" ' r 'V. r t - 1; VOL. XXVI NO. 14,489. PORTLAND, OREGON, . THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1907. PRICE FIVE CENTS. . it i 4. 0 1 .1 'f FALLEN BOSS CONFESSES HIS GUILT Ruef Central Figure of Dramatic and Pathetic Scene. SUFFERS TO SAVE FAMILY Says Prolonged Trial Means Death to Parents, Sister and Niece. HE ADMITS CONNIVANCE ONLY Will Devote Life to Building Up Civic Honesty. CAUSES OF CORRUPTION Ruef Says Bribery Unnecessary, but Newspapers Create Impression Only Way to. Get Franchises. Sacrificed Ideals to Clique. - SAN FRANCISCO, May 15. Abraham Ruef. better known as Abe' Ruef, the ac knowledged advisor, of Mayor Sch'mitz. and biu-o the recognized dictator of mu nicipal affairs In this city, pleaded guilty to the charge of extortion in Judge Dunne's department of the Superior Court today. Sentence will be pronounced upon him two weeks hence. After a private conference with his four attorneys in Judge Dunne's chambers this afternoon and after they had with drawn from his case because of the reso lution he had taken to change his plea and avoid trial, Ruef, to the utter aston ishment of the prosecution, arose In court and announced in a dramatic ad dress that after long and earnest con sideration he had determined to with draw his plea of not guilty and enter a plea of guilty. He asked that the Jury be dismissed and the trial abandoned. , , ' Draws Tears to Many Eyes. Ruef read his statement from a manu script which he had prepared In the pres ence of his attorneys a few moments be fore Judge Dunne's chambers opened. He showed in his voice, in the expression of his face, in his quiet smd gestureless attitude and by the tears that again and again overflowed. his eyes, the great emo tion and the utter humiliation he suf fered. The pathos of the scene was com municated to the crowd that thronged the courtroom. Tears sprang to the eyes of veteran newspaper men, who have been life-long acquaintances and whose papers have conducted against him and his political associates a long and bitter campaign for the purification of munici pal affairs. The accused man was several times all but overcome by emotion. When he , reached the final words of bis address "I desire to withdraw my plea of not gulty and enter the contrary plea" his voice was sunk to a whisper. But so in tense was the silence that It reached the far corners of the courtroom. i Pleads Guilty, Proclaims Innocence. Though Abraham Ruef has formally declared himself to be guilty of the charge on which he was about to be tried, he nevertheless proclaims his in nocence. He confesses that he is guilty of having connived at the corruption in municipal affairs, but he denies with all the emphasis a man in his unhappy posi tion can command that he Is guilty of the crime of extortion charged against him. He declares that his sole motive in ac cusing himself in open court was to save the lives of those who are nearest and dearest to ' him. his aged father and mother, his maiden sister and a niece. In the course of a long and frank con versation this afternoon with a repre sentative of the Associated Press In a room at the house, 2849 Fillmore street, which for the last month or more has been his prison, Ruef said: "I changed my plea to guilty in court today, yes: but pledge you my solemn word that I am as innocent as you are. I have been guilty of conniving at the corruption in municipal affairs by cor porations, but in these French res taurant cases I am "not guilty. Since my action of this' morning I can have no motive in misleading you on this point. I shall pot mislead you. Never, never in the wide world could I have been convicted on this charge. No one knew this as well as myself. Then why, you ask, did I plead guilty? I pleaded guilty to save the Hves'of those who are nearest and dearest to me on earth. I am hot over-stating the truth when I tell you that if my father, mother and sister had been compelled to endure the strain of my trial, last ing at least two month and possibly. longer, it would have cost their lives." Can't Stand Family's Suffering. Ruef s eyes were filled . with tears when he said this. He turned, and for a full moment gazed out of the window unseelngly. When he had mastered himself, he turned and with wet eyes but a steady voice went on: "You don't know what they have suf fered in these last few months, and I would not tell you if I could. Why, night after night every night my father and my sister have come up here into my room and sat for an hour, saying nothing, seeing nothing. I could not stand it any longer." Again the tears and the choking and the long look out of the window.- "Last night 'i gathered my family about me in this prison-house of mine and prepared them for the act I had determined upon. That would mean one day of sorrow. To go on would have meant months of agony and death. Take Sentence Without Flinching. "I don't know what my sentence will be. For myself I do not greatly care. I say to you now, and you can judge if I boast, that no man possesses phys- Abe Ruef, the Fallen Boss, Who Has ' Confessed His tiuilt. leal nerve more than I do. I could face a crowd of 6000 men, of 10,000 men, every one with a rope in his hand and calling for my life. I could face them calmly and meet my end without flinch ing. But the suffering of those I love I could endure no longer. I say I do not know what my sentence will be. If it be five years across the bay, I can meet that when it Comes. I believe that with my personality and leaving out of consideration the feelings of those who love me and have stood by me, I could spend five years in San Quentin almost as comfortably as In a hotel at Napa Springs. But if the step I took this morning had meant five years or 14 years or 1400 years, the fear of that would not have deterred me. "I have made no confession. I know much. Some things I shall tell, some things I shall not tell. Whenever an innocent man has been forced into cor ruption against his will, that man I shall protect. Whenever a man, be he high or low, has entered into corrup tion, with his eyes open, that man I shall expose. . Wanted to Break From Sclimitz. "I will , not say at the present mo ment that Mayor Schmltz is guilty of the charges that have been brought against him or that he is innocent. I will say this: "I wanted to . break away ' from Schmltz before his re-election a year ago last November, and said to him: " 'I am sick of this thing and I want to get out of It. I cannot stand for all these labor union bums you have gathered around you and will appoint. They would eat the paint off a house.' "In answer, the .Mayor begged me to stay with him, and put up the argu ment that these fellows must be al lowed their share or we could never hold the machine together. There wad all too much truth in that. "I stayed with Schmltz and I stayed with the machine that I, at great labor and pains, had built up and assem bled. I found then that I had taken a step away from the high and clean Ideals with which, I earnestly assure you, I originally entered the political field. I found, in short, that to hold this machine together I had to permit and connive at corruption. In the state of affairs existing, it was neces sary. But I myself never asked a dol lar of any man, never took a dishonest dollar from the public The things I did were things that hurt no one. Warned Supervisors to eB Honest. "Before the boodle Board of Super visors was elected I warned them against crookedness in office. Immedi ately after their election I got them together and I said to them: 'Now, you , if any one of you takes a dollar. Til prosecute you myself,' and I meant it. I was in earnest, but I did not carry out my threat, for I did not want the machine to go to pieces. "And so much of this corruption was needless needless, I mean, from the giver's end of the dead. Take, for in stance, the trolley franchise. Every body wanted the street railroads elec trified. There would have been no opposition If the application had been merely and customarily ' laid before the bo-rd. It would have been granted. But the press of San Francisco had taught the public to believe that every officeholder was a crook; that the whole city government was rotten from skin to core; that no privilege could be obtained unless it were paid for. It is strange that those system atic attacks, . though frequently grounded on nothing more truthful than personals suspicion in private quarters, should have led the corpora tions astray as to the real situation. "The officers of corporations are not Continued, on Pass &.i TO DISSOLVE HARRIMAN EMPIRE Government Lawyers Recommend Plans. SHERMAN LAW IS VIOLATED Competition 'Killed in One Third of Republic. NEW LAWS MUCH NEEDED Report Tells How Rivals Are Crushed, ' Stock Watered and Western Profits Used to Buy Eastern Roads. WASHINGTON, May 15. (Special.) That the inquiry conducted by the Inter state Commerce Commission into the con duct of railroads controlled by E. H. Har riman will result in prosecutions was plainly shown by the publication today of the report and recommendations of Frank B. Kellogg and Charles A. Sever ance, counsel for the Commission. Within a short ,tlme the Commission will take up this report, vote upon it and transmit to the Department of Justice the evidence tending to show that the Harriman school of railroad financiering has oper ated In violation of the Sherman anti trust laws and other statutes. The pub lication of this important report caused a pronounced sensation. It proved a de cided shock to . some members of the Commission. The document submitted to the Com mission by Messrs. Kellogg and Sever ance, who have been unrelenting In their search for facts connected with the ab sorption of railroad after railroad by Mr. Harriman, covers 25 typewritten pages. It was prepared by the counsel at the re quest of the Commission and has been considered by-, members of the Commis sion individually and informally dis cussed by several of them together. It has yet to be considered by the Commis sion as a whole, but this has simply been deferred because there are one or two points into which the Commission de sires further to probe. -1 Evils and Their Remedy. The main points of the report recite: That railroad competition- has been ab solutely ended in an area equal to one third of the United States where Mr. Harriman is absolute master. That Mr. Harrlman's contracts with the Rock Island, Southern Pacific, Santa Fe, Illinois. Central and San Pedro Rail roads are in violation of the anti-trust act. The counsel is in favor of proceed ings against them by the Government. That the purchase of the shares of one railroad by another is an evil practice that should be stopped by law. That there should be new and effective laws to prevent inflation of securities like that of the Alton reorganization. That the profits of the great railroads of the far West are being used to buy and control railroads In the East, Instead of building more roads for the development of the West. West Milked by the Fast. The report by Messrs. Kellogg and Sev erance is based on developments in the Harriman hearings. The Southern Pacific voluntarily has abrogated the contract of the San Pedro route, which Messrs. Kel logg and Severance have repeatedly stated they believe was In violation' of the Sher man law. The facts revealed as to use of Western railroad profits to buy con trol in other railroads have been made the basis of Informal recommendation of some members of the commission to President Roosevelt in the interest of fur ther legislation. In its report the Commission tells briefly the atory of the Union Pacific reorganiza tion and of the establishment of Mr. Har rlman's control and of Its acquisition from the Huntington estate of control of the Southern Pacific; of the elimination of competition between the two roads. It is declared that these two systems are nat urally and inevitably competitors for a vast traffic between the East and West and to the Orient, and that their Joint control by one Interest is a violation of the Sherman law. . Prior to the passage of the interstate commerce law they be longed to the transcontinental pool, in which each road was awarded a fixed percentage of the traffic Harriman Lord of All Under the Union Pacific organization, the report points outfl the majority of di rectors In each of these companies has also constituted the majority in the other. Mr. Harriman has been president and chairman of the body . in each, and as chairman of the body in each, and as chairman he hag been delegated all powers of the board when it was not in session. He is absolute in both. Their bylaws have been amended and made approximately uniform, so that Mr. Harriman. has all the powers of the di rectors and the executive committee. All the huge financial transactions have been made by him and later approved by his dummy directors. ' The commission's report tells the btory of Senator Clark's effort to build and operate the San Pedro road as an Inde pendent line. He was well on the way to completion of his line when Mr. Harriman block him. Part of the right .of way which Mr. Clark was using consisted of a route through a canyon about 60 miles long In Nevada, known aa Meadow, Yei- HOW I ley Wash. This route had once been owned by the Oregon Short Line, but had been relinquished many years before. When Mr. Clark was ready to build through the canyon, the Oregon Short Lane revived its claim, started litigation, began building a road through the pass and threatened Mr. Clark that, if he con structed his line, it would parallel every mile of it, and, having all the connections for handling throughJjuslness, would make his road absolutely profitles. Clark Forced to Surrender. Mr. Clark finally surrendered and en tered Info the contract with the Harri man system by which the latter secured half of the stock of the San Pedro road and absolute domination In all traffic mat ters. Since the investigation, announce ment has been made that the Union Paci fic has bought the other half of the stock and now owns absolutely the whole road. Thus was killed the last attempt to se cure competition in this great region. The Santa Fe was brought into subjec tion, Mr. Harriman and his associates buying stock in it till they were able to force two of the Union Paciflo directors, Henry C Frick and H. H. Rogers, on the Santa Fe directory. Irrigation of Alton Stock. The famous financial Irrigation project in Chicago & Alton receives more atten tion in the text of the report than any other one matter. It is declared "the most remarkable story of manipulation and sfock-waterlng." The men named are E. H. Harriman, Mortimer H. Schiff, as representative of Jacob H. Schiff, James Stlllman and George J. Gould. When they bought up the shares of Al ton, it had a complete capitalization of 33,900.000 stocks, bonds and floating debt. In seven years they increased this to J114.000.000 and in that time they spent only $18,000,000 in betterment and exten sions. In other words, the- report says, they added $65,000 per mile to its capital ization without "one dollar of considera tion." The investment by the Union Pacific of more than J182,000,000 in the securities of other railroads is analyzed in detail. Competition Utterly Killed. The Commission finds that for several years, under the Southern Pacific-Santa Fe agreement, there has been absolutely no competition in the fruit traffic from California east. In fact, in the immense aea west of the Missouri dominated by the Union and Southern Pacific, Santa Fe, San Pedro and their related lines, competition has been utterly killed. REPORT NOT YET ADOPTED Counsel Have Only Made Recom mendations to Commission. WASHINGTON, May 15. The recom mendations of Messrs. Kellogg and Sev erance in -regard. to the Harriman Tall roAd am Ho.- yet acoepted and confirmed iy the Interstate Commeroe Commission, so that they stand at present merely as recommendations to the Commission, and not the report of the Commission Itself. Commissioners Harlan and Knapp, of the Interstate Commerce Commission, say that the Commission has not yet made Its report. The members of the Commission' con ferred for an hour this afternoon over the report from New Tork that the recommendations of Messrs. Kellogg and Severance had been made public and then I authorized the following statement: The commission has not prepared a report In the so-called Harriman rue, nor has it yet decided any of the questions Involved In the inquiry. The whole matter U stilt under In vestigation. It may be that the briefs or memoranda sirbmltted by counsel have become known in ome quarters and the mistaken in ference drawn therefrom that the Commission has agreed upon a report. No further Information than Is con tained In the - statement is authorized. Chairman Knapp reiterated that the Com mission had not reached any conclusion respecting the case and probably would not for some time. He declined to indicate what might be the conclusion. Sounds Like Rehash, Says Kellogg. CHICAGO,' May 15. Frank B. Kellogg, special attorney for the Government In the investigation by the Interstate Com merce Commission of the affairs of the Harriman lines, who is In Chicago to night, said: That story from New Tork outlining supposed recommendations by me to the Interstate Commerce Commission sounds like a rehash of my closing- arguments In the case April 4. Then I suggested legislation to correct certain evils relative to the com munity of interests. A copy of my address was returned to me for the customary c.--recttons, and the corrected copy was for warded to Washington a week ago. I have made no statement to anyone regarding this case, and don't Intend to. SENDS STOCKS TUMBLING DOWN Report on Harriman Lines Causes General Bear Raid. NEW YORK, May " 15. Union Pacific was the storm center of an attack by traders upon the Stock Exchange today upon the appearance of the report of counsel for the Interstate Commerce Com mission. Union Pacific Btock fell nearly four points before support was forth coming and the whole list became weak and unsettled upon the news, and declined a point. Southern Pacific fell off a point, but steadied with good buying. All rail roads holding stock control of other lines were adversely affected by the news, principally Pennsylvania, which became weak. After the first- shock had passed, the market became steady. PLOTTED TO BUY COUNCIL Pittsburg Brokers Accused of Con spiracy In Franchise Deal. PITTSBURG, May 15. C. R. Richard son, a broker, and A. B. McGrew, his busilness associate, were arrested to day on a charge of conspiracy to bribe in connection with the Pittsburg & Tube City Railway scandal, in which $70,000 and bills granting franchises from McKeepsport to Pittsburg figured. A. A. Martin, member of the Com mon Council, was recently convicted on a charge of conspiracy In the same case, and is now under bonds, pending I appeal. -. - i . Warships Stay in Position. WASHINGTON". May 15. That the American - wajrshlps now in Central American waters will be retained there for some time was Indicated at the State Department today". The Marietta is at Puerto Cortez. the Paducah at Point Bar rloa and the Yorktown is taking Minister Merry, from CotU liica. to Aoajutla, t, - . ' . CANNOT BELIEVE HARRY CI Possible Jurors Reveal , New Prejudice. CAUSE LAWYERS TO WRANGLE Introduction of Roosevelt's Name Stirs Them. 'BUTTED IN" SAYS DARROW Judge in Haywood Case Stops Spir lted Dispute About Roosevelt's Letter State Exercises First Peremptory Challenge. BOISE, Idaho, May 15. The unexpected uncovering of a vein of prejudice against Harry Orchard and his testimony during the further examination of talesmen In the Steunenberg murder case today led to the first sharp wrangle between counsel and involved the name -of President Roosevelt In an acrimonious discussion.' The day and the incident began ' with Samuel Wlngate. the eleventh talesman In the hands of the defense for examina tion in chief. Questioning had proceeded but a short distance when it developed that Mr. Wlngate was biased against Or chard and unwilling to accept the testi mony which It Is expected he will give against the prisoner. The defense natur ally tried at once to show that Mr. Win gate's state of mind on the subject was not such as would warrant his removal from the box, but when the talesman re passed to the hands of the State, Senator Borah quickly drew from him the Cat footed statement that he could not under any circumstances give credence to Or chard's testimony. Mr. W-ingate was upon this excused, the defense excepting to the court's' ruling and from -thenceforward the State was particular to test all tales men on the point. Lawyers Spat Over Orchard. A. P. Burns, who finally succeeded to Mr. Wingate's seat, said under oath that he was not prepared to give the same credence to Orchard that he would extend to other witnesses, but his attitude was not deemed 'sufficient fo' warrant his re movah The question recurred at the af ternoon Besslon, when Mr. Borah put the covering question to William McGuffln, who succeeded Mr. Henry at seat six af ter the latter had been evicted for implied bias on the testimony of R. Z. Lovelace, the first witness called In the case, who swore that Mr. Henry had. told him that Moyer, Haywood and Pettibone would not have been brought here If "they had not been mixed up In the case." Clarence Darrow. of the defense, ob jected to the question and Mr. Borah sharply replied: "After the immense latitude that the defense has taken In regard to McPart land, Taft and Roosevelt, I do not think they would stick on any technicalities at this late day." "We didn't ask as to the effect of Mc Partland's testimony," said Messrs. Dar row and Richardson together. "If Roosevelt Is to be'brought here to testify, we might have something more to say," went on Mr. Richardson. Says Roosevelt "Butted In." ' "Roosevelt can take care of himself, wherever he is," retorted Mr. Borah. "Weil, I don't know about that," said Mr.. Darrow. Judge Wood directed counsel to proceed with the case, but Mr. Darrow, who was standing, took formal exception to the remarks of Mr. Borah. "I will be glad to eliminate Roosevelt if you will," replied Mr. Borah. "He was brought Into the case by the defense." "He came in himself," said Mr. Richard son. "He Is 2000 miles away and he writes letters." "He was brought In by his own but ting in," added Mr. Darrow. The Judge overruled the objection to the question, the talesman saying that he did not have any bias or opinion in the matter, the defense noting an exception, and the inoident closed. The jury-box was finally filled with 12 talesmen subjected to examination and temporarily passed by both sides at 3:40 o'clock in the afternoon and the court announced that It was In order for both sides to exercise peremptory challenges. Counsel for Haywood asked for a few moments' delay and for five minutes they gathered around the chair of the pris oner and engaged in earnest consultation as to their course on the men occupying the jury-box. First Peremptory Challenge. The state exercised its right first and excused William Van Orsdale, a grocer, who has occupied seat No. 2 since the opening day of the trial. George V. Maw, a 3-oung farmer with some strong objec tions to the acts of certain elements In the labor unions of tha comity, -srss then called to the vacant place. The state passed him and he was still in the hands of the defense when adjournment hour was reached. The trial will not be resumed until 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, because of the -funeral In the morning of Judge Nu gent, father of John F. Nugent, one of the counsel for the defendant. The pro ceedings were interrupted at the begin ning of the afternoon session today and Judge Wood made formal announcement of the death of Judge Nugent. Commit tees of the local bar to make arrange ments for the participation of ' the bar and court in the funeral and to draft me morial resolutions were appointed by Judge Wood and it was announced that, to permit the members of the court to attend the funeral, there would be no session tomorrow morning. This recess may extend the completion of the Jury beyond the end of this week. Between prosecution and defense there lie 20 peremptory challenges, and but one of these has been used. It is generally ad mitted that both sides intend to fully use their peremptory rights and the present composition of the tentative jury may be entirely changed. Seeking Local Prejudice. The examination of talesmen by the defense indicated a desire to further in vestigate the question of general local prejudice. Counsel recalled the trouble In the Coeur d'Alenes IS and 18 years ago and made careful Inquiry as to its possi ble effects upon the minds and prejudices of prospective jurors. The rest of their examination covered the wide range of subjects already outlined. The state, besides its general line of questions and General S. B. IK. Young-. WASHINGTON, May 15. General S. B. M. Young, retired, was today ap pointed superintendent of Yellow stone Park, to succeed Major John Pitcher. the attitude toward Harry Orchard intro duced', today, is also covering -rr.ember-Rhip in labor unions and the possible ex istence of prejudice for or against them. The prisoner was again an active par ticipant In the conduct of his case. : He repeatedly consulted with his attorneys and watched the proceedings with atten tion as alert as theirs. The courtroom ..failed to fill again today, and If talesmen, witnesses, lawyers,- court attaches and newspaper men had remained away, the place would have been absolutely lonesome. The people of Boise are following the case with Interest, but the city seems unwilling to spare more than a score of its inhabitants to sit through the proceedings in court. Prejudice Against Orchard. When asked by Mr. Richardson if any prejudice against the Miners' Fed eration had grown up in his mind in consequence of the Coeur d'Alerie dis turbances of 1892 and 1899, Mr. Win gate, the first talesman examined, said he partly upheld and partly blamed the Western Federation of Miners in the Coeur d'Alene matter. He thought the murder' of Steunenberg "a very bad thing," and had.' formed -an opinion, which died down as time went on. He had read interviews with Detective McPartland accusing the Federation of ficials of the crime, hut came to no opinion on them, because there were so many; of them' and they were all cir cumstantial. The examination then continued: ; x .- 11 "Did you read about an alleged con fession of Harry Orchard?" ' "Yes." "Reach any opinion in regard to it?" "As to what?" ! 'As to Orchard's guilt?" "Yes." "You could hot sit as a Juror at this trial then?" "No.' "Is your opinion so strong that it touches the guilt or Innocence of Hay wood?" "In a way." "But you 'could give him a fair and impartial trial?" "Yes." Wlngate declared ho would be preju diced against Orchard as a witness. . He was a Republican, but the fact that the accused was quasi-Democrat or quasi-Socialist would not make any dif ference to him. He had read the Pres ident's letter but It had not influenced him and he thought Mr. Roosevelt should have kept his hands off and let the court and Jury try the prisoner. .. Mr. Richardson passed the juror and Mr. Borah renewed the examination for the state, asking: Admits Abiding Conviction. "Do .1 understand you to say you would be prejudiced against Harry Orchard as a witness?" "Yes, sir, I certainly would." "And you would give his testimony no weight?" "I couldn't." "And if. the state came to rely very largely upon Orchard's testimony you would have a prejudice against the state?" "I couldn't help but have." "Your bias against Orchard Is an abiding conviction?" "Yes, sir." "We challenge the juror for cause for actual bias," said Senator Borah. The defense reslnted. saying the Juror had a right to put his own weight upon the testimony to be adduced. Judge Wood allowed the Challenge arid the defense noted an exception. S. M. Kepner. a farmer, said he had (Continued on Page 3.) DIUHOISOF GREAT DILEMMA Goes to Washington to See Foraker. MUST DECLARE PREFERENCE Choose Ether Taft or Foraker dr. Keep Silent. TAFT MEN ARE AGGRESSIVE State Committee May Call Conven tion to Declare Party Choice. Democrats Hope to Gain Sena torship Through Fight. COLUMBUS, O., May IB. (Special.) Senator Charles Dick has hastened to Washington, and it is believed here he will have a heart-to-heart talk with Senator Foraker. After Mr. Dick has formally declared his position, the Taft forces will get into speedy action. Mr. Dick must fish, cut bait or go ashore. . ' . Here are Mr. Dick's alternatives, as the astute politicians in Ohio see them tonight: . ' He can come out with a frank declaration that he favors the candi dacy of Secretary Taft for 'the Presi dential nomination next year, and tell the people of the state why he has hesitated about giving expression to his position. He can declare that he is for Mr. Foraker, Instead of Mr. Taft, for President. Effect of Either Action. , If he does not accept either of these alternatives, he may equivocate by an expression in favor of putting the matter off until next Spring, which would bring the whole question to the eve of the National convention. If Mr. Dick declares himself in line with the overwhelming sentiment of the state for Mr. Taft, that practically will end the matter. Should he de clare that he is for Mr. Foraker aa against Mr. Taft, It would be up to the state central committee, now con trolled by the Taft forces, to meet. Is sue a call for a state convention for the specified purpose of putting the party, through Its duly constituted rep resentatives, on record on the Presi dential Issue and so terminate any semblance of doubt in the minds of Re publicans in other states. , Rest of Ohio of One Mind. If Mr. Dick refuses to make any declaration now, it1 means acknowl edgment that he is a negligible quan tity and that the organization may go ahead without considering him at all. With only Mr. Foraker and Mr. Dick remaining slient, it can be made plain to the country that all the rest of the Republicans of Ohio are of one mind as to the overtopping Presldenthil question. 1 Right now the situation in Ohio may seemed muddled to outsiders. Before midsummer the whole matter will be cleared up, if it becoes necessary to take . drastic action. DEMOCRATIC HOPES REVIVED Taft-Foraker Fight Offers Prospect of Winning Senatorship. CLEVELAND, O., May 15. The reclnd ipg of the call for the Republican love feast at Columbus and the consequent failure of Taft and Foraker factions to get together has greatly encouraged Dem ocratic leaders In Ohio. They are of the opinion that they now have an excellent chance of electing Senator Foraker's suc cessor and cite the existing makeup of the Legislature as proof. The present Ohio House consists of 62 Republicans, 57 Democrats and two In dependents. The Senate has 18 Republi cans, 38 Democrats and one Indepen dent, who is classed as a Democrat. This gives the Republicans SO votes against 78 for the Democrats and Independents. The next Senator will be elected by the Legislature chosen at the next election, and there are sa many districts In which, the vote is not close that It may safely said that the Democrats have at least as fair a prospect of overcoming the present Republican lead as the Republicans have of Increasing it. Five of the present Republicans were elected by pluralities of less than 100. One had a margin of three votes only, one was elected by four votes and one by 12 votes. The man elected by three votes for himself and ha has three sons, who voted for him. Three Democrats had pluralities of less than 100. In the Senate the Republicans have one member who was chosen by a plurality of 50. while the smallest plurality for any Democratic Senator was 22. T he Democratic leaders declare that ar.y election giving pluralities of 100 or less is anybody's light when the next election comes around. Picks Up Men From Ella G. VICTORIA. B. C May 16. The steamer Amur, which arrived today, reports having picked up a boat's, crew of three men lost from the schooner Klla G. off Queen Charlotte Islands, who lmd 'been without food for 30 hours nnd were almost exhaust ed. The schooner was met with after the steamer left Charlotte Islands artJ the men were returned on board. 1J-1.75LU