NEWS FROM OUR NATIONAL CAPITAL Change hi Wool Schednle to be Fought by Wool Manufac turing Association COUNTER REVOLUTION PROBABLEIN TURKEY Militarists Consider Enver Bey Too Ambitious and Plan to Curtail Power GENERAL SICKLES SENATOR-ELECT BRADY ruti tut..--- - irfir-- 1 it it n i 1 ii H .u ' . : ' ii Vft hirAA t . w i - . i r . ii a r r;::!i5t lias. Wanliltigton.-A virtually undisturb ed tnrlf r on III" variety of article In thn flim, hemp and Jule ichedula wai Indicated it Hi tariff revision hearing before the house way mid mean com mittee. No action will be taken until tin) eoiiiiiilltiui consider III schedule In cxeeutlv session linxt liionlli, tut members have I iitllcni tl thut they con sidered tiioitt of tin) dullc Ha already highly romitltlva. The committee, which hoard th testimony of niHiiy manufacturer and Importer on the flax, hemp and Jut schedule of the tariff. w not dlspo d to question tlm Competitive chirao ler mid luxury classification of many of tha lures, sinbrolderlci and other article In th schedule. Thli Indi cate thut the committee favor re tention of approximately th sum rate on ninny Item. The schedule In on of th most profitable of th whole tariff scheme, and produced lest year war than $49, 000,000 of revenue, with dutlr averag lug bov 49 pr cnt id valorem. Rom of the article will b reduced to tlinuUt competition nd bring revenue. Wool Sehadul Under Fire The Wool ichedul will be under fir tlili week, end It I expected thet the wooliirowen end wool manufnclur liil iMoclallon will preaent an un broken front In their fight galnt any change In the preeent rate. Th expectation, however, U thnt th democratic majority both Id th commute and houne In the next con (rent will favor the unit revlelon ai Incorporated In th Underwood bill that pned the houa at th last io alon of congres. Knox Bend England Not -on Panama Th next move In th dlplomatlo klrmlah between Oreat Britain end th United Htate over th former na tion' objection to th clauea In th rutin ma canal bill, which exempli American shipping engaged In coast wise, trad from th payment of tolla, numt come from Kngland. Until that time, elate department of ficial declared, they muit refrain from a discussion of Becretary Knox'i Dot to Becretary Grey to th effect that there la no baali for th British protest. It waa admitted, however, Utat at leaat two or three additional "Ctrl mum be exchanged befor a Jaaali for an understanding could be Beached. Thla mnkea It practically uertnln that Woodrow Wilaon will be Onllod upon to make final dlepoaltlon of th question, aa It la considered Im possible thnt the Tnft admlnlatratton can effect a aettlement befor Mnrch fourth. Monopoly In Money Denied. Accepting aa an "argument" a long tntumcnt by Henry P. Dnvleon, of J. I. Morgnn & Co., denying the exist ence, of a money trust and attributing the co-operation among financial In terest to the "weak hanking law," the houne money truat Inreatlgntlng committee closed for tha tlm being Ita flniinrliil probe. The coininlltoa will begin within a week consideration of It report, which will recommend change In the national bunk law and legal control of vnriou financial agen clea. Mr. Davison' itatement wai an analytical argument baaed on tha ta ble and chart presented to the com mittee purporting to ihow control of i2r,000, 000,000 or reiource by 180 di rector. The statement denied thla conclu alon and tet forth specifically that th firm of Morgnn & Co.' "believe thore ii no such thing, either In form or fact, a a money trust." National Capital Brevltlea. President Taft retimed to dlamlsa the criminal anti-trust suit against th so-called "hnthtub trust." Democratic manager In the senate have agreed thnt no bill having any reference to tho Sherman anti-trust 'law shall receive consideration during the remainder of thla session of con gress. Democratic senator In caucus re affirmed their determination to permit none of President Taft' nomination to be confirmed, at this time, with the exception of army, navy and diplomat ic appolntmonta, A dry Inauguration will murk President-elect Wilson's Induction Into of fice If a petition presented In the Bon ate by Senator Gnlllnger, on behalf of flie Woman's Christian Temperance Union, la acted upon favorably by congress. The petition, urges closing of all saloon In the national capital en March 4. Prediction that one of President elect Woodrow Wilson's f Inst requests to congresB would be to repeal that part of the Panama canal law which grants free tolls to American ships en gaged In coastwise trade waa made by Chairman Adamson of the house inter state commerce committee. In a for Dial statement. j.urK,i.mfJ.q.0uioY.iTr7;y Censril Daniel E. Sickle, who I accused by th Nw York tat author Itl of misappropriation of fund. Brief News of the week "The Merchant of Venlce'Miai been barred from New Tork public school, upon request of prominent Jewish pa tron of th school. Th Diamond Match company paid flue aggregating $2000 for violation of the Wlaconaln child labor law. Th complaint allege 2!4 Infraction. That a girl who doe ber hair up, wear a hobble aklrt and la commonly known a "Mia." I too old to be spanked, i th ruling of Police Judg Thompson aa Klgln, 111. A father who spanked waa fined. The Women'a Recall league of Ban Franclsc. which I seeking the re moval of Police Judge Charlea L. Wei ler. ha 12.000 namea on the recall pe tition!, 6000 more than are neceiaary to compel a recall election. The Minneapolis, Bt. Paul ft Bault Bte. Marie railroad will spend 125,000, OnO In building 726 mile of new road, which will cross Montana and strike the Canadian Pacific railroad some where near the Montana-Idaho bound ary line, Knormou frauds committed against the government through Illegal traf ficking In atolen postage at amp have been discovered by poatofflce Inapect ora. PoetmasterOenernl Hitchcock aaya they involve at leaat 12,000,000 annually. Th woman suffrage amendment to the constitution giving women tha bal lot I the first amendment of eight which have been Introduced In the Montana assembly to paaa both bouae and It may be the first on the ballot at the election In November, 1916. The National American Woman's Suffrage association, as auch, will take no part in the Inauguration of President-elect Wilaon on March 4 next Nor will "General" ftosalle Jonea and licr "army" of mnrchera have anything to do wllh the Inaugural parade. The women any the Imiuguraton la a parti ann affair and the association la a non partisan body. ' People in the News If. R. Wllllnms was elected at New York a vlco president, director and member of the executive committee of the Clilongo, Milwaukee ft St. Paul railroad. Formerly he was president of the Puget sound division. - Senator Kenyon, before the Iowa legislature, pledged himself to do all In hln power to aid the Wilson admin istration, "not from a partisan stand point, but when the measures advo cated by the democratic president would produce the greatest good for the greatest number." Senator La Follette announced In a letter to Governor Carey and other progressives of Wyoming that' he would contest Senator Warren's elec tion on the ground thnt his preferen tial eloctlon was granted through al leged extensive frauds in the coal min ing districts of Uintah county. Oustnv Carl l.udorn, one of the best known composers of comic opera and musical comedy In America, died sud denly of apoplexy in New York while calling on friends. He was 49 years old. Among his popular successes were "The Burgomaster," he "Prince of Pllsen" and "The Fair Co-Ed." Eugene V. Dobs, candidate for pres ident of the United States on the so cialist ticket at the recent election, was arrested at Terre Haute, Ind., charged with obstructing Justice by corrupting a witness In the govern ment's case against the Appeal to Reason. The newspaper waa attacked by the government tor violation of the postal laws. The participation of subsidiaries of the United States steel corporation In pools organized for the purpose of fix ing prlcea was known to Judge Elbert H. Gray, chairman of the corporation, long before he gave orders that the pools should be abolished, according to William E. Corey, former president of the organization, In his testimony In the government's suit to dissolve tle corporation. Constantinople. Gravest apprehen sion of further and more serious dis orders I felt throughout Turkey. There I a well defined rumor that a counterrevolution ws planned to overthrow the committee of union and progress that seized the sublime porte after aaaaaalnatlng Nazlra Paaha, coin Blunder In-chlcf of th army. It la a mutter of common knowledge that many of the moat Influential offi cer of th Turkish army are bitterly opposed to Knver Bey and hi high handed method and th newest revo lutionary plot I said to have th back ing of th Roldler now at Cbatalja. Th militarists credited with plan ning the counter revolution fear the Influence of Knver Bey. They believe he Is too radical ai well aa too ambi tious. They believe that he mean to make himself absolute dictator of Tur key, If poaalble, and that practical an archy would follow th ucces of his acheme. AdrlanopJe clearly la th paramount laau of th Ilalkan war In tb Otto man mind, and It la believed that re fusal to give up th city would be Tur key' eventual anawer to th powers nd to th alllea, no matter bow many revolution, counterrevolution! and minister aucceeded themselves on tb kaleidoscopic pan of tb Ottoman em pire. Ixmdon. Th Balkan plenipotenti aries, who bave received full powers from their respective government, ap pointed a eommltte to draft a not to the Turkish plenipotentiary, explain Ing why th peace conference muat now be conaldered broken off. Wilaon Obrv Landing of Alien New York. Hundred of aliens, many of them still clad In the garb of distant landa, stood before the Immi gration official In Ellis Island, seek ing admission to th country, while Woodrow Wilson, president-elect, ob served with a scrutinizing eya tb manner of their welcome. RAILROADS TO BE DIVORCED Kruttschnltt Saye 8. P. Will Treat U. P. a EaaUrn Road Ban Francisco. Jullu Kruttschnltt of the board of directors of the South ern Pacific company, succeeding Rob ert Lovett, who resigned to take the chairmanship of tha Union Paclfk board, haa written a letter to execu tives of the Southern Pacific In this city advising that on February 1 the Southern Pacific will operate inde pendently of the Union Pacific In ev ery way. On that date, Mr. Kruttschnltt says, the complete divorce of the Southern from the Union Pacific will be estab lished. In all such matters as rout ing or shipping contracts, the South ern Pnclflc will be expected to consid er the Union Pacific, If an eastern line muat be conaldered therein, on an equality with such roads as the Den ver & Itlo Grande. Preferential clauses In contracts or agreementa favoring tho Union Pnclflc will be under the Southern Pacific ban, it la understood. Mackinaw Strike Going Out of Port Ixis Angeles. The Bteel freight steamer Mackinaw, en route from Bal boa, Panama, to San Francisco, vir Lob Angelea, struck the breakwater at the entrance to San Pedro harbor In a heavy fog and came Into the har bor after several of the crew had been taken In the boats In the belief that the vessel was Binklng. SICKLES' ARREST ORDERED Accusation Comes as Climax of Dis tinguished Career, Albanjf, N. Y. Upon application of the state authorities, the supreme court Issued an order for the arrest of General Daniel Sickles, of New York, who ns chairman of the New York MoYiuments commission is alleged to have failed to account for $28,476 of the commission's funds. The total amount of the alleged shortage was $33,476, but on December 20 last Stnnton Sickles, a son of the general, paid the Btate $5000 and prom ised to make good the remainder as aoon as certain property in Spain, owned by Mrs. Sickles, could be sold. The order for General Sickles' ar rest comes as a climax of a distin guished and picturesque career. Born in New York" in 1825, of a wealthy fam ily, General Sickles served as a sold ier, legislator and diplomat. At the outbreak of the civil war General Sick les raised and equipped at his own ex pense, five regiments of volunteers, and aa colonel of one of them went to the front. He participated in most of the great battles of the war, Including Gettysburg, where he lost a leg, and achieved distinction for bravery, being rewarded by promotion to the rank of major-general. , Ex-Govrnor Jam H. Brady, who broke th deadlock and wn sleeted Unltad gtatea Senator from Idaho. SERUM IS HELD AT MILLION Phyalclan Crltlcl Frltdmann'i Atti tude Toward Dlacovary Berlin. That Dr. Frledmann wants $1,000,000 for tb American right to bla tuberculosis serum, U tb itate ment made ber. German phyalclan trongly condemn what tbey call bla "non-ethical attitude." They go so far a to ay that ba la mora concerned In th monetary aspect than the hu manitarian of bla discovery. Dr. Frledmann baa so far failed to carry out bla promise of submitting a culture to th government He baa made various excuse for not doing this, but he denies that mercenary mo tives govern hli action. Flooda In South Memphis. Tenn. The entire delta section of four states was under water from 1 to 15 feet deep and families by the thousands were fleeing In ter ror from a wall of water that is pour Ing through a gap 1000 feet wide In tb levee at Beulab, Miss. Ten thousand acrea of winter wheat In western Kentucky, southern Mis souri and part of Tennessee are sub merged In water and the loss In crop will be enormous. Scouts Killed In Fight With Moral Manila. A dispatch from Brigadier General John J. Pershing, command ing the department of Mindanao, gives detail! of an engagement at Taglltsl, between Moroa and detachment of Philippine icouts and the constabu lary. Captain Patrick McNally and six en listed men of the scout were killed. Lieutenant William Townsend of the scouts, and Lieutenant Cochran and Lieutenant Whitney, of the constabu lary, and 19 enlisted men were wounded. TAFT DEFENDS HIS POSITION ON CANAL Baltimore. President Taft, speak ing at the annual banquet of the Mer chants and Manufacturers' association, defended the administration's attitude in the Panama canal disagreement with England. He declared that ita position was not unpatriotic or dis honorable and asserted there was no reason for anyone to oppose the pro posal for arbitration by an impartial tribunal. "Whether you call it a subsidy or not, I am in favor of making the rates between the coastB through the Pana ma canal lower," he said. "Now the question Is, can we do that under our International obligations? I think we can, and If you read the authorities I think you'll find that we may. But if we are bound not to exempt coastwise vessels we can agree to submit the question to an Impartial tribunal." The president concluded his speech with an appeal for constitutional gov ernment, endangered in the last few months, he said, by those who propos ed remedies but who could not furnish concrete examples of their proposed reforms. THE MARKETS. Portland. Wheat Club, 86c; bluestem, 92c; red Russian, 83c. Oats $27 per ton. Hay Timothy, $17; alfalfa, $12. , Butter Creamery, 37a Eggs Candled, 30c. Hops 1912 crop, 20c. Wool Eastern Oregon, 18o; Wil lamette valley, 22 c Seattle. Wheat Bluestem, 92c; club, 86c; red Russian, 83c. Eggs 31c. Eutter Creamery, 36c. Hay Timothy, $17 per ton; alfalfa, $12 per ton. I . r W.,2t i.'-l Mar , i , r - fill There Is Satisfaction in knowing that you have bought a worthy article one that gives you full value for the money you have invested in it And it is our purpose that every buyer of our pianos shall feel that he has the best instrument that could be given him for the price. We go beyond the consider ation of profit-making for ourselves because we recognize that a perm anent business is best establised by 'i - ' having due regard for the custom- -er's interests. '; No patron of ours is more anx ious to have a saisf ? ctory instrument than we are to give it to him. No purchaser is more concerned in economical buying than we are in .. helping him to select the best piano obtainable within the price he . v.vishes to pay. No better pianos than the Ma son & Hamlin, Hardman, Conover, Packard, Krakauer, Cable, Harring- ' ton, Price & Teeple, Hensel, Kings bury, Wellington and Rembrandt are purchasable anywhere in this country. Our list of player pianos repre sents, all told, about 35 styles, and another such matchless line cannot be found in the whole United State sJ These instruments are offered . you at the very lowest prices that you could purchase them, either, in our warerooms, or in Chicago, New York or elsewhere. Convenient payments arranged to suit every purchaser. Write us for catalogues and prices, and we will be pleased to submit to you in formation about pianos that will enable you to select, compare and save considerable money on the the purchase of an instrument. The Wiley B. Alien Comp'y Founded 1873. Seventh and Morrison Sts., Portland Chas. I3. Condart, Prineville Representative