PRICE TWO CENTS g i a n d sINr i v Dc VOL.X. NO. 225.' Portland Wins in Fight for Lower Distributive Rates ; to Interior Points Beattie- Confesses Before Execution .:. Gipsy Smith Commends Governor PORTLAND, OREGON; FRIDAY , EVENING, NQVEMBER 24, 1911 TWENTY-FOUR PAGES, - '? BEAM CALMLY MHTS END AFTER FULL CONFESSION Virginia Banker Who Murdered i Bride of Year Walks Unhes ; itatingly to Electric Chair One Shock Extinguishes Life BOY'S SIGNED STATEMENT -, itmr mini ih nv niornn WIMUC rUDLIU p I rng I Un layer Tells of Killing Wife- ' t - . ' v.. a a , a . .. . , p "i-or mis am I Am iruiy Sorry." Announces Seattle's Conf ession.. . ! first tad Piww Leaiftd wire.v Richmond, Va.; -Nv.' 24.--Rev J. J. Fix announced today ths following 'confession by Henry Clay Batti Jr.'.. ' - "I. Henry Ctay Beattle Jr.; de- slrous cf ietan.'Jng right before God end man, rto on this twenty-, fourth day ypt November, -19U, confess my guilt of ths crime charged against me. . ,,.,! Much .has been published eon-" cernlng the detail which was not v true, but the awful fact, without ' the harrowing clrcum- Stances, retrains. For this ac- O tlon I am truly sorry. Believing that I am at peace with God and am soon to rasa Into his pres- cnce this statement la tna.de. ; ' ((Signed) "HENRY CLAY BEATT1B: .JR.". (United Prata Leased Wire.) " f -Richmond. Va. Nov.. 24 Henry Clay i Seattle Jr, 'died In the "electric chair ; here thl morning. -A few minutes later signed confession was given to the public ft -i Walk Calmly to Death, 5 . vaimiy ana smiling y,iii3v imui !ferntly. '" Henry Clay Beattle, Jr., walked to hla death In the electric ? chair at the, state prison here .this i morning and paid the penalty for the. ' murder of hla young wife. He showed no Indication of ; physical or mental weakness. r' V'".-r.t II The execution required just three minutes from the time Beattle stepped j Into the death chamber. .. The two guards entered side by side with the 'doomed man. Rev. J. J. Fix and Rev. Benjamin Dennis, the two clerygytoen ' who have been attending- the doomed man la his cell, and Dr. W. T. Oppen- Tfcelmer, the prison physician, follow- lng.' . t :.,v.. ,,.v" - Sleep 'Wm TJntroubled. V :' Throughout ' "the ordeal Beattle re mained with - nerve unshaken. Hla sleep last night was untroubled, and .a ' gloomy,', rainy momln failed to bring In a tremor to the silent steadiness of hU ' If. 1 1 M - w, pea nd then began his march to the death (Continued on Page Two.) . DEPOSITS ARE OFFERED ; ALMOST EVERY DAY AT ; 'BUSTED' CLARKE BANK 'Eleven Months Shut Down, Presence of Receiver aqd the Woes of Former Depositors-- Are ' Not Yet Known to All the .World. ' C I Special to Tbe Journal.) Vancouver," Wash., Nov. 24. Despite the fact that the Commercial bank of Vancouver, has been closed 11 months; that a receiver is In ' charge, and that officers of the Institution are on trial for alleged misdeeds in connection with .receiving funds when they knew the bank to be insolvent, scarcely a day passes' but what some one offers a de posit or asks for an exchange certlfl- ;, Testerday a , man walked Into . the -t. tl. tend In Milrl nn tha counter ana toia . Keceiver " r.iaw no wanted to make a deposit V " VWliy, this bank la. broke," aald Mr. Kies, "and wo- are, not receiving ; de ponitsr -a vy.-- - ','.''. 'J . With much repugrnance after the slt UaWfon had been explained, the would brfTdeposltor scraped the coins from the Jlbunter' and departed. . ;r iVV-vyv- j-zV-f 4 "Scarcely a day t passes,' said Mr. Kles, "that an Instance : Of , this kind does not happen." i , , i, , ,;,- ,, ,. (- 11 (United rri-M MtiM Wire.) :i New York, Nov. E4. Sentence of not more than eight years ant! eight months and not less than four years and eight months was Imposed today upon Vf. J. Cummins, former trustee of the Carne s:le Trust company.:' Ha waa found guilty Monday of having stolen $140,- ii0 mi msinuuon a lunaa. CARNEGIE TRUST CHIEF GETS PRISON SENTENCE PHILLIPS' WING METHODS EXPOSED TO COVUTZ JURY Cash Blotter of Wrecked Bank Gone When Experts Came; Certificates Totaling $1,00,- ; 000 Merely, "Arithmetical." STATE BANK EXAMINER STICKS TO NEW ORLEANS Wires Prosecution He Can't . Get Back Till Dec. 1 Too "Late for Trial.. ,i (EpeeUl to The Joarnal.) Kalama. Wash., Nov. J 4. State Bank FvnmlntK Hf nhimilrn. who la blamed by many depositors for holding the de funct Commercial bank the run so daya allowed by law after It . failed, though reorganisation was deemed Im possible, .and who has been ordered to Kalama by Governor Hay, telegraphed District Attorney Tempeajast night he eould not come until about December 1, when the trial is likely to be finished. He is attending the Bankera conven tion at New Orleans, teavlng the state about 10 days ago. . Tempes replied, urging him to report here before the trial enda. '- ,: -.' .v. .. (United Pms Leaaed Wire.) i ' - -v-oiorr.. w. Nnv t Kl r h tlnr his Lway "step 1 by , step -oveif objections by attorneys for the aerense, Martin u. Pipes, attorney for the depositors of the defunct Commercial "Bank of Vancouver, today made aubstajjtlal progress In pre senting the testimony upon which , the state hopes 'to secure the conviction of Hugh Phillips, ex-president of the bank, who Is on trial In the circuit court on the charge of i receiving deposits after he knew the bank waa Insolvent. f y n.m.irlii ' i.ailmnnT . waa nlven by John Y,-Richardson of Portland, an-ex pert accountant, wtio wun ' Jonn . w. Ferguson experted the books last sum mer. He told f the failure to locate the missing cash blotter among the books of the bank and the difficulty of conducting the batik'a business without such a- record. He entered upon ,. the story of the entries shown by the books, leading quickly to. the Increase of the bank's cash account by $130,0)0 on Pe oember.6. 190 1, by means of two f 50,000 cerUfJcatea of deposit, payable to the bajik Itself, and. Wiped .out by reverse bookkeeping on the following day.; L As "ArlthmeUoal" Bntry. ; This Is contended by the state to rep resent a fictitious Increase of $100,000 in the bank's cash and it Is expected the (Continued on Page Seven.) IS Witnesses Bay Motorman Failed to Stop Car st Crossing G. W. Clark Driving Automobile; Other Collisions Reported. Mra Bessie Duke of East Thirty-first and Main streets was seriously Injured last evening when an automobile of which she was an occupant, driven by Q. W, Clark, collided with an East An ken y street ar at First and Yamhill streets, hurled her into ' the street on her head, inflicting a long cut on the forehead. The woman was taken to the operating room In the office of Dr. Hegele, where eight stitches were tak en In the wound. , She is believed also to be injured internally. . s According to . the atory told by wit nesses, ther street car crew was O blame, for, instead of stopping at First and Yamhill streets, the car merely slowed up, and without ringing nhe bell pro ceeded across the street. Clark, believ ing that the car -would stop, proceeded across the street -and met the car in the middle of - the sueet.1 v Another ;: collision ' occurred " shortly afterward at Second .. and Jefferson streets when ' as auto driven by M. Heldford and a Rivervlew car In charge of P. 8. Anderson col'lded. No one was injured,' but the- automobile and the car were both, damaged, j . ', . Shortly after 6 o'clock trafflo across the Burnslde bridge waa delayed for nearly 0 minutes when a street car collided with a milk wagon, scattering milk bottles all over the street crossing at East Second and Morrison street. T (United Pfeas tcaaed Wire.) ; ;fliverpool i -Nov, 24: Thirty-three persons were killed and 73 injured In an explosion at Blbby & Company's oilcake mill here. A boiler " exploded, burling mangled bodids to all parts 'of the Wrecked building. Many of those injured are -expected to swell the death list WOMAN SERIOUSLY INJURED WHEN STREET CA AND AUTO CRASH 33 KILLED AND 73 HUH WHEN BOILER EXPLODES GYPSY APPROVES WEST'S OPPOSITION TO TAKING OF. LIFE f x . Great .Evangelist Lauds GoV- ernor for His Action in Abol ' Ishing Capital Punishment During His Term. ' ' CALLS HIM BRAVEST . OF BRAVE CITIZENS Has Caustic Word for Govern or's Critics; West follows Teachings bf Savior. Gipsy Smith, world famous evangel ist. . applauds " Governor West's an nounced opposition , to , capital punish ment and calls the governor the bravest of brave men ; because, when he com muted the death sentence of Jans M. William Hasslng to life Imprisonment last night he also declared that so long as he Is governor there shall be no more BtChgings in Oregon. ; . The evs-ngellBt. too, had a caustlo word to say thla morning concerning the 'critics of the governor's action. - "Any little dog may bark at the moon," he said, "but the moon goes on shining Just the same. "Any man who follows his conscience and. In the sight of God. tries to do what he ought to do, Is going to be target for the gibes and sneers of the critics who have no generous or good motive In their criticism. - "I admire the governor of Oregon. He isj a brave man to stand . for . his con victions In carrying out a splendid work of reform In the face of the kind, of opposition I am told he baa. "Let the people of Oregon uphold their governor in his opposition to the prin ciple of -capital, punishment. He has given. a sinning man a chance to seek God and live a regenerated life, though In nrtson. ' 1 .. ?My; heart Jea4 toward "keeping ih man in-a prison rather than snap of I his life and with it his opportunity to turn from evil. "Capital punishment Is not a proper attribute of civilization. In this day we live to eliminate vice and crime by Instilling the prlnoiples of lovo and gen tleness and peace. This was the mis sion ' of Jesus Christ and we. his fol lowers, could not do less and do right and be brave. God bless your governor. I think he has done a splendid thing." NO MORE NECKS TO BE BROKEN IN STATE WHILE WEST IS THE GOVERNOR ! (Salem Bnreau of Tci Journal.) ' Salem, Or., Nov. 24. The last official act of Governor West t before he left Ealem on the 1:40 train yesterday after noon was to announce that the death sentende of Jans M. William -Hasslng, sentenced to hang December 19 for mur dering hla wife, would be commuted to life imprisonment. The governor went further and declared there would be no more necks broken by the state of Ore gon as long as he was chief executive. "The old rule that bloodshed should be expatiated by theBheddlng of blood (Continued on Page Eleven.) T fATAL TO YOUNG ON AUTO HONEYMOON Goldfleld Couple Arrives at San Bernardino Braised and Bleed r lng From Score of Lacerations , Caused by ,4Whipping.M .(United rreas Lao Wlra.V 8an Bernardino, ,' Cal., ' Nov. 24. Bruised and bleeding from scores of lacerations, the 'result of a. sand whip ping on the desert east of here, George Young and his bride, of GoldfieM. Nov., reached San Bernardino today more dead than- alive. .;.::;:.'. . '.",; Caught in a terrific, sandstorm while enroute to Los Angeles and San Fran cisco on an automobile honeymoon, the couple were marooned on the desert for three days without food and water and would have perished but for 'the bravery of the four day bride. ' - t When Young fainted from exhaustion, Mrs. Young started out In the whirling storm and walked 1 miles to a mining camp. Miners guided the couple to the railroad station. ., , ,', . .,','. BERESF0RD ASSERTS, ONLY 12 OF ENGLAND'S SHIPS READY FOR FIGHT : 7 ' (Special to Tli. Journal.) . ' ! 4 ,:, London, Nov, J4. England : is 4 .. aroused today as the result of 4 Lord Beresrora s declaration,' in s his speech at rortsmouth that of 4 4 the 244 snips in me navy but 12 4 4 ' are ready .for service. , He , de- 4 4 . clared that the others are manned ' a by boys and l alf drilled stokers,- 4 4 and that the fleet Is. not only in- 4 4 sufficiently manned, but divided.' 4 " . ; :4 SANDS ORM IS NEARLY PI ' r,,i ' 11 11 ,1 1 1 ill 1 i"i . 1 1 1 li mm RJDERS TO VIE FOR HONORS Grand March to Be Longest in History of the Hunt Club; Elaborate Mounted Drills to Be Feature. Ring Master Chester .Murphy will crack his whip and start the Hunt club's fifth annual horse show promptly at 8 o'clock tonight The grand march of dainty, high-bred animals, ridden by Portland's most graceful equestriennes and their partners, will be one of the longest In the history of the Hunt club's series of shows, and wil be followed by one of the most elaborate mounted drills ever1 given by the club; sight couples, on beautlfulnlgh-stepplng mounts, will ride through the Intricacies ot thla number. " The elaborate scheme of decoration, In the club's colors, with lavish use of ever green branches and brilliant electrlo Illuminations, Is being completed today, and will form a gay setting for the fashionable audience and the maneuvers of the prancing thoroughbreds within the show ring. Two different children's, drills, mads up of two juvenile classeswill take the place of the Hunt club drill at tomor row afternoon and tomorrow evening's performances. There will be various interesting events, and the showing of different classes at each performance, the concluding event tomorrow night being the judging of the hunting horses and the awarding, to the winner, of the handsome silver cup which has been hung up: ' . ' The awards are to be-made by Jobs Johnson, who arriyed early today. He is one of the most famous judges of horses in the' country, having been for several years In the service of the British gov ernment buying cavalry horses for tbt British army. . 'V " - Lieutenant Rucker, of ths Post at Vancouver, will act as entry 'clerk, and John E. Cronan will be the announcer. T WORKER FOR PEACE - Toklo, Nov.; 24. Count Komura, for mer foreign minister of Japan and for many years one of the foremost' man In the nation,' died hers this morning of consumption. ,;'..,'-.". .. ,. Komura, after being prominent In the conduct of the Russo-Japanese war, was the leader, of the commissioners from Japan who made peace at Portsmouth, N. H.; after extended conferences with Count Wltte, the plenipotentiary for the ctar.," ,:.':-:,-:':r-' : ..." : ., OPENING TONIGHT COON KOMURA DEAD SHOWING OFF! 'THE STATE PASSES' S; DEFENSE HARD HIT J " Sudden Action on Part of the Prosecution Compels . Mc Namara's Attorneys to Ex ercise Part of Peremptories. . 4 - remanent Jurors Sworn to Try 4 McNamara, ' 4 Robert F. Bain, carpenter. 4 F. D. Green, rancher.- 4 4 Byron Llsk, mill president . 4 Jj B. Sexton, '. orange grower ' 4 4 and real estate broker. 4 , William J. Andre, carpenter. ' F. A. Brode, retired hardware 4 . merchant and lumberman. 4 K. S. Blsbce, rancher. 4 J. II. Coke, rancher. 4 (United Treas Leaned Wire.) Hall of Records, Los Angeles, Nov. 24. As the climax of one of the most tense situations In a noted criminal case, four men were peremptorily chal lenged by the defense In the 'McNamara murder case today when District Attor ney John D. Fredericks,, with an inscru table smile on his face, "stood pat" on. all of the men ln the box and reserved all of his. five remaining peremptorlea The men eliminated were .F. A. Mo Burney, builder and architect; A. D. Stevens, retired cattle man; s. P. Olcott, rancher, all of whom had said they believed McNamara guilty,- and J. H. Marshall, a retired hardware clerk and near neighbor of Captain Freder icks. By having to utlllxe its precious per emptories, the defense was put to a decided disadvantage, now having only seven remaining of Its original 20. v. --'':,,-; Sxerotslar.Xs Delayed. .-.',': Exercising of peremptories was de layed for 20 minutes until the arriving of the prosecutor and the result was a (Continued on Page Fourteen.) POSTPONED BY JUDGE ? (United Preae Leaaed Wlra.) , Chicago, Nov. 24. Acquiescing In the plea of J. Ogden Armour and nine other beef kings indloted for criminal con spiracy In Violation of the Sherman law, United' States District Judge Car penter today postponed the packers' trial until December . 6. , ; : 1 " ,i The' .United - States.supreme court meets December 4 whon It will .receive the packers' appeal on the constitution ality of the Sherman sctr i SNAPS FREDE IK TRIAL OF BEEF BARONS LA FOLLETTE SAYS GREAT RAILROADS GOVERNMENT "Senator Bob'Asserts He Will Continue Fight Against the Postal Car Service. "Graft" Has Continued Decade. (United Preaa Leaaed Wlr.V ; , .' New York, Nov, 24. Declaring that the fight against the alleged railroad graft of millions of dollars ' annually In charges for postal car service will be taken up vigorously at the next ses sion of congress. Senator Robert M. La Follette exposes a graft which he says has been continuing for a decade under powerful protection. In a new In stallment of his autobiography In tbe American magazine, out today. "Senator Bob's" story goes back to the administration of Grover Cleveland, when, says the article, Postmaster Gen eral Vilas of Wisconsin made the dis covery that for the rental which tho government paid annually to the rail reads. It could "actually build outright, equip and keep In repair all the cars it used and then save $500,000 a year. " " Pits Facts Before Committee. Vilas hastened to put these facts be fore the house committee, believing that they had only to be made known to bit remedied at once. He could not even get a vote in support of his proposi tion for reforming the evil. "If he had tried to get It upon the floor of : the: house, there would not have been a corporal's guard io sus tain him," declares the autobiogrphy, I'The railroad lobby outside and the rail road members inside would have pre vented any action. Seventeen years lat er, when I came to the senate, I looked the matter up and there was the same old abuse.' During all these years the (Continued on Paee Two.) JAPANESE DESTROYER, EF, 45 OF CREW DROWNED v Great Part of Hen on Board War Vessel Die When, LUtle Craft, After Banging on the Rocks All Night, Goes to Bottom. ,.' V (Unltad rraaa f.M.art Wlra. Toklo, Nov. 24. Forty-five members of a craw ot 60 of the torpedo boat de stroyer Harusameh"were drowned today when the vessel was sunk off Cupe Slma during a terrlflo gale. The destroyer was driven on a reef , last night, and sank toOay. DRIVEN ON RE SINKS OA ERINAS ARE GIVEN LOWER BACK HAUL RATES Interstate Commerce Commis sion Orders Reduction of 20 Per Cent in Distributive Freight Charges to Interior. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE , BEGAN FIGHT IN 1S09 Decision : Affects - Shipments Over N. P., 0.-W. R. & N., and Connections. (Washington Bnnaa of Th Journal.) Washington, Nov. 2 is The Interstate commerce commission In an Opinion by Commissioner McChord today holds in terstate class .rates from Portland, Se attle and Taooma to points In Washing ton, Oregon, Idaho and Montana are un reasonable and. should be reduced, ths commission orders the Oregon-Washington & Navigation company,' Oregon Short Line, Oregon-Washington & Idaho, and the Union Pacific on or before Jan nary 2, 1912, and two years thereafter, to maintain : from Portland , to points east, northeast and southwest In Wash tngton, Idaho and Montana first class rates not In excyss of the following: For distances less than 100 miles,. SO cents; between 100 and 200 miles, -73 cents; between , 200 and S00 - miles', 91 cents; between. 300 and 400 miles, $1.10: between '400 and- 600 miles, $1.29; be tween 600 and COO miles,' $1.47; between 600 : and. 700 .. miles, $1.64. , , Other class rates sre graded In proportion.. The re duction amounts to 20 per cent, t " ! " Maximum rates, for distances exceed ing i 700 . miles are not prescribed . but are. left to the' carriers for adjustment The Northern Pacific; Great Northern and other roads operating In the states mentioned are made party to tbe order. This Is the-famous "back haul"' case that has been before the interstate com merce oommlsslon since early In the year 1909 when it was filed by Attorney J. N. Teal of Portland for the Trans portation committee . of the Portland Chamber of r Commerce, the Transporta tion Bureau of the Seattle Chamber .of Commerce, and the Taeoma Trafflo as sociation. Testimony was taken by ths commission at the time the - Spokane case was heard. :'; ""; The petition set forth that the- dlu-, iritutlve rates from coast; ports into Oregon, Washington. Idaho and Mon tana were unduly discriminatory and un reasonably high, and according- to th above dispatch . the commission found that the evid nice Introduced had au t aired these contentions. . . 1 Mr. Teal stated, this morning that he does not expect the United States Com merce court will grant , an injunction in this case as was done In the Spokane case a few days ago because-the com merce court at that time refused to en join the enforcement of the commis sion's rulingr in the Salt . Lake f case which was brought upon a reasonable ness of the rates established. - .The Spo kane case differed in that the rates granted Spokane were not based on 'their reasonableness-but the commission. In stead; established the' Missouri river coast rates as the maximum to Spoknne and common points, a basis which would flu:tr.ato with the change of water com petitive rates If the railroad saw fit to advance or reduce its rates to thi coait . accordinrly. ,.a, .y-. '. . ' ' "I would incline to think that the (Continued on Page Seven.) 1 - 1 JURY IS STILL OUT Men Who Pleaded Guilty Go to . Prison for, Long Terms; Fate of Those Who . Stood Trial Undecided. - . 5 (United Frees taaed Wirt.) ' " Lincoln Center, Kan ., Nov. 21. At noon today the Chamberlain jury en tered the courtroom and asked for a copy of the testimony regarding the defendant Slmms. Lincoln Center, Kan.. Nov. 24. One yeareaoh in tbe penitentiary was the sentence meted out here today to F.ver ett G. Clark, a miller, and Wntwa Scrahton and Jar Fltswater, fhrmor, all of Shady Bend, who pleaded guilty last week to the charge of "assault an! battery brought against thera for tar ring and feathering Miss Mary Che tn berlain, school teacher. . At 11 o'clock today no decision hs.t been reached by the Jory in hands rests the fata of. N. 8. Finn . , SherriU Clark .and John ffrni. charged with having tarred an t t ered Miss Chamberlain. When it , was. fonuu'!.v r: ' him that the Jury h'i " r ' Grover annmnpil t J t l-t ' would keep them ti:. " '!' i row. THREE OF E HYEAR