei i i 1 - - ' , .vi. .i 1 ; -.