WEEKLY EDITION VOL. XXVIII J. G. RIGGS BUYS G.P, Hi RAILWAY TO RE MERGER WITH NEW VOIU'ORATIOX. IN- NEW COMPANY IN FIELD Portland, San Francisco and Cout i Railroad Organized Willi Cap. itul Stock of $2,000,000. That the finances are already pro vided Tor the building of the Portland, San Francisco Hnd Coast Railway is the statement of J. G. Riggs, who has returned from Portland, where the incorporation papers of the new pro ject were filed Monday. The purpose of the new company, Which is .capitalized at $2,000,000, divided into 20,000 shares of a par value of $100 each, is to build a line from Marshfleld, Ore., to Trinidad California, with connecting lines to Grants Pass, the Illinois valley and the copper fields of southern Oregon, the incorporators being E. X. Chester, Portland, representing, eastern inter ests; 11. X. Tinker, piesidciu First Trust company, Portland; J. u. Riggs, Grants l ass, Oregon; iienry A. Davie, attorney, First Trust company, Portlaud. Mr. Riggs says that the incorpora tion is the outgrowth of plans that have been under development for the past two years, and include the main line down the coast and the connec tions into this territory, with ar rangements already made for the op eration under agreement with the S. P. Co. The coast line, according to the articles of incorporation will cross the Rogue river some distance up from the mouth, near the Illi nois river. A branch will then be run up the Illinois to Kerby, and on to Grants Pass, building on the old Southern Pacific survey. A line to the Blue Ledge mining district runs from Grants Pass to Seattle Bar, As a part of the general scheme, deeds have today been filed with the county clerk conveying to S. H. Riggs all the rights-of-way, trackage and other property of the Grants Pass and Rogue River Railroad company, which it is understood will become part of the new corporation, the deeds being made from the receiver of the defunct company to Mr. Riggs Tuesday Mr. Riggs had men on the ground protecting the temporary railroad bridge built across the Rogue from high water, cables being run from the bridge to anchors on shore. Mr. Riggs said that the building of the road was being undertaken inde pendent of any of the other railway corporations, though traffic arrange ments had been entered into with the S. P. Co., which company owns the lines with which connection will be made north and south. He says that construction will commence in the spring, and that rails for spring de livery are already ordered. Mr. Riggs says that the men who are (Sacking the new company are men of recognized standing in the financial world, and while he did not feel at liberty to say who they were, he added that the announcement of their names would give ample assur ance that the newly Incorporated road was sure to come to a successful is sue. ELECTROCUTION FOR VIRGINIA RAN HITS. RICHMOND, Va., Jan. 15. The supreme court of Virginia this after noon denied a new trial to Claude and Floyd Allen, members of the no torious Allen clan of bandits, convict ed of first degree murder for the part they played in the shooting un of thoea are stopping at the, Josephine. Hillsvllle county court house. I'n-j Messrs. Wayment and Reed bring less the governor interferes the two some fine ore with them and are en men will be electrocuted here Friday thuslastlc over the mining future of morning. I. CAMP NO. 1 MOVED ACROSS ALLEN CREEK, Clearing the right-of-way on the Pacific-Interior railway is progress ing rapidly, and camp No. 1 has been moved across Allen creek and the men are now working to the west of that stream. The engineer and those in cnarge have been considering the advisabil ity of Jetting a contract to local par ties for the clearing of a three-mile stretch of the right-of-way, and bids were asked for that work. Saturday afternoon twelve separate bids had been filed with the engineer's office, all from local people. The clearing covered in this contract will be that extending to Jerome prairie, a point 6 1-2 miles from this city. To Allen creek the right-of-way has been cleared the full one hundred feet in width, but from there on the clear ing will be only of such width as will be necessary to the making of the grades and the moving of dirt in-the cuts and fills. From the city out across Jerome prairie very little grading will be necessary, there being no cuts of depth. The engineering department Is therefore contemplating the let ting of a great number of Individual contracts, each of a few hundred feet only, to individuals nt a stated price per yard of earth moved. Much of this grading is shovel work, and by taking a contract in this way men can work as hard as they please and know that they are being paid ac cording to the effort they .put forth. By this method more men could be put on the Job at once. The newly appointed Public Util ities commission has met and or ganized, Jos. Moss being named as vice chairman to act in the absence of the mayor, who is permanent chairman of the body. Saturday the board of directors of the Pacific-Interior met with the commission, and plans were discussed for the turn ing over to the city of the property now held by the directors. This In cludes the Draper-Gunn terminals and the right-of-way and the notes, documents, etc., that go with it. The city is now advertising the $200,000 bond issue for sale, and asks that the bids cover all or any part of the issue. Transcripts have been prepared to go to each bidder and be must base his bid upon this, putting up one-eighth of the amount of the bid as a guarantee that he will complete the purchase within five days after the acceptance of the bid by the council. This precaution is taken to prevent the delay that was occasioned by the methods em ployed at the time of the sale of bonds a year ago, and is to make the bond money available at the earliest possible moment. Hospital Rusy Mrs. J. Christie, who was operated on by Drs. Ixiughridge and Strieker at the South Pacific hospital on the 4th of January, Is making satisfac tory recovery. Mrs. Christie was op erated on in Portland for the same trouble two years ago but the opera tion had to be repeated. On Sun day a heavy operation was performed on Mrs. C. II. Gilman; and on Mon day Mrs. Lem Trask was operated on for tumor; and on Tuesday, Dr. Findley operated on C. A. Learned, of Medford, for diverging strabiscus. On Thursday Miss Winnie Osborne of Murphy was operated on for ap pendicitis. All the patients are mak ing satisfactory recovery. Inland Excursionist He A special train bearing 220 excur sionists from the Inland Empire to southern California points passed through the city Thursday noon. A short stop was made here, and repre sentatives of the commercial dub were at the depot to present the northerners w ith a couple of boxes of Rogue River Newtown apples. There were also a number of one-time res idents of eastern Washington at the depot to greet friends who were among the excursionists. S. J. Wayment and J. W. Reed, who have been working a rich claim .near Galir-e for the past several this country. GRANTS PASS JOSEPHINE COIXTV, HAMMOND C. KINNEY, PIONEER OF GRANTS PASS, DIEO TUESDAY, JAN. 14 Passing of One of the Foremost Citizens of South em Oregon Is Mourned by the Entire Community. Hammond C. Kinney, for 28 years the foremost citizen of Grants Pass, Its leader in enterprise and in com mercial activity, kind of heart, gen tle of disposition, beloved of all our people, has passed away. That word passed on the street Just before noon on Tuesday, Janu ary 14th, has caused an entire city to bow Its head in mourning, regret In the loss of a citizen, sorrow in the final departure of the true friend, philanthropist and Christian gentle man. Early in December It was announc ed that Mr. Kinney was stricken with disease. In the hope that change of climate would prove beneficial he went to California, but neither the climatic change nor the best of med ical attention was availing, and he returned to Grants Pass almost Im mediately, arriving here on January " I HAMMOND C. Horn in yueflMT, Ontario, February January 2nd, since which date he had failed daily in strength. Specialists were called in, and while it seemed to be agreed that the liver was the scat of the ailment, no definite diagnosis was announced, and the strength of the patient was waning too fast for the contemplated operation. The public was warned that nature could likely not rally, and while we were in a measure prepared for the annoiinceinent'that has now come, it has nevertheless proved a shock to all. Hammond C. Kinney was a native of Quebec, Ontario, where he was born February 26th, 1850, though as a child he removed with his parents to Orleans county, Vermont, and his earliest recollections were of farm life in the Green Mountain state. His father, Hammond Kinney Sr., was a native of Vermont, and had lived in the state except for a brief time spent in Potten, Quebec, during which per iod the son was born. As a boy, young Kinney followed the unevent ful life of the county boy, attending the district school, and when old enough to go for himself was em- ployed by the Fairbanks Srale Co.. of tor, was also prominent In musl St. Johnsbury, Vermont, with which ra' circles throughout the city, and firm he remained for twelve years. ,lel(l the position of president of the On reniovinit to the west. Mr. Kin-! r.ey located at Rathdrum, Idaho, where he gained his first experience In the saw mill industry, coming to Grants Pass in March, 1885, and comlne Intoronted nf nnrn In tho Inm-i"'8 bering and milling enterprise of this;"'"00' ,,oaru' In ine tommi-mai run, locality. He became associated hereiand 1b a11 other rIvlc organizations with H. B. Miller, and organized thCj1"' f"r tn"lr 'ri the lromo Sugar Pine Door & Lumber com-j (Continued on page eight.) fHLiV L'Plllll' ltVIl .! ruiii.ii, i.i.ii.lltl . iwi.l. ... pany, erecting the plant for that in stitution in the fall of 1 8S5. The following year the box factory was built. At the same time they started a general merchandise busl ness at the corner of Sixth and F streets. In 1S89 and again in 1902. disaster visited the firm, fire destroying the mill, but It was nt once rebuilt in each instance, Mr Kinney having been as undaunted in his courage as he was stable In his Judgment. In KS90 the Sugar Pine store building was erected at the corner of Sixth and F streets, Mr. Kinney being the president of the company at that time. A year later the store wns purchased by Messrs Kinney and Truax, in whoso proprietorship it remained till the Ume of Mr. Kin ncy's death. The factory in this city of which Mr. Kinney was In management be came the loading Industry of the lo- M.WEV. 11(1, IH.IO. Died at Grunts Pass, Ore., 1 1, 1013. cality, filling a large place in the commercial llfo of southern Oregon, and at one time it consumed the pro duct of three mills built by the com pany in Josephine, as well as the pro duct of other mills within the plant. Mr. Kinney was also at one time as sociated with lumbering interests at Hilt, Cal. He was one of the organizers of the First National Bank of Southern oregon, and continued a director of that Institution to the time of his t'eath. If Mr. Kinney was a lender In the business affairs of tho growing com munity, so also was he a leader in the social and tho political life as well. He assisted In the organization of the Bethany Presbyterian church in IS 87, and was the secretary of the first Sunday school organized by that society. In 188S he united with the church in the organization of which he had taken part, and during all the remainder of these years he wag foremost in tho work of the church and In advancing the cause of humanity, A member of the church chior, and for over 20 years Its dlrec- .iusic kauu miring me past year. Three tprnig he had served upon the city council, and In 1908 he was be-'mayor of tho rltv- ,lutv 88 8 He had also done member of the i t t '- - -'7 - - .. .... WM. F. PETT1TT HEI.lt FOR CROME OF INCEST. Wm. F. Pettitt. a citizen of Merlin, languishes in the county Jail in this city with one of the most heinous crimes In the calendar hanging over his head, his daughter Julia, a miss of seventeen years, being the one against whom an incestuous father is alleged to have sinned. Pettltt's wife Is an Invalid, help less from an attack of paralysis and from other diseases which she says were superinduced by neglect and abuse heaped upon her by the man who had promised to "love, honor and protect'" till death should sever the' bond. Conditions became so bad for this wife, and for the daughter who was the Issue of tho marriage, that three months ago the county authorities took notice, and the suffering wo man was sent to the County Home In Grants Pnss, the daughter coming with her to assist In her care. The daughter had been neglected through her unfortunate life surroundings, and In her backward mentality can not be held responsible for nil the wickedness that the father Is said to have visited upon her. The day before Christmas when all the world Is supposed to be filled with the spirit of love and of kind ness and of good will toward men, Pettitt, tho husband and father, came to the county court and asked that he bo permitted to go to the County Homo and spend the one day that Is hallowed above all other days by a Christian people, In tho company of his family. Of course his request was granted. It was natural and It was right, and tho court could not read the Inner man. At the Homo the Pettltts, mother and daughter, occupied a room on the upper floor, the daughter occupying (lie bed and tho helpless mother the other. Here Pettitt remained over Christmas, both Christmas eve nnd Christmas night being passed there, and during this time It is charged that the crime of Incest was commit ted. Tho superintendent of the II :;n became suspicious that all was not rU:ht, nnd Investigation resulted in omplalnt being made, and PeiilU vat placed under arrest Fridu;,' ev ening and lodged In tho county .'.al!. The bedridden tnother niiiilts knowledge of tho father's unnatural lime, and the girl says Hint It bad ontinued during the residence at Merlin, but that both the mother and tho (laughter feared the father's wrath If they made tho situation public. Prosecuting Attorney Kelly will ome here Monday, nnd will at once make a thorough investigation and take necessary proceedings. Mean time Pettitt Is being held In the coun ty Jail. Petti Is a man about 50 years of age, and has worked off and on at day labor In the Morlin neighbor hood. Under tho Oregon statutes the crime with which ho stands barged Is punishable by imprison ment In tho penitentiary for from one to three. years, or In the county all from three months to one year, and a fine of from $200 t0 $1000, The Juvenile court will probably nt once consider the case of the unfor tunate girl. PROSKti'TOR EDDY RESIfJXS. IJS ANGELES, Jan. 16. The resignation of City Prosecutor Guy ddio, recently acquitted of a charge of contributing to the delinquency of Mrs. Alice Phelps, a minor, ' Is In the hands of Mayor Alexander today. Necessity of recouping his re sources, which were dissipated dur ing his trial. Is given as a reason or resigning. Eddio was suspended by tho mayor pending the result of his trial. it. HYDE AGAIN FACES Ml RDI.lt TRIAL. KANSA3 CITY, Jan. 1 The I third trial of Dr. B. C. Hyde for tlio I TorKoron. under the alias of St. alleged murder of Col. Thomas I f'lnlr, served 28 months In the penl Swopo, millionaire uncle of Mrs. tf-ntiary nt Folsom for burglary. Pro- Hyde, started here today. The de-1 iifo attorneys tried hard to secure ! border. After bis release from prls postpononient, but failed. It Is tin-10"' Torgerson got employment In'a derstood that Senator Reed will Jolnl"" rnmn at Vlna- nn(1 tnpre lcl1 ,n the prosecution Saturday. I (Continued "on Page P Five.) .yu. iui CHIEF OF POLICE CLAIMS PRIZE MONEY IV P. O. Rl RGLAIt CAPTURE. 600 DOLLARS FOR CATCH Torgerson, Allan Allison, Confesses to RiiblMricti, and is Wanted in Callforuln for Murder. Some $600 of rewards will fol low the capture of the burglar who raided the postofllces of tho Rogue River valley, and Chief McLane of this city has mado claim for (the prize money. It was through the activity of Chief McLaue thnt the robber was first located In this city nere ho was registered as J. Allison at the Josephine hotel. McLaue then followed Hio case, and becoming sat isfied that ho had the hunted man spotted, he notified tho officers at Roseburg when AIUboii and his sup posed family went to that city, and It was through this trip that the man was finally nrrested. Notwithstanding that Grants Pubs and tho Rogue valley were filled with railroad and postofflce detectives, none had suspected the right party till McLano saw tho woman exchang ing the 775 pennies nt tho Josephine County Bnnk. Following this clue he obtained the evidence that finally led to the capture. At Roseburg Allison, or TorgurBon, as the man's right name Is now known to be, huH confessed tho rob beries charged against him, Includ ing also tho robbery of the Tracy Jewelry store In this city, The most of tho plunder from the latter place was found in tho room which he oc cupied In tho hotel at Roseburg, though ho admits having thrown away tho three watch rases that were found here In tho east part of tho city. Tho woman and the two children who were supposed to bo TorgorBon's family are the wife and children of Arlhlo Dlotz of Vina, Cal., at which place Torgerson Is wanted for the crlmo of murder. Tho Roseburg Review has the fol lowing details following the arrest of Torgerson in that city: "Torgerson wns arraigned before City Recorder Carl Wlmberly Mon day night nnd waived examination. He was held to the federal grand Jury on n charge of postofflce burglary under bonds of $10,000. It Is ex pected, however, that tho federal au thorities will ultimately turn Tor gerson over to tho civil authorities at Red Bluff to face the charge that may send him to the gallows. "In his cell at tho city Jail Tor gerson talked freely of hts Oregon crimes to Marshal Fenton, Postal In spector 8. H. Morse and Detective P. K. Kelly, the three men responsible for his rapture. Then ho was taken to the studio of a photographer and "mugged." Incidentally, ho was giv en a searching physical examination and found to correspond to the last detail to the description of the man wanted in California for murder. Tho subject of the California crlmo was not broached to the prisoner, who re marked glibly that his actual career of crime began with his robbery of tho Medford postofflce on December 27, 1912. Torgerson declared that all of his Jobs In Oregon yielded him not more than enough money to pay the traveling expenses of his "wife," as he referred to her and "his two children," as he further prevaricat ed. Record ft Rul One. "Tho circular sent from the sher- lfr " at Red Bluff recites that v'f),"',y hfl wns employed as a sheep WANTS (EYARD