THE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, APEHi U, 1906. HARP ON RAILRQRDS Southerner Opposes Southern Mail Subsidy. HOUSE LOVES ITS PASSES Randall Accuses Committee or Strangling Bill Forbidding Them. Towno Grows Eloquent on Jamcstovrn Exposition. "WASHINGTON, April 10. For seven hours today the House had under consid eration the postoffice appropriation bill, but in only a few instances were the pro visions considered. During the debate on the special appropriation for railway mall pay, bitter words were exchanged between' .Representatives irom .worm -aronna, Arkansas and Kentucky, but all were within the rules of the House. A humor ous speech was made by J. Adam Bedc (Minn.) and Charles A- Towno (New Tork) spoke In behalf of the Jamestown Exposition. Both Bedo and Towne repre sented the Duluth district in Minnesota in other Congresses. They were warmy congratulated on their speeches. Anti-Pass Bill Stranded. Johnson (S. C.) said that notwithstand ing the receipt of many letters from con stituents of his. whose judgment he ro spects. he would be compelled to antago nize the special mall subsidy carried by tho bill in favor of certain lines of rail roads in tho South and West. Randell (Tex.) addressed tho House on his bill prohibiting carriers from giving Congressmen or any judge of any Fed eral court any free pass or anything of value. Ho said he had to admit that it was being "strangled" in the judiciary committee, and that tho Speaker had re fused lUm consideration. Gaines (Tenn.) interrupted to ask what had occurred in the Judiciary committee regarding Randcll's bill. Tho latter said tho action of the committee was execu tive, but he admitted that tho vote on tho bill stood 6 to 6. all tho Democrats on the committee voting for the measure, with ono Republican. Towno Booms Jamestown. Mr. Towno declared it would bo difficult to overestimate tho significance of the celebration of the landing at Jamestown of tho first permanent English-speaking colony on tills hemisphere. Tho object Recmed to him so worthy and Important as to Justify the Government in partici pating in commemoration of tho event. In his remarks he said: Never lias a period of nimllar duration witnessed such transformation and such progress as that whose close Is to be so Appropriately .commemorated at Jamestown in May of the coming year. In military organization and equipment, la naval archi tecture and armament, and In. the whole domain oC Industry, it would be Impossible to cite a parallel. ICor could there be found a place Jn all America so appropriate to an Impressive demonstration of this mar velous change as the fair domain of old Vlrninla. Let us, therefore, when the Spriac. 'shall come again, gather In old Vlrglnt& abetg the earliest altar erected to our clvlo wersMfr 1b this bravo new world, and there. Amerieaat all, take upon our lips again tho h'eJy aatal vows of our peculiar .tiatlonaUty. strong la J file l-opo and resolute In the purpose that. Is fthr words of John Adams to Thomas Jeffer. sc.. "our pure, virtuous, publlc-enlrlted. fed erative republic ahall last forever, govern the globe and Introduce tho perfection or man. Bcdo Would Divide- Texas. Marcus A. Smith, Delegate from Ari zona, rose, not to make a speech, he said, on the seal-herd situation, but read a poem by an Arizona woman, Charlotte M. Hail, entitled, "Arizona," in favor of statehood for Arizona. Without regard to the merits of tho bill, Bede (Minnesota) arranged a text for a speech brilliant In its humor, by having read a resolution creating four states out of the State of Texas. At 5:39 the commltteo rose and the House at B:23 adjourned until tomorrow at 11 o'clock. CRAMP TALKS FOIt SUBSIDY Great Difference In Cost or Scotch and American Sldps. WASHINGTON. April lO.-The expected testimony before the House commltteo on merchant marine- and fisheries regarding tho cost of American steel at home and abroad was forthcoming today, when E. S. Cramp, of the Cramp shipbuilding firm, testified at length in favor of the ship subsidy bill. There was at present, he aid. absolutely no difference between the foreign and domestic price of steel. This statement made the steel question one of brief discussion. As to the cost of building ships in this country and sibroad. he gavo an illustra tion by reciting the bids which were re cently made on a tank, ship of tho larg est type. Tho successful bidder was a Scotch firm, which constructed the vessel for $613,000. Tho lowest American bid was $l.te4.00O. In ten years. Mr. Cramp said, this Gov ernment had expended 511,000.000 In pur chasing foreign merchant ships for war purposes, and tho ships thus acquired had been "rotten." Under the subsldv bill, ho maintained that in ten years, at a cost to tho Government of somcthlnc v-,vw.wv. u. Kreaier tonnage win havo run unjuui-u .ma me snips will bo good nes Charles Tt TTntiRonm net -r . . . itiaiuciu Ui. iiic Eastern SlllllhllilfUnr- Vimn.,.. --- , - " jjjxtvuea 3Mi ( ramn In fovnr nf flm nuu ins iirm naa great dif ficulty In obtaining sufficient workmen notwithstanding that the wages paid were at least to rer cent h!ehr Vidt in -tr,. . pean shipyards. His firm employs 6000 AVIIiL NOT ABANDON OFFICE Quartermaster to Bemain at Port land Without Changed , OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU. Washington. April 10. Senator Fulton today again called on the Quartermaster-General to ascertain whether there is any intention of abandoning the office df purchasing- Quartermaster at Portland, as has been repeatedly rumored. He was assured that no such change is contemplated and was told in the most positive terms that that office would be continued in the future as It had been Jn the past. Marines Start for Philippines. "WASHINGTON. April 10. More than 200 marines under command of Captain J. N. "Wright started from Washington Ik today for San Francisco. Ono hundred I marines from Norfolk, Ya. and IX from ban Francisco will Join the party, and ail -will sail for Manila on a United States transport. April 1C. These men .will re lieve 3 marines now in the Philippines. woo win rcacn &an TTanclsco about June 6. NerUmcjtt Postal Affairs. ORBQpNlAN NEWS BUREAU,' "Washington. April 19. Rural routes ordered established May 17: Oregon Dundee. Yamhill County, Toute 1. population 3S2. houses 85. "Washington Park, Whitman County, route 1, population 460, houses 102: Spokane. Spokane County, route S. population 840, houses 210. Frank Craig- baa been appointed reg ular, Charles Moody substitute, rural carriers, route 1. at Richland, Or. Charles N. Rogers has been appoint ed Postmaster at Suramcrvlllc, Or., vice Ed McCowcl, resigned. Navy Must Economize Coal. "WASHINGTON. April lO.-Cencral or ders have gone out to naval commanders in charge of warships directing tho ob servance of the strictest possible economy in the use of coal, on account of the de ficiency in the coal appropriation for the Navy. WOULD CALL OLD BOARD 3Iine Operators Offer Alternative Plan of Arbitration. NEW TORK. April 10. Tho anthracite operators at their conference with the United Mlncworkcrs here today declined the proposition to have the conciliation board arbitrate all grievances submitted by the wageworkers and made a counter proposition that the commission appoint ed by President Roosevelt in 1302 be re quired to decide whether any changes in conditions in the hard-coal region have oc curred which require that the award of the commission should be modified. The rolneowners limited the Inquiry to two grievances wages and a method for the adjustment of complaints. The miners have taken the proposal under considera tion. In connection with today's conference, George F. Baer. chairman of the mine owners subcommittee, n.a'de public a let ter sent to the committee by the Inde pendent operators in which they gave their views and their firm conviction that any "agreement to arbitrate with tho United Mlncworkcrs will be an unjustifia ble surrender to anarchy and mob vio lence." Tho letter camo as a great sur prise to the miners, and did not tend to bring tho contending parties closer to gether. Offer of Operators. Tho meeting today was very brief, and it later was announced that another meet ing would bo held on Thursday. The an swer of the operators was made public. It is as follows: The Anthracite Coal Comxnbwion of V.KC should be requested to reconvene and con sider whether .ny circumstances have arisen rtnee April 1, 1MB. which would Justify a modification of Its award of that date. In re spect only to the following subjects: FlrM Wages. Second Ae to tho adjustment of complaints through th4 conciliation board or otherwise. Any new award of tho Commlanlon shall bo binding for a period of three years. Your proposal, a we understand It, oven involves tho submission by us of tho question of our making an agreement with tho United Mlncworktrs of America to the exclusion of nonunion workers a question which we did not nubmlt to tho Anthracite Strike Commis sion for reasons then stated, in which wo were fully Justified by that commission. Every question that you have presented was. In some form or other, after careful in vestigations passed upon by the Anthracite Strike Commission a commission composed of disinterested- parties. The award It made has been faithfully lived up to. Although the duration of the award was limited to April 1, 1000. It was our expectation and that of the public that tbo principles upon which it was made would be permanent and continu ing. That expectation was Justified, because the Commission In Us hearings and In Its award was guided' by the President' cxpresse desire that It should "endeavor to establish the relations between the wageworkers and employers In tbo anthracite coal fields on a Jmt and permanent basis." ' We cannot assent to reopen the fundament al questions decided by the Anthracite Strike Cesiaiilon. They havo formulated principles and rules of right to govern the relations be tween employes and employer which hav re ceived the hearty absent of all good citizens of the land. Moreover, the decision of these question necessarily Involved the further and most Im portant one of all, 'that 1. Jncrnae in the price of coal to the consuming public. A board of arbitration connlstlng ocdy of your rep resentatives and ours would hardly be con eidered by the public a proper one to pa on this question. The reply is signed by George F. Baer. W. H. Trucsdale. J. B. Kerr, David Will cox, MorriB "Williams. E. B. Thomas. J. I. Cake, committee. New Tork, April 9, 1906. 3ray Reduce or IlaLsc "Wajjcs. After tho proposal bad been read. Pres ident Mitchell asked whether under tho plan the anthracite operators would havo the privilege of asking the commission to reduce present wages, and he was in formed by one of the coal presidents that they would. In reply to another question ho was told that, if the operators plan is accepted, the first offer of the coal com panies to renew and continue for three years the award of the Strike Commission would collapse. Mr. Mitchell did not know that tho in dependent operators had sent a communi cation to the presidents of tho coal-carrying railroads opposing arbitration. He first learned It after returning to his head quarters at the Ashland House, but would not comment on it at this time. Calls Mlncworkcrs Anarchists. The letter expressed the conviction of the Independent operators that any agree ment to arbitrate with tbo miners would bo an unjustifiable surrender to anarchy and mob violence The letter contained the following: We contend that it would be better that our mines shall lie idle for years than that we should accede to the highwayman-like de mands of an organization that lack either the wifch or the ability to restrain Its members from acts of violence that would dltgr&cc the rouch-deeplsed Rus&la. The Independents wrote that, if the op erators committee could decide, in defer ence to public opinion, upon some offer of arbitration, that arbitration should be by the same body that met in 1902 and 1903, and that there should be no submission of questions already adjudicated, like the closed shop, collection of dues or the sug gestion of any term less than five years during which the award shall be binding. Tho independents also suggested that any Increase in the cost of production could be added at once to the market price of coal. On this point the letter said: It consumers (naturally-, perhaps, thinking only of their own comfort and convenience) are so Indifferent to the demands of law and order as to compel ue to abandon a contest for right and decent government then we are ready, tf necessary, to uxdertake they should pay the cort of the surrender that they com set This letter Is signed for the Anthracite Coal Operators Association by XL S. Ash ley, president, and IL Kingsbury, .secre tary. Proposed Arbitration Board. The Anthracite Strike Commission, to which the operators propose to submit the dispute, was composed of: Judge George Gray. United States Circuit Court. Wilmington. Del,: Carroll l. Wright. ex-United States Commissioner of Labor and now President of Clark College; Brigadier General John M. Wilson, retired. 1'. S. A Washington. D C; Bishop John X Spalding. Peoria; Edgar E. Clark. Cedar Rapids. la, grand chief of the Order of Railway Conduc tors: Thomas II. Watklsa. Scrsntcn. Fx, formerly an anthracite coal operator, but sow 'a large producer of soft ceal la Central Penn ey Ivan lx; Edward "W. Parker, expert statis tician. Washington. Recacr Is Renominated. . IilNCOLN, KanA April 10. W. A. Reedcr was nominated here today for Congress by tiic Republicans of the Sixth district. BLftMEDNTHEDEnD Valencia Commission Censures Only Captain Johnson. SEA WAS QUITE SMOOTH Much Testimony to Provo This, bat Question Is Not Decided Whether the Queen and Topcka Could Scnd-Boats. SEATTLE, "Wash., April 10. A special dispatch from tho "Washington corre spondent of the Post-Intelligencer sum marizes the report of tho commission sent by the President to inquire Into-the Valencia wreck. The full report of tho commission has not yet been published. After a protracted consideration of the disaster in which more than 1(0 men. women and children lost their lives off Cape Beale last January, tho Valencia. Commission has failed to fix the responsi bility for that heart-rending event. The dead captain of the Ill-fated steamer Is blamed to a degrco for tbo striking of tho vessel, but the failure to rescue the scores of human beings who clung to the wreck for days between -lifo and a watery grave must remain forever a sub ject of Individual discussion, for all tbo light that is thrown upon tho matter- by these commissioners. The commissioners finished their la bors nearly a week ago. and the report, which they have received from tho print er, will be given to tho public when they get ready. Extraordinary measures have been taken to guard the report at pres ent. Ono of the commissioners said to day that they wished to havo the re port printed in full, and it must be seat by mall to the several thousand aewapa pers covered by the Associated Free and other news agencies. Tho following is given as a brief sum mary of tho commission report: First Captain Johnson, the master, aw dead, overran his oocrto oa account of mis takes In navigation. Proper cars would bars revealed to him his whereabouts. Second Vessels -cro alow In reaching lb VI vicinity of the wreck, but wire communica tion was Interrupted and sot enough steamers were quickly available at the time. No tugs or other comparatively light-draft veaU were pent to the scene. Third Broadly speaking, tho Valencia ans wered the requirement of tbo law In regard to 1 If waving appliance Fourth Parties who got ashore from the wreck were jvit censurable fur failure to de vise means to help the remaining passen gers to cscasc. Fifth The report Is wobbly oa tho question of the responsibility of rescue parti en sent to the wreck, and the com million finally strad dles this Important question. There la much testimony that the sea. was comparatively smooth during the time the Qnten and To peka were In the vicinity of the wreck, but there Is a Question whether it was jxsblo to send boats. Officers on board the riearnfT Qaeen are blamed for the departure of the vest el for Victoria. The Pacific Coast Company, a a company, is not censured or blamed In any way. The report will also contain recom mendations for various new aids to navi gation on the North Coast, all or most of which were published In tho prelim Inary report of the commission. PRESENTS TOR SWEETHEARTS Oregon Sailors "Were Xot in tho Smuggling Bublncs. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.. April 10. Through tho prompt action of Acting Customs Collector William B. Hamil ton, 52 packages of goods landed from tho United States battleship Oregon, to be transported to the East were seized today while in transit in custody of "Wells, Fargo & Co.s Express. A partial examination was made by Appraiser Dare, sufficient to kIiow that the rumor of smuggling was al together unfounded. There wore dross suitcases, apple boxes, small telescope baskets and other packages of like size, and they were found to contain souvenirs of the voyage addressed to the wives. Misters and daughters and friends of the officers and crew of the Oregon, all of them residing in the East. It is expected that the Secretary of the Treasury, when put in possession of the facta by Appraiser Dare, will order the goods released and forward ed to their addresses. Smuggled Pearls From Mexico. SAN FRANCISCO. April 10. A com plaint was issued today by United Slates Commissioner J. P. Brown, charging Mig uel 1. Comejo. a Mexican, with smug gling into San Francteco 530(0 worth of pearl. The prisoner is alleged to have come from Mexico on the steamer Cura coa. March 90. Some time later the sale of part of the jewels to local jewelers and attempts to dispose of others of them brought the matter to the attention of the Treasury Department. INDIANS AT THE POLLS. Oregon Attorney-General Gives His Opinion Regarding Part Blood. SALEM. Or.. April .10. Answering ques tions propounded by M. F. Parker, of the Klamath Indian agency. Attorney-General Crawford today issued the following opinion: Replying to yours of the 4th lrt. relative to tho status of so-called Indtass. saraely. half, quarter, etc. blood, at the poUi. permit me to say that 'the question really Is whether the are considered Indians or whiles, and if held to be Indians, then they have the right to vow If they have severed their tribal rela tions nad have adopted ths habits of civiliza tion, or If they have received allotments cf land under the United States allotment laws relative to Isdtaaa. My oplalon to J AV Ev ans, asxlstaat superintendent of the Klam ath Indian reservation, under date March 4. I9CC answers the queatloa asd holds, la sub stance, that ail Indians who have received land by allotment are citizens of the Vnlted States, and entitled to ths right to vote, to gether with sit other right, privileges aad Im munities ci such citizens, etc. aad I died authorities la said opinion which cover ths point. As to the ctatus of one-fourth bloods aad half-bloods. I am of the opinion that a one fourth blood would be considered a wb:: perwoa aad a cltlien. aad entitled to vote, while a half-blood. If his mother was aa In dian wotaaa and his father a white man. would be considered aa Indian, the child taking the states of Its mother. I havo sot time to thoroughly examine this matter, but la the case of United States vi. Sanders. United States. S7 Federal Cases. SCtt. SOI. It U held a child partakes of the conditions of the mother, aad If the mother is an Inotau. the child will be so ooaddered within the provisions of the act of 1S34. sec tion 2. declaring that the lava of the United States for the puslahsaesl of crime In the Indian Territory shall sot extend to the crimes comssHted by one ladsaa sgalntt the person or property of another. Tho child of a white wotnaa by aa Indian father Shan, for the purposes or that act be deemed ef the whltn race, the conditions of the mother and sot the quantum of Indian blood In the veins dstersBlnlsg the coB41Uon or the oScprtac. thbt rtBard foUowlag the cosaaaoB-law rale, which wa rrwe4 frsm tbe-cJrtl 'law. 'Is Ike sac 1 re, CissHU UsK4 JNrtac Fetferal. 3E6, the eevrt hsMs tsat "a per soa of feaif waits ad half Ibb Mood la not a wotts ptnea wttals tse meaalfig of this pferasa as wed la Um natBrallxatlon Iwx. bt aa. I&Alaa." la the Vlrrtsl code. ec- Uca it U jKorMed tsat "eTery person, sot a colored persos. fcarisg oae-fourth or mors c; Iadlaa blood, fcall be dressct an lodlas. Howrrer, ocr ctatste costala bo protridocs upon the qvestios. a&4 there fere I am of the opinion that tbo coarts wceM bold that asr penraa bo fcas t&aa oaeialf Indian Mod would be coolicrfd a white r-mon. Th state of Indians, has held that all perracs recognized as Indiana by te Indiana ibets- -lres sad who are tasiprd sj roca by birth. education ana language aad have three-eighths Indian blood, are Indians. Is Keith vs. United States. ZS Partite. 207. S Oklahoma. 46, It U keid that a persca that vaa bora from a asaxrlage fcctarcea a whito father adopted Into aa Isdiaa tribe asd a. half-breed woman is not aa IsdUa wlthht the meaning of the act of September S. 1&7. granting land to Indians not residing on the rcjcrvatioa. Complaint "Will Not Be Pressed.' ABERDEEN, "Wash, April 19. 5pccial.) B. Oppcnhelmer, an ex-traveling man. who was arrested on the charge of em bezzlement and found guilty, the Supreme Court, however, sending the ease back for retrial, has been released on motion of the District Attorney. Tho amount Involved was $150. but it will cose the county to settle the bill. Tho complaint was made by John J. Carney, of the Herald, between Oppen heimer and whom a difficulty existed in getting out a special edition of the Her ald. Carney claimed tho money as col lected and not divided. MAY BE OUTLAWS" VICTIM WKLLi - KNOWN" BAKER ClTiT HORSEBUYER DISAPPEARS. No Trace of J. B. SlkK-'AMw KeWu Seen Mm OsCarte'ck-. jgr lraary. i7. BAKXR CI IT.. Or-. Aprti .M. (Special.) Far acre wtaka I. JB. Mer, a wcll kHswa tereyer'ef :t4rc!ty. has been mining. Hlc vKe beeves that he has beea Murdered by tho outlaws known to Hifect Us WHw Creek country, near Oatoria. SKar disappeared February . with Bariy W.Q in cash on his person. His wife was in Colorado visiting her pother at the time, and received a letter from him, dated February 3, saying that he was starting for Ontario, to purchase some horses- at Willow Creek. It has not been learned who he was to deal with. Slier had no family trouble and was not a drinking man. He was about 45 years of age. At the time he disappeared. Slier had a draft for tllQ) In tnc Citizens National Bank awaiting his order. This has been untouched. No one believes that he vol untarily disappeared. The foul-play the ory is generally accepted. His disappear ance has been kept very quiet by the officers, who aro searching for him. and just leaked out today. Officers admit that they have been un able to traco Slier farther than Ontario. How he left Ontario is a mystery. He did not leavo on a train and the authori ties have not learned where he secured a horse, although his saddle, which he took with him to Ontario, cannot be found. His wife is grief-stricken and declares that she Is certain he was murdered. TRIED TO SAVE HIS BOG Malheur 3Ian Killed on Railway Bridge Across the Snake. BOISE, Idaho. April 10. -Virgil "Wil son, of Malheur. Or., lost his life In the Snake River, near Ontario yesterday. Ho was crossing the river on the rail way bridge, accompanied by a dog. A train camo along and he had difficulty In gqttlng the dog out of the way. Whether he lost his footing and fell or was struck by the' train could not bo determined by persons who wit nessed the accident from a distance. His body has not been recovered. DEAD OF THE NORTHWEST John Hanson. NEWBERG. Or.. April 10.-John Han son, of this city, died this morning at 4 o'clock, at the homo of his daughter. Mrs. T. 11. Gardner. Death was due to advanced years, bis age being SS. Mr. Hanson has been a resident of Ore gon since 1SS0. He left the following children. Elwood Hanson, of Minneap olis; Silas Hanson, of Newberg: E. C and PAINS IN MY BACK Mrs. A. W. Switzer, of Toronto, Can., who suffered intensely from inflammation of the kidneys and bladder, cured by Warner's Safe Cure. A trial bottle of Warner's Safe Cure, the great kidney and bladder cure, sent ABSOLUTELY FREE to every reader of The Oregonian who suffers from, kidney, liver, bladder or blood disease. It Was My Kidneys Thousands of men and women have kidney disease and do not know it until it is too late. lmnmnmnmnmnmnn'-''-xV-?Vnmnmml ImnTnTnTnTnTnTnTnTnTnTnTnTn: c-:wf.-nTnTnTnTnF ImnmnmnmnmnmmY :V W: v3nmnmt llmmmmmmmmmmyMliB UMw.'.V.yA MHnmnmnmnmnC nmnmnmnmnmnmVSnml mnmnmnmnmnmnl&mn:''nmnml omnmnmnmnmnmmi :t4nmm( mnmnmnmnmnmmV iinmnnf mmmfllmW (mnmnmnmnmnnmnKV omnmnl nwmnmnmnmnmnmna06 . ..--x-xKB nnmnmnmnmnmnmnmnP-iinmnmnH InmnmnmnmnmnPvOnmnmnmV MRS. A. W. SWITZER. IF IN DOUBT MAKE THIS TEST: Put some urine in a glass: after it stands twenty-four hears, if yea, Aad a red dish, brick-dust sedlascnt in It. or particles floating In the urine, or the uriae is milky or cloudy, you will know yonr kidneys arc In a diseased condition aad are unable to perform tneir work: the result will be the bladder aad urlaary er gans will become Inflamed, uric add will poison the blood, the stomach will becoaM affected and unable to digest the food, the systesn will become weak, aad the remit will be a breakdown ef the general health with Brtght's disease or diabetes, which wlllprove fatal If not treated with proas ptne aad great care. Warner's Safe Pi lb taken with Warner's Safe Care move the bowels geatly aad aid a speedy cure. WARNER'S SAFE CURE Is now put up la two sizes, and fat sold by all drogxistx. or direct, at id cents aad n.a a, bottle. Kef use sHfecHKutet! containing harmful drags, which lajure the system. tdii I DnTTI c CDCC To con vice every sufferer from diseases of the I KIAL UU I I Lfc rKtt kidneys, liver. Madder aad Meed that WARNER S SAKE CURE will care theat. a trial bottle win be seat. ABSOLUTELY FRKS. PMtpaM. u any one who will write WARNER'S SAFE CURE CO- RocbeiKer. -N. aad mention having seen Una liberal offer ta The Oreffonma. Th genalne- of tMs offer is faNy guaranteed. Onr doctor will akw send mooleal booklet cMtalnlnfc doseriottMa of nyaiHsmii and treatment of "oac hch, and mnnr coarincte leoMmnnoiW free le roryone. J. M. Haasen. Mrs. E. E. Seow, ef Port land: Mrs. Evangeline Martin, ef New berg, aad Mrs. B. S. Cook, of PortlAad. George W. Fogr- TACOMA. April 1. George W. Fogg, a prominent attorney hero for 12 years, formerly of Qulncy. I1L. is dead, aged 69 years. He was a Major la the Civil "War and a member of tho Loyal Legion. Report oh "Warren to a Company. ASTORIA. Or, April ia SpeciaL The report of Frank Spittle, as trustee for tho "VVarrcntoa Lumber Company, a. bank rupt, was filed today with Judgp a H. PagCj referee In bankruptcy. The report showed that the trustee has oa haad SML 333.37 and that his expesaes and commis sions amount to J3GCUi The claim of Coovcrt t Stapleton, of Portland. In the sum of 5730 as attorneys for tho creditors, was reduced to JSOft. The fees of Smith Bros, as attorneys for the trustee, and of Harrison Allen as attorney for the bankrupt, were allowed 53SO each. Fifty-eight claims against the bankrupt were filed, and while these have not yet been segregated. It Is expected tho dividend to be allowed will not exceed 9 to 10 per cent. The declaring of this dividend will wind up the affairs bf the defunct company. Oregon Coast Railroad Incorporated. SALEM, Or.. April 10. William J. Wil sey, John M. Eddy and William M. Greg ory, filed articles of Incorporation with tho Secretary of State this morning for the Oregon Coast &. Eastern Railway Company. Tho proposed road Is to start at Portland, theneo to Tillamook Bay; from Tillamook to Nehalera. and from Coo- Bay, In Oregon, to Humboldt Bay. in California, and from Sluslaw Bay east erly via the Sluslaw and Willamette Val leys to such point In the south half of Malheur Count v on th mat nr nuth. crn boundary of the state, as may be Convenient- Tho ranltnl frV Is tTOfKYI. 0X divided Into shares of $1C0 each. The Principal place of business is Portland. 3Iany AVcnt to Klamath Falls. SAN FRANCISCO. April 10.-(Spec!aU It Is estimated that at least 1000 people ut of the 25.CCO that came to this Coast on the colonist rate this Spring have settled In California and Southern Ore gon. This rate went Into effect on Feb ruary 13 and closed April 7. asd was in existence for S days, as against 75 days the previous year. These 22.COJ who have remained are pretty well distributed. They havo gone Into the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys, and hundreds have go no as far north as Klamath Coun ty, Oregon, having been attracted to that region by tho work that has been dona there recently In tho way of land recla mation. Brook Trout for Northwestern Rivers OREGON CITY. On. April 10. l3peciaU J. Nelson Wlsncr. superintendent of the Clackamas River hatchery, near this city, has been advised tliat tne Government, within the next two months, will plant 73).XO Eastern brook, rainbow and lake trout in the streams of the three states Oregon. Washington and Idaho. Ten thousand land-locked salmon will also be planted this Spring. The rack that was formerly stationed near Clackamas is being installed In the Upper Clackamas River, near Cazadcro. Factory to Resume Operations. ASTORIA. Or.. April lO.-(SpeciaL) W. L. Barnum and W. R. Hocking, of the Central Agency of Portland, arrived in the city today to take charge of the Smith's Point msh and door factory, which will resume operations within a few days. The plant Is owned by Ma larkcy Bros, and has been lying idle for folly a year, bat it will now be run to its fall capacity. Candidate Cake, at Albany. ALBANY, Or.. April 10.-(SpeciaI.-H. M. Cake, of Portland. Is the first candi date for the Republican nomination for United States Senator who. has in person visited Linn County and met the voters pemnally. Mr- Cake Is In Albany today, meeting business men and politicians, and looking after his interests In the Sena torial race. Object to Clause in Subsidy BUI. ABERDEEN. Wash.. April 10. (Spe cial.) The Chamber of Commerce has ap pointed a committee to draft a resolution requesting Cbngrcstt to strike out the clause in the ship subsidy bill which pro vides for the payment of a bounty to American ships. Under the clause the bounty on lumber would be Sent to the Oregon Asylum. OREGON CITY. Or., April 10. (Special.) Mrs. J. C. Holcomb, aged 21 years, of this city, was today committed to the State Insane Asylum. In a letter tellinr of her remarkable cure. Mrs. Switzer said: - "In January. ISM. I was taken down with inflammation of the kidneys and bladder, and was laid up in bed for eight weeks. I bad very severe pains across the back and kidneys and in the legs. I also bad a terrible burning sensation in the affected parts. The doctor could not aid me. He told me frankly be thought there was no hope, and that I could not be cured. Ho proposed an operation, but I remembered reading of the remarkable cures credited to Warner's Safe Cure, and sent out for a bottle. I soon began to recover my vforrner good health. Today I am on the fourth bottle and am bow as strong as before I was taken sick. My cure Is complete, and I folly believe Warner's Safe Cure saved my life. I cannot say too much In Its favor, and Slady make this statement that others may know and be benefited. MBS. A. W. SWITZER. C Wyatt avenue, Toronto, Canada. Warner's Safe Cure Does your back ache? Do you have scalding paina? Are you troubled with vital weakness? If the answer la "Yes. your kidneys are diseased and your life Is in danger. Warner's Safe Cure Is the medicine that will help you. Thousands of wonderful cures attest Its aerir, aad thousands of people voluntarily commend its use as the best cure and sure preven tive of all forms of kidney and bladder trouble, female weakness. B right's dis ease and all diseased conditions of tbo liver and blood. ARE YOUR KIDNEYS WEAK? Thousands of Men and Women Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It. To Prove What the Great Kidney Remedy, Swamp-Root, Will Do for YOU, Every Reader of the Oregonian May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Absolutely. Free by Mail. It ased to be considered that only urinary and. oiadcer troubles were to bo traced to the Kid neys, but now modem science proves that near ly all diseases have their beginning In the dis order of these rsost important organs. Therefore, when your kidneys are weak or out of order, you can understand how quickly yoar entire body is affected, and how every organ seems to fail to do Its duty. IX you are sick cr "feel badly" begin taking the great kidney remedy. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Boot, because as soon as your kidneys begin to get better they will help all tho other organs to health. A trial will convince anyone. I was out of health and run down Eenerally: had so appetite, was dizzy and auffercd with headache most of the time. I did not know that my kidneys were the cause of my trouble, but somehow felt Jr th'T 'n'sht be. and I besaa taking Swamp Hoof. There la such a pleasant taste to Swamp Boot, and It Koes tight to the spot and drives dis ease out of th system. It has cured me. making bi stronger and better in every way. and I cheer lully recommend It to all sufferers. Gratefully yours . MRS. A. L. WALKER. -31 East Linden St.. Atlanta. Ga. Weak and unhealthy kidneys aro responsible for many kinds of diseases, and If nermltte.i to continue much suffering and many fatal are sure to follow. Kidney trouble Irritates the nerves makes you dizzy, restless, sleepless and Irritable, ilakes you. pass water often during the aay and obliges you to get up many times dur ing the night. Unhealthy kidneys cause rheuma tism, gravel, catarrh of the bladder, pain or dull ache in tho back, joints and muscles; make your head ache and back ache, cause indigestion, stomach and liver trouble, you cct n. in iir.tr- yellow complexion, make you feel as though you naa ncart trouble; you may havo plenty of am bition, but no strength; get weak and waste away. The euro for these troubles is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the world-famous kidney remedy In taking Swamp-Root you afford natural help io .Nature, xor wamp-toot is tne most healer and eentlo aid to tho kldnev known to medical science. How to Find Out If there is any doubt In your mind aa to your condition, take from yonr urlno on rising about four ounces, place It In a glass or bottle and let It stand 24 hours. If on examination It Is milky or cloudy, if there is a brick-dust settling, or if small particles float about In it. your kidneys arc in need qf immediate attention. Swamp-Root Is pleasant to take and is used in the leading hospitals, recommended by phy sicians In their private practice, and is taken by doctors themselves who have kidney ailments, because they recognize in It the greatest and most successful remedy for kidney, Hvcr and utuuuer irouDies. EDITORIAL .OTE So successful Is Swamp-Root in promptly curing oven the most distressing cases of kidney, liver or bladder troubleathat to prove its wonderful merits you may havo a sample bottle and a book of valuable informa tion both sent absolutely freo by mall. The book contains many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters received from men and women cured. Tho value and success of Swamp-Root Is so well known that our readers are advised to send for a sample bottle. In sending your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing hamton. N. T be sure to say you read this generous offer in The Portland Dally Oregonian. WE CURE We care akla diseases, Blood Poison Varicocele, Stricture, Nervous Decline, Weakness, Piles, Kstala aad Diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder aad Prostate. Private Diseases Newly contracted and chronic cases cured. All Burning. Itching and Inflammation stopped in 24 hours; cures effected in. seven days. If you have violated the laws of health and are conscious of a constant drain which is undermining your system, come to us before you become a nervous and physical WTeck. If you are weak, gloomy and despondent, have bad dreams, depressed, lack ambition and energy, unable to concen trate your thoughts, lack vim, vlor and" vitality, come to us at once, our treatment will stop all drains and overcome all weaknesses and positively restore you to strength and health. We have cured thousands of weak men. THOSE "WHO HAVE BEEN DISAPPOINTED BV UNSKILLED SPE CIALISTS ARE EARNESTXY HEQ.U ESTED TO INVESTIGATE OUR. METHODS AND TERMS WITHOUT DELAY, WHICH HAD THEY DONE IN THE BEGINNING, "WOULD HAVE SAVED THEM TIME AND 3IONEY. Our BiethedM are ap-to-date and are ladorned by the highest medical authorities ef Earepe aad America. Heace our success In the treatment of Men's Diseases. Remember, our specialty 1st limited to the diseases of MEN, aad. MEN ealy. Our offer is to yea, to every one. only 512.53 for a cure, payable at your convenience. In such sums as you can spare. Could an offer bo more Kenerouaf No matter what your trouble is If you suffer from neglect, from want of money or from unskillful practice here Is an opportunity to get the services of a skilled specialist, a graduate physician, with years of ripe experience in treating complicated and special disorders of mea ealy. It will cost nothing to talk to us, and may be the means' of restoring you to health and happiness. Why not call today? Our offices are very private. You see only the doctor. If you cannot call, write for Blanks, as .we extend the same liberal offer to those who cannot call. In fact, there Is no excuse for being disordered or sick while this liberal offer remains. It Is a jtlrt oC'pricelcss value, within the reach of all. Re member, only I2j;d for any disease. If job cannot call, -write for symp tom hlaaks. HOURS 3 to 3, 1 to S daily; Sundays. 9 to 12. CONSULTATION FREE. St. Louis Hsr Dispensary COR. SECOND AND YAMHILL STS PORTLAND, OR. Thn1 ka kart k UMe(atrl frr cseas aad aasklfled saectel- iss are earnestly resjaested te lavestlaate say methods aad term vrlth mmt alelar, which scad they- deae la the Tsa4aalam weald have saved them tisat -aah. wwil aad aieaey. I GUA1AKTEE AN A1S0LUTE AND LASTING CURE GONORRHOEA, SYPHILIS, BLOOD POISON, SKIN DISEASES, SO KM. ULCBRS. STRICTURE. VARICOCBLE, HYDROCELE. NER- vus pgcLDrmy weaxnbss. fixes KIDNBTS AND FKOSTATE. I chara-e for cures only. I do set care a patient sound aad well, so will never again have to be treated for success and nothing for xauures. investigate and learn that my word Is ae good as my bond. Twenty-five years of successful practice 1b Portland and thousands of cures juatlfiea this assertion. Mr financial standing Is solid and Bay long experience In treating, special diseases of men Insures you of modern, scientific treatment that will accomplish a cure. DR. J. D. WALKER 164 " ,Mt T.a fi- results perfect ti.-. t (Swamp-Itoot Is pleasant to take.) If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you, need, you can purchase tho regular 50-ccnt and $1 slza bottles at the drugstores everywhere. Don't make any mistake, but remember tho name. Swamp-Root, Dr. Kil mer's Swamp-Root, and tho address. Binghamton, N. Y., on j overy bottle. MEN FOR $12.50 ESTABLISHED 23 TEARS IN PORTLAND. We will treat any single uncomplicated ailment for $120 for the fee. UNDER ABSOLUTE GUARANTEE NO PAY UNLESS CURED SPECIALIST FOR MEN I Core Diseases o! Men If you have violated the laws of health aad are conscious of a constant drain which is undermlnlnsr your system, come to me be fore you become a nervous and physical wreck. If you are weak, gloomy and de spondent, have bad dreams, depressed, lack ambition and energy, unable to concentrate your thoughts, lack vim. vigor and vitality, come to me at once, my treatment will stop all drains and overcome all weaknesses and positively restore you to strength and health. I have cured thousands of weak men. or chronic diseases op the expect Bay- for my services unless I ae entlrelv satisfied, and that he will be entirely satisfied, for the same trouble. I want pay ISt Fan mm. Taihfl. TmHam. r.