VOL. XBVI.-XO. 14,132. PORTIiAIO), OREGON, SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1906. PRICE FIVE CENTS. -GUILTY OF THEFT SAYS THE JUDGE Criminal Charge in In- surance Frauds. JEROME ASKS FOR WARRANTS ants Perkins, Bliss and Cor ielyou Arrested. CAMPAIGN GIFTS ILLEGAL If Intent Wns to Defraud, Perkins Committed I.nrrcny, Biles and Gortelyou Becclvcd Stolca Goods. Says Jerome NEW YORK. Maroh 23. if the grand Jury which Is investigating somo of the condltons developed by the recent legis lative Investigation reaches the conclu hi that contributions of Insurance corn puny fund to political campaign com mittee: wore made with Intent to de frawd the true owner of this property. It must find that larceny has been com mitted. This opinion was expressed to day by Justice O'SullIvan In the Court of General Sessions. In answer to a pre sentment on the subjuct submitted to Mm by the grand Jury. Judge O'SullIvan addod that It Is not within the province f tho eurt to say whether or not thero wns intt. That is a question which Uf Jurors must determine for them selves from all the facts and circum stances in the case. He charged the jury lo make a through investigation Into all the facts and to place the responsibility for such crimes. If they find that crimes were committed. Toins Issue With Jerome. This opinion Is In effect directly oppo Flte to one upon the same subject which was jdvon by District Attorney Jerome several days ago. Mr. Jerome. In his brief, which was submitted to Justlco O'Surilran, said that iiipw was no ground for pro?ecuTon of any Insurance ofilHaJ In connection with the campaign contributions, taking the ground that no intention to defraud had boon shown. Judge O'SullIvan agrees with the conten tion of the District Attorney that intent must have been present to constltuto the crime, of larceny, but declures that tho question whothor or not there was Intent Is a question which is yet to be deter mined. Jerome Asks Warrants for Arrest. Mr. Jerome was in court today and, when Judge O'SullIvan had delivered his opinion, the District Attorney asked the grand Jury to remain, as ho desired to address It upon the subject in question. Jle declared that Judge O'Sulllvnn had misconceived the subject which ho had considered, and that. If tho court held to Its opinion. It would be the duty of the grand Jury to return indictments against George "W. Perkins, ex-vlce-pres-ident of tho New York Life Insurance Company, for larceny, and against George B. Corteryou, chairman, and Cor nelius X. Bliss, treasurer, of the Repub lican National Committee, as receivers of stolen goods. Mr. Jorome Informed Judge O'SullIvan that. If he would sit as .a magistrate, ho would submit affidavits to tho acts com mitted by George "W. Perkins and would ask for a warrant for his arrest. Ho added that, in event of such warrant being issued, a writ of habeas corpus would follow, and that the case would be taken to tho higher courts, where the District Attorney would retain Alton B. Parker as special counsel. "Leaves It) lo Grand Jury. Judge O'SullIvan declined to grant the warrant, giving as his reason that the question at Issue should be passed upon by the grand Jury. In his charge to the grand Jury In reference to questions put to him. Judgo O'SullIvan said: Contributing to a political party Ir not mreRsarlly a crime. Individual and poi flbly certain corporations may contribute to political parties a they may contrlbuto to anything ele. and be kuIIUcrk; but they may contribute In nuch a manner as to ren der the transaction criminal. You aro to inquire If In this case an act prohibited by Jaw has been commlttod with the Intent which make It a crime. If you find clr rumi'tances tending to deceive or mislead vereons having beneficial or flnanrlal Inter est In the property to dispose of. you may consider that with regard to Intent. Mr. Jerome immediately at the conclu sion of Judgo O'Sulllvan's charge asked that the jury remain so that he could make a statement to it. He at once ad dressed tho court, saying: "Your Honor has misconceived this Snattcr." Jerome Says It Was Stealing. Tho District Attorney then went on to say that he was in possession of a great deal of information on this subject. He said that Mr. Perkins had sworn that he gave Mr. Bliss J4S.000 and that he was reimbursed out oC tho funds of the New York Life Insurance Company. He con tlnued: Such acta should be prohibited, but the lact that confronts us here now Is, are they prohibited, by law? There Is a legal propo sition before this court that makes Georj? ii. Corteiyou a receiver of stolen goods and Cornelius N. Blirs also a receiver of stolen goods urder these theories. Now. If your honor will consent to sit as a magistrate, I will submit all of those matters to you In affidavit form. If you hold that they have committed a crime, there are many reputa ble corporation officers Jr this cltv -who should be declared felons. 1 want to have the case of the people vs. George W. Perkins put la such eh ape as to make It binding upon the court and myself. Judgo O'SullIvan. replied: "No one is moro reluctant than I am in turning the suwsr of the law toward these mm. It is my duty lo say what the law Is and my view of it. I have given an honest opinion. You have been as honest as I. Your lone experience in criminal cases may lend more weight to your opinion than there Ik to mine. There are 14 magis trates In this jurisdiction and six of them are in this building. "Why take this case from the magistrates and submit 'It to this court as a magistrate, or even to the grand Jury?" "Does your honor want me to answer that question?" interrupted Mr. Jerome. "Not now." replied the Judge. He wont on. pounding the desk, "I don't see why a hypothetical question was. sub mitted to this court In the first instance. There is a court idle below. The Court of Special Sessions Is available, and one of the Justices of this court. Recorder Goff. is now Idle. Why not take tfic case up to one of them? If they refuse to do their duty, 1 will always do mine." Thieves Should Be In .fall. "The habit of stealing, which Your Honor has .indicated, has grown up through thuse corporations paying assess ments which should be no excuse for any person." said Mr. Jorome. "They should be behind prison bars." "If I were Innocent 1 would consent to be tried and have my name cleared by fellow-citizens." said Judge O'SullIvan. "Would Your Honor wish to be In dicted?" Hskod the District Attorney. ""While of course. I should not, desire to be Indicted." replied the Judge,-"stlll. r 1 ssssssssssB I llalalssitBSsiSsBrV jCSssB BsssssssMssssssssPf " ''ssstsssRHiHrB ' i sssssssssssBlikV -LSB " I William Travers Jerome. t if I were indicted. I would clear my name if I were Innocent." "If Your Honor will issuo a warrant for George W. Perkins that h may come within tho custody of this court." said Mr. Jerome, "he will at once "be taken out of here on a writ of habras corpus and. in order that the rights of the people may be preserved. I shall retain Alton B. Parker as counsel." Jerome Will 3Inkc Charges. Justice O'SullIvan said that he would not Issue a warrant, for reasons he had already stated and tliat for the same rea son he would not accept tho deposition which Mr. Jerome had to offer. Mr. Jerome would make no definite statement after the close of the proceed ings in court. It is considered probable that ho will go next week before somo magistrate and there institute proceed ings against Insurance f officials. "Wheni asked if ho would "go before Recorder Golf, as suggested by Judgo O'SullIvan, he replied: "Certainly not. Recorder Goff is a policy-holder In the New York Life." Thomas C O'SullIvan was elected Judge of General Sessions last Fall on tho Democratic ticket. He was one of Tam many Hall's old-time -orators. SUITS AGAINST M'GUROYS MUTUAL UFE CLAIMS MILLIONS THEY" . WASTED. Contributions, Excessive Salaries and Commissions and Dam ages Kcach $3,370,312. NEW YORK. March 23. The first com plaint In a series of eight actions already begun by the Mutual Life Insurance Com pany against ex-President Richard A. Mc- Curdy. his son, Robert H.. and the firm of Charles IT. Raymond & Co., tho com pany's former metropolitan agents, was made public today. The particular com plaint Is against Richard A. MrCurdy and contains nine separate causes of ac tion. In each Mr. McCurdy is charged with the waste of largo sums of money belonging to tho company through al leged unfaithfulness and neglect in the discharge of his duties. Damages amount ing to $3,250,000 are demanded. Must' Itcpay Campaign Funds. The first five causes seek recovery In tho aggregate of ?292,tK). as alleged con tributions to political parties since Janu ary 1. 1683. These contributions are Mated lo have been 15.0CK In JSSfi. $33,000 in 1900 and 140.000 In lf04 to the National Repub lican campaign committee: ?2Ti00 In ISO! to the Republican Congressional committee, and 5200,000. embracing the various contri butions, testified to by Senator Piatt as having been made to the New York Re publican State Committee since January t JSS5. Excessive Salary and Commissions. The sixth cause seeks to recover the sum of $225,000. embracing the $50,000 al leged Increase of annual salary drawn by tho ex-president since Juno 1, 1301, with out authority, as Is claimed. The seventh cause seeks to recover J600.000 as the aggregate of the respective sums of $25,000 drawn quarterly from the company for the last six years of Mc Curdy's presidency on the voucher of the. committee on expenditures and under cir cumstances detailed In the testimony be fore the Armstrong committee. Tho eighth cause deals with tho rela tions of Louis A. Thcbaud. jon-ln-law of HENEY TIKES UP BRISTOL'S CAUSE Declares There Is No Ground for Ousting District Attorney. NO - HOLD-UP ATTEMPTED PorseciiJor of Land Frauds Bclievos Bristol Acted for Coo's Bay Com pany. Not Page and Hobcrg;. Quotes Affidavits. OREGOXIAN NEWS BUREAU. "Wash ington. March 23. Francis J. Heney. ex-Dlstrlct Attorney tor Oregon and upon whose recommendation William C. Bristol was later appointed to that office. In ah Informal conversation' to- " day said he bad not talked with the President or the Attorney-General about the proposed removal of Mr. Bristol, but declared his personal opin ion that there was absolutely no ground upon which to oust Mr. Bristol from office. Mr. Heney, said Mr. Bristol's famous letter to the president of the Coos Bay Land Improvement Company was not susceptible of any construction which would oporateto Mr. Bristol's dis credit. "Mr. Bristol In that transac tion." he said, "was not representing; Page Hobcrg. as has been commonly understood, but was representing1 the Coos Bay Land Company, and he de clares this statement Is supported by affidavits, not only from Page & Ho- bergr, but from the president of the Coos Bay Company and others familiar with the deal." Mr. Heney says Mr. Bristol wrote that letter at the sugges tion of the president of the Coos Bay Land Company in order that he might be properly compensated for his serv ice in tne event that the sale was made and It is his firm conviction that there was no double-dealing or at tomptod holdup. As to tho letter of Secretary Max well, Mr. Heney says Mr. Maxwell did not know Mr. Bristol and was not fa miliar with the facts, and he gives no weight to Mr. Maxwell's statement that Mr. Bristol was attempting; to "holdup the Cbos Bay Company." Though Mr. Heney says ho has not discussed the Bristol case with the president or other officials since he ar rived in Washington, he declared today that "oven If they should beat him (Heney) in the Bristol case, they would know they had had a scrap on their hands before they got through." im plying that ho intends to take up tho fight in Mr. Bristol's behalf later on. Mr. Heney is unablo to say when tho land fraud trials will be resumed in Portland. For the present his time Is otherwise occupied, and he Is notable to go to Portland to continue the pros ucutions. CONDEMNS PALOUSE SCHEME .Grunsky's Kcport on Irrigation More Unfavorable Than Any. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. "Wash ington. March 23. Tho Secretary of the Interior has received the report of Con sulting Engineer C. EL Grunsky. of the Reclamation Service, on re -exa ml nation of tho Palouse Irrigation project. It Is even more unfavorable than the report hereto fore mndo by the local engineers. He speaks of the project as being out of all reason at the present time. Mr. Grunsky finds many difficulties In the way. but tho greatest objection at this time is the fact that tho project cannot be built for lors than $6,(00,000. and there is no such amount available. This re-examlnation was made at the request of Senator Ankeny, who had hopes WOMAN WHOSE TEMERITY AMUSED CZAIt. Mile. Kefeino. Mile Robine, run a story current In Tarli, was at St. Petersburg on the latest occasion of the annual ceremony of the blessing of the waters of the Neva, and took, up a position In front of the soldiery, fac ing the Czar, An ald-de-camp was ent to request, her to retire, but she was unwilling to do so, and "the offi cer returned to the Crar to report, announcing- that the lady was a Frenchwoman. In answer to this the Czar is Mid. to have exclaimed. Isurhlnsly. "O. if she is French you oan do nothing with her." of reviving this project. Mr. Grunsky's report practlcaly puts this project to sleep for a dozen years. St. Paul Bridge Bills Pass. OREGONTAN NEWS BUREAU, "Wash ington, March 23. The Senatsf-tonight passed tho six bills authorlrTngJthe Chi cago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad to build bridges over the Columbia and Snake Rivers along the line of Its proposed ex tension from Chamberlain, St D to Puget Sound. New llural Carriers. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, "Wash ington. March 23. William M. Quan trlll has been appointed regular. Al fred Churchill substitute rural carrier, route No. 1 at Toppcnlsh, Wash. Public Building Tor Juneau. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington, March 23. Representative Sul zer today Introduced a bill authoriz ing the erection of a $200,000 public building- :t Juneau, Alaska. IS DOCTORS STILL KEEP GOVEUN OR'S AILMENT SECRET. lie Rallies From Slupor and Asks to - Be Taken Home Mystery ' Aggravates Alarm. COLUMBUS. 0-. March 2. Governor Pattlson rallied this afternoon and. ac cording to the statement of physicians Is sued at H o'clock tonight, the Improve ment'conUnued slowly and steadily. Tho refusal of the attending physicians to make any direct and definite statement regarding the nature of the Governor's Illness strengthens the Impression which vast prevalent tonight that the Improve ment is only temporary. Mr. Pattlson rallied this afternoon from a deep stupor and talked with the mem bers of his family, expressing a deslro to be taken back to his home In Milford, O.. as soon as possible. Should he recover to such an extent that his removal would bo possible, his wish will be gratified, hut the physicians give no assurance that such a step can be contemplated. The following bulletin was issued at 11 o'clock tonight: "Governor Paulson's condition has slowly btlt steadily improved. Pulse, ICS; respiration. 25: temperature. "E. J. WILSON. "OLIVER P. HOLT." The Governor Is very weak and tho fear is that he may not have the strongth to sustain the alarming finking spells that perm to be becoming mruv .freuuont. CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The Weather. TESTERDATTS Maximum temperature. 5fl deg.; minimum. 42: Precipitation. of an inch. TODAVP Shonrer. Frenh. gusty souther ly winds. Foreign. Only details of agreement remain to settle at Algeclras. Page ". rtoo?evelt credited with solving Moroccan problem. Tage 5. Alliance of Britain. France and Russia pro posed. Fare 5. Famine In Japan grows wore and disease follows hunger. Pago 3. National. Bpooner and Tillman spar about rate bllh Pace 5. Houe has lively wrangles about small mat ters. Page 7. President tells Kep Commission his opinion of red tape. Page 7. Heney saj-gBrlsol charges are baselesa and Bristol will retain ofHce. Page 1. Interstate Commission Investigates under billing frauds. Pago 2. iBiruraace. Judge. O'SullIvan saya giving campaign sub scriptions was stealing and Jerome aeks, for warrants for Perklns, Corteiyou and Bliss. Pago 1. Mutual Life brings suit for millions against tho McCurdy. Page. 1. Jerome makes vigorous apeech on lnsuranco - prosecutions. Page Z. Politics. ' Hadley speaks In New York on lawlessness of trusts. Page Shaw makes standpat speech In Iowa. Page 2. Conservative Democrats, fearing Hearst boom, turn to Bryan. Page 1. Domestic. Government gives Hermann Nil of particu lars, but he delays trlaU Pago 4. Hadley offers Rockefeller truce to see. his grandson. Page 4. Rogers will testify In Standard Oil ca to day. Tage 4. Coal operators split In scale conference. Page X Governor Paulson's condition Improves, Page 1. ... All but one. body recovered, from Century, mine. Psge i. Pacific Coast. Convict to work on county roads In Wash ington.. Page 4. Martin Both, prominent salmon packer, dead at Rainier, Or. Page 6. Attorney McMahan Incenses Federal Court and Jury by speech denouncing corpora tion at Tacoma. Page A. Farmer's wife and child mysteriously pois oned In LJnn County. Oregon. Page 1. Ex -Governor Geer Issues redhot circular let ter denouncing political enemies. Pare C Governor Gooding, of Idaho, denies story that he offered to let Orchard repeat his confession to labor leaders. Page 0. Commercial aad Marts e. Higher opening prices for Columbia River canned eatmon predicted. Page IS. Chicago wheat market strong and higher. Pago 13. More strength In stock market. Pago 13. Shipping demand for California apples. Page 15. Effect of cold wave on general trades. Page 15. Steamer Cambrian King arrives to load cargo of flour toa Vladivostok. Pago 14. Partiaad asd VIclaltr. Plass for viaduct for wagon crossing over terminal yards, which are to be greatly enlarged. Page 11. Woman murdered, by man jealous of atten tions of a rival. Page 11. Xetectlve says more evidence is needed to hold Mum. on murder charge. Page 14. Quarrel over a ras store leada to the r Municipal Court. Pago 9. rive divorce decree granted. Page 16. Testimony la concluded In tho gaa inquiry; arguments will be made. Page 10. Federated Trades Council Indorses Judga Ellis for Congress and opposes Jtasd. Page 10. Slogan of the exhibition of state manufac tured products vrJU .be VMadela Oregon." Tage 9. k TesBocrat9 Invite -labor leaders .to a. Joint coafereace. Psge lQ. POISON KILLS 10 III ONE FAMILY Mysterious Tragedy on Farm Near Munkers, in Linn . County. MOTHER AND CHILD -DEAD Same Virulent Toxic Decimates Poultry and Destroys Song .Birds PJiysiciaii Fails to Recognize Symptoms. ALBANY.. Or., March 23. By some cause unknown, but what strongly ap pears to have been a wholesale poisoning, almost an entire family was wiped out of existence at Hunkers, in Linn County, this wcok. News of two deaths and pe culiar accompanying circumstances has just reached Albany, and has caused much comment. Local phyyfclnny are dis cussing the matter, and declare that poi son of some kind Is at the bottom of tho fa tall tic. Mrs. Thomas McClain. of Munkcrs. was early In tho week attacked by some vio lent malady which called for immediate medical aid. A physician was called, and pronounced hor to be suffering from apo plexy. After the departure of the physi cian, Mrs. McClain. who had lost the power of apeech. attempted to signal something to her husband, clutching her throat as if to Indicate that the trouble was there. A fow minutes later she died. Daughter Also Dies. Tho next day her 4-year-old daughter was attacked by throat trouble, which af fected her much like the disease that had carried off her mother. The physician re mained with the little girl and studied her case. Anally concluding that It was an acute attack of croup. The child died. The same day 20 chickens died suddenly. nil seeming to be affected by a disease of the throat. A numbor of wild birds which had been frequenting the farm, also sick ened. Then an examination revealed that for several days poultry had been dying: on the place, but because of illness In the family no attention hud been paid to the fact, and the large nnmbr of dead fowls was not, .known until the search was over. Both the mother and daughter had been buried before .the. fact .that poison prob ably had killed them was full' realized There is much excitement and uneasi ness In tho Munkers neighborhood over the tragedy, the presence of any deadly poison on the farm being: unaccountable. Inquest May Be Held. It Is probable that n Coroner's Inquest will be held, unless there Is somo unex pected development In the case, and a -ohomlcal -analysis of the- Internal organs of some of the dead chickens will bo made at once. If poison Is found the bodies of tho mother and child will bo exhumed and stops taken to ascertain the person or persons responsible for their death. At present, suspicion has not attached to anyone. STARTS TO OREGON TODAY Mary Anthony Will Take Up "Work of Dead Sister. ROCHESTER, N. Y.. March 23. Mary 3. Anthony, accompanied by Dr. Anna Shaw. will start tomorrow for Portland, Or., to take up tho work of woman suffrage in compliance with the last wishes of her sister, Susan B. Anthony. She will stop CONGRESSMAN WHO IS TO BE COME A JCTKJB IN THE PHILIPPINES. Newton W. Gilbert, of ImUaaa. Congressman Newton Whiting Gil bert, -who Is to retire from Congress to accept a Judgeship In the Philip pines. Is a welt-known lawyer who lias served In the State Senate aad also for one term was Lieutenant Governor of Indiana. In the Span ish War'he was captain of Company if. 157th Volunteer Infantry. Mr. Gilbert, whose home la In Fort Wayne, was born at Worthlngton. O.. In 1S6S. and at the age of 13 moved with his parents to Indiana. He was educated in the common schools and. the Ohio State Univer sity. This Is his first term In Con gress, having been elected is 1S04 over James M. Roblaaon. a Zemo-crat. i I L . BBBBBBBBBBBf week In Chicago. After tho Oregon campaign Miss Anthony will go to Okla homa. RIGHT TO KILL OFF M0R0S Chief of Philippine Constabnlary Defends American Troops. LEXINGTON. Ky.. March 23. In an address befbore the Chamber of Com merce tonight. General H. T. 'Allen, chief of constabulary In the Philippine?, who Is home on a furlough, discussed the recent battle between the American arms and hostile Moros in the Island of Jolo. He said: "It Is. easy for us to sit at home and criticise our own blood for what we fancy Is brutality in dealing with the hostile Moros. Conditions are little known, or we would hesitate to do so. "These hostile Filipinos glorified In death and wanted the women to share their fate. Allow them to escape and this ambush warfare would continue In definitely, their strength doubling imme diately with each escape. What to us would be termed a left-handed victory would give encouragement to them." LET CHICAGO TAKE THEM Yerkcs Heirs AViliins to Sell Trac tion Stocks to City. CHICAGO, March 23. The News today says: Ml the traction securities of the estato of the late Charles T. Ycrkes are said to have been placed at the disposal of the City of Chicago yesterday during a con ference between Mayor Dunne and Mr. Knight, tho latter representing the heirs to tho erkcs estate. The heirs are re ported anxious to withdraw from the Chi cago traction muddle and willing to take Mueller certificates In full payment. Tho last Legislature, at th Instance of Senator Mueller, passed a bill providing that the City of Chicago might issue cer tificates to tho aggregate value of 573.- W.OOO for the purchase of existing trac tion lines. GREAT RAID ON GAMBLERS Chicago Detectives Chop Down Doors and Smash .Furituro. CHICAGO. March 23. (Spcclal.-Spcc-tacular gambling raids were mado this afternoon by detectives from Assistant Chief of Police Schucttler's office Head Quartcrs for handbooks run by men -who for years havo defied, the authorities were visited, and altogether the -round-up was one of Ihe most thorough' tho police have made for weeks. Axes were used on two occasions to gain access into rooms where the gamblers were. Approaching the locked doors,, tho police knocked without avail until they decided to employ axes. The doors were smashed in and part of the furniture de stroyed. In all. 14 places were visited. KILLED BY WIFE'S FRIEND T. II. Plnnkett. Montana Ttanchman, Shot In His Oven 'House. ANACONDA. Mont.. March 23. A spe cial to tho Standard from Kallspell says a man named Kuhn has been arrested for tho murder of J. H. Tlunkett. a ranchman near Troy. Kuhn i is an old friend of Plunkett's wife, and had been on the ranch for six months. He and Plunkett quarreled and the neighbors, who hurried to the scene, found a duel In progress. Kuhn had a rifle which ho was firing Into tho window. Plunkett lay on the floor dying. Plunkctfs wife had a shot gun. The fatal wound, however, was In flic ted by a revolver which has since been found In Kuhn's trunk, to which tho woman had the key. SHOOTS FUNERAL PARTY Insano Man Injures "inc, Two of "Whom Will Die. BALTIMORE. March 23. At Brooklyn, across the river from this city. "Walter Potee. an Insane man 2S years old, enter Ins his brother's, house Just aa friends and relatives were gathering to attend the funeral of tho brother's child, opened Are with a. revolver, set nre to the house and himself died from gunshot wounds. Nine people were Injured moro or less seriously by his shots. Of these a broth er. John P. Potee. and W". H. Miller, a brother-in-law. are likely to die. Mall Dispatched to Peary. NEW TORK. March 23. The Peary Arctic Club today dispatched Its an nual mall to Commander R. E. Peary, the explorer, who Is far up in tho Arc tic region in an effort to reach the North Pole. The mall will go by ex press to Dundee, thence It will go by the whalers leaving; that port April 1 to bo delivered to tho Esqulraos at Cape York, with the hope that it may later reach its destination. Hepnbllcsn Campaign Iicadcr3. "WASHINGTON. March 23. Representa tlvo Dawson of Iowa, Is being- discussed by Republican leaders to succeed Repre sentative Overs treet of Indiana, as secre tary of tho Republican Congressional committee-. It is generally conceded that Rep resentative Sherman of New York will be named as chairman and Representative Tawney of Minnesota, is still the most dlacusaeQ candidate Xor Tlce-chalrman, l William 1C. Hearst. i FLY FROM HEARST TO BRYAN'S ARMS Democrats Alarmed At Radical Power. MAYBE HEW YORK'S GOVERNOR Success Would Make Hearst Man for President, - BRYAN THEIR SAFE REFUGE Xebraskan, Once Horror of Conserv atives, Will Bo Welcomed Home From Orient as Savior From Hearstlsm. "WASHINGTON, March 23. (Special.) Democratic leaders in Congress are look ing beyond the important elections ot next Fail and giving serious attention to 390S. "Visiting- Democrats from various states arc discussing the next President tlal nomination in tho hotel lobbies. Every strolling member of the Demo cratic National Committee who drops oflJ at the capital for a day or two has some thing- to say about leadership timber for tho campaign two years distant, and an opinion to offer as to how events aro shaping. Conservatives and scml-conservativcs- tho latter term being permissible In view of the situation that has devoloped with in tho last two years are balancing be tween the old and undying hopes of par ty success and fears that tho party or ganization may fall at last Into the hands of William Randolph Hearst. Two Causes of Speculation. Two things havo contributed recently to focusing Democratic attention on tho Presidency. Tho Southern tour of Judgo Alton B. Parker, the lato nominee of tho party, has revived the old question oC seeking tho candidate In Democracy's stronghold, the aforctimo solid South, and tho Parker declaration In favor oC going below the Mason and Dixon line for a nominee has set the bee buzzing Irt the bonnet of many a Southern states man. The other thing that has aroused In various quarters either enthusiasm or anxiety, and speculation in all quarters, is tho present political situation In tho State of New York. Of the two tho lat ter is worthy of most serious considera-1 ton. Hearst Propaganda Growing. It cannot be denied as a result of the news that reaches "Washington that tho Hearst propaganda Is making rapid prog ress In New- York State. The Hearst martyrdom obtaining from the question able Tammany victory In the recent Mayoralty campaign, coupled with the discontent and indignation over boss rule. In state as well as city, exemplified by .the disclosures of universal graft in con nection with the Insurance Investigation seem to bo sweeping Congressman: Hearst toward the goal ot the Guber natorial nomination. It is well under stood, however, that that 13 not tho ulti ma to goal, but Hearst's personally or- ganlzed and salaried machine now sim ply is engaged in a movement prelimi nary to the attempt to capture the Dem ocratic Presidential nomination in 1S0S. Tho seriousness of the situation Is to bo observed most notably from a distance by the attitude of Democratic leaders who, under ordinary circumstances, never could bo found within sight of the Hearst ban ner, but who are trimming their sails to skim along In tho popular tide. As con servative a leader a3 National Commit teeman Norman E. Mack, of Buffalo, who has represented New York's Democracy during the stormy periods of the recent past when New York sentiment was in striking contrast to Democratic sentiment throughout a large part of the country, has been In "Washington the last few days openly declaring that Hearst stands the best of chances of "being nominated for Governor this year, and that, If elected to that ofllcc, ho will, In all probability, bo nominated, for President two years hence, Man or Destiny for 1908. Even It Hearst should fall to secure ther regular Democratic nomination for Gov ernor, It Is understood here that ho will be a candidate for tho ofHce Just the same. Thero Is to be tho Independent Hearst convention July 4, at which Hearst Is to bo placed formally before the people, and the politicians, such as National Com mitteeman Mack, express the opinion that with this Indorsement hq cannot fall to command the regular party nomination In September. But. even If he does fall in. that, it seems practically certain to the, politicians outside New York State that he will run second in the race at the polls In any event, and still be in a posi tion to present his claims to the National convention in 1S0S as the man of greatest strength. Conservatives Turn to Bryan. "With this situation in the National fleldV confronting them, It Is not to the South., whero the finger of Parker has pointed, that the conservative and serai -conservative Democratic leaders here are turn ing, but to that peerless leader of old "William Jennings Bryan. The Nebraskan. who eight years ago was the alleged dis organlzer of tho Democratic party, now projects above the distant horizon bound ing the Orient, where he Is on his trav els, as the prospective organizer of the next National campaign. The Bryan rad icalism of 1S96 and 1200 is the conserva tism of. the Democracy of 1906. To him. Concluded on. Paa 2.) Hit C