5 THE ; MOBNING OREGQSriAN, THffffSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 190ff. AtVQRO STILL AT LARGE IS ARE SAID 'TO BE oir his trail? How the Tfote Teller of the First X tloxtal of Tfew York Stole the Basic's Money. NEW YORK, Oct. 21 Cornelius L. Al vord, the defaulting: teller of the First National Bank, has not been arrested. Mrs. Alvord left her home la Mount Vernon and-came to this city -this morn ing. It Is said jshe does not Intend to re turn to .Mount Vernon. It was learned today that when the Al vords went to Saratoga last -Summer they took with.lthem. all their horses and car riages. It took two cars to transport the outfit. The horses were -blooded animals and the vehicles were all of the hand somest description. One set of harness alone Is said to have cost $1500, and everything about the stable equipment was on the same scale. Vice-President Hine, of the .First Na tional Bank, In answer to a number of questions put to him In regard to Alvord and the general situation, said that the bank liad cleared up the whole matter of the defalcation to its own satisfaction. This was Interpreted to mean that Just how, and when Alvord nad taken the moneys had been discovered by the offi cials. Mr. Hine said he did not care to talk about the matter. President Baker, who arrived at the bank from Tuxedo early today, would not eay anything to inquirers except to refer them to the vice-president. W, G. Snow, an assistant cashier of the bank, who lives at Montclalr, N. J., sain last night that he had no authority to tell -any of the details of the matter, but continued: "The money which was stolen came out of the profits accruing to the bank, and not out of the capital. If I could explain the methods of the defaulter to you, you would see that they were very simple. The stealing has been going on for Ave or six years. The bank examiners should ,have dlsn'eredit and so should we, but It was one little thing that we overlooked. We trusted Alvord implicitly and had not the least suspicion of him until last Thursday. On that day, while the bank examiner was inspecting the books, one of our clerics called attention to a cir cumstance that made us suspicious of Alvord. It had entirely escaped the no tice of the bank examiner, for he said the books were all right. "Nobody knew of this, not even the officers o fthe bank, at the time. When the bank was closed Alvcrd went home as usual. Then a few of us who knew about the clerk's discovery started an in vestigation of the books. We found that by making false entries he had been stealing. Nobody knew of our investiga tion, and Alvord could not have had tho least suspicion of it. "He did not return to work next morn ing and has not been seen since. His only explanation lor his flight, to my mind, is a guilty conscience, for I do not believe he could have guessed that we suspected him that afternoon. Even the officers of the bank did not know of the discovery until next day. "Ever since last Thursday we have had detectives on his trail, and I think that he will bo landed soon. He is in New York City, I believe, at the present time. He could not conceal himself well any where, as he Is a very large man, of a very striking appearance. "I wish I could explain his trick to you. It is so simple. We 'are all .greatly cha grined to think he could have fooled us by it. Years ago we lost a few thousand in the same way, and we took special precautions to prevent anything like it in the future. I, among others, stayed at . the bank night after night studying methods and we thought "that wo could not- bo fooled again." Considerable Information as to the fashion in which Alvord spent the bank's funds is Imparted by race-track habitues. A well-known bookmaker had this to say about the missing man's acts at Sara toga: "Alvord was a'regular frequenter of the tracks. He was always accompanied by & woman with blonde hair, who wore a veil, which, while not thick, served to hide her features, so that if 1 saw her today on Broadway I would not recognize her. He generally bet on the English system. That is to say, he knew all the bookmakers by sight, and at a race he would go to a bookmaker saying: 'Bet me $500 on this horse. He would go the rounds of the hookies, putting a bet with each -one. Then every Monday all the Bookmakers would go to the United States Hotel and- there he would settle Tip in cash. Because of this peculiarity the bookmakers nsed to call him The Prince.' " Al Davis, smother turfman, made the statement that In Saratoga Alvord was known as the Hon. Mr. Alvord, the younger son of an English Earl. Davis, too, says that Alvord was invariably ac companied by a woman. The bank's officers positively deny that any one in the bank or any of its depos itors "was in collusion with Alvord. Alvord, according to a dispatch to the Times from Syracuse, was born In that city and belongs to a family of hankers. His father was Cornelius I Alvord, 8r., brother of the late Thomas F. Alvord, formerly Lieutenant-Governor of the state. Cornelius Alvord. St., was one of the most prominent men In Central New York, when, .30 years ago, the family moved from Syracuse to a town between Albany and Hudson. He was treasurer of the Bank of Salina. Afterward ho be came treasurer of tho Salt Springs Na tional Bank. C. I Alvord, Jr., Is a cousin of Mrs. James L. Cheney, of Syra cuse. His relatives in Syracuse refused to talk shout him or his family. The First National Bank has corre spondents In almost every city of any size in the country, so that its mall from correspondents is always very large. In soroo cities, Philadelphia, for instance, the number of its correspondents is more than half a dozen. All through Pennsyl 'onla, in the coal, iron and oil districts, it has representative banks as corre spondents, and its mail Is probably larger than that of any one banking institution in this city. ' According to Vice-President Hine. while Alvocd handled a great deal of the money that came into the bank, he had nothing to do with money aispatcnea $o interior correspondents. In spite of many rumors, some of them very circumstantial, It may be positively stated that the officials of the bank have np definite idea Just what Alvord did with the large sum of money he stole. That much of it went in high living and luxuries for his family is clear, but the hank officials believe that less than one fourtit of his pilferings went in that way. Wall street is full of stories telling how the defaulter was a heavy loser in the stock market, and although the bank -officers Tef us to discuss that phase of the matter, there is no doubt that their de tectives are looking Into it, and if Al vord's broker or brokers can be found, they will be made to disgorge, if that should be possible. In Wall street the opinion prevails that Alvord was a superior defaulter that is to say, that he was cleverer than the average of his kind. He probably real ized that the majority -of his rivals of the past got away with very little money. Banking .men were disposed to believe to day that Alvord managed to make his escape -with several hundred thousand dollars. It was thought possible Schrel beis Ellzabethport defalcation helped to uncover Alvord's. operations. Becoming nervous and apprehensive over the no toriety obtained by Schreiber, Alvord failed, through neglect or nervousness, to check up some of his transactions, and the result was exposure. One man who is Intimately acquainted with Alvord, and who was a frequent guest at the home in Mount Vernon, de clared that he never recalled the missing teller -having spoken of race horses. He lcnew however, that Alvord speculated heavily in stocks. This- friend is posl-7 tive that Alvord did- not gamble exten sively on the turf or at cards and other gambling games. Speculation and ex travagant living, he said, were responsi ble for Alvord's downfall. Bookmakers ridicule the assertion that Alvord lost heavy .sums on the track- A supplementary statement was given out 1y the First National Bank officials this afternoon. The most Interesting feature of the statement is the positive assertion that Alvord had not been ab sent from the bank, one business day this year. Mr. Hine repeated this statement orally after an examination of the time books in which every nay's leave of ab sence by an empjoye of the bank Is en tered." This contradicts the numerous re ports that Alvord was a regular .at tendant and heavy better at the Saratoga races this last season. HOW ALVORD WORKED IT. Hi Plaa Explained by tlte Acting Controller of the Currency. WASHINGTON. Oct. 24. T. P. Kane, acting Controller of the Currency, today gave Out the following statement regard ing the defalcation in the First National Bank of New York: "During the progress of the examination by Bank Examiner Hanna, October 15, of the First National Bank, Assistant Cash ier Backus discovered that the note and exchange teller, Alvord, was short In his cash to an amount -which has since been found to be $590,000, "His thefts have been going on for a long time. The plan of concealing them and making the cash on hand agree with the amount for which he was account able, as shown by the books, was to take out of the morning mall, of which he was in charge, A sufficient number of cash items to cover the aggregate amount of his defalcation find add them to the exchanges for the clearing-house receipts during the preceding day. The examina tion of the exchange at the time of dis covery showed the total amount correct but $690,000 of the Items had been taken from the morning receipts and listed with previous days exchanges, the amount of morning additions being reduced that much so that the sum of the two aggre gated the correct amount. "A change In the slip by Alvord later in the day caused inquiry and. comparison to he made at the clearing-house,' when it was discovered that the two items of 'previous day exchanges' and 'morning additions' did not correspond with the list checked by the examiners, and a count of the current day's cash and checks. In the hands of the third teller, revealed a shortage of $690,000. The shortage seems to have been about $100,000 two Tears ago. and has been Increased gradually since that time, tho teller concealing the same in the morning additions, which always amount to much more than the amount of his shortage, and never enter into. the count of the preceding day's cash. "There is no way to have a check on the morning additions to the exchanges, except by counting the. note teller's cash and checks twice, or to begin examina tions of cash in the evening, which is otherwise objectionable. "The bank has charged out the amount of the shortage without Impairing its sur plus or undivided profits account. "A further examination of Alvord's hooks by the officers of the bank shows that his stealings have been going on for several years. Fourteen months ago "he took a two weeks' vacation, and exami nation of his tickets preceding his going "and after his return shows that he cov ered his shortage while absent by making a number of charges to out-of-town ac counts, and credited back the amounts on his return, before the monthly state ments were sent out. "He seems to have gone up and down, and It Is probable this is due to the fact whenever he had reason to expect any investigation of his cash or a periodical visit from the examiner he would, doctor it by means of these false charges agalnsf large accounts. In. the present Instance, "the examiner- went into the hank a month ahead of the usual six months' period, the last preceding exam ination having been made May, 3300, and this unexpected visit prevented a manipu lation of figures hy Alvord and led to. a discovery of the defalcation. "This theft could probably have been prevented by a rotation of the clerical force of the bank, thus placing each de partment under the supervision of differ ent heads successively. "There Is no -way accurately to check the accounts of an employe If he has ac cess to the succeeding day's cash from which to make good his shortage from the current day (and this is what Alvord has always had), and has also the opportunity to hold back credits for a longer time than the day on which the letters enclos ing items are received." The Patersoa Tragedy. NEW YORK, Oct. 2. Soulthorp, the driver of the carriage in which Jennie Bosachieter, the Paterson mill girl, was carried about the streets of Paterson after she had been drugged and assault ed, as alleged, by four men, was re leased today under $500 ball to appear as a witness against Walter McAllister, George C. Kers, William A. Death and Alexander Campbell, who are accused of causing the girl's death. The Coroner of Passaic County said today that the in quest cannot be held until a report is re ceived from the jchemlsts who are mak ing an analysis of the dead girl's stom ach, and it may be two weeks before the chemists' work is completed. Baalc President Sentenced. CHICAGO, Oct. 24. William A. Paulson, convicted of receiving a deposit in the Central Trust & Savings Banx, of -which he was president, while knowing the bank to be insolvent, today was sentenced to serve an indefinite sentence in prison." A stay of execution of 30 days was allowed to enable the defense to prepare a bill of exceptions for presentation to the Su preme Court. The Central Trust & Sav ings Bank went down in the crash which followed the failure of the National Bank of Illinois. Its liabilities were $357,160. and its assets less than a .quarter of that amount. TfegToes Lynched. MACON, Go., Oct. 24. It was learned here today that two negroes, James Grier and James Colloway; were lynched hy white farmers- near Liberty Hill, r- in Pike County. While out hunting they shot recklessly Into a farmer's house, fright ening a young white woman. Word reaches here" from Wellston, in Huston County, that a negro was lynched by a mob of his -own Tace for assaulting a colored .girl. Another negro was lynched near there for a similar crime last week. Domestic sad. Foreigm "Porta. Queenstown Oct. 24. Arrived, Servia, from New York, for Liverpool, and pro ceeded. Browhead, Oct. 24. Passed, Germanic, from New York, for Queenetbwn and Liverpool. Gibraltar. Oct. 24. Passed, Parmenian, from Genoa, Leghorn and .Naples, for New York. , Queenstown, Oct 24. Arrived, Com monwealth, from Boston, for" Liverpool, and proceeded. Emma. Goldman. ComiBy. NEW YORK, Oct. 24. The "-various groups of anarchists- in New York are in a flutter aver the announcement that Emma Goldman, the woman anarchist who has been engaged' in a propaganda throughout Europe for about a" year, will return to New xorK aooutjno middle oi next month. Her return" was hastened by the authorities -stopping a proposed International convention- of anarchists in Europe. t ' For any case of nervousness, sleepless ness, weak stomach, indigestion, dyspef slo, relief is sure in Carter's vLlttle Liver Pills. HOW CALIFORNIA GROWS ITS POPULATION IS nearly a MIL LION aW A HALF. , Aa Increase of Abemt Thirty Per Ceat Since the CeaH of Tea Years -Agro.' WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. The population nf the State of California "was announced by the Census Bureau today. The pop ulation of the state In 1900 is L4S5;053, as against 1,205,130" In 1890, representing an Increase since 1890 of 276,923, or 22.9 per cent. A small portion of ihls Increase is due to the fact that there were 5107 $ " HE CANNdT FOLLOW BRYAfo. 7 1- . So Mr. Anderson Changes, and Decides to Support M'Kinley. . ; THE DALLES, Or., Oct. 23. (To the, Editor.) I have no apdlogy .to offer for supporting "Bryan, four years ago. Hundreds were deceived, like myself. Conditions were such that men might honestly differ re- garding the remedies offered. Times were very Tiard, work -was scarce, and when secured was poorly paid for, and any change Vould have "been an improvement. But now labor Is king There is more money In circulation than we, who asked for an increased circulation, ever thought of'-'demandlng; capital has come forth from its hiding-place and. is invested in manufacturing industries; why should the vote of the .wage-earner drive-it back? , Over 20 years' working at the anvil on the Pacific Coast, -and association during that period with skilled' and unskilled labor as employe and employer, makes me know that there never -was a time when labor was as independent as during the past two years. Four years ago we demanded an improvement in the condition of the workingman and the farmer, and, despite the faot that Bryan' wa3 defeated, some of our pet theories upset and our prophecies unful filled, the change is here, and foolish is the workingman who .will cast his vote to call Coxey's army, again into the field. ' If the man with the gold lsv foolish (?) enough to believe, his Investments are safer under the gold standard, why should the well pald,laborer make a martyr of himself and victims of hjs -wife ' and, children in an attempt to prove a theory (and it is only a theory, after alQ that even its champion, Bryan, dare not advocate amo'ng business men of his own party in tho commercial cities of ttieEast? The Bryan of 1896 was well masked, if he was the same Bryan of today. I saw him then as a- patriot- r.see him now as a hypocrite,. If nothing worse; the greatest dictator' this century has ever known talking of the will of the people; "the idol of our country's enemies preaching patriotism; the slanderer of our country's Idols fearing for, our National honor; the man who secured the ratification of the Paris Treaty fighting against the fulfillment of" its provisions; the' avowed friend of labor asking the wage-earner to fight his ownnd hiB employer's interests; the great advocate of the principles of Jef ferson opposed to expansion; a man backed by every disloyal South ern Brigadier quoting Lincoln;, preaching consent of the governed for the brown, man and marching arm in arm with those who have taken the ballot from the black roan. Was Mr. Bryan the true friend of the workingmen, he would frankly acknowledge that good times are not only possibly tinder the gold (standard, but are a fact, and that hadi his dream of elec tion come true and his promises been carried out nothing better could have been expected. Such would have been far more worthy' of his great ability than this howling of imaginary Ills and evils to come in order to gather 'the discontents and dangerous elements of all sections to vote for him as a great reformer. In my Judgment there couldbe no 'greater calamity at this time than the election of Bryan. Even his most enthusiastic followers say that much capital would be temporarily withdrawn from busi ness, and they make no promise of better times afterward. Every man knows that eVen a temporary withdrawal, anything that would have a generally bad effect' on business for a day, week or month, would be fatal to the Interests of labor; that wages would go down; that history would repeat itself; and the' -days- when goods became' ' shelfworn in the stores, because the workingmen and the farmer had . no money to purchase them, would return. The farmer Is prosperous, not because wheat is high, for it Is not; nor because McKinley brought5 good crops; but because' the consumer, of his produce can afford to eat pork, beef, mutton, and everythlpg else the farmer ralseB. His horses bring good prices because every branch of industry 1$ prospering, and horses are a necessity. It is undoubtedly true that millions of dollars have been invested in the past three years in great manufacturing industries, in "trusts," If you please, and it is equally true that small manufac tories have been closed in various parts of the Union. It is possIble that the farmer may "have to pay a dollar more for a plow, or 'five dollars more for a wagon, or some other farm implement; but he is better able to pay an extra twenty dollars vthan he -was to buy at the old price four years ago. Thef Bryan orator who would deceive the farmer with the cry that trusts will run the price of farm im plements up indefinitely" is a fool or a'sknave. The small manufac turer is not dead, and whenever the price goes, where he can pom pete, le will go into business again, and when the farmer gets his Implements at prices that the manufacturer with ordinary capital cannot build them for, he is getting them cheap enough. Seventeen years' experience at making and repairing farm im plements and wagons in Oregon enables me to say, without fear of contradiction, that the farmer never in his lifetime received better value for his money than he 1b now getting in wagons and imple ments made by the great manufacturing companies of the United States. Let the farmer take his fault-finding friend out to the 'shed . and examine 'his ancient and modern machlnery.t Go Into the field and compare the work done, and then compare ancient and modern prices. There are certainly great combinations of capital used wrongfully to control certain materials, rayr and manufactured, but It is JUBt aa certain that millions of dollars have been invested1 legit imately In manufacturing since Bryan "fought his "first battle." Bryan would destroy all to get rid of the bad ones. Like the, old farmer who set fire to the wasp-'s nest tinder the eaves of his house, he -burned the nest and the house, but the4 wasps escaped to go into business in his barn. There Is but one issue, and that whether pres ent prosperous conditions continue, or not1 "Imperialism" and ''mll-i itarism" are but the side shows. . M, J. ANDERSON. V . 1 Indians and 161 other persons, or a, total of 6268 persons, on Indian reservations In California, who were specially enumerated In 1890 under the provisions, of the census act, but were not included lrf the general population of the state that census; 'The population of the stato In 1850 was 92,597, and from 1850 to 1860 it increased 287,237, or 310.3 per cent, showing ,a total' population in I860 of 379,994. During the decade from 1860 to 1S70 the Increase was f only J80.252, or 47.4" per cent, but for each of the three succeeaing aecaaes tne nu merical increase has been much greater, though the percentage of increase for the last two decades bos declined. The population of California in 1900 is more than 16 times as large as- that given for. 1850, the first census In which the popu lation of the state appears. The total land surface of California is approximately 155,980 square miles, the average number of-persons to the square mile atithe census of "1890 and 1900 being as follows: 1890 7.7J1900 9.5 Hobuon in Danger of Blindness. Pittsburg Dispatch. All hands stood by to receive Lieuten ant Hpbson at the navy-yard last week. He was to begin his duties as Assistant Naval Constructor, and any amount of work was p'lled"up as a result of the overhauling of the North Atlantic squad ron. But" no Hobson appeared. 'Rear Admiral Barker finally said he guessed Secretary Long must have granted him leave of absence. It Is an open secret among naval officers" here that Hobson Is highly dissatisfied with the navy-yard assignment He had expected something better after being ordered home from the ABiatic station. Thore is Bald to bo grave danger of Hobson s going blind. While In Manila and Hong Kong he con tracted a disease of the eyes, aggravated by overwork, which Is regarded as se rious. The young, constructor consulted ian oculist here, who advised him to take a long rest. Tt Is said' he Is preparing to spend -slxt. months In .Europe, fundepv the rnrn nf eminent sDeciallsts. .and that upon hiy return 'ho will take up construc tion work in earnest, leanwhile, the ijrooitiyn navy-yara omciaas axe anxious for another assistant. Work" of a press ing nature remains unfinished . . HERMITS AMONG COMMONERS The British. M. P.s Arc Not or Sociable Set Twenty Years of Silence. There is probably no assemhly In the world, where so little social and, personal intercourse takes place. I woW for five years In the House of Commons without knowing half a dozen men, outside the small body of 35 to 40 members .with whom I acted, writes T. P. tO' Connor In the London Mall, These were', ' of course, stormy times, and it was difficult' to say whether an Irishman In f he' epoch be- o $ o A 0" i00fe i.6-i tweentlSS0 and 18S5 had a. fiercer hatred for Liberals or Tories. Things, -of course, have greatly changed, but eyen now I see every day members of the House of Commons -who. must have been there for the same, 20 years as myselfj and not only have I never spoken .to them, but 1 do not know some of them by name. Amldall this gregariousness the House of Comomns has Its isolation. Members retain there the eccentricity or the love of solitude which' are characteristic of certain temperaments. Mr. Ch'arrlngton, thg member for tho MIle-OEnd, for In stance, who Is one of the 'most unlver- f sally generous men In the House) and wno is never dear to a true tale of un deserved suffering, has rarely been seen to talk to a single human being. 'The same. Instinct perhaps, which made him refuse both a baronetcy and- peerage, keeps him apart from hl3v fellows.. He dines alone, he takes his single cigar In the smokeroom alone, he sits on a back bench in the House, still and ever alone. Wolcott to Flgrhi Sharkey. NBW YORK, Oct. 24. Tonx. 6'Rourke, manager of Joe Walcott, covered Tom Sharkey's $2500 today. He offers" to match Walcott, a welter-weight, against -the sailor in a battle of six rounds or any length and, to bet abig sum on the negro. Graiea' Application. KANSAS CITY, Oct 24. Judge John F. Phillips, in the United States District Court today, postponed to one.' week from date the -hearing on the application' for a receivership for the Guardian -Trust, Com pany, made yesterday by John W. Gates. Jacquelin Will Not Race. PARIS, Oct 25. Jacqueliny the.' French cyclist, now declines to race 'with Mac Farland, even if the latter vould pay his expenses. He assigns as a- plea for refusal that he- Is out of fomv owing to two, days inactivity. , NEW. PACIFIC MAIL DEAL -. v HARRIMAN-.VATfDEK8IliT 1NTER--ESTS SAID TO HAVE CONTROL. Extensive Trans-Pacific Transporta tion Enterprise "Will Help Port land' Oriental Line. NEW YORK, Oct. 24.-The Times says: Control of the Pacific Mall Steamship Company changes. E. H. Harriman suc ceeds Collls P. Huntington. Mr. Harri man and his' colleagues have taken over a jnajority of Pacific Mall capital stock. Identified with Mr. Harriman in this new big deal one of international significance 'Is William K- Yanderbllt Sequels soon to 'follow will have far-reaching conse quence. Under Mr. Huntington's direction the Pacific .Mail 'Steamship Company was a tender to his Southern Pacific Interests, Its operations subordinate to Mr. Hunt ington's great railway system. In Its new control the company will have scope never hitherto contemplated. The acqui sition of the Pacific Mall Steamship Com- pany makes possible the Immediate ac complishment of Mr. Vanderbilfs cher ished plan of a continuing transportation system virtually under one management from the Atlantic through to the Pacific Coast and thence direct to the far East The New York Central system, linked to the Union Pacific by the Chicago & Northwestern, with natural auxiliaries already possessed, will now connect with Pacific Mail steamships for continuous transportation service to China and Ja pan. Philippine trade is also, of course, to 'be incidentally competed for. Under "Mr. Harriman's control control in which' W. K. "Vanderbilt directly par ticipates the Pacific Mall Steamship Company's affairs will be revolutionized. More steamships not one or two, but many will bo -forthwith added to the company's service. Most of them will be for Asiatic trade. It may be disclosed that James J. Hill, of the Great Northern Railway, Is also Interested in Mr. Harriman's project. Mr. Hill and Mr. Harriman have come into close affiliation In Chicago & Alton and In Baltimore & Ohio reorganization un dertakings, and Mr. Harriman is credited with giving more heed to Mr. Hill's rail road counsel than that of any other trans portation authority of the country. Now freight can be taken from the port of New -York across the continent by rail without breaking bulk and sent forward ,by steamship to China and Japan all under a bill qf lading representing one centralized transportation Interest 'The Pacific Mail Steamship Line be comes thus practically a mere "division" in a Vanderbilt system from New York to Asia. It is, therefore, not Improbable that-before long there will be a revival of tho former reports of consolidation or what, In substance, may be the same be tween railway systems from New York to California. Several shares have been notable on the New York Stock Exchange", and they' have advanced substantially. Generally this improvement has been attributed io the fact that assurances have come from Senator Henna and others quotable as au thorities that as soon as Congress meets the Hanna-Payne shipping subsidy bill meet be passed. No possible change In the political complexion of tho Congress elected next month will have bearing upon this programme, the present Con gress, in its Winter session, having tho power to enact the subsidy legislation, though there are independent observers 'who doubt the ability of Mr. Hanna to hurry through his bill under any cir cumstances. However this may be, the disclosure of Mr. Harriman's control of the company "makes clear the fact that discounting Congressional action has not been respon sible ''for the advance in Pacific Mail's quotations. Mr. Harriman and Mr. Van derbilt are credited with having bought Pacific Mail stock largely in the open market after having obtained, at private sale, a block of the stock from a repre sentative of the Huntington estate. Sub sequent purchases on the Stock Exchange have been responsible for the activity and strength. The 'stock bought from tho Huntington estate is said to have been taken over at an average of close to $50 a share. Some important changes in the person nel of the Pacific Mall Steamship Com pany are likely to be soon announced. The board of directors, as now consti tuted. Includes Henry Hart Isaac Gates, Edwin Hawley, Samuel Thomas, Russell .Sage, George J. Gould, G. H. Macy, of New York, and R. P. Schwerln, of Sun Francisco the latter being vice-president and general manager. Mr. Harriman and W. K. Vanderbilt, Jr., may enter the directory. Edwin Hawley, for. years one of C. P. Huntington's chief lieutenants, can have the Pacific Mail presidency if he will ac cept. Mr. Hawley Is credited with hav ing recently declined the Southern Pa cific Railway presidency for the reason that he was not willing to give up his residence in New York. Mr. Harriman went West Immediately. Immediately following his return Pacific Mail changes may be announced. In Chi cago Mr. Harriman will meet represen tatives of the Union Pacific and Chicago & " Northwestern, and If not James J. Hill personally, one of the latter's Great Northern associates. Under Mr. Huntington's control the Pa cific Mall Company practically confined its relations to the Southern Pacific Rail way. Under a Harrlman-Vanderbllt con trol It will have the business of various systems. Best-Informed Circles Discredit It. 'NEW YORK, Oct 24. The Evening Post today says: No credit .was given In the best-Informed circles today to the report that the control of the Pacific Mall Company had passed from the Huntington and Southern Pacific Interests to Chairman Harriman, of the Union Pacific, who, It was asserted, was acting in conjunction with the Vanderbilt interests. Edwin Hawley, a director of the Southern Pa cific Company and the Pacific Mall Com pany, said there was no truth in the story. "Other officials of both companies were equally positive in their denials This Bottle Is known all over thevorld. It will be found in al most every family mediclno T chest For half o ccnhjry HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS HAS CURED Dyspepsia, Indigestion. Constipation, Liver and Kidney Trouble, Malaria, Fever and Ague. Sold by all druggists and dealers gener ally. See that a Private Revenue Stamp k bjoVW'the top. of the bottf that there was any foundation for the talk' of the control having passed to new Interests or that such, a development was possible. ITonr Roads Tryinjj to Get It. NEW YORK, Oct 24. The Mall and Express says that four transcontinental railroads are fighting to secure control of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, and that the contest is going on In open mar ket. This fight Is said to be between tho Atchison, Union Pacific, Missouri Pacific and Southern Pacific. Companies to obtain absolute control of the steamship com pany. To this end It Is said that the Southern Pacific has been a heavy buyer of Pacific Mall stock recently In an en deavor to retain the hold on tho property which It had exerted through Mr. Huntington. Tweed Doesn't Know of It. NEW YORK, Oct 24. Charles H. Tweed, vice-president of the Southern Pacific Company, who is closely Iden tified with the Interests of the estate of the late Collls P. Huntington, was afeke'd today regarding the report that E. H. Harriman had succeeded in securing a controlling Interest in the Pacific Mall Steamship Company. Mr. Tweed said: "I know nothing of it except what I have read In the papers. Of course, I do not know what Mr. Harriman may have In his strong box, .but I know of no transaction which would tend to corrobo rate the report." No Denrlnsr on Portland. President Mohler says he knows noth ing of Mr. Harriman's relations with the Pacific Mail, but that the fact that ho Is In control of that corporation. It the report be true, will In no wise Interfere with an Oriental steamship line from Portland, for which arrangements aro now being made. Any influence It may have on the Portland line will be helpful. HARRIMAN IN CHICAGO. Deal Under Wny for Tnfcinfr In the Knnnas City Southern. CHICAGO. Oct 24. E. H. Harriman, head of the big railroad buying and con solidating syndicate thot bears his name, arrived in Chicago today to confer with the attorneys of the Kansas City South ern and President Felton, of the Alton, regarding the future management of the former line, and to discuss the recently formed traffic agreement of the "U'esrern roads. Just what the syndicate Intends to do with tho Kansas City Southern Is not known. The rumor that this line Is to be consolidated with the Alton, Illinois Central and Union Pacific all Harriman roads and the whole operated as one sys tem, is generally believed by local rail road men and financiers. It Is said that several of the owners of the Kansas City Southern are against any consolidation scheme, on the ground that it would tend to reduce earnings of the various roads In tho Harriman combine. By maintaining Independence, the road would be In posi tion to enter Into arrangements with con necting lines not owned by the Harriman people. If the roods under the Influence of the latter were brought together as one system, the other lines would com bine against the syndicate in competitive traffic. During the day, it is said, Mr. Harri man met with the presidents of big "Western roads operating west of Chi cago, and discussed rates and traffic or ganizations at length. NORTHERN PACIFIC SCHEDULE, One Daily Train East of Billing;: to Be Dlnconttnned. The Northern Pacific will discontinue one of its through trains to St. Paul next Sunday. The double train service will be maintained on the Northern Pacific from Billings westward, but east of Bil lings but one train will be run. The time schedule will not be much, if any., changed. The train leaving Portland at 11:30 P. M. will be a Burlington tra!nSnd will turn off at Billings over the Bur lington lines to the southward. The train leaving Portland at 2 P. M. will run through to St Paul as usual. It its pos sible that the train will leave Portland about 1:45, when the new schedule shall go into effect. President Mellen, before leaving Port land, told a reporter that it was extreme ly improbable that a third train would be put on the route between Portland and Seattle. He said It had not even been discussed as far as he knew. The de mands of travel, he thought, would be quite fully met by the present service. New Road to El Paio. SANTA PE, N. M., Oct M. Articles of Incorporation were filed here today of "the El Paso, Pecos Valley & Eastern Railway, extending from Roswell to El Paso, Tex., a distance of 175 miles. J. J. Hagerman, of Colorado Springs, Is president. Tho route Is through Chaves, Eddy and Otero Counties, New Mexico. This line will shorten the distance by rail between El Paso and Kansas City and Chicago SCO miles. The survey is completed and con struction work will begin soon after elec tion. Rate to Livestock. Ansoclntlon. DENVER, Colo.. Oct 24. The Colorado Railway Association granted tho applica tion of the National Livestock Association for a rate of one fare for the round trip to Its annual convention, which is to con vene at Salt Lake City, Utah, January 15. Railroad Noted. T. M- Schumacher, vice-president and general manager of the California Fruit Express, with headquarters in Los An- geies, nas resigned' tnis position and will LOOK H ARE YOU ONE OF THEM? If so, write to old Dr. KESSLER today. Don't youknow? 613 MEN WANTED There ore all over this county old. young and middle-aged men.suiScr lng from the effects of bad habits when boys. Hundreds caught private diseases, which have never been property cured. Such men are unlit for marriage or business, and If they let this disease continue, they will break out with pimples or sores, sometimes rhoumatlsm, heart disease, paralysis, dizziness, stomach trouble will follow. They go to sleep sometimes whilo reading or resting. PRIVATE DISEASE. If not CORED properly, will run Into stricture, gleet, prostallttis, catarrh of bladder and kidneys, and that awful disease called chancres and bubols, that have ruined so many young men for life. DR, KESSLER. at thft old St. Louis Dispensary, has been doctoring these cases right In Portland for many years. He also cures tumors, wens, warty growths, old sores, cancers, all kinds diseases of noso, throat or liver", pr any kidnoy or bowel trouble. Call and see the tape worms they have taken from person? some 35 feet long. Rheumatism. Piles. Neuralgia, Headache. Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Itch ing Skin Diseases and that AWFULEST OF ALL DISEASES, Syphilis (Pox), Gonorrhea, he cures QUICK WITHOUT ANY CUTTING. His private ofllce is filled with pictures of these awful diseases. This old doctor can refer to prominent business men. lawyers, ministers, professors, etc, as; to bis honesty. EVERYTHING PRIVATE. When you go to see him he sees you In private rooms. When you wrlto him, only tho doctor reads your lotter. AVhen you go to consult this doc tor, take a small bottle urine (made the previous morning) with you. If writlngk send it by express or mall. Address J. HENRI KESSLER, M. D., ST. LOUIS MEDICAL AND SURGICAL DISPENSARY 23(H YAMHILL ST., PORTLAND, OR. - sjsHyl 4s5 5 Wffi If a'woman's crown of glory is her hair, Jessie Frascr, of Fine, N. Y., must be a queenly woman. She wrote us, last January, that her hair was nearly 64 inches long and very thick. And she gave Ayer's Hair Vigor all the credit for it. Ayers Hair Vigor may do this for you. VVc don't claim the 64 inches every time, though. J. C AifEK. Company, Practical Chnii3, Lowell, Ma. Ayer's SnpIU Ay.r PlIU Aj" Ague Care Aye? '3 Hair Vigor An-i -ferry Pectoral on November 1 assume the duties of gen eral agent of the Union Pacific at San Francisco. The Canadian Pacific is among the first of tho railroads to display in Portland ad r vertlslng matter for the Buffalo Pan- American exposition. Two cars in a Portland-Sound grain train left the track at John Day station, on the O. R. & N.. yesterday morning and caused a delay of five hours for the pas senger train following. The train was going slowly at the time, and no damage was done except to th car3 that left tho track. OUR FACTORIES IH ENGLAND Ho-iv Tliey RcjTnrd the New Wentlng hoaie Electrical "Works at Trafford. Lcndon ExDress. Quite recently an American manufac torythat is. founded by American capi tal, equipped with American machinery and worked by American workmen, or a large proportion of them wai laid down at Chippenham, near Brlstor, for tho manufacture of pneumatic tools. The British Wcstinghousc Electrical Company are now erecting enormous en gineering works at Old Trafford, ne ir Manchester, on similar lines, for the pro duction of heavy engineering plant The foundation of such alien industries must necessarily be considered a distinct slin i of retrogression in a manufacturing coun try. 3uch as ours, but it Is dimcuit to see how it can be otherwise than of com mercial benefit to it. Of the eduatonal t value of such there can be no question.. On the other hand, the Americans, in es tablishing branch manufactories abroad, are only following our own example, as shown in the works at Spezzla of Sir W. G. Armstrong. Whltworth & Co.; In Sweden and in Spain of Virkers Sons and Maxim, besides others. Such a policy has never formed the subject of econom'cal anlrnrtver-ion. to w'-lch. however. It would appear to be justly -exposed.. Fire In lllnncanta Town. WABASHA. Minn.. Oct . The entlro business part of Mlnneis.ka was burned to day. Including the postoffice. The Farm ers elevator and sewral loaded cars were also burned. Loss. $73,000. X VlrprlnlR. Aiinisinntlon. BRISTOL, Tenn . Oct. 24. Joseph Ches ser. a leading lumber dealer, was assas sinated at Norton, Va. last night whilo going out of a hotel. Tho assassin b" not been arrested. Elht Hours Vorlcj Ton Hour Pay. REDDING, Cal.. Oct. 24. Over CC0 miners employed by the Iron Mountain Copper Company struck today for an eight-hour day with tho pay current for a 10-hour day of 12 50. Dropped Dead in the Pnlpit. NEWPORT NEWS. Oct. 24. Dr. J. N. Craig, of Baltimore, dropped dead In tho pulpit today while addressing the Pres byterian Synod of Virginia, now in ses sion here. An Easy Part. Touth Ch. 1 don't want to take that character. I'll make a feol of my self, sure. Maiden Well, you said you wanted an easy part. Detroit Frt-o Pnis. LiLa iyUliVl itiLl uq