1 74 Pages Pages 1 to 12 VOJL XXIX- NO. PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 13, 1910. PRICE FIVE CENTS. PARTY PROMISES KEPT, SAYS TUFT Business Men Warned to Keep Within Law. NO FAVORITISM TO BE SHOWN Tariff Really "Revised Down ward;" Free List Grows. TRUSTS ARE SHAKEN UP Anti-Injunction Bill, Tliough Not All Extremists Asked, . Is Fair. . to All Conservation Pro gramme Not to Falter. NEW YORK, Feb. 12. "If the en forcement of the law la not consistent with the present method of carrying on business, then It does not speak well for the present methods of conducting business and they must be changed to conform to the law." This was President Taft's answer to Wall street and Its cry of "panic." It was made to a cheering audience of hundreds ; of prominent Republicans gathered tonight at the annual Lin coln day dinner of the Republican Club of this elty, at the Waldorf-Astoria. Mr. Taft adhered to bis purpose of discussing platform pledges and how they should be kept. It was at the con clusion of a detailed argument as to how th Republican party Is redeem ing Its pledges tnat he came to a dis cussion of the anti-trust law and Wall street, on which his utterances had been waited with greatest interest. Stronger Law Pledged. The President declared that the Ad ministration "would not foolishly run amuck In business and destroy values and confidence just for the pleasure of doing so." .a "No one," he continued "has the motive as strong as the Administration in power to cultivate and strengthen business confidence and prosperity. But there was no promise on the part of the Republican party to change the anti-trust law except to strengthen it. Of course, the Government at Wash ington can be counted on to enforce the law In the best way calculated to pre vent a destruction of public confidence in business, but that it must enforce the law goes without saying." President Taft did not hesitate to dis cuss the attacks that have been made upon the Administration and the party, or danger to success fro-.n the insurgent movement. Republicans who feared defeat at the polls In November, he declared, how ever, should take courage from the de moralized condition of their opponents, the Democrats. "It was Grant," saiS the President, "who banished his own fear in battle by thinking how much more afraid the enemy was." Mr. Taft again came to the de-ense of the Payne-Aldrich tariff bill. He did not hesitate, he said, to repeat that it substantially complied with the party pledge for tariff regulation and that, through this bill, the party had "set Itself strongly in the right direction, toward lower tariffs." Reviewing the party platform, the President spoke of postal savings banks, amendments to the Interstate commerce law, the anti-injunction plank, statehood for Arizona and New Mexico, and the conservation of Na tional resources, bills to carry all of which promisee Into effect were pend ing In Congress, and he believed would lie passed. Exchange Compliments. The President in doting referred to Governor Hughes as a man "whose name Is such a power before the country that to lose him as a candidate for Governor v by his voluntary withdrawal is to lose the strongest esse that the Republican party has in the state to enable it to win at the next election." Governor Hughes responded In kind when his turn to speak came. "The- American people are fair enough," he said, "to recognize a great President. (Concluded on Pag 2.) "Get Away FTom My NanluttM." MRS. SAGE DENIES GIFTS IN SOUTH r REPORTS OF GEXEROSITY DO XOT PLEASE HER. Financier's Widow, on Arrival in Ix9 Angeles, Calls Indiscriminate Giving Worse Than f seless. LOS ANGELES. Cal., Feb. 12. (Spe cial.) "The reports of gifts to the amount of $150,000, scattered through out the South, are entirely erroneous." said Mrs. Russell Sage, who arrived here with Major and Mrs. Slocum to day. Mrs. Sage was plainly nettled by the reports of her largesse and although she refused to say how much she had given'- away on her trip across the country, she was positive it did not approximate that sum. "Most of my donations to charity are .made after investigations by my agents," she continued, "and it would be worse than improper for me to have distributed in this way any such amounts as have been reported. I am sorry these reports have been sent out over the country, for it is unjust to those whorrr l have been reported to have aided." Major Srocum refused to a41ow his aunt to talk for more than two min utes to the host of reporters who met the train, and it was at her request that he allowed even that long an in terview. He said that the party had a pleasant trip across the country and that they would remain here several weeks. AUTOS CRUSH MRS. BROWN Mother of Famous Beauties Injured at Chicago Show. CHICAGO, Feb. 12. Special.) Mrs. George Brown, of Baltimore, mother of the three famous Brown beauties, Mrs. Honore Palmer, Mrs. Stanley Field and Mrs. Walter W. Keith, suffered injuries this afternoon which may prove serious, when Bhe and Mr. Keith were jammed between two heavy cars at an automo bile show. Ir. Joseph A. Capps attended to their injuries and announced Mrs. Brown may have suffered Internal in juries. Mr. Keith and Mrs. Brown were exam ining a machine when a small boy reached Into an electric runabout stand ing nearby and .threw back the lever, starting It forward. A warning1 shout went up from an attendant, but Mrs. Brown, standing directly in the path of the machine, was caught between it and a touring car. Mr. Keith, Jumping to the assistance of his mother-in-law, was bruised about the knees. A crowd of spectators, exhibitors and attendants went to the assistance of the two, but It was several minutes before Mrs. Brown could be extricated from her position between the two machines. WIFE SAVED, ANGER MELTS Blood Transfusion Operation Unites Severed Couple. TACOMA, Wash., Feb. 12. The In tervenus transfusion operation per formed here yesterday on Mrs. Lucy Wood has resulted in reuniting Mrs. Wood and her husban, who have been separated nearly two- years. As a last resort the young wife's mother wrote to the husband in Van couver and asked him to submit to the operation, telling: him it was the only way of saving; his wife's life. He hur ried to Tacoma and eag-erly presented himself at the hospital. The blood from his arm was allowed to flow into his wife's body for 30 minutes. Today it is said she will recover. A reconciliation betwen husband and wife was effected when she regained consciousness. TWO POISONED, NEARLY DIE Physician Administers Wrong Drug, Then Samples It. PENDLETON, Or., Feb. 12. (Special.) Dr. John Griswold, of Helix, and Mrs. John King, his patient, both lie at the point of death as the result of accidental poisoning. It seems that medicine pre pared for Mrs. King made her deathly sick and in an effort to ascertain the cause Dr. Griswold sampled the medicine and was immediately taken very ill. Dr. C. " J. Smith was summoned from Pendleton by automobile and It was found that the two persons had taken aconite, t deadly poison, by mistake. Both are still alive at a late hour to night and Dr. Smith holds out hope for their recovery. Llm. . BHiE'TS HARD THIHfttN"& wo; ;. AHERK" CSV, XM. REPUBLICANS CALL STAT ASSEMBLY Counties Will Name 1 248 Delegates. UNANIMOUS VOTE ADOPTS PLAN Gathering Will Be Held in . Portland July 21. PROXIES ARE ELIMINATED Central Committee Provides for Se lection of . Representatives of Each County by Body Chosen at Precinct Meetings. Without a single discordant note, the members of the Republican state central committee, at a meeting in this city yes terday, authorized Judge M. C. George", the newly-elected chairman, to call a state assembly to be held in Portland, Thursday, July 21. This assembly will consist of 12- dele gates, apportioned by the committee among the 34 counties of the state on a basis of one delegate to every 50 votes or major fraction that were cast for R. R, Butler for Presidential elector in November, 1908. Twenty-seven counties were represented at the meeting, the proceedings of which were marked with uninterrupted unanimity. No Dissenting1 Vote Heard. The large and representative state as sembly was indorsed by the committee without a dissenting voice on the recom mendation of a sub-committee of five members which had been appointed to prepare and submit some method of pro cedure for calling and holding such an advisory gathering. The members of this committee were:- R. E. Villiams, of Polk; C T. Early, of Hood River; PI. T. Botts, of Tillamook; C. S. Moore, of Klamath, and C. E. Cochran, of Union. In counties outside of Multnomah, it was recommended that delegates to the state assembly be selected by county as semblies and that delegates to the county gatherings be chosen by majority vote only at mass meetings of the voters In he ffferent precincts, these meetings to be called by the county central com mittee. Saturday, July 9, is the date rec ommended for the precinct mass meet ings, with the date for the county assem blies fixed for the following Saturday, July 16. Multnomah County Excepted. From this plan of organizing county assemblies and electing delegates- to the state assembly, Multnomah County was excepted. In this county the committee found that it would be impracticable, be cause of the large number of voters, to hold - precinct mass meetings. It was voted to leave the matter to the county central committee with the understanding that it would exercise its judgment in adopting some plan calculated to produce the best results. Dr. J. N. Smith, of Marion, and J. H. "Worsley, of Wasco, asked that the same discretion be left to the county central committee of their counties with the re sult that? following some discussion, the original report of the committee was amended to the extent that in other coun ties where it was deemed advisable the method of procedure in electing delegates to the1 state assembly might be deter mined by the county central committee. Proxies will nor te allowed in the state assembly If the recommendations of the state committee are adhered to. On this subject the committee took no compromise position. It voted to elim inate from the state gathering1 all proxies. The committee did recommend, however, that the vote of absent and duly elected delegates in the state gathering shall be cast according to the majority opinion of those present and acting from the same county. This method, it was contended, will insure the polling of the full vote of every county in the assembly and at the same time be expressive of the wishes of the particular locality interested. As to Congressional and district as- (Concluded on Page 10.) HARRY MURPHY MAKES HIS REGULAR WEEKLY RESUME 0ly tk Geaitlemaa Fran 14a INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTERDAT'S Maximum tmprature. 42.4 degrees; minimum, 39.2 decree. TODAY'S Rain; southerly wind. Foreign. Redmond throws thunderbolt into "British Liberal camp and attack on Lords will not be delayed. Section 1. page 1. French Antarctic expedition under Charcot- exDlores land in TO degrees south latl- tude Section 1. pace 5. Only one American. Portland man. lost in wrTk of General Chanzy. Section 1. page 3. Organ of Vatican defends action toward Fairbanks ana denounces Methodist mis sion. Section 1. nage 4. British steamer ashors in Magellan Straits: 51 drown; 205 rescued. Section X. page 3. Domestic. Pax ton says Margaret Swope and Chris man Sw&pe were also poisoned. Section 1, paga 6 Mrs. Russell Sage denies reported sifts in South. Section 1. page. 1. Ex-Secretary of Treasury Shaw says If Cen tral Bank Is established Standard Oil would control It. Section 1. page &. Chicago's fight on safoons begins this week, to be continued till April 5. Section 1. page t. Mangled telegraph operator crawls half mile, saves 200 lives. Section I, page 1. Navy begins search for tug Nina, crew S2 men, believed to be disabled between Nor folk and Boston. Section 1, page 8. Nattosal. President Taft in Lincoln day address de clares platform promises have been kept. Section 1. page 1. Politics. W. M. Cake calls for unity in Oregon Repub lican party. Section 1, page 11. Bryan calls on Democracy to divorce ttself from liquor interests. Section 1. page 4. Presl dent con f exs with New York lea ders about bribery scandal; favors searching Inquiry. Section 1. page 2. Republicans call state assembly to be held In Portland July 21. Section 1, page 1. Pacific Northwest. General Maus snubbed by Spokane in I. W. W. trouble? Colonai Abercromble sus pended. Section 1. page 4. Search of week for 'Mrs. Alice Katon by Oddfellews brings no racc. Section 1, page 1. Annual Commonwealth Conference closes at Eugene with discussion on resources and conservation. Section 1, page 6. Recall election in Ashland fails to develop new candidates. Section 1. page 7. At T'niverslty of- Washington CO forest rang ers study free. Section 3. page 10. George Russell. Tacoma horsebuyer. shot by Jack Johnson stagedrlver. near Prine ville. Section 1, page 4. Sports. Record sales made by auto dealers. Sec tion 4. page 4. Trial of Jack Johnson will not stop big flsfht. Section 4, page 4. Airship exhibit at pure food show attracts. Section 4. page 4. Professional engineer to help get good road in Oregon. Section 4. page 5. Flycasting- Club supports Master Fish Warden. Section 4, page 5. Jack Johnson uses taunts to help him. Sec tion 9, page o. Track men soon to begin training. Section 4, page 6. College ban on Summer baseball hurts game. Section 4,' pge 6. Tackling believed cause of football injuries. Section 4, page 6. Many new faces will be seen in Coast League. Section 4, page 7- Preparations for Nelson-Wolgaet battle com plete. Section 4. page 7- McCredle's squad nearly complete. Section 4. page 7. Oregon University will not join conference In fi.ght against Washington for gate receipts. Section 1, page 11. Real Ksta4e and Building. Realty market In state of ferment. Section 4. page 8. A. W. Faw to build East Side department store. Section 4. page 8. Alameda Park notable for fine houses. Sec tion 4. page &, Prosperity wave strikes St. John. Section 4. page 9. The Dalles Elks plan clubhouse. Section 4. naze a. , - Montavilla feels building rush. Section 4. page 9. Spring Kill dairy farm sold for 430.000. Sec tion 4. page 9. Corner Twenty-first and Taylor sells for X1O.0O0. Section 4. page 9. For S40O.O00 300 acres of Crystal Springs farm is sold to realty company. Section 4. page 10. ' Amateur architect gets permit. Section 4, Page 10. Linnea Club plans hall. Section 4. page 10. Reed Institute will help district in which It Is located. Section 4, page 10. Seven-story Swetland block to be torn down. Section 4. page 12. Another big plant rumored for Kenton. Sec tion 4. page 12. Apple men unite at Sheridan. Section 4, page 12. Several options taken on Burn side street. Section 4. page 16. Apartment-house planned for Flanders street. Section 4. page lti. Two new additions platted on Heights. Sec tion 4. page 16. Permits of week make record. Section 4, ' page 15. Portland and Vicinity. Regatta will be feattire of Rose Festival week. Section 3. page 9. Distributive rate case to be argued again Monday. "Section 3. page 12. Y. M. C. A. branch in Deschutes Canvon helps railroad construction forces. Sec tion 3, past: 12. Hermann jury, out 12 hours. i ordered locked up for the night; result expected today. Section 1, page 1. Three hundred delegates coming to Port land to attend annual convention of Western Retail Lumbermen's Association, opening Monday. Section 4, page 14. National Guard inspections to begin Mon day. Section 4. page 14. Oregon Trust depositors paid $46,325 on first day at German-American Bank. " Section 4, page 14. M. O- Lownsdale points out Injustice of Lafean bill. Section 4, page 15. East Side merchants resent Counril's action in dictating style of cluster lights. Sec- tlon 4, page 14. Hermann jury asks further instructions,. Is locked up. Section 1, page 1. More Portland women complain of high streetcar steps. Section 1, page S. Lincoln's memory honored at annual ban quet of Union Republican Club. Section 1, page 11. Baldwin ranch, rrear Madras, sold to syndl d lea to for S450.0O0. Section 1. page 4. Governors Benson and Hay to hold con ference here March 9 to discuss joint legislative matters. Section 1, page S. . am Waltlma;. " LETTERS PUZZLE HERMANN'S JURY TalesmenOutl 2Hours, Sleep Under Guard. MORE INSTRUCTIONS ASKED Mitchell Notes to Mays Hard Nut to Deliberators. DEFENDANT IS SANGUINE Judge Wolverton Orders Investi gators Locked l"p for Xiglit. Sealed Verdict Is Barred. Result Expected Today. HERMANS WA3 IXIMCTED FIVE YiSARS ACJO IOUAY-1CHRO-JfOLOGY OF HIS CASE. NA-mber 7. 1903 Attorney Heaey arrived in Portland. February 13. 1903 Hermann was indicted for conspiracy, and an order was entered flxinc his bond at $4000. April 17. 1905 Hermann appeared In the United States Court, pleaded not euilty. and through his attorneys filed a demurrer to the Indictment. June 26. 1905 Hermann's demurrer was overruled. June 2S. 1906 Order was entered granting ex-Congressman William son and Blnger Hermann separate trials. . November 4. 1909 Hermann case was set for trial. January 10. 1910 Trial of Her mann began. January 11. 1910 President granted full pardon to Henry Taft Mel- drum, that he might testify at the trial. January 12. 1910 Jury secured and first witness examined. February IX 1910 Case was sent to Jury. - After deliberating eight hours yester day the Hermann Jury asked additional Instructions at 7:45 o'clock last evening and retired. Unable to agree upon a verdict as to the guilt or innocence of Hermann, the Jury was locked up at 11:30 o'clock last night, and Judge Wolverton retired, leav ing orders that he should not be dis turbed throughout the night. The court will be in readiness to re ceive the verdict should it be reached at any time during Sunday, and will not con sent to discharge the Jury until thorough ly satisfied or the futility of further en deavor to harmonize the talesmen's dif ferences of opinion. So closely guarded are the deliberations of the Jury that not an iota of informa tion as to how the 12 men are divided has been allowed to leak out. A rumor sprang from nowhere that on the first ballot the vote was six for each side, but the gossip was not confirmed and only resulted in doubling the guatd ' in the hall leading to th Juryroom. ' Exhibits Kile High. Exhibits in the case were heaped upon the desk of the cleric of the court when the jury first retired and had not been asked for at any time. They were turned over to the ..Jury bailiffs when the court closed for the night. A sealed verdict will not be per mitted in the Hermann case. Judge Wolverton regards the result of such importance that he wilf require all parties to be present, as well' as a careful poll of the Jury, should an agreement be reached. Indicted five years ago today, Binger Hermann was as cheerful on the eve of the anniversary as he has been at any time since the news was flashed to Washington that he would be com pelled to return here for trial. Her mann would not admit the possibility of a failure to acquit m the charge of conspiracy with Mays, Jones and Sorenson in the formation of the Blue Mountain Forest Reserve. He was en couraged by the thought that the jury returned a verdict of "not guilty" af ter being out 21 hours in the trial at Washington In 1907. Hermann be- (Concluded on Page 7.) OF VARIOUS INTERESTING EVENTS. Tk rnal Result t THOUGH MANGLED, MAN SAVES 200 OPERA TOK CRAWXS " TO KEY AXD SEXDS WARNING. Tract Supposed to Be Clear for Pas senger Trains; Error Discov ered In Time. MANKATO, Minn.. Feb. 12. (Special.) With one foot cut off and both legs so badly mangled that he could not walk. Rudolph Elmquist. an lS-year-old teleg rapher, crawled half a mile, bleeding and faint, to his station and sounded a warri ng to Mankato which saved the lives of 200 persons aboard the Great Western train. Then Elmqulst fainted from pain said loss of blood. He had followed his cus tom of boarding an evening freight train caboose from Bennlng, his station, to Mankato. This time he slipped, fell un der the train and was fearfully mangled from the knees down. The track was supposed to be clear for passenger trains. Elmquist knew that it was not, and in his agony he realized what would happen if the passenger crew were not warned. He was more than half an hour on the way back, but he was in time. FAMOUS SANITARIUM LOST Battle Creek Institution Will Move to Escape Taxes. BATTLE CREEK, Mich., Feb. 12. (Special.) The- Battle Creek Sani tarium, famous the world over, is lost to Battle Creek. Judge Parkinson this morning: handed down a decision of un conditional ouster for non-payment of taxed. Dr. Kellogg recently announced that In case the court decided against him he would close the institution and es tablish a new one in the East. Plans for two such institutions have been practically completed. Both will be In Xew Jersey, one at Lakewood and the other at Atlantic City. In New Jersey such places are not taxed. The legal fight to establish the status of the sanitarium as a charitable insti tution and exempt It from taxation has been In progress for 10 years. AUSTRALIA J0 GET NEWS Antipodes Xo lxnger to He iu Dark as to Canadian Happenings, -VANCOUVER. B. C, Feb. 12. .Spe cial.) As a result of overtures made by Thomas Temperley, when in London representing the provincial press of Australia at the recent imperial press conference, there has sprung Into -existence the Independent Press Cable Association of Australia, witH head quarters at Vancouver. W. E. Vincent managing editor of the new service, has arrived in this city by the Makura to take up his duties. The Provincial newspapers of the commonwealth have been handicapped in the past by a cable monopoly. Un der new conditions this will be reme died and news ' of Canada and British Columbia will be sent to the Antipodes. OUSTER ORDER ' LIMITED Kansas Court Ketatns Supervision of Harvester Trust. TOPBKA, Kas., Feb. 12. The Supreme Court today made a limited ouster order against the International Harvester Com pany, prohibiting it from making exclu slve contracts with agents in Kansas. The court also prohibits the company from limiting territory, discriminating or destroying competition or ODIng other things which the Attorney-General held were violations of the anti-trust law. The court specifically . says that it re serves the right to take up complaints in the future and settle them as it de termines, thus retaining control over the business of the corporation in Kansas. NAT GOODWIN OBEYS EDNA X'ame of Oil Company Called After Her to Be Changed. LOS ANGELES. Cal., Feb. 12. (Spe cial. ) Mrs. Edna Goodrich-Goodwin. wife of Nat Goodwin, the actor, will not allow her name attached to an oil company, and a petition was filed today asking for authority to change the name of the Edna Goodrich Consolidat ed Oil Company to the Coalinga Royal Oil Company. The company has stock of $1,000,000 and $400,000 Is paid up. It is further recLted that Mrs. Goodrich Goodwin, for whom the corporation was named, requests and demands that the name of said corporation should be changed. Cook, Psa SorBrle4r RFDMDrJD ARBITER OF ASQUITH'S FATE Demands Lords Be Par alyzed at Once. CABINET HANGS IN BALANCE Premier May Unite Irish and Radicals Under Banner. PASS BILL ANNULLING VETO If Lords Resist, Kins Will Be Askenl to -Create More Peers, Will Re fuse and Another Election Will Be Result Xext July. BY T. P. O'COXNER, M. P. (Copyright by the Tribune company, 1910.H LONDON. Feb. 13. (Special.) Suddenly the whole political sky is overcast and tha fate of the Liberal ministry trembles in the balance. Redmond's speech in Iublini set forth clearly the policy of the Irishj party. This policy demands that the pass age of the budget be postponed until tha House of Lords veto the bill, at least a, introduced. This attitude is imposed on Redmond by the intense unpopularity of the budget in Ireland, but still more by the abiding suspicion in Ireland that the ministers may try to palter with the question. The Lords and Asquith's old association with Rosebery and tlie former lukewarmnesa , on the home rule ls calculated to in-; crease this feeling of uneasiness. Redmond's Seecli Is Thunderclap. : This speech of Redmond's came as a thunderclap on Asquith and was discussed at two Cabinet councils. It meant, ofi course, that, if the ministers persisted ira the tactics of bringing in the budget firsts-! and the veto question afterwards, theyi would be beaten by the transfer of the Irish vote to the Unionist opposition. Ona- solution suggested by the Unionists andi some Liberals was that the budget in that case should be passed by a combina-' tion of Liberal and Unionist votes agalnetii the Irish, but this policy already hasu received a quietus from both Liberal audi Unionist quarters. Redmond's policy, curiously enough, rep-i resents the policy advocated by a large, body of the radical opinion and also bj). the most powerful radical newspapers, j the solution of a combination between: the Liberals and the Unionists in supporfi'' of the budget being out of the way. i Three other solutions are possible. EJtherl Asqulth could immediately resign, and, secondly, Asqulth could proceed with tha ! budget and invite defeat in the House ofiJ Commons by a combination of Tories 'and Irish. The third solution would bar the adoption of the policy recommend ed by Redmond. Irish and Radicals May Unite. There are some difficulties from a finan cial point of view in hanging up that budget, including the loss 'of money amounting to $75,000,000 for one year. Bub these difficulitlee are not insurmountable' if Asquith can come to terms with tha radicals and with Redmond and proposa a veto bill postponding the budget until that measure is advanced well on the way and until the whole world knows thaC. Asqulth murt pursue the measure to tha bitter end. Then the situation may ba transformed again and the Liberal minis try. Radicals and Irish can march to gether in an effective campaign against ' the lords. Whether such an arrangement is possible lies in the balance for the nexft two days. It will probably be decided on Monday or Tuesday next. Another Election In July Likely. If this working arrangiment is mada. possible, the following will be the pro gramme of the coming session: The King's speech will be strictly lim ited to the announcement of the Lords" veto of the bill, after which some neces sary money will be provided for immedi ate expenses of the government. The' House of Commons will separate for a month. At the end of the month, Asquith; '. will introduce the Lords' veto bill, com-' plete In all its details. This bill will ba-' pressed forward then as fast as possible, i (Concluded on Page 5.) ! WHEN 'HE. VOTED FOR THE ROAD WAT RIDCrE.ANJ) WHEN HH ft S will rrrQfyW- Tfc Will pt the People."