lft0t VOI,. XXV.- NO. 13,998. PORTLAND, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1905. PRICE TTlVE CENTS. OOSEWELT WINS VIRGINIA HEARTS Ovation Greets Him at State Capital. PRAISES DEEDS OF SOUTH Claims for Nation Credit of Virginia's Great. POLICY IN CARIBBEAN SEA Southern Tour Begins With Great Outpourings of People to Greet President, Who Boasts Blood of All Sections. THE r RESIDENT'S ITINERARY. Left Washington S:30 A. M...Oct. 18 Richmond Va Oct 13 Raleigh. X. C. Oct. 19 Durham. X. C '. Oct. 19 Greensboro, X. C Oct. 19 High Point. X. C Oct. 19 Salisbury, X. C Oct. 19 Charlotte. X. C Oct. 19 Roswell. Ca .....Oct. 20 Atlanta. Ga Oct. 20 Jacksonville. Fla -...'...Oct. 21 St. Augustine, Fla 21-22 Mobile, Ala Oct. 23 Tuskegee. Ala.... ...Oct. 24 Montgomery. Ala.... Oct. 24 Birmingham, Ala-. Oct. 24 Little Rock. Ark Oct. 25 Memphis. Tonn Oct. 25 Xew Orleans, La Oct. 20 Arrive Washington Oct. 31 RICHMOND, Va.,' Oct. IS. Richmond oday threw open her gates to Presi dent Roosevelt, and during the seven hours of his stay' state and city officials ard citizens accorded him a welcome hiarty and sincere. The Presidential train arrived a few minutes after noon, ard from that moment until 7 o'clock tonight, when he departed for Raleigh, X, C, over the Seaboard Air- Line, ho was given an ovation. His entry into the city was th siir- nal for a wild demonstration from a multitude, and the -welcoming enthusl asm only ceased when his train con tinued on its Journey through the South. Mrs. Roosevelt shared In the honors. and Mrs. Montague, the wife of the Governor, gave a reception at the Executive mansion in her honor. The President made several ad dresses, one at the Capitol Sauare. be fore one of the largest crowds ever assembled in Virginia's capital, an other at a banquet In Masonic Temple, where 400 of tho representatives of the Old Dominion were gathered about the boards; again at the Lee monument, where he spoke to a largo number of Confederate veterans, and onco more at a gathering of negroes. His speeches paid tribute to the Confederate veterans, voiced apprecia tion of the economic and political progress of the South since the Civil War; pointed to his ancestry, in which Southern and Northern blood are min gled, and to his birth in the East and his life in the West, declaring he bo lieved himself a middling- good Ameri can; spoke of the preponderance of Southern blood in hls regiment in Cuba, referred to the aid, through ad vice, that this Government can rive the peoples on the coasts and islands of the Caribbean; reiterated the principle of equal Justice to all, and in his talk to negroes, congratulated them on their progress as a race. The President .will speak tomorrow at itaiejgn, un. u- PRESIDENT nEXTOLS SOUTH. S Speech at Richmond on Reconstruc tion and National Policy. RICHMOND, Va., Oct 18. lodav was Roosevelt day at Richmond and the city was in gala attire. Business was practically suspended and nearly the wholo population was on the streets At 12 o'clock sharp the Presidential train pulled into the Main-Street De pot and a special committee formally welcomed the President to Richmond. Then the President was escorted to Capitol Square. The line of march was through the principal streets to the Western part of the city and return All along. the route the President was enthusiastically cheered. The President and party called at tl: Executive Mansion and paid their re spects and then repaired to the speak ers stand, which was faced by oar. of the greatest multitudes ever assembled in Richmond. Mayor McCarthy rre sented the Governor, who in a brief speech introduced the President, who spoke as follows: Great Men of Virginia. I trust 1 need hardly cay how great Is ray plasure at speaking in this historic capital of your historic state; the state than which no other has contributed a larger proportion to the leadership of . the Nation, for on the honor roll of those American -worthies whoee greatness Is not only for the age, tut for all time, not only for one Nation, but for all the world, j on this honor roll Virginia's name i.anas aoavc un uwierz. Ana in greeting an m you. I know that no one will grudge my raying a special word of acknowledgement to the veterans of the Civil War. A man would -indeed be but a poor Ameri ran who could without a thrill witness the way in which. In city alter city in the North, as In the South, on every public occasion. the men who wore the blue and the men who wore the gray now march and stand shoul der to ehoulder. giving tangible proof that we are all now in fact as In name a reunited people, a people Infinitely richer because of the priceless memories left to all Americana by you men who fought In the great war. Think of it. oh. mr countrymen: think of the good fortune that is oursl That whereas every other war of modern times has left feelings of rancor and bltterncsa to keep asunder the combatants, our great war has left to the sons and daughters of the men who fought, on whichever elde they fought, the came right to feci the keenest pride in the great deeds alike of the men -who fought on one side and of the men who fought on the other. ncroism of the South. Great though the. meed of praiae which Is due the South for the soldierly valor her sons displayed during the four years of war. I think that even greater praise Is due to her for what her people have accomplished In the 40 years of peace which followed. For 40 years the South has made not merely a cour ageous, but at times a deeperate, struggle, aa she has striven for moral and material well- being. Her succesc has been extraordinary. and all citizens of our common country should feel Joy and pride In It. Only a heroic people could have battled sufficiently against the con ditions with which tho people of the South found themselves face to face at the end of the Civil War. There had been utter destruction and disaster, and wholly new business and social problems had to be faced with the scantiest means. The economic and political fabric had to be readjusted In the midst of dire want, of grinding poverty. The future of the broken, war-swept South seemed be yond hope, and. if her cons and daughters had been of weaker fiber, there would in very truth have been no hope. But the men and the sons of the men who had faced with un faltering front every alternation of good and evil fortune from Manassas to Appomattox, and the women, their wives and mothers. whose courage and endurance had reached an even higher heroic level three men and these women set thmselvca undauntdly to the great task before them. For 20 years the struggle wax hard, and at times doubtful. Then the splendid quali ties of your manhood, and womanhood told. as they were bound to tell, and the wealth of your extraordinary natural resources began to be shown. Now the teeming riches of mine and field and factory attest the prosperity of those who are all the stronger because of the trials and struggles through which this pros perity has come. You stand loyally to your traditions and memories; you also stand loyal ly for our great common country of today and for our common flag, which symbolizes all that Is brightest and most hopeful for the future of mankind; you faco the new age in the spirit of the age. Altko in your-' material and in your spiritual and Intellectual develop ment, you stand abreast of the foremost In the world's progress. If we treat the mighty memories of the past merely as excuses for sitting lazily down in the present, or for standing aside from the rough work of the world, then these mem ories will prove a curse Instead of a blessing. If wc, treat them as I believe we shall treat them, not as excuses -for inaction but as In centives to make us show that we are worthy of our fathers and of our fathers' fathers, then in truth the deeds of the past will not have been wasted, for tbey shall bring forth fruit a hundredfold In the present generation. Best Foreign Policy. In foreign affairs we must make up our -minds that whether we wish It or not. we arc a great people, and must play a great part In the world. Our commission in the world should be one of peace, but not the part of ARRIVES AT RALEIGH TODAY. RALEIGH, N. C. ..Oct. 19.-The President's train reached Mlllbrook, tour miles from Raleigh, on the Sea - board Air Line, at 12:55 this morn wlng. It will remain there during tho early hours and pull into Raleigh at 8:50 A. M. cravens, the peace granted contemptuously to those who purchase It by surrendering the right. No! Our voice must be fffectlve for peace, for it is raised for righteousness first and for peace only as the liand-maldcn of righteousness. We must be scrupulous in re specting the rights of tho weak and no less careful to make it ev.ldent that we do not act through fear of the strong. We must be scrupulous in doing Justice to other, and rupulous in exacting Justice for ourselves. We must beware equally of that sinister and cynical Reaching which would persuade us to dlnt-gard ethical standards in lnternatlenal relation, and of the no less hurtful folly which would stop the whole work or civiliza tion by a well-meant, but silly persistency In trying to tsupply to peoples unfitted for them those theories of government and of national action which are only suited for the most ad vanced races. In particular we must remember that In undertaking to build the Panama Canal wc have ncecearlly undertaken to police the seas at either end of it; and this means that we have a peculiar interest in the preservation of order on the coasts and islands of the Carib bean. I firmly believe that by a. little wise and generous aid we can help even tho mo6t backward of the peoples on these coasts and islands forward along the path of "Orderly lib erty, so that they can stand alnno it v Am.. cllne to give them such help, the result will be bad. 'both for them and for us. and will In the end In all probability cause us to face humiliation or bloodshed. The problems that face us abroad are im portant, but the problems that face us at home are even more Important! The extra ordinary growth of industrialism during the last half century brings every civilized peo ple face to face with the gravest social and economic Questions. This Is an age of com bination among capitalists and combination among wage-workers. It Is Idle to try to prevent such combinations. Our. efforts should be to seo that they work for the .good and not for the harm of the body politic New de vices of law are necessary from time to time In order to meet the changed and changing conditions. But after all we will do well to remember that, although tho problems to be solved change from generation .to generation! the spirit in which their solution must be attenyjted remains forever the same. This Government was formed with Its basic Idea the principle of treating each man on h!s worth as a roan, of paying no heed (Concluded on Fage fjL) :: TV -V 0iy yJjt&lHKZrU. OCK2 ' - I V J ttWOTKf HA. Oct 22 . p . I PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT'S TONER ART IN THE SOUTH. j 1 v I PEW! CHARGE HANGS OVER HIM Witness in Insurance Inquiry Suspected of Repudiat ing Signature. BECK ENTERS A PROTEST Says Hughes Is Unfair to McCurdy and Draws. Declaration From Armstrong Lobbyists' - Roost in Albany. XEW YORK. Oct. IS. The District At torney's office was called upon today by tho legislative Insurance investigating committee because of the testimony of one witness and the requirement of an lndictmenc for perjury is now being con sidered by Assistant District Attorney Rand. Tho witness in question is George B. Plunkett, an lS-year-old telephone op erator In the employment of L. W. Law rence, from whom the Mutual Life- In surance Company purchased a great deal of Its supplies of stationery. It was brought out In yesterday's testimony that among the vouchers for money charged for expenses was one for 1201, signed by George B. Plunkett and Indorsed by A. C. Fields, superintendent of tho Mutual Ufe supply department. His ldentltywas not disclosed until today, when- Plunkett was called to the stand. He testified as to his employment, and. when shown the voucher, denied that he had ever signed It. He further denied that he had ever received that amount of money from the Mutual Life Insurance Company, or that ho had rendered the company any service. Mr. Hushes asked Plunkett to write his name in Ink on a piece of paper, which he did. This and the voucher were then offered in 'evidence, and the attention of the committee was called to the similar ity of the signatures. Shortly after this incident, the sergeant-at-arms was sent to communicate with the District Attorney's office, and soon Mr. Rand appeared. He was escorted to a seat beside Chairman Armstrong, and for a time he critically examined the sig natures. All that Mr. Rand would Bay was that he had been summoned by Mr. Armstrong, and the matter was now out of the hands of the committee, and "was up to the District Attorney's office." Passage at Arms With Beck. Another feature of the Jay's Scaring was the passage at arms between Mr. Armstrong. Mr. 'Hughes and James M. Beck, counsel for President McCurdy. Mr. Beck accused Mr. Hughes of misleading the public by not following out Ills lines of Interrogation to the end, and asserted that he dropped a subject before the witness was allowed to explain. Mr. Arm strong then paid that the committee In tended to carry out Its purpose to make life Insurance safer, and that the work of the committee must not bo obstructed. The committee, he said, wanted all the Information it could get that would be helpful, and the witness had placed him self in the position he found himself by his continual evasive answers. Mr. Arm strong said further that al! witnesses would be treated with every possible courtesy. Mr. Hughes said that, if he had been guilty o lack of courtesy, it was unintentional. "Lobbyists House at Albany. William A. Carpenter, a clerk in tho supply department of the Mutual Life Insurance Company, made an excellent witness for the committee, by his frank manner and apparent desire to give what ever Information he could upon the mat ter before the committee. Mr. Carpenter was under the direction of A. C Fields, the superintendent of this department, and was very close to Mr. Fields in his "legislatl supervision" at Albany. Mr. Carpenter told of how a house had been maintained in Albany for sev eral years at the expense of the Mutual sLlfe. Mr. Fields occupied it only during legislative sessions, and on several oc casions two members of the insurance committee of the Legislature, one of them Senator Charles P. McClelland, lived at the house. Mr. Carpenter leased the house and paid for the servants and sup plies with money furnished him by the Mutual Ufe. He did not know whether these members of the insurance commit tee ever shared in the expense; he never received any money from them: but he said they might have paid Mr. Fields. No account was kept of these expenditures', and- tho nVoney was all received on vouch ers calling for disbursements for legal expenses. A house has been maintained for a period of about ten years in Albany under these conditions, but not always in the same street. Later in the day Mr. McCurdy was re called. He said he did not know that the Mutual Life's funds had been main taining this house, although he did know that Mr. Fields had rented a house to escape the risk of illness in hotels. Ho was assured Mr. Fields paid JSOO rent, Mr. Carpenter said the entire expense of running the house had been about $6500. Can't Find Controller Jordan. An attempt was made by Mr. Hughes today to cot trace of Thomas D. Jordan. former controller of the Equitable Life Assurance Soclctv. whom he desires to question about the mysterious $555,000 loan. Frank B. Jordan was called under a sub- pena and he said he saw his father last Labor day. He did not know then that he was going away, and did not know where lie was now. Under persistent questioning by Mr. Hughes, young Jordan saia no mall was forwarded to his father and that he did not know whether his father or mother was living or dead. Edgar W. Rogers, a clerk for L. W. Lawrence & Co., was called and was rep resented by John D. Stancbfleld. Rogers Is also the nresident of the Globe Print ing Company. He was shown the Plunk ett voucher and said be was of the opin ion that the signature on the voucher and that written by Plunkett on the stand were identical. He did not recognize either of them definitely as the signature of Plunkett. A voucher drawn In December, 1502, ror tt&ST.LO and signed by Rogers, was charged to legal services of the Mutual Life, but Rogers could not remember the circum stances of a transaction so far back. He acknowledged that It bore his signature and that he must have received the money, but for what it was disbursed lie could not remember. The checks for which both Plunkett's and Rogers' vouchers wero signed were ordered to be produced, and they will bo presented at a later session of the committee. What McCurdy Does Not Know. Toward the close of the day's session Mr. McCurdy was being- interrogated on the trust companies with which the Mutual Life Insurance Company Is con nected and the subsidiary companies of tho Mutual Life, and was still on tho stand when adournment was taken. Mr. McCurdy testified that the firm of Sewell & Pierce was counsel for the Mutual jCompany before Mr. Pierce wns Superintendent of Insurance. He said that he knew nothing- about a voucher for the payment of $1067. by Edcar w. ogers. in December. 1302, for legal uf auuui ovcrai u uter voucn ers for a similar purpose drawn ' others. He declared he knew nothing about special notices In the newspa pers, c. E. Smith and Walter Sullivan had charg-e of the advertising. He was unable to say that tho advertising cov ered the press notices. Ho said he knew nothing: of any moneys being ex pended for tho' Insertion in the news-. papers of reports of this investigation" oi- any reports favorable to the com pany. Son-in-Law Thebaud's Commission. Mr. McCurdy denied that he abolished free-lance agents In the aietropolltan district, and referred such agents wltll their business to C IL Raymond & Co., after Louis A. Thebaud became a part ner in that Arm It was brought out that Mr. Thebaud was in charge of tho department of agents that handled the exceptionally large risks beforo he became a partner. This department was known as the "executive special" departmc-nr. Spe cial books wero kept I - tblj depart ment, and witness thout-t that any in terest. 1n the business Mr. Thebaf d might have had was on the regular commission basis. He did no; knc, however, that Thebaud did have any interest. Mr. McCurdy said he did tiot know that this business was turned over to C H. Raymond & Co. when Mr. Thebaud entered that firm. "Does any officer of the company, in cluding yourself, have any commission on business written as well as the agent?" asked Mr. Hughes. "No." "Did you get any share of your son's commission on foreign business?" "No, sir; not a cent." "Or of your son-in-law's commission?' "None whatever." Furniture Xot extravagant. "You may havo seen statements in the press accusing- the Mutual of gical extravagance In furnishing your ofilce. You have now an opportunity to make as full an explanation as you wish," said Mr. Hughes. Mr. McCurdy declared that there were many erroneous statements in the press nbout the Mutual. Ho said that the fur niture and fittings of his office wero in every respect proper and fitting. .The company published a book with photo graphs of nearly every room and otllco In the building- except tho wine-cellar, he said; they could not photograph that, because it did not exist. Mr. Hughes asked why applicants for loans on policies to tho home, ofilce were referred to C H. Raymond & Co. Mr. McCurdy said they wero not, but were referred to the policy department. "If you wish to Imply: 'Docs anyone re ceive any commission on loans on policies,' I would answer distinctly no," he said. "But policyholders write to mo and say they are referred, on asking loans, to C. IL Raymond & Co.." said Mr. Hughes. "I doubt It. There may be isolated cases." Taking up the matter of the real estate holdings of the company, the witness was asked where he made his Winter resi dence. He said It was the Grosevenor apartment In Fifth avenue. This house is owned by the Mutual Life. A statement of the return on the Investment in the apartment was asked for and'Mr. Hughes was about to the leave the subject when Mr. Beck, counsel for the Mutual, pro tested and said it was not fair to Mr. McCurdy to lead up to his occupancy of an apartment In the building and then not give him the opportunity to testify as to whether he paid a fair rental for IL Beck Draws Out Declaration. "Without intending to do so, no doubt. Mr. Hughes." said Mr. Beck, "you fre quently lead up to a point where It gives tConcluded on Page 5: WHO QUITS WITCH Scandal Over Pipe Line Leads to -Tender of Resigna ' tion of Bidder. REFUSES TO GIVE REASONS Bidders Who Lost to Member of the Board Declare They Have Been Buncoed " and Express . .a Their Disgust. LADD'S BIG TITE CONTRACTS. Pipe contracts awarded to the Os wego Iron Works, of which William. M. Ladd la president, by, the City Water Board, of which Mr. Ladd Is a leading member, in the last two and one-half years, as follows: April 8. 100.t '. j S 32.353 September 1-4. 10O4 25.737 April 15, 1005 71.07tS October 10. 1005 152.8S8 Total $303,134 In the same period two other pipe contracts have been let, both to the United States Castiron Pipe & Foundry Company, of Chicago, as fol lows: January IS. 1004 5C0.432 November 3. 1001 17.100 TotaT .177,332 W. M. Ladd has tendered to Mayor Lane his resignation from the City Water Board, apparently in response to the com plaint that as a member of that board he could not legally receive pipe contracts from It for his Oswego Iron Works, though he said last night that he had offered his resignation Monday, which was be fore the complaint burst out. Mayor Lane refused to discuss the mat ter yesterday, so that It could not be learned whether he would presa Mr. Ladd to stay on the board. Mr. Ladd himself refused to state the reasons for his with drawal, saying he preferred that Mayor Lane make them public. Violated, the Charter. Mr. Ladd is president of the Oregon Iron & Steel Works, which received a $152,553 contract from the Water Board .for water pipe last Monday, and which nas received several other contracts from the same board in the last three years, in clear violation of the city charter. which makes it unlawful for a member of the board or any officer of tho city to receive a contract from the municipal ity. Of the sl3y pipe contracts let by the Water Board in the last 2& years, four were awarded to the Oswego plant, and In two of the four awards the Oswego bids were higher than competitors, leav ing only two contracts fairly won by 'the Oregon Iron & Steel Works, which owns the Oswego plant and whose presi dent Is William M. Ladd. x Ladd Gets Heavy Contracts. Of the total expenditures for pipe, au thorized by the Water Board in the 2 year period, the Ladd plant has secured J303.CC0. or SO per cent, and the United States Cast Iron Pipe & Foundry Com pany, winner of the two other contracts, $74,000, or 20 per cent. The contract let to the Ladd company W. X. LADD. WHO HAS RESIGNED In September, 1204. for $25,737, was won fairly by the United States Cast Iron & Foundry Company, for the lattcr's bid was $37 less than that of the Oswego, works, just as tho bids of the Martin Pipe & -Foundry Company for the cast iron pipe contract, awarded to the Ladd works last Monday, was some $1S0) lower. The Water Board In September, 1S04. car ried Sv motion to notify the United States Company .that its bid would be accepted, providing" that company would pay the siIIIhis&BriB'' HHiIIBHhbHbIIIIhHsiIIIIH cost of Inspecting the pipe at the foundry. The company surprised the board by agreeing to pay that cost; whereupon the Water Board, several days later, rescinded the motion ana let the contract to the Oregon Iron & Steel Works, on' the ground that an award to the United States Company would bo unfair to the other outside bidders, who had not been allowed the same opportunity to Include the in spection expense In their bids. These facts are displayed In the city records. City Has Jfo Inspector at Oswego. As to the Inspection of pipe at the foundry. It Is notorious that the city has no inspector at tho Oswego plant, yet the Water Board has been insisting that pipe made at outside foundries shall bo examined by the city's in spectors, before it shall be accepted. ''Buncoed" Is what the outside bfd d'ers.aay of themselves In discussing the Monday award to the Oswego works Their representatives, one and all declare that never again will they bid on water pipe for Portland, at least not until tho re shall be a fair deal re form. Among- those who expressed their disgust were J. S. Mammerslough, representing- Joseph T. Ryerson & Son, Chicago; John Batcher, representing the Shaw-Batcher Company, Sacramen to; Field, representing the RIsdon Iron Works, San Francisco; Vanderburs, representing- the . New Jersey Pipe Company. All these men have shaken the dust of Portland from their feet, saying they don't care if they never come back. Disgusted Bidders Say Bunco. Two bunches of disgusted bidders are in the "buncoed" class, one o'f them containing those who bid on steel pipe; the other, those who bid on castiron pipe. The steel men put in bids' be tween $35,000 and $50,000 lower than the castiron bid of the Oswego works, while the Martin Pipe &. Foundry Com pany, of San Francisco, bidding- on cast iron, was some $1800 under the Oswego bid. The Oswego plant makes, only-cast-iron pipe, and because the steel-pipe men had no show before the Water Board, they suspect that they were frozen out for some thrifty reason. One of them said last Monday, before de parture, that he was reliably informed the Oswego company could not fill the contract, because of Its small facilities, and that it had agreed to whack up the business with the United States Castiron Pipe & Foundry Company. In asmuch as tho local foundry has been boasting that it was a home Industry, he did not see that its claim for pat ronage on that score was valid. Be sides, the docal company Imported all Its plglrOn for tho pipes from Scotland and Alabama and did not use Oregon ore. Steel Men Dispute Claim: The steel men vigorously dispute the claim of the castiron men that cast iron plpo is better Than steel-riveted. J. R. Bowles, local representative of the Shaw-Batcher Company, Sacra ' men to, said that the steel-pipe bid of his firm was $50,000 less than, the- cast iron bid of the Oswego works, and that the money saved In steel pipe, com pounded at 5 per cent Interest, would renew the pipe every 20 years, though tho actual life of steel pipe was much more than that length of time. He said that the biggest cities in the world were using steel water-pipe both for supply and service mains in preference to castiron. and cited that in San Francisco at this time a 48-lnch steel pipe was being laid In Harrison street. As for the repairs which have been necessary in the Bull Run steel-plpo line, he pointed out that many more re pairs had been necessary in the cast iron mains in the city, and referred to the many breaks that bad occurred. Promise Arizona Single Statehood. ADAMMA. Ariz.. Oct. IS. The Congres- AS MEMBER OF WATER BOARD. slonal party, after Inspecting the great petrified forests here today, visited. Flag staC. Winslow and Holbrook In turn. In an address to the pupils of the Flagstaff Normal School. Representative Tawney said the vote of the party upon Its re turn would be satisfactory to both Arizona and New Mexico. Representative Adams spoke encouragingly for single statehood at Winslow. At -Holbrook, Representative Minor assured the citizens that Arizona would have the vote of Congress for ad mission in a short while. SLANDERER SOON PIT TO SILENCE Sensational Incident at Ban quet to Taft Party v in Manila. DEEP INSULT TO WOMAN Rough Rider Governor of Snmni Smashes Wineglass In Filipino Blackguard's Face and Chastises Him. SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 13.-(Spec!al.) The Army people who arrived today on the transport Sherman bring from Manila a hitherto unpublished story of the visit of the Taft party to Manila, The hero is Captain George Curry, formerly one of Roosevelt's Rough Riders, now Governor of Samar. The villain is Cruz Herrera, president of Manila's Municipal Board. Herrera gave a banquet at his house In honor of the distinguished visitors. Sec retary of War Taft, Miss Alice Roosevelt and the majority of thoso who made up tho Secretary's party wero there. Every thing went along beautifully until the toast stage was reached. The host Is said to have paid liberal attention to his -rflno glass, and by tho time it came for him to propose a toast he was laboring under the handicap of a large-sized jag-. , Curry Stops His Slanders. To the astonishment of his guests. Herreras eloquence took the form of an apparently studied Insult to tho women of America. He did not get very far when Captain George Curry, in the words of an officer who returned on the Sherman, "pasted him In the face with a glass of champagne." Curry throw glass and all. and would have followed his act of pro test by .further physical demonstration, but for the Interference of other guests. Thrashed on the Street. That ended tho banquet, but Captain Curry was not satisfied. A little later. It Is said, he saw Herrera riding In his carriage. Curry ordered the coachman to stop. He then pulled Herrera out of the rig and the Governor of Samar gave the president of the Municipal Board a thrashing, which, for vigorous complete ness. Is said to rank with what Togo did tojthe Russian fleet. Wright's Fierce Denunciation. When Herrera recovered, he Is said to (Concluded on Page 4.) CONTENTS TOpAY'S PAPER The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature 51 dep.; minimum. 32. Precipitation, none. TODAY'S Fair and continued cool. North to east winds. Foreign. Release of captured British officers denied Page 4. China, will hold army maneuvers of modern style. Page 4. Cuban merchants fear Phllipplno compe tition. Page 2. National. President Roosevelt starts on Southern tout and Is received with enthusiasm at Rich mond. Page 1. Captain Carter accuses General Otis and Army officers of conspiracy against him. Page 2. Interstate Commission gets evidence against private car lines. Page 3. Shont.o say much progress Is being made or canal. Page 3. Beef trust indictment for monopoly falls conspiracy charge stands. Page 3. Politics. Philadelphia machine orators speak at great meeting. Page 2. Domestic Army officers returning from Manila tell of sensational incident of Taft's visit. Page 1. Pittsburg bank falls through loans to poli ticians and cashier commits suicide. Page 2. Former officer of asphalt trust admits Venezuela, rebels received aid. Page 3. Witness in Insurance inquiry may be In dicted, for perjury- Page 1. Tornadoes in Illinois and Oklahoma cause loss of life. Page 4. Duvall explains . cause of his wife's bigamy chaige. Page5. Sport. Willamette University defeats Pullman Giants by score of 11 to 0. Page 7. Pacific Coast scores: San Francisco 4, Port land 2; Seattle 3, Oakland 1; Los Angeles 6, Tacoma 4. Page 7. McGorern knocks out Murphy in one round. Page 7. Pacific Coast. Settlers protest on terms insisted upon by Deschutes irrigation project. Page 6. Tacoma theater leased by Portland women Is under boycott. Page S. Congregatlonallsts of Oregon favor closer union with other churches. Page 0. Washington Ilquordealers plan campaign gainst local option. Page 10. Capture of smuggling schooner from San Diego. Cal., by Mexican authorities. Page C. General Constant Williams says his Army canteen argument is misconstrued by Vancouver Councilmen. Page 0. Commercial and Marine. "Unsettled condition of. city butter prices. Page 13. JTew hopgrowers association formed Pago 15. Almost banana famine at San Francisco. P.age 13. Light wheat movement causes higher prlcet at Chicago. Page 15. Stock market sagging. Page 15. Portland and Vicinity. Car shortage reported for the lumber traffic Page 11. Two Socialists convicted of selling theit literature without a license. Page 14. Greek shoots a countryman, takes refuse under the docks and eludes posse In pur suit. Page 10. Professor Zueblln declares that Hill Is tha bejieflclary of the Northwest, not the benefactor. Page 11- rcrestry building is ready to be delivered to the city. Page 14. Application for right of way through Port lanU streets for electric line to Rosaburg believed to be In Interest of Gould. Page 10. Railway to Nehalem and Tillamook Is now assured. Page 16. W. M. Ladd resigns from the Water Board Pace 1.