. , .. ... . . . . .... ' 77 ... ,, ,. en BRING PEOPLE TOGETHER,, The Sunday Journal Journal Want Ads ar Jha means of. ' bringing many . employer and workers ""together. They cost but little, i ooMPmxasi 6 Sections 68 Pages it ! Th weather Fair, and cooler; . k northwesterly wind. ' . . - VOL. VIII. NO, 16. FIVE CENTS ;, ' PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY ' MORNING, JULY 16, 1911. PRICE Bank wreckers1 arrest near in ( vancouver quiz Indictments May Be Drawn Against,. President Phillips, Cashier Daniels and Maybe Two Directors. INVESTIGATION BARES , ARRAY OF. EVIDENCE Juggling of Accounts and the Transfers of Stock Alleged by Examiners. Wbt .port Bbowe. . Bank hopelessly Ineoivent nhen It wa-cioed, e.nd for some time previous. Officers and director knew of Us condition at all times. Bank's blotter, which would be valuable to prosecutors, la miss In if. Deposits of nearly $20,000 were made the day, the bank cloaed. Bank's reserve seldom reached ; tha minimum required by law. County Clerk Wilkinson made a preferred creditor by giving him security tor deposits th day the bank, closed. . . Note given on afternoon of last day to . cover heavy over drafts. ' Bonds held by bank aa collat era.1. and not Owned by It, ap parently disposed of for $8000. -Fifteen ! thousand dollar In notes cancelled day the, bank cloaed by" accepting : property turned over by Moor & JiardJn. Property, and note y now both gone.' , s' 1:. - Exactly. $$20,924.01 loaned to 10 Interests, or per -cent of the total loans.' '.'H".:-' "" Forty thousand dollar loaned to PhilUps A.AldrJch leas than two weeks after bank was pur-, chasaoV. , ' . KTotea of Phillip & AWrlch and their companies Juggled back, and forth continually for five ' year. Fictitious remittances entered as having been made to oiner banks, notably $40,000 to the Or egon Trust & Savings of Port land. t Loans to rlilllips and A. U MUler Juggled eo they would not appear in their personal ac counts. . Cash mysteriously Increased one day by J100.00O by certifi cates of deposit, wiped out the nDeUberate falsification of the books to mislead bank examin ers, depositors and minority stockholders. 9 WW WW . a a. a. A. v.n,ur Wash.. July 15. Uhfold- lnr a riot of high finance, leading all the way from loan, by the officers to themselves and juggling of figure to show fictitious cash balances down, tp desperate manlpulatlona' on the last day and the concealment or destruction, of valuable records, the story of the Com mercial bank of Vancouver U told detail in the report of Experts John W. Ferguson and John Y. Richardson, ren dered yesterday to the depositors com- ""Bas'e'd on the records of the bank, the experts had no hesitancy in declaring that the bank was hopelessly insolv ent, not only when its doors were closed by State Bank Examiner Mohundro on December 17 last, but for a long time before. With equal positivenesa the , opinion Is given that the offlacrs and director Of the bank knew at all time's V -that tney were uyu .. -i Following the announcement of the I Veport cama, the statement from Prose I Xting Attorney .Tempos that itiforma- lion Will 1 jjicjio . upon which the officials held respon sible for the wreck will be arrested and placed tn trial. Martin I Plpea of Portland, who performed a like aerv lce in the Title Guarantee & Trust cases, will draw the Indictments In consulta tion with Tempe and will be the chief flrura Jn the prosecution. , Warrants to Be Issued. Warrants are expected to be Issued next Tuesday or Wednesday, after the report of the experts has been fully di gested and care' taken -to draw paper that will stand the assaults of tech-' nlcal lawyer, The tenor of the report Is such that charge are believed a cer tainty against President H. C. Phillips, Cashier 'Gilbert W. Danlpls, Director (Continued on Page Six.) SEEKS ANNULMENT OF HER MARRIAGE, TO INDIAN WHO WEDDED ANOTHER ': (8,-iaeial to T"' Joarnnl.) Los Angers, July 15.--Mrs. Hart M. Schultav whoa secret marriage last arch to Schult. a run uiooa , Biacg- foot Indian, caused a sensation in in art circle' of oao urancisco ana ,ftew j ui it. in wniun nuv im mm. ww-n .. Mn the exclusive ' Arroyo Dinner club of trinr. city, Of which she 1 a" member, ha filed cult for the annulment of her' marriage.-: ., .itj-.-j . -y . Mr. Schulta charges tht"hr hus band already, had a wife at the tithe of their marriage.,;' .'.. r i . Thla -wife, she declares, is a full blooded; Indian girl named Margaret Strong, whom Schultx - married on thai Blackfoot reservation fcl fj)3. Her uit ; is accompanied by inte'.k .'iom the In dian agent at FtiV -Browning. Mont, bearing out i 'statement. ,ilv.W! fh',j.i---:9M Xal Oharga,tv"lr.-' Hrh-iilt la almost as well known" In Two Sordid Chapters Disclose ' Suridicate's Grip, oh Alaska VJICKERSHAlli GETS ' RESPITE; DELAYED FOR TIME Attorney General, Apparently Undisturbed, Departs for a Week of; Speechmakjng Dickinson in Scandal. (Br the International News Service.) Washington, July 15, The prompt In vestigation of Attorney General Wick ersbam in connection with the newest Alaska spoliation scandal was delayed unexpectedly today by the absence of Judge Henry D. Clayton, chairman of the committee on the Judiciary. Judge" Clayton is to report the reso- lutlon of Delegate Jamej Wlckersham caning on Attorney uerverai Wlcker sham for all information In - connec tion with the alleged frauds in the award of coal contracts for use in Alaska and for an explanation why no prosecutions were undertaken until after the statute of limitations made criminal action impossible. The house adjourned today until next Wednesday. Judge Clayton is expected to push the resolution through. Another Important end to this scan dal became known today when it was learned that General Dickin son, while secretary of war, had' sim ilar Information aa to the frauds in the. war department's Alaska coal awards ' submitted to him by Delegate Wlckersham. Dickinson ignored the complaint Bo far aa is known he uev gave any reason wny ne lanea to Investigate- these contracts under the proofs of frauds submitted. The department or justice is appar ently unruffled by the threat or im peachment ald. allegations of crime and misdemeanor by Attorney General VVIckersham.il Tha attorney general left here this afternoon -on the Congressional Lim ited for r New- York for , a .week's ab sence, .which ; will be spent principally In the reat, where he will make ome speeches. V , ' - i Byadleata StIU XOabl. The department . of Justice points out that while in ail probability th Btat- ute of limitations In the Alaska affair ha rtih ' against prosecutions ror per jury, it has not rim against the syn dicate or its members for prosecution of conspiracy to defraud the govern ment. The house committee on xpendltures In the agricultural department nas taken up the part the attorney general has played In recommending the dla ml'ssal of Dr. Wiley. This committee will attempt to reconcile Mr. Wlcker sham' opinion tr.at Dr. Wiley should be dismissed for hiring a $1600 expert with the fact that the attorney gen eral himself saw nothing wrong In pay ing his own experts sums running Into the thousands. Frank B. Kellogg, for Instance, received $59,000 fees and $22,000 In expenses in lump sums and unltemized accounts. ' . The Committee on expenditures In the (Continued on Page Seven.; PACIFIC COAST STEEL MILLS IN T Consolidation of Steel Inter ests in Seattle, . Portland and San Francisco Being . Worked Out Is Claim. (By the Intmationl News Kertloe.l Seattle, Wash., July 16. Following the trend toward consolidation of the steel Interests throughout the world, a merger Of three principal steel concerns of Seattle, Portland and Ban Francisco is being worked Cut In, the latter llty. As regards this' city the plant of the Seattle Steel company la to be taken In. William Pigott, the principal financial force In the concern; E. Mi Wilson, Its president and general manager, and D. E.'McLaughlln, vice president and treas urer, are now In Pan Francisco. , ' ' Seattle is to b the headquarter .of the merged concerns. (phe Seattle Steel company's plant, some five? acres Jn ox- (Continued on Page Four.) art circles aa Mr. Schultx, who "be fore her marriage wa Annabella Mc Farland. r He ha, done soma fin work with - the ...brush,, and it wa , through their -mutual Interest ln.; painting: that the two , met. ! They eloped; to Santa Ana and , were married- and 'it wu net until a month later that the secret leaked out. -Schultx declared today that the allegations made against "him In hi wife' complaint; are untrue. He1 ad mits that he did go through a cere mony with an Indian maid, but -later found 'out thafit was' Invalid. .'This ceremony followed a meeting at a res ervation dance, followed by. hi flight1! witn me gin., xney roae away on the same horse and ipon their return three day later-the girl; father forced' them to! go ;. though i the! wremonr Hchult declares that hla present wife was told all of thla prior to their marriage, Thl she denies. ;': f MERGER REPOR CONTROLLER CASE .i EXPLOSIONS DUE Developments Probably Will Bring Under the Light Men Close to the Administration and Guggenheim. (Washington Boreati of Tbe Journal.) , Washington, July 15. Plans are bejng made to bring Into the Investi gation of Alaska and Controller, bay matters an attorney of national note. whose experience will make It possible for him to analyze the evidence and to bring from the case the tremendous possibilities that It la known, to con tain. Effprts have been made to get either Francis J. Heney or Louis B. Brandels, the latter of whtyh conducted thy examination . of witnesses for the PJnchot side ""In ' the Uallingor-Plnchot Investigation. Heney has been com municated with, and It is thought by some that he will accept, the position. Hints given in original dispatches to The Journal, upon which Senator Poln dexter based his resolution calling for all Information" on the matter, were conservative. Developments since June 27, when the resolution was intro duced. Justify the statement that this case holds more dynamite than the Cunningham' case, and that the facts brought out Will exceed In public in terest thosa Elicited In (he Ballinger Plnehot . inquiry. Exaggeration Is Impossible. . Many -wild' state'fneltts- have been made, which in detail are Inaccurate, but they do not exaggerate the dy namic character of the scandal, which will Involve persons not hitherto be lieved to have Interests In Alaskan op erations. Investigation in New York reve'als that men close to the admin istration were Interested In the opera tions of the Morgan-Guggenheim Alaska syndicate, while It Is probable that It will be established beyond question that every act connected with that syndi cate's deai was known to th White House. .' . ' ' ' After- denial ha . Ween made of the xiatem:t..tilcU&sJe1 Dick" pontscrlpt connecting C. P. Taft with B. S. Ryan and' his Controller Bay railroad, for which the president restored ll'.SOO acres on the shores of Controller has, which postscript was seen by Miss M. F. Abbott, a partial denial has been now made that Ryan's map Of the structure across the mud flats of the bay had been filed with the war department, although that map was seen by more than one person. Miss' Abbott was one of them. Disappearance of the map, however, continues to create Interest, and the war department attaches feel keenly the Intimation,, that it might have been abstracted - from the department's files. No department here has such a clean record for Integrity, and the most earn est search has been made to find a trace of such a map as Miss Abbott says she saw there. Persons who know the inside of the case regard it as so remarkable that they hesitate taking up the burden of ferreting out all the facts that may be brought to the light of day. Task Unpleasant One. They say that the duty Is unpleasant because the necessity will arice of in volving, persons to whom an attack would be most unwelcome. But the de termination has been declared to go to the bottom once and for all, and to clear up the maze of scandp.! which has wrapped Alaska until It has become al most unsafe for anyone to touch any thing connected with that territory. However, while the alleged corruption is being brought to light, it Is the de- (Continued on Page Two.) Spectacular Blaze Threatens Iowa Capital Until Checked, by Fruit Trees. Learntd Wire.) Dea Moines. Iowa, July 15. The hated enemy of the pioneer when Iowa was -still an almost, unbroken prairie was nreaented In miniature here this afternoon, when thousand of people In De iioine office buildings viewed a spectacular prairie fire that knocked at the city' door. leaping a if by magic from an un known cause, tha flames awept over zo acre of prairie grass just south of the city and paused at the edge of th Dea -Moines river, north of which lies the city of Des Moines. For two hour the fire raged,; wnne a nunarea iarm ers and a lago' portion of the city fire department fought the tongues of fire that leaped as-high as 80. feet In the air.". ;v ' ' . '" . ' During, the fire fight thousands of employes in the city office building ascended the roof of various, high building and watched the scene. Busi ness practically was suspended for the time. The - first check - to the - fire fiend, whloh threatened to sweep : over hundred . ot acres of - wheat and oat standing in the shock.; was met in. an Immense orchard. : ' . u ; The fire ate its way slowly, through the tree and gave the firemen a Chance to ''get It under control i before L H reached the field of grain. ", i- , i . Prairie fire ar almost unknown ' at this time of the year In Iowa, but the long drouth ' cued . the gras to be unusually dry, and the flame spread with great rapidity., , :. ..',', ( , , The river, coupled with the wind that carried tha flames southward, prevent ed sd. danger to th city., :; PRAIRIE FIRE AT DES MOINES' DOOR SECRET 0PDEATH IS OBSERVED BY P. Chicago Physician Explains a Remarkable Experiment Performed on Dying Patient in Charity Ward of Hospital. X-RAY EXPERT TRIES TEST ON FOUR GIRLS Claims to Have Witnessed the Phenomena That Accom panies Passing Away. fBr ttie International News BerTIc.) nicago. juiy 15. "I have actually observed the spirit leaving the hody of a dying man who was a charity patient at Mercy hospital." This startling announcement' was made by Dr. Patrick O'Donnell. an X ray expert of Chicago today. Ho adds to the statement that he believes he has discovered what in fact constitutes the soul or spirit. According to Dr. O'Donnell's storv. an Invited number of Chicago physicians attended his latest demonstration at Mercy hospital last Thursday night. Previously he had held demonstrations In his office In the Heyworth building, using four young women as models for the detection of the "human aura." Using a film of dicyanln and other chemicals held between two small plates of glass all of the physicians Invited admitted that they had seen the "human aura" or "halo" of light waves that surrounded the bodies of the women. This "aura" developed as a strong radl ata of light surrounding the outline of the body and the head. Secret of Death Explained. Following up these experiments Pr. O'Donnell,' believing he bad found the secret of death and the way the soul passes from the dead clay when dissolu tion comes, went further. Here Is his own story of his version of what hap pens when death, comes and life de parts. . "The patient was reported as having only a few minutes to live. I looked at the .man. throusrh thl' .chemical screen for almost half an hoirrV The aura was tending, said the patient was sinking rapidly and I did not take my eyea from the screen. Suddenly It was announced that death was about to occur. At the name Instant the aura which as a bright light had been radiated from the hedv at all points began to spread from the body and disappear. Further observa tion of the body revealed no sign of the aura." Dr. O'Donnell says he does not claim that this aura Is the soul or splrft. Ho says he docs not know what It Is but declares that ha has witnessed the fact that it is radio activity that Is present during life and passes away after death. Dr. O'Donnell promises to go further. He wants to solve the question 'has an animal a soul or spirit kindred "to that of man?" ' Tomorrow he expects to test a h'orse or a dog to see if It, too, haa an aura. NEW YORK CITY; NEGLECT CHARGED Health Officials of Eastern Metropolis Engage in Strug gle to Prevent Dread Mala dy From Gaining Ground. 'T'ntted Prew f.nM Wire.) New York, July IB. With cholera at Its gates, the health officials of New York are taking more energetic precau tlona than ever tonight to prevent the disease gaining a foothold In tne city. Allegations of carelessness on the part of the quarantine officials were freely made and It Is likely that, as the re sult, of today's developments, stringent regulations will be adopted to prevent employes and attaches of the Quaran tine station mingling with outsiders. ' Patrick dishing, a night watchman at quarantine, lay for 34 hours in the public ward in St. "Vincent's hospital at Livingston; Staten Inland, before It was known that he had cholera. Two hour after ha had been rushed back to quarantine he died. 1 Allegations that Dr. A. H. Doty, health officer, "permitted his employes, who guard the 'detained Immigrants, to come to' New .York without being sub mitted to any fumigating process and even without changing their clothes, were also made today by Attorney Charles Dushklnd,, counsel for persons who want Doty removed. In support of h( charges, he produced Charles Lea vltt, carpenter at Hoffman Island, who said that he and live . others come and and go from the contagion disease hospital ' without Interference. , Dr. Doty insisted tonight th t every, thing possible was being cone to pre vent cholera getting.- Into this country. "There Is absolutely (no danger of the disease getting ', here,' he said. "There might be a sporadic case, such, as the Cuahlng 'case, 'but . all . such would be Controlled' from the' very moment they were discovered." ; . -. '4 , fv'tsV Grande Has Eastern Night, . ' (Special to Ttie Journal.), ' ' La Grande, Or.. July 15. La Grande ha been sweltering in - almost record heat ,, here today and the night keep to aVplteh of as extreme heat as one night before this week when- t he. 'mer cury went down only to 75 . degrees here. 35 .Is a normal night summer temperature.,;: :j;x;v;,; I v" ;.'r.'!xj ODONNEL OA MENACES Cabinet Members Involved in investtaation , Drawing h;- Homer Davenport. Copyright 1911 by C. J. Mar. With Dr Cathey He Will Visit Scene of Recent Crime in Effort to Gbnnect Perpetrat or With Hill Murder. If Swan Peterson, the section laborer lnJall at Olympia charged with the killing of Arthur Coble and his wife at Rainier, last Monday night, Is guilty of the crime a strong link in the evi dence will be added tomorrow when Sheriff Mass of Clackamas county and Dr. C. C. Cathey will make a thorough examination of his clothes and endeavor to trace him every day since the Bar bara llolzman murder last March. So fully docs the Coble crime duplicate the Hill crime at Ardenwald that Sher iff Mass has concluded to go over the ground and get the facts first hand. Dr. Cathey will go to test the clothing of the accused man, for there sre two men In the Olympla Jail charged with the crime, In an "effort to. trace the blood spots that must Imve fastened them selves to the clothing of. the murderer. On the floor of the Coble home where the crime was committed, small spots of blood were found as far as four feet from the aide of the bed In which the dead couple lay. The blood had been forced from the head of Mrs. Coble when her skull was split open by the blow (Continued on Page Eleven.) Five Thousand rjhicagoans Seized With Fright When Wind Downs Tent. Rt the International News Service.) Chicago, July 15. rive thousand per sons at Buffalo Bill's wild west show were thrown Into a panic this afternoon When half the large t?nt vs blown down In the electric storm. Several men and women were Injured by col lapsing seats and falling tent polos. Tbe great damage was done in the "ex tension" tent, which Is just beyond the entrance pavilion, and which was occu pied, by., an audience of nore than 2000 persons. The band naa just xinisnea the Becond overture and the performers, mounted on horsvi, were crowding In the approach of the arena before the grand march when the accident oc curred. I . . A blinding flash 'of lightning was followed by a wind flurry that lifted the roof from the-tent, tore the canvas walls from their anchorage and sent seats and tent poles flying. Enveloped In thousand of yards of flapping can vas, terrified men '.and women strtig. tied to escape. Cries of the f. ghtened audience could be hrd above the storm for many blocks. All or the people In the fallen tent managed to extricate themselves with the help of canvas men and other employe of the show. ... , The presence ..or a squad of police and the coolheadedness of show attaches alone averted, a serioas catastrophe . ' : v--. V At Mcdford .106 Legreea. ,) 5- ) limited PrcM "Lesatd Wlru.t ' Medford,.Or., July 16. The thermom eter thl .afternoon' stood it 106 de His. Proper Place mFJEEN TELLS OF JMk CONFERENCE WITH fcmb SECJACVEAGH SHERIFF MASS OF CLACKAMAS TO GO : jorainier, una. . - ww'i,; , ' 'ST '"'I'"'" 1 I 17 t - ' " CU CROWD IS THROWN IN PANIC No JroatraUona .war .tporta-'.motjh' or sen. Monmer Governor of Illinois Testifies to Having Told President's Agent of Part He Played in Lorimer Election. (United rre teA Wlre.t Washington, July 16. As a result of developments at the Senator Lorimer hearing this afternoon, a second mem ber of the president's, cabinet will be called as a witness. Secretary of the Interior Fisher al ready has been named. He was appealed to by Senator Root. Republican, New York, to get from I'dbllsher Kohlsaat of Chicago the name of the men who told Kohlsaat about tho Lorimer "slush fund." The climax of Governor Deneen's tes timony came when the name ofSecre tary of the Treasury MacVcagh was mentioned -today. "In August, 1909, three months after the election of Lorimer," said Deneen, "I was asked to meet Secretary MacVcagh at the federal building In Chicago. He wanted to know "for the Information of the president the part I had placed in Lorimer's election. President X Mentioned. "I told him to tell the president that ho. President Taft, wn the one who had" kiector; )r!mj.t)Mijt h;V4 I. one wno was. unaei suspicion ana mat he had sent a telegram favoring Lori mer. t told him 'that "Mr, Hlnes had telephoned to me "that President Taft had sent that werd to me through Sen ator Aldrlch." " . , Four witnesses were- summoned for Monday Herman II. Hettlcr. WHllam Burgess, JameB Keeley and Henry Tur rish. Hettler will be asked regarding an alleged statement made to him by Edward HInen, that he (Hlnes), "elect ed Lorimer." Burgess will be asked rel ative to an alleged conversation he had In March, 1911, on a train In Minnesota with O. F. Wlehe.' secretary of the Hinea Lumber company. In which Wlehe is al leged to have remarked that he con tributed $10,000 to the Lorimer slush fund. TWO LOSE UVES Windstorm Strikes Presbyteri an Meeting House and the Walls Fall, Crushing Car penter and Hindu. (tToltcd Preia tenneil Wire.) Kl Centro Cal . July 15. Two per sons lost their lives and several others in lured here this afternoon by a cyclone, which destroyed property to tha extent of about $50,000. The storm came shortly before 3 o'clock and was very torrlflo while It lasted The principal damage was dono In the main business section, especially to the high buildings and churches. The Presbyterian church .was raed and It was when this' structure was felled to the ground that the lives were lost The victims were Leslie Novant. a carpenter, and Singh Hunt, a Hindu. Both were crushed by the falling walls and died a short time later at the St. Thomas hospital. .,., Of others who were struck by flying nieces of timber and debris, none was seriously injured. Several small fires were canned oy tne cyiuimw. um nm damage by flames was very nominal. CYCLONE BLOWS CHURCH WN MAYOR MCCARTHY FREES:PRISONERS , FOR HIS OWN POLITICAL PURPOSES (Special to TV Journal.) -San Francisco, July .-arollng prisoners from the county Jail and lib crating them for the sole .purpose of distributing banners and 'ction cards la the latest phase of the coming elec Uon W h Mayor . F- H., McCarthy is bavins worked at the rate of on a dav through Sheriff Tom Finn . and District A '"? Una: fact was brought out by an, In vestigation ' today into the record, of the district .attorney's of Ice. which shows that McCarthy; and .his friend, the sheriff. -" have - been .working the scheme literally ''to death,y; for -the past The' iBtestcas to come; to . llghi thrniith investigation i the liberating of Frederick Bahrt. isanrt wa corw though in reality, the charge should have been "battery. ' Evidence wa ad duced to enow tna tsanri Deal run aged in a -jr mother in a pruiatr issnion, , .. romicai IT SPELL KILLS A FARM LABORER IS Suns Rays Beat Down P. F. Mahler in Field Near Fair view Portland Man Over come, Falls Off Dock. TEMPERATURE FALLS AS COOL WINDS BLOW Forecaster Beals Says Indica tions Are That Relief Is at Hand. Hourly Temperatures. : . 6 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 .6511 .89 .90 .92 .93 .93 .94 .91 .85 ....662 ....673 ....704 ....735 7S6 ....8317 ....838 The first death due to the prevailing hot weather occurred yesterday, -when P. F. Mahler, an employe on the farm of C. W. Clute, near Falrvlew, died in the hay field. After the body wa brought to Portland, Deputy Coroner Dunning examined it. with the 'result that he learned death was caused by the heat. The man appeared at the Clute farm Friday morning, and asked for work. He worked that day, and yesterday un til about 2 o'clock, when he became ill. A physician was called, but the man -died before he arrived. He was about 68 years old, .. ' . ..... Overcome by the excessive heat of yesterday afternoon, John Vlgar, a la borer, fell from an East) Burnside street dock to some logs ten feet below, break, lng one of his leg. When searched at police headquarters, where he wag taken for attention, $410 was found in his pockets. He was quickly revived after being relieved of hi clothing at tha!, With a promise of cooler weather to day, a slight breeze sprang up" last night ' between t and 8 o'clock, putting an end to a day which. If not the hot- ' test of "the season, was' a sirzler, the lack of any wind during the day caus ing the" people of Portland to suffer - more than they did last Thursday, when the thermometer reached the highest point of the summer so far 97 degree. Freakish atmospheric condition are held responsible for the weather that has made Portland pant for the last " three days, according to the weather - man, and yesterday presented an un usual condition for this part of ths country by an Increasing temperature until the thermometer reached Its high est point ror the day at 6 o'clock, when Old Sol ran the mercury up to 94 de grees. Xallef Come. After 6 o'clock perspiring Portland era began to draw long breaths of relief' as the breeie began to freshen and the tiny thread in the thermometer began to drop. Two degrees were lopped off hy 7 o'clock and by 8 o'clock the gov ernment thermometer read 85 degrees, a fall of eight degrees In two hours, v. Among those who felt the heat yes. terday was the usually genial weather prophet. District Forecaster E. A. Beals. who said that condition were none his making, but one of those unusual conditions last year on the same date J the thermometer stood only at 70 de grees from 4 o'clock In the afternoon until 7 o'clock in the. evening which ' sometimes prevail, the heat being caused by a Blugglshness in the atmosphere, there being np movement In it He said, however, that the wind was blowing at the. rate of 18 miles an hour at North Head yesterday, and that there was but' little doubt but that Jt would find it way up here. . ; Above the wormaL Temperatures, he said, were still de cidedly above the normal on the Pa--clfic slope, and the 100 degree mark was reached at North Yakima, Wash., Roseburg, Or., and at Red Bluff and Fresno, Cal. A peculiar feature of the hot aneU. as pointed out by Mr. Beals, was th fact that after Thursday the hour -at which themaxlmum temperature , was recorded was later each day until yes-, terday, th greatest heat occurring th first day at the normal parted of 3 o'clock, Friday, it i came at 5 o'clock. the mercury then beginning to fall. The official forecast for todaje- for Portland and vlclnltyris fair and cooler . with northwesterly winds,,: Old Sol made every possible use of his time yesterday and out of a pos- (Continued on l'. . - Eleven.) influence . wa brought - to bear- whan the case was called, in pie courts and Bahrt wa copvlcted of vagrancy and 1 sent to the 'county, jail to serva 90 aay..?''rS."",.,Y, v- "r; "i:cit;i;t ' Bahrt started hi sentence, but after , serving 1$ day m Flnnl "hasttte, wa liberated by Finn and Dlatrlct Attorney Flckert. ' Bahrt Is now distributing banner for McCarthy, and ' Finn, an nouncing, their candidacy fox I, ra-eleo-tlon. f From people who 'are In touch with the affair of the present Admin istration come th word that JlcCsrtny and - Finn', will ' practice the . m sort of: tactic until th election In Novem ber'ls over.'. .' ' ; -'. '' ' -5 Examination of .-the record In th district ' attorney's ' office ; today tw) that McCarthy and Finn hhve libera petty offender from th county ji I for 'the past month . at n v-mi i,t one a day., Most ot the prisoners -rv about 10 to JU days when pnmUA ei, i have "been sentenced for aui-h ofVi.r 1 battery, drunk and. - petty, lr -.-iy. WAVE BROKEN