VOL. XLYI. 3fO. 14,166. PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1906. PRICE FIVE CENTS. GIGANTIC MERGER IS PERFECTED Light, Power and Traction Corporations Are Consolidated. THIRTY MILLIONS INVOLVED Every Plant in the Lower Wil lamette Valley Is in Combination. TAKES STREET CAR LINES Portland Railway, 0. W. P. and General Electric. SALEM AND VANCOUVERJOO New York and Philadelphia Capital ists Conclude Deal by Which They Take Over Into One Institu tion These Properties. BIO C0N80IJ0ATI0N EFFECTED. By an allianca effected, yesterday In New . York by - the fTtark-Sellgman-Pratt Intrants, all th electric power, light anA trolley systems In Portland and the lowar Willamette Valley have become consolidated and m-lll in future be operated under one management. The deal Involve about MO.Ono.OOO. The properties that have been merged are the Portland General Elec tric Company, the Portland Raliway Company. the Oregon Water Power & Railway Company, the Citizens' L,ight Traction Company, of Salem, the Vancouver r.lght A Traction Company, of Vancouver, Waah., and the Union T.ight A Power Company, of Sllverton, Mount Angel and Woodburn. The en tire properties of each company are In cluded In the transaction. The Oregon City I.ock. owned by the Portland General ISlectrlc Company, also change owners. Details of the consolidation and management remain to be worked out. The new concern controls everything In electric lighting, power and trac tion within a radius of fio miles of Portland. By a deal involving J30.000.000, every electric light, power and traction com pany In the Lower Willamette Valley, including; Portland, has been merged Into one vast consolidation of Interests. Every mile of electrlo railway and every horse power of olectrlc energy generated within A. radius of 50 miles of Portland have been brought under the same ownership and will be operated by one management. The consolidation of all the- various interests In the Iower Valley were merged by financiers In New York yes terday. Telegrams telling of the trans action reached Portland yesterday and were confirmed by H. W. Goodo, president of the Portland Qeneral Electric Com pany and the Oregon Water Power & Railway Company, and by O. F. Faxton, counsel for the Portland General Railway Company.. The owners of the affiliated Interests are K. W. Clark & Co., Phila delphia bankers; J. & W. Seligman, bank ers of New York City, and Charles Pratt & Co., also Now Tork bankers. ProjHrtles Are Merged. The properties that will be merged and operated under one management are the Portland General Electric Company, the Portland Railway Company, the Oregon Water Power & Railway Company, the Citizens Light & Traction Company- of Salem, the Vancouver Light & Power Company, of Vancouver, Wash., and the Vnlon Light & Power Company. Silver urn. Woodburn and Mount Angel. The transaction 'Just effected is perhaps the largest consolidation ever effected on ths raiifle Coast and is certainly the greatest attraction In Northwest history. It will mean greater facility and economy of operation, combined with added effi ciency. The molding of all electric power, light and traction Interests Into one great machine will give Increased service at a minimum of cost. retails -of consolidation and operation remain to be worked out. What name the huge company will operate under, or what men will officer It cannot yet be known. The change that will be made In the present systems of managing the affair of the various companies interest ed are only now guessed at. It Is defi nitely known that the head offices of the concern will be located In Portland. Represent Eastern Capital. Representing as It does an Immense in vestment of Eastern capital, the move means great development along all lines. The pouring of more millions into the country selected by the New Tork and Philadelphia capitalists for Investment Is mmttrn , i nnha r.1 a jit. rtraumm-t hjniLl llonalre backers of the concern are satis fled with their previous Investments here and that they have great confidence in the future of Portland. It signifies that the present holders of the allied properties are here for good. Their past record in effecting improvements presages better service and greater things for Portland in the future. The value of . the various properties merged yesterday is estimated as follows: Portland General Electric Company, 310, 000.000; Portland Railway Companj-, $12. 000,000: Oregon Water Power & Railway Company, J5.O0O.00O; Citizens" Light & Traction Company, J500.000; Vancouver JJght & Power Company, J200.000, and the Union Light & Power Company, $100,000. The Interests Consolidated. The interests which have Teen consoli dated have owned the major part of the properties that have just become affili ated. The action Just taken assures that the investments here will be permanent. The owners are practical and conserva tive men, but their conservatism does not hinder improvements wherever possible. The Portland General Electric Company was organized in 1892, when the "Willam ette Falls Electric Company was consoli dated with the Willamette Transportation & Locks Company, under the new title. H. W. Goode became general manager with the formation of the new company, and continued In that position until four yearB ago, when he became president. Owns Electric Power. The Portland General owns the entire electric power and electric lighting sys tem of Portland and vicinity. The water power at Oregon City is owned by the company, as well as the locks in the Wil lamette River at that point. The huge power plant of the company at the crest of the Willamette Falls at Oregon City generates 15,000 horsepower, which is transmitted to Portland to light streets and speed street-cars. Additional light and power is used in Oregon City and tributary country, while the company sells water power at the falls to local manufacturing concerns amounting to 18, 000 horsepower. The principal steam plant of the company Is located on Sherlock avenue and Nicolal street, Portland, and has a capacity of 15.000 horsepower. The Portland Railway Company was organized in October, 1905. and was the successor to the Portland Consoli dated Railway Company, which then passed to the control of the Clarks, of Philadelphia. The Portland Consolidat ed was the result of the merging of the old City & Suburban Railway Company and the Portland Railway Company, which was accomplished in the Summer of 1905. These two com panies were tlie important street-car Interests of Portland for years. The Portland Railway Company was the older of the two and occupied Wash ington street, operated a cable line to Portland Heights and a line to Van couver. Growth of Consolidation. The City A Suburban operateJ a ntimber of city lines and was owned by the Corbett interests. Consolidation of the two companies was attempted several times but without success until 1905, when almost as soon as merged, the properties were purchased by E. W. Clark & Co. The Oregon Water Power & Railway Company had Its beginning in the Knst Side Railway Company, which built and operated a line from Port land to Oregon City along the East Side. The line underwent many vicis situdes, and the builders, which were George A. Steel and a few others, lost all they had put Into it. Control of the property was gained by Morris Bros., bankers of Philadelphia, who snapped up the assets of the company at a forced sale. The new owners mapped out bigger things for the company and capitalized it at a large amount. Since the Morris Interests acquired the O. W. P. the lines have been improved and extended in many directions. A new electric power plant has been begun at Cazadero, which, when com pleted, will grind out thousands of horse-power and wlU prove a powerful factor in supplying "Juice" for the many activities of the new consolida tion. Plant at Salem. The Citizens' Light & Traction Com pany, of Salem, owns and operates an electric lighting syBtem, a street rail way and a gas-light plant. The com pany supplies Salem and vicinity with these three utilities. The Vancouver Light & Power Com pany, of .Vancouver, Wash., has a steam electric light and power plant that supplies the city with electric en ergy of all kinds. The growing impor tance of Vancouver as the result of the building of the Portland & Seattle Railway makes it valuable territory for the new alliance of interests. The Union' Light & Power Company supplies electric light to Sllverton, Mt. Angel and Woodburn. It also owns and operates water plants at Silverton and Woodburn. Details of organizing the immense interests represented in the consolida tion into a vast machine with one management remain to "be worked out. The benefits of great trolley and light ing systems being the manufacturers of their own power are apparent. Great economies will be effected and reduc tions in fixed charges can be put into improvements and extensions. SLAIN BY BROTHER PRIEST Spanish Jesuit Shot at Altar and As sassin Commits Suicide. MADRID. May 4. Word of a tragedy in the Cathedral of Santo Domingo, in the town of Merida. reached here last . last night. While the Jesuit priest Morales, known from one end of Spain to the other as one of the most devout and learned members of the order, was con ducting mass at the high altar on Thurs day, a fellow-priest. Tarlbo Martinez, suddenly drew a revolver from hts robe and shot Father Morales dead . The murderer then turned the revolver upon himself, blowing out his brains and fall ing across the body of his victim. Jessup Again Chosen President. NEW YORK. May 3 Morris K. Jessup was today re-elected president of the Chamber, (it tinraercw FIVE LUMBERMEN ARE ARRESTED Oshkosh Capitalists Are Indicted. OREGON LAND FRAUDS CAUSE Result of Grand Jury Work in . Portland. WARRANTS FOR TWO MORE Men Are Arraigned and Held Un der Two Thousand Dollars Bonds Each by United States Court Commissioner McDonald. Returns from the first Important in dictment returned by the present grand Jury announce the arrest of Leandor Choate, Benjamin Doughty, James Doughty. Thomas' Daly and James Bray. Wisconsin capitalists. Joseph Black and August Anderson, of the same state, are also wanted. Sumner J. Parker, of Ashlandl has been ar rested for complicity In the land frauds and James H. Drlscoll Is want ed on the earn charge. The Wisconsin men are alleged to have acquired 160,000 acres of land In Klamath and Lake Counties. Oregon, by Inducing residents near Ashland and Medford to file upon It with the understanding that title was to be transferred as soon aa tha final papers should be se cured. OSHKOSH, Wis., May 8. (Special.) Five lumbermen and bankers represent ing an aggregate wealth far In excess of $1,000,000, were arrested here today by the Federal authorities on the charge of conspiracy to defraud the general Govern ment by means of alleged land frauds In the State of Oregon,' The men arrested are: Leander Choate. James Matt Bray, Benjamin Doughty, James Doughty and Thomas Daly. Bray is the president of the Bray & Choate Lumber Company, and Choate is the treasurer of that company. The Doughtys are retired lumbermen. Daly is .cashier of the Commercial National Bank, and all the men are large stock holders in that institution. The men were arrested by a deputy United States Mar shal, who was accompanied by Assistant District Attorney Henning. Placed Under Bonds. They were all arraigned before United States Court Commissioner D. E. McDon ald, of this city, except Mr. Bray, who is a paralytic and was unable to appear. Each was placed under bonds of $2000, and the hearing adjourned to Friday, May 11. Besides the foregoing defendants, war rants have been issued for August Ander son and Joseph Black, of Shawano. The charge contained in the Federal grand Jury indictments under which the men are being prosecuted is that of con spiracy to defraud the Federal Govern ment by having furnished money to Ore gon persons to make entries and buy homesteads in Oregon. Charges in Indictment. The indictment describes the land and avers that the alleged crime was com mitted between the years of 1900 and 1903. The men Indicted maintain that they never owned the lands described In the indictment, never had anything to do with the matter and that they never owned any lands within 40 miles of uiose in connection with winch the fraud Is al leged. The belief here Is that the accused have been made the victims of Oregon land sharks. Oshkosh capitalists, including the five named, have dealt largely In Oregon and Washington lands in recent years, but they have always done it through third parties. ASHLAXD AND MEDFORD MEN ARE INVOLVED. James H. Prlscoll, Former Clerk of Klamath County, Was Ac- -cuscd, and Disappears. Reports from Wisconsin of the arrest of five capitalists of that state in connec tion with the present inquiry into Ore gon land frauds give the first information that has been made public of the serving of warrants pursuant to one of the most Important indictments returned during the present session of the Federal grand Jury. It was known that the Govern ment representatives in Wisconsin were busy taking Into- custody tha men against whom charges had been made but the first news of the result is con tained in the special dispatch from Oshkosh, not even District Attorney Bristol yet having received official advise ment of the arrests. The Wisconsin men who have been ar rested are said to be the chief partici pants in the fraudulent operations for which the indictment which included their names was Issued. Oregon men were also Involved in the alleged fraudu- LlsmL-fpQzteiiM&s imt only, it is -jessed. as the tools of the Eastern men who are men of wealth and furnished the funds for the operations and also laid the plana by which, it is charged, they Illegally ob tained great tracts of Government acre age. The Oshkosh men who have been ar rested, Leander Choate, James Matt Bray, Benjamin Doughty, James Doughty and Thomas Daly, operated in Southern Oregon as the Oshkosh land & Timber Company. August Anderson and Joseph Black, of Shawano, are also said to be connected with this corporation. Choate is said to be very wealthy, and the others are all men of wealth and prominence in their home state. The charge upon which they are arrest ed is that of obtaining a large tract of timber land east of Klamath by induc ing men to file upon it and then turn it over to them for a small consideration. Most of their work is said to have been carried on through representatives In this state, but the principals themselves are said to have been on the ground at va rious times. Choate, who la reported to have been a leader in the proceedings, is said to have visited the Btata and to have taken a direct hand in bringing about some of the fraudulent entries. It Is alleged that the original scheme of the coterie of capitalists was to acquire several immense tracts of valuable land, aggregating nearly 40 sections. The plan did not work out in Its entirety, but even the partially completed operations are said to have brought them into control of about 160,000 acres of land. Some of the land is located on Jenny Creek, some on Lone Pine Mountain and a portion east of Klamath. All of the land is in Klamath and Lake Counties. Connected with the Wisconsin men in the indictment are Sumner J. Parker, of Ashland, who has already been brought into custody at Medford, and a timber cruiser who was arrested at the same time. James H. Drlscoll. ex-Clerk of Klamath County, 's also Implicated, and a warrant has been issued -for his arrest, but It is said that he has left the state and eluded the authorities. Two other names which have not been made public were included in the same Indictment. The BaBtern men are said to have come into possession of the land by inducing Oregon people to file upon It and turn it over to them as soon as they obtained it. In many cases It Is alleged the transfers were made the day the final papers were received. All of the land was taken as homestead claims. Most of those who made the nlliiRS were residents in the vi cinity of Ashland and Medford. and these persons were used as witnesses before the grand jury. Sumner J. Parker, now in custody, is understood to have been the solicitor for the Wisconsin men.-: Through his agency It Is'alleged men and women were induced to take up the land, with the understand ing that it wu ;to be turned over to the Oshkosh Land & Timber Company as soon as the final papers were received. The papers were filed with James H. Driscoll at Klamath Falls. Driscoll is accused of accepting fraudulent proofs of land and being a party to the general scheme to de fraud the Government. With all of the wires carefully a.ld for their- operations, It is said that the scheme was carried on smoothly and ihpuaonds of acres of Gov ernment lands seized before the proceed ings against them wore commenced. . The present returns are on the first of the" Important Indictments returned by the present grand Jury. The session opened March 14. Several minor matters were first attended to, and the indictment of the Wisconsin men occurred about April 1. CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER Th Weather. TODAY'S Fair and warmer; northwest wind!. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 68 dcg.; minimum, 48 dfg. The California Ilrastr. Phelon describes pitiful conditions to Taft and (jrflfly says new appeal for aid may b needed. Paice 1. Portland delegate consider plan for distrib uting fund. Pace 3. Idle men refused free food and put to work. Pace 4. Stens taken to adopt plan of rebuilding-. Pasc 4. "Water -supply safe, but short. Page 4. Banks reopen and do Rood business. Pave 4. Foreign. Russian "Democrats will caucus on radical measure of land reform. Pagre 7. New Russian Cabinet composed of reaction aries, but will soon die. Pasce 7. Turkey yields on Tabah question, because other powers support Britain. Page 4. Russian 0tudent in Paris blown up by hia own bomb. Patre 0.. Bold pint of Armenians to capture arsenal. Pa ire 7. Russian expedition to M on folia. Pace 5. National. Tillman prills Federal Judges In speech on rate bill and make Spoon er squirm. Faze 1. Majority secured for court review provision on rates. Paae 1. Moodv prepares to prosecute Ptandard Oil and railroads for rebatinc Page 2. House discusses naval bill and tariff. Page 6. Ex-Consul MoWade turns on his accusers. Page S. Domestic. Anthracite miners' convention considers ques tion of strike. Pace 7. Widow of Abner McKinley accused of making away -with prooerty. Page 4. Pacific Coast. Attorney W. C. Fischer brutally assaulted by thug at Rainier. Page 6. Oregon Supreme Court denies jurisdiction in aDDeal on suit over title to local option bill. Pane 6. Official count of ballots In Republican and Democratic primaries. Page 6. Hill interests will fight Harrlraan's entrance to Seattle. Page 6. Sport. First Boxing match under new prizefight law In New York. Page 32. Beavers defeat Commuters by a score of nine to xero. Page 12. Seattle an Los Angeles want to quit the league, but Portland stands by Ban Fran cisco and Oakland. Page 12. - Blooded animals will go under the hammer. Page 13. Commercial and Marine. Oregon wool market alow to open. Pag 17. Chicago wheat steady on good milling demand. Page 17. Heavy liquidation of -mocks over, but market is unruled. Tage 17. fcteamer Redondo loses stack in storm off Tai- roka and puta back to San Francisco. Page 16. Steamer Tottenham chartered to load lum ber at Portland for China. Page 16. Portland and Vicinity. Gigantic $.10.000. 000 merger of all electric light, power and wtret railway properties of Portland. Salem, Mount Angel, Wood burn, Sllverton and Vancouver effected. Page 1. As the result of indictment returned by Fed eral grand jury in. Portland, five lumber men and bankers of Oshkosh. Wis., axe arrested and arraigned. Page 1. Relief fund now lacks lss than f4Y 0f reaching the quarter-million mark. Page 10. T. K. Abrams gave freely of bis money, tes tify witnesses. Page 13. Fourteen Important franchises In various stages of progress. Page 10. Witnesses for the defense in the suit of the Johnson estate heirs to oust W. M. LacM as administrator ay that management of Redville ranch was good. Page 13. San Franciscans grateful to Portland for its prompt generosity. Page 10. Bruin enlisted from Chicago, Army records show. Page 16. Woman's relief committee concludes Its work. Pas 11. Flrmn who distinguished themselves at the Chamber of Commerc Are will be fire amted -with, .mfrtairV f&CQ il - TILLMAN GRILLS FEDERAL JUDGES Gives Reasons For Limiting Power. KITS SPOONER ON TENDER SPOT Angry Words About Strike In junction Case. TALKS OF JUDICIALTYRANNY Cites Many Instances of Misconduct as Reasons for Not Giving Loner Federal Courts Power to Suspend the Kates. MAJORITY FOB COMPROMISE. WASHINGTON. May 3. (SpeciaJ.) The long contest over the form of the Judicial review amendment to the Hepburn railroad rate bill la believed to have ended. It Is claimed with what appears to be warranted confidence that 54 Republican votes have been secured to the. compromise provision. The present Intention among the leaders Is to adjourn tomorrow af ternoon over Saturday, so that Mr. Allison,- who has engineered the com promise, can be present and bindi the agreement. He was confined to hia home today. WASHINGTON, May 3. This was the last day for general debate in the Sen ate on the railroad rate bill, and It w&3 fully occupied. Following , a brief speech by Nelson, Tillman spoke at length in an effort to show by criti cism of individual Judfres that the power of granting- temporary injunc tions by inferior United States Courts should be taken from them in Inter state Commerce Commission cases and be was- followed by Bacon, Bailey, Teller and Foraker in speeches at some length. Tillman's speech consisted mainly of quotations reflecting, upon the con duct of Federal Judges in different parts of the country. While he was speaking, he engaged in a controversy with Spooner, in which the Wisconsin Senator characterized his adversary's reference to him as "indecent" and during which Tillman ordered Spooner to take bis seat. Difference Between. Democrats. Bacon criticised the course of Till man as calculated to produce a false impression on the country and was in' torn censured by Bailey, who held that, while the office of Judge is en titled to the greatest respect, there should be no reverence for Judges as men. - The Army appropriation bill carrying an appropriation of about 374,000,000 was passed. When the Senate met, Tillman again asked for the postponement of his resolution for the investigation of the eviction of Mrs. Minor Morris from the White House last Winter. He asked that the measure lie on the table until he might desire to take it up. The railroad rate bill was then laid before the Senate and Nelson ad dressed the Senate in opposition to Bailey's amendment depriving inferior United States Courts of the power of suspending orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Tillman Grills Federal Judges. Tillman rose to express regret that the country's faith in the Federal Courts was not firm. He referred to the decision of the Supreme Court on the income tax cases, saying that in that case one of the Judges had changed his mind. "Thus," he said, "the practice of a century was reversed and the country submitted, merely because of the plea that the highest court In the country must be sustained." He could not accept the idea that there was anything holy about a Judge and said: "When we see how the high est Judges differ or change their minds, possibly because something gets - the matter with their stomachs or they sleep badly, we cannot be blamed if we can see that they are not Infalli ble." He therefore saw no reason why a nonsuspension provision should not be "tied on." Judge McTherson at Banquet. He also cited other cases in other courts, intended to show that some Judges are "not only not infallible, but not incorruptible." The first of the references was to Judge Smith Mc pherson, of Iowa, who was represent ed 1 nan article in the New Tork World of March 30, as having ap peared at a banquet to Governor Cum mins at Council Bluffs In such a con dition as "not to be able to stand up without clinging to the table." Carter defended Judge McPherson as a man of great learning and of probity of character. If in participating in the ban quet he had entered into the spirit of the occasion, he had merely shown himself a good fellow. He criticised the course of the man who had given out the occur rences of the banquet. He had never heard any one intimate that Judge Mc Pherson was guilty of an excess in the use of intoxicants. Dolliver and Perkins also defended Judge. M-cPiiexiogj Parkins dfic&r&g ttiAiJLnarao, Cuba, having been at the same hotel with Judge Perkins four years, he knew him to be a teetotaller. Dolliver said that the Judge had never been charged with a want of Judicial fairness. Railroads Give Judges Picnic. Tillman next referred to a pleasure trip to Tamplco given by three railroads to Federal Judges McPherson. Phillips and Pollock. The account was condensed from the Kansas City papers, and showed that the Judges had been provided with a spe cial car and were accompanied by the genera J solicitors of the roads giving the excursion. Tillman said that Judge Phil lips had been especially commended by the President in connection with the Paul Morton case, and he contrasted the Presi dent's course in this case with his course in criticising Judge Humphrey in the beet packers' case. He would have Judges keep themselves above suspicion, like Caesar would have had his wife. He would have them in such a position that they would not be subject to the reflec tions of any "dirty newspapers." The Senator also called attention to a railroad case at Sherman, Texas, in which he declared Circuit Judge McCormick had declined for six years to allow an unpreju diced Judge to sit. He said that the mat ter" had been brought to the attention of Congress by petition, and declared that with such a Judge sitting in a given case complainants would have to "whistle for relief." He would stop judicial tyrants from denying Justice. Makes Spooner Jump. He next called attention to the Nortly em Pacific receivership, in which Judge James S. Jenkins, of the seventh circuit, figured in 1893, and in which an Injunction against strikers was granted. Comment ing on these facts, Tillman said that Jen kins had recently retired, "therefore," he added, "he can do no more devilment like this." "I believe it has come to be considered good law to issue injunctions against strikers," said Tillman, and added: "If it is not, the Senator from Wisconsin (Spoon er) will correct." The manner of this appeal to him evi dently angered Spooner, who. as attorney for the receivers, obtained the Injunction in question. He rose and replied sharply, saying: "The Senator from South Carolina for gets what is decent when he challenges me in that manner." Judicial Tyranny in South. When the tiff between him and Spooner had drawn to a harmless close, Tillman returned to his strictures on certain Fed eral Judges. He considered the case of Editor Josephus Daniels, of the Raleigh (N. C.) News and Observer, who, he said, had been thrown into prison for criticising the appointment of a receiver for the At lantic & North Carolina Railway by Judge Purnell. Tillman said he could re view instances in his own state of acts of tyranny and Indecency, but the Judre committing them Is dead and had settled his accounts elsewhere. The Senator said he also knew of some carss in Georgia, but that he would take up, the case of Circuit Judge Pardee in enjoining the Florida Railroad Commission from instituting suit to compel the Louisville & Nash ville Railroad to reduce its fares from 4 to 3 cents a mile. He charged that Pardee ought to be impeached for his course. If impeachment proceedings were brought to the Senate, Tillman predicted that there would not be votes enough to impeach, although the Judge were proved guilty of violating his oath of office. Situation Needs Pliysic. Tillman next paid his respects to the case of Judge Charles Swayne, of Flor ida, whom the Senate refused last ses sion to impeach. Tillman then closed with an apology, explaining that the situation was such as to require the administering of some "physic." He would not allow the Judges to "roam up and down the land, doing whatever the railroads want and refusing to grant relief to the people." Bacon said the same Judge that would issue an interlocutory decree must in the end pass upon any case be fore the court, and asked what remedy there was if there were so many Judges guilty of reprehensible con duct. Tillman replied that he would de pend upon the Supreme Court. Bailey also replied that, in case a temporary injunction was granted in a given case, it would be held up indefin itely, whereas it would be expedited if there should be no injunction. These declarations led to a controversy over the right of appeal in Injunction cases, in which Bailey, Spooner, Bacon and Culberson participated. Puts Question to Bacon. Tillman asked Bacon if he did not believe It proper to call the attention of the country to the derelictions of Judges, as there was no way of punish ing them except by impeachment. Bacon responded that the Senate had no right to originate charges, and that for It to do so was to usurp "the power of the House and in a measure disqual ify Senators from conducting impeach ment proceedings. He admitted that he had voted for the impeachment of Judge Swayne, and said that he was sorry Swayne had not been found guilty. Tillman declared that he had not in tended to censure the entire judiciary, but contended that, so long as there were such men as McCormick, Pardee and Swayne on the bench,' the crlticisim of individual members of the Judiciary was Justified. , Teller Defends Judges. Teller praised the Judiciary of the United States as the most exemplary known to the history of the world, but said he had known of many individuals who departed from the high standard of the great body. He announced him self as favorable to the rate bill as It passed the House, with the addition of the Bailey amendment, including the provision for a court review. Bailey- opposed Bacon's contention that the judiciary should not be criti cized on the floor of the Senate. Con sideration of the Army appropriation bill was resumed and after further amendment It was passed. Atlantic Fleet at Xetv York. NEW TORK. May 3. The first division of- the Atlantic fleet, consisting of the .Maine, Missouri, Kearsarge and Ken tucky, arrived here today from Guanta- NEW APPEAL FOB HELP DF NATION Phelan Says It May Be Necessary. TELLS TAFT CITY'S SAD PLIGHT Only Eleven Days' Rations Remain for Homeless. STILL FEEDING 300,000 Chairman of San Francisco Paints Telling Picture in Few Words. Greely Suggests Xew Call for Nation's Aid. . . ..... APPKAI, AGAIN TO XATION. t WASHINGTON. May 3. In a tele- J gram to the War l-partment today, General Greely reported a general Im- 4 provement In conditions at 8an Kran- Cisco and vicinity. He calls attention to the fact, however, that scarcely ten 4 days relief rations are in sight and that further appeal to the generosity of the American people Is possible. Reporting over night, Edward T. 4 Devinc. representing the Red t'roas. says that 300.000 were fed on May 1. f Relief, plane, he said, must be contin- 4 ued for several weeks. He reports present little need of relief at Santa f Rosa, but says the greater need will T be in San Francisco, Oakland and im- I mediate suburb.. f SAN FRANCISCO. May 3. When the finance committee met this afternoon. Chairman James D. Phelan read a tele gram which was later sent to Secretary Taft. Any rumors of lack of harmony be tween the local citizens' committee and the War Dep-rtment because of the dis position of the funds appropriated by Con gress were dispelled by this m-s-sage, which read as follows: . "Telegram May 1 received. Finance committee directs me to acknowledge the same and to state that it fully under stands the situation with which you are confronted and your authority in the premises. We have only to renew our thanks for the prompt manner In which you met our needs wlmout even waiting for the action of Congress, and we plainly see that no disbursement of funds can be made except through the regular Govern mental channels. The only advice we pre viously received was that Congress had voted large sums of money for San Fran cisco, and the impression was abroad that it would be disbursed by local authori ties. Valuable Aid of Army. , "The Army organization under General Greely has given us inestimable aid and has co-operated in systematizing the work of relief. We are under great obligations to the Army and desire to express our acknowledgments. There is perfect har mony of co-operation between the Gover nor, the Mayor, this committee, the Army and the Red Cross. We will communicate with you from time to time as to the supplies most needed. We suggest the fund be credited with the articles not needed, as certain quantities of tents and blankets, and that so far as practicable you expend funds in California, to avoid transportation cost and to circulate the money where It Is most needed for re habilitation of business. "Cash on hand, less than 3300.000, with drafts in process of collection of which we will report further. Will also advise you as to respective use of money at ear liest posible moment. Period of Privation . Near. "Meanwhile desire to say that we are entering on a period of unprecedented privation. The assessable value of the city's property w,ill be reduced by about 200,000,000, and the ability of the city government to maintain its institutions will be accordingly decreased. Charitable institutions and hospitals depending upon private contributions, paid patients and like sources of revenue are in absolute need, and those which have no endow ment will be charges on us. In many in stitutions their buildings are destroyed. The poor, the old and young create a de pendent class which is augmented by the unemployed and certain classes of per sons doing jlerical work and engaged in domestic services. They will have to wait for the restoration of business houses ana homes. The city, with all its agencies, has been destroyed and its manifold ac tivities paralyzed. "By limiting rations to women and chil dren as a measure of restoring business, the men will be required to seek work, of which there is much of a rough character in cleaning up the city and preparing it tor reconstruction. Apart from shelter, food and clothing, efforts will be made to restore the worthy to their employ ment. "Dr. Devine and the committee are so en?t.ged in the important work of sys tematic relief that these questions, be coming more necessary of solution every day, have not as yet been carefully worked out. We will be pleased to keep you fully adtflsed In order that you may wisely direct the expenditure of the fund in your keeping." Only F.leven Days' Rations. General Greely made a brief speech on the food situation, saying: I don't like to be an alarmist, but I want a-uucluded 11a fua i