TWODROWNEDNEAR FATHER UNE WILL 5209,000 DAMAGES RUFUS THOMPSON GETS BIG INCOME FROM BEES ALBANY AUTO TURNS OVER IN CQRVALL1S LAST NIGHT 11. BEN John W. Rannells of Albany and I. A. Lucas of California Sink To Watery Graves. LAUNCH STRUCK FISH-TRAP AND CAPSIZED IN HARBOR Rector of Albany Parrish Will Attend Eucharistic Congress At Vienna, Austria. WILL LEAVE ALBANY AUG. 6 FOR THREE MONTHS TRIP Two Women and Two Children During Absence of Father Lane Are Saved by F. A. Lucas Parrish Will Be in uarge ot of Portland. l-atner uilligan. Details of Sunday Drowning at Willapa Harbor, Wn. Dead. I. A. Lucas, 51, Lake County, Cal. J. W. Rannells, 52, Albany, Ore. Rescued. Mrs. F. A. Lucas, Portland. Mrs. H. C. Courter, Portland. Loleta Courter, 9, Portland. Kermit Courter, 7, Portland. Hero. F. A. Lucas, Portland. South Bend, Wash., July 29. 1. A. Lucas, 51, who lives in Lake county, California, and J. V. Rannells, aged 52., 217 Kast Fourth street, Albany, Or., verc drowned and five others had miraculous escapes from death when a launch in which 111 fy were riding yesterday struck a submerged lis li -trap piling in Hear fiver straits. The rescue of two women and two small children by V. A. Lucas, broth er of one of the drowned men and une of the owners of the townsile, w-as as heroic as it was sensational. When the bow of the launch or dory struck the piling the latter was shoved through the boat and extended some distance above the gunwale. There the boat was held fast in the stream. Kanuells and I. A. Lucas were seat ed in the stern of the boat when it struck and both were precipitated in to the water, in the widest part of tile straits, two miles south of the town of Chctlow Harbor and away from any available help. The two men began to swim for a mud fiat 25(1 feet away. When about 50 feet from the mud Hats Rannells sank. 1. A. Lucas was a capital swimmer and reached the mud fiats. His ap parent intention was to hasten to the mill at Chetlow Harbor, some three miles away, by a circuitous route, and bring back a rowboat. After leaving the mud fiats there was a slough, the high tide filling it to about ten feet at that time. Lucas was hurrying along, when he suddenly plunged over a precipitous bank of the 'slough and was drowned. It is believed he was so exhausted that he could not help himself, cloth ed as he was in heavy clothing and logger's shoes. Until bodies were re covered at 4 o'clock this morning, the tide, however, having washed Lucas' body back into the main channel. As soon as the launch struck, and F. A. Lucas, a brother, took in the situation, he stripped himself, except a white shirt. He swam to the mud fiats and waded in mud knee deep to the shore, and then raced over the sharp stones for three miles barefoot ed and naked, sealing a hlutt ami climbing through slashings to the mill, where the rowboat was an chored. It was then a pull of two miles back to where the launch was pinioned with its human freight. Steadily the tide kept rising and each minute brought the two women. Mrs. F. A. Lucas and her sister. Mrs. H. C. courter. and her two children. Loleta. P, and Kermit. 7, of Portland, nearer their doom. As the water rose the women boost ed the children a little higher up on the bow of the boat and later upon the nose of the launch. All the time they kept their composure, the little girl and boy praying that their uncle might return in time. In the distance, two miles away., they saw Lucas land safely upon the wharf. The children waved to him. and be was encouratrcd. Faster and faster he rowed and faster and faster the tide kept rising until it had sub merged the women and children to their necks, when, exhausted and bleeding from his terrible race over stones and through slashings. Lucas reached the imperiled women and children. They were safely taken off and returned to Chetlow Harbor. Lucas' feet, legs and body arc a mass of cuts and bruises. The water was dragged all night by men who came from Chetlow Harbor and other adjoining towns. Rannells had come north to take charge ot some oi in: work at the new townsite. The bodies of J. W. Rannells of this city and I. A. Lucas of Califor nia, who were drowned Sunday in Willapa Hay where the launch in which they were crossing the bay struck a fUli-trap and capsized, were recovered early yesterday morning and were brought to Portland. The funeral service" ot J. W. Ran nells will be held in Portland this af ternoon and will be conducted by the Rev. Henry II. Marsden oi St. Peters F.piscopal church of this city. Rev. Marsden left for Portland this morn- The Rev. Father Arthur Lane, pas tor of St. Mary's Catholic church of this city and rector of the Albany par ish, will leave this city on August bth for Vienna, Austria, to attend the Fucharistic Congress to be held there from September 10th to 15th, inclu sive. Father Lane will be the only prelate from Oregon to attend the congress, and will be the iersonal representative of Archibshop Alexan der Christie of Portland. Father Lane will go from this city to Montreal, Canada, where he will take the steamer to Liverpool. He will then cross England by rail to Dover, wher he will cross the Eng lish Channel to France. After a short visit in Paris, he will proceed to Vien na by rail, stopping enroute for a visit in Switzerland. After the close of the congress he expects to visit Rome for an audi ence with the Holy Father, and to visit scenes of interest in the history of the church. lie also expects to vis it Prague, the ancinet capital of llo heiuia, and other European cities. This is Father Lane's first visit to Europe and he expects to be gone about three months. During his absence from Albany the local parish will be in charge oi liither .Michael Gilligan, assistant rec tor. Father Lane is a native son of Oregon, a grandson of General Jos eph Lane, pioneer territorial governor of Oregon and one of the state's first United States senators. Hammond Lumber Company Wins In Suit Brought to Condemn Power Site. JURY RETURNS' A VERDICT AFTER BEING OUTTWO HOURS Lumber Company Represented In Able Manner by Lawyers Weatherford & Weatherford The jury in the case of the Willam ette Power Company vs. Hammond Lumber Company which has been on trial at Salem ior the past few days, returned a verdict yesterday after noon aiter being out but two hours in favor ttf the Mammon Lumber Com pany for damages of $200.1100. The company had asked for ?250,0O0 danj ages. All other issues in the case aside from the value of the power site were eliminated by the pleadings. The Hammond Lumber Company were represented by .the law linn of Weatherford & Weatherford of this city, through whose able efforts the verdict was secured. The Willamette Power Company sought to have a number of power sites along the Santiani river which were being used by the lumber com pany for logging purposes, condemn ed, ami the case involved the question of whether or not a logging stream could be used for power purposes, when the stream was not navigable except for lloating logs to the mill. Thief Fails to Appreciate Com mercial Value of Platinum and Leaves It in Drawer. EIGHTEEN DOLLARS WORTH OF GOLD IS MISSING Th:it bee culture is an industry which tniirht be profitably carried as a side line by the farmers of I.hhi county is indicated by the success Kit tits Thompson of this city has at taiued during the past six yjjars. .Mr. Thompson has twenty-five col onies at his home in this city and forty at his farm two miles southeast of town. Mis average net income from the bees has been between $250 and ?.tP per annum. A couple of young men and women from Albany, while turning their car riage at Second and Adams streets last evening, were upset and the en tire party spilled out in the street. Bystanders hurried to their assistance and the rig was soon righted without any serious damage being done. From the sundry and various drinkables which were scattered over the street when the carriage turned turtle, the party had evidently come from a wet town.- Corvallis (ia7ette-Times. No Other Property Is Taken by Thief Entrance Made by Use of a Pass Key. TRAGKLAYING CREW MAKES NEW REGORD YESTERDAY CONTRACT FOR NEW SCHOOL . HOUSES GO TO SNELL At a meeting of the local school board held last evening the contract for the erection of the new school building was awarded to Councilman K. D. Snell, the contract price for the building, not including the healing plant, being $7,285.01). The heating plant will cost the school district $"43.00, making the total cost of the new building $8,228.00. The heating contract was let to Mcl'hcrson of Portland. The new building will be erected about half way between the Santiam and the Salem road and south of Hob liurkhart's residence. It will be a four room structure and will be so constructed that an addition can be easily made, or the entire building re moved in case the board funis it nec essary to erect a larger and more sub stantial building in that particular section of the city. According to the contract signed last night, the work on the new building will be commenced at once and must be completed by the 15th of October. It seemed to be the concensus of opinion among the members of the board that it will only be a matter of a short time beiore it will be neces sary to erect a new school building in the southwestern section of the city. Machine Places Four Miles of Heavy Steel Rails in One Day of Nine Hours. The failure of a thief to recognize the commercial value of platinum saved Dr. H. A. Leininger of this city the sum of ten dollars, when a burg lar who had forced an entrance to the ollice of the Albany dentist refused to burden himself with a metal which he evidently regarded as of but little value. The office of Dr. Leininger was burglarized cither on the night of July 28tll or early yesterday morning, an entrance being made by the aid of a pass key. The fact his otlice hail been burglarized was not disclosed until yesterday when the doctor dis covered that some $18.00 worth of gold phite had been taken front the drawer oi his work bench. As far as the doctor could ascertain no other property was taken. Although the platinum was in plain sight and in the same drawer which contained the gold, the thief left it untouched. Cream, Cream, Cream We Want Your Cream Are Paying Top Prices Bring Us Your Chickens and Eggs and Get the CASH ON THE SPOT Klock Produce Company Fifth and Jackson Streets, Albany Pecanse of criticism on the i;irt of liis conj-rej-ation because lie played billiards. Rev. Frank J. Milnes, pastor of the IVeshyterian church of 1'en (Ueton, has resigned and in his fare well sermon, look for his subject. "Progressive. Religion." He defended the game of billiards. The crew of 120 men now engaged in laying the rails of the Oregon Electric between Albany and Hngenc, yesterday made a new record for lay ing rails, when they laid four miles of steel in nine hours, with the Robert's track-laying machine. The men are in charge of General Foreman J. P. Xeilson and Foreman T. R. Shay and have been doing fast work on the Albany-Eugene link of the line. The rails have now been laid to a point three and one-half miles this side of Harrisburg and barring acci dents will reach that city on Thurs day evening, thus completing the first 20 miles of the track between here and the city of Eugene.! The grade has been completed to Eugene for some time and the traeklaying can be accomplished . without interruption. There is one of the straightest stretches of track in the state be tween Albany and Harrisburg, 22 miles of this section being without a curve. J. O. Johnson Jr., superintendent of construction on the Oregon .Elec tric, stated to the Democrat this morning that the work was proceed ing rapidly and satisfactorily on the Eugene link and that the rails would reach Harrisburg Thursday evening. FARMERS For half ground salt Go to Murphy's Seed Store 1 . ' o A if ; Ntft.. m'N "wry 'M ri oli tr. Kb THE PLACE TO GET THE BEST WE DEVELOP FILMS 6- Mrs. Francis Arnold and son of tis city left this morning for Scio where they will visit for several days at the home of Mrs. Arnold's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Gill. ing to conduct the services. The news of the tra;;ic death of Mr. Rannells was a shock to his many, friends in this city and many were loath to believe it, until the Portland papers arrived here this morning con taining the terrible details of the drowning. Nfr. Kannells bad nearly reached safety by swimming to a mud Hat several hundred yards away and when he sank was only fifty feet away from the flats. It is presumed that his clothing became soaked with the water to such an extent that the ad ditional weight pulled him under the surface and that with his remaining strength he was unable to nelp him self further. Miss Frances Rannells. a 17-ycar-old daughter, who was at Newport when the telegram announcing the death of her father was received, returned to Albany last evening, and with her ! aunt, Mrs. E. P. Rannells of St. Louis I Missouri, and brother. Ted Rannell. 'age 21. left for Portland to attend ! the funeral services today. The members ot tne tamily are prostrated with grief over the death of the father and brother, and his untimely death was a great shock to them, and to their nianv friends in this city, whee heartfelt sympathy is extended to the bereaved family. The decea-cd left a wife and three children. Mi-s Frances, aged 17: Ted. aged 21: and Paul, aged 14. He al-o left several brothers, one of whom. Pudge F-. P. Rannells of St. I.ouis, was spending the summer here in Albany. WOMAN FALLS IN LOVE WITH MAN WHO RENTED HER FARM The cause of Mrs. R. C. Wills' fre quent visits to Shedds has been deter mined by a few of her many Corvallis friends since her marriage, July 24, to Charles Eeazcr, of that place, a se cret which has leaked out. Mr. Eeazer recently rented Mrs. Wills farm near Shedds. and during the frequent visits of that lady to oversee matters there, he made her acquaintance, and has finally won her heart and hand.- Mrs. Eeazer has a wide circle of friends in this city who will be surprised to learn of her re cent marriage, but will wish hci suc cess in the new venture. It is said that the affair has been kept very quiet and that not even i the employees on the farm have yet t i i. .t. t t... 4 itecome acquainted nun uic iill im.h Mr. Eeazer is married. Corvallis Times. TheFia. SHOE CLEARING SALE IS NOW ON Our shoe business has been unusually good this season and as a consequence the summer shoe stock is getting ex ceedingly low. We Do Not Intend to Carry Any Summer Shoes Over The following prices speak for themselves: Ladies' White Shoes This scrson's new, clean stock. Absolutely no shop-worn or soiled shoes, especially good lasts; 33 pairs of high shoes, regular $4 and $4.50 at $2.48 In his speech of acceptance Gov ernor Wilson will advocate a tarift for revenue oniy and one term f r president Fisher, Braden& Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND UNDERTAKERS Undertaking Parlors, 3rd and Broadalbin LADY ATTENDANT Both Phones 17 pairs of pumps and oxfords, the new shapes that have been so popular, regular $4 and $4.50 at $2.60 24 pairs of canvas pumps and colonials, extra ordinarily attractive, regular $2.50 and $3.00 at $1.87 Men's Florsheim Oxfords First quality leather throughout, in tan, gun metal and patent leather Regular $4.50 and $5 at $1.85 THE BIG STORE EST. 1866