VOL. XLVI.-XO 14,541. PORTLAND, OE: f WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1907. PRICE FIVE CENTS. V . i ill MAYOR FOR 1 FRAN CiSGQ Dr.Taylor of University Is Elected. BIG STICK IS LAIO ON SHELF Schmitz Will Maintain Right to Hold Office. TWO CITY GOVERNMENTS Third Man to Whom Office Is Of fered Accepts Langdon .Praises New Mayor's Integrity, Ability and Also His Patriotism. SAN FRANCISCO. July 16-Dr. Ed ward R. Taylor, physician and lawyer, dean of the Hastings Law School of the University of California, was tonight, by the Board of Supervlaors,:;;alected Mayor cf San Francisco, and by the open avowal of the bribery-graft prosecution the so called "reign of the big sltck" came to an end. . Dr. Taylor was the third man to whom the election was offered by Rudolph Fpreckels and District Attorney William H. Langdon. His election came as a complete surprise to the city, f ot at no time in the past week of daily guessing wag his name mentioned by anyone out Bide of the secret councils of the District Attorney and his half dozen associates. The office was tendered to Dr. Taylor a few minutes after 4 o'clock this after noon, and his acceptance was in the hands of Mr. Langdon and Mr. Spreekels before 5 o'clock. Dr, Taylor Is between 80 and 65 years of age. The District Attorney dictated for the Associated Press the following state ment: Langdon' s View of Taylor. ' "We feel that Ban Francisco is to be congratulated upon having a public serv ant of the character and standing of Dr. Edward R. Taylor. A resident of Ban Francisco for 45 years, his heart is In the city's future, and the high serv ices that he can and will render this stricken city will. I trust, be fully appre ciated by a grateful people. "Dr. Taylor is in no sense a politician, but is a man of great learning and fine executive and administrative ability, coupled with unquestioned Integrity and unselfish devotion to the people's wel fare. "The .wide authority that has tempora rily lodged in the District Attorney's of fice will now be restricted within the bounds prescribed by law, and the ex traordinary functions hitherto directed from this department will, to our great satisfaction, have come to an end." Schmitz Asserts Claim. Mayor Eugene E. Schmitz, who was recently convicted of extortion, is yet a factor to be reckoned with In the solv ing of the municipal problem. Today he appointed Samuel Sawyer, a member of the Typographical Union, a Supervisor to succeed Charles Boxton, who resigned to be appointed temporary Mayor by the graft prosecution. It is announced that Schmitz will appjiit successors to the re maining 15 Supervisors who will be forced by the District Attorney to resign. The city will then have two govern ments, one headed by Mayor Taylor, the other by Mayor Schmitz, who maintains that he is not incapacitated until after the court of last resort has confirmed his conviction. It is held by the prosecution that the conviction of Schmitz in the trial court Incapacitated him from further holding office, and on that theory it has chosen Dr. Taylor as Mayor. Chief of Police Dinan announces that he will recognize no one but Schmitz as Mayor. , FIKD WITNESSES UNWILLING Heney Extorts Facts in Glass Trial and Threatens Delmas. SAX FRANCISCO, July 16. Both disap pointment and success fell to the lot of the prosecution in the Glass bribery trial today. Two witnesses, John Krause, a sub-agent of the Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph Company, and Miss Ryan, a stenographer, formerly in the employ of T. V. Halsey, proved unwilling wit nesses. Miss Ryan was relied upon by the prosecution to tell of the incrimin ating conversations between Halsey and Glass, but the best Assistant District At torney Heney could get from her was that she had seen Boxton in Halsey's office In the company's building at. Bush street and that she had been dismissed from the room when. Halsey and Boxton entered to converse;.' From E. S. Pillsbury, attorney for and director of the company and for many years a well-known lobbyist in this state, Mr. Hcney. after much difficulty, elicited the statement that Halsey reported di rectly to Glass, and that at the time of the alleged briberies Glass was the only official of the company with power to sign checks for disbursements without the approval of the board of directors. Heney Threatens Delmas. Mr. Heney questioned Miss Ryan at length as to which of the 18 supervisors she saw at the tele-phone company's offices at different times. Some she re membered, others she said she did not know. Asked a trivial Question byk Mr. Heney, Miss Ryan Insisted that her memory did not serve her and, when Mr. Heney re peated the question, Mr. Delmas came to his feet with this remark to the court: "Tour honor, we most seriously object to the sneering manner adopted toward the witness by the "Assistant District At torney." "Tt wm not sneerlnc ' retnrttiA "Viv Heney, hotly, "and you know it, Mr. Del mas. You have no right to characterize my attitude as sneering. "It submit to the court that it was sneering." replied Mr. Delmas, "and I will . row, inform the gentleman' on the other side that my rlsrhts in thn of my client's case are not to be pre- scriDea or limited by him." "I shall address myself to the court whenever it appears to me that the gentleman h? transsrresslni ' wr,nu4 vt,. Heney, "and I will tell him now if ho does not cease questioning my state ment, i win settle with him elsewhere,' "Ha, ha, ha." laughed Delmas. Witness' Memory Fails. After .Miss Ryan testified that sha "was acquainted with Mr. TjmiU Gl " Mr. Heney asked. "Did jnaisey in Glass' office?" Perhaps once in three months," Miss nyan replied. "Were they talking together?" "I suppose so." "Did you hear anything they said?" "I was not paying attention." "Did you hear anything without paying attention ; ' "No." "Did you ever take down nn ioWn or reports or anything else addressed by naisey to mass?" "I don't remember." Then came the most nenaoHnnoi in. cident of the examination. Mr. Heney looking full into Miss Rvan's face vA "Did you have a talk with hit in ine corridor yesterday?" Mr. Delmas entered an ohwtlnn nMh Judge Lawlor sustained. Denies Halsey Prompted Her. "Didn't Halsev. in thA hoi! Hn, yestertiay, urge you not to testify to for get what you knew?" asked Mr. Henev. Again Mr. Delmas objected, but before tne court could rule Miss Ryan answered: He certainly did not." "But Halsey talked with von vw.. for 15 minutes in the hnll HHn-f , Mr. Heney persisted. Mr. Delmas' objec tion was sustained. The defpnsA roiiTn ir : . - ...... " vnanes .Boxton for cross-examination. Mr. Delmas asked: "Who examined you before the grand Jury?" "Mr. Heney." 'Was thrt mani4 i - -."-""" iimiiH awarfl or the fact bv Mr Hphav tli.t .v.- tlon had granted you immunity?" Mr. oojectea and was sustained. Mr. Delmas said he had no further questions. In re-dlrArt.fTnmlnaff.n T) . , .-ww,,, ijuAtun saia lie was on the salary list of the Pacific States Telenhnno Cn-mT, - lacs, unm th :r,ow ,;r -J"'- - , . . v. WA xiiney i ruin ean Francisco for Manila in November, ijuo, una goi iia! per month. Decide on Indictments Saturday. SAN FBlvnam t,o.. ... Lawlor today announced that he would render his decision on the various mo tions to set aside bribery indictments against Calhoun. Mullally. Ford, Abbott ......i, xiuei, imosen, Green, Brobeck. Martin. Drum nnH n c ,i - ' llOAC DULUr- day Judge Dunne today overruled the motion to set aside Indictments in two of the bribery charges against Schmitz and continued the plea of Abe Ruef in me i-u.rn.sine cases for one week. Will Reclaim Yellowstone land. WASHINGTON. Jnl- ie T-t,- h tal7 of,-hInterior has -"dthdrawn from entrv 22S.nnn nr-c. , , .. , - , . - , in Montana and North Dakota on account of the Lower Yellowstone reclamation project CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The Weatlwr YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature 73 degrees; minimum, 67 degrees. TODAY'S Fair and .lightly warmer; north- Paclrto Coast. Corvallls business men raise S0.0O to blld .b.mvou in interior or Benton County. Page 7. Two men badly Injured by powder explosion . near Pendleton. Page 6. Eugene merchants boycott Harrtman lines. Page 6. Surveys completed for Harrlmaa road to . Interior Oregon. Page 12. More rebuttal evidence ( In Haywood trial. Restriction on evidence for state against iiuywoDu. rags . Dr. Taylor elected Mayor of San Francisco. Page 1. Heney has trouble wtth witnesses In Glass ...... uu uiirauni to ngnt Delmas. Page 1. - Fore Um. Korea In panic expecting Kmperor to bo dethroned.. Page 8. Hague conference considers disarmament . Hon.. ruriw epeaK on urago doc trine. Page 8. Terrible mortality by famine la India. Notional. Another death from , Georgia disaster and io more HKeiy. page 8. Government has ample funds to complete .... ,, u .i ia. mgs i- Politics. Railroad presidents deny they were ever in Judge Vlndsey saysalorado Is most cor- JDoraestlo. International "theater trust to rule America and Europe. Page 3. Collapse of building at London, Ont., causes nine deaths; five missing. Page 2. Elks convention In Philadelphia. Page 8. Portland and Vicinity. Vice-President Fairbanks guest at Press Club and banquet. Page 1. Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Longworth pas through Portland. Page 14. Aspirants to office of Surveyor-General be siege congressional delegation. Page 11. Fairbanks' visit develops evidence of new political alignment. Page 10. Dr. A. C. Panton fined 1S for technical assault. Page 14. Portland pastors arrange to take vaca tions. Page 11. Anti-trust ordinance ready for presentation to Council. Page 9. Sports. Portland loses opening game to San Fran cisco. 8 to 2. Page 7. Commercial and Marine. Trading in new wheat of small proportions. Page 18. Another break in Chicago wheat market. Page 18. Eastern wool prices firm: stocks mo sluggishly. Pag 15. FAIRBANKS GUEST OF PRESS CLUB Attends Banquet Giver by Newspapermen. GENIALITY NUKES HIM FRIEND Vice-President Disproves Hi man -Iceberg Story. HEARTY GREETING FOR ALL Informal Dinner, "Without Wine, at Sargent Grill Thoroughly En joyed. Distinguished Visitor Spends Day in Portland. THE nCE-PRESIDENT'S DAY IS ' PORTLAND. Arrived from Astoria at 12:20 P. M. Attended luncheon given by W. D. Wheelwright at Arlington Club. Called upon Mrs. H. W. Goods, widow of the late President Goode, of the Xwls and Clark Fair, whoso guest be was two years ago. Visited with old Indiana friends during remainder of the afternoon. Prom 6 to 9 P. M. was the guest of Portland Press Club at an infor mal dinner at the Sargent Grill. Spent remainder of the evening in bis apartments, attending to corre spondence. Will depart at 8:1b this morning over the O. R. & N. tor his home at Indianapolis. Charles Warren Fairbanks, Vice-Presi dent of the United States and generally conceded to be a candidate for the Presi dency In 1908V spent yesterday in Portland. His coming was attended by no salute of artillery nor rataplan of drums. He was here in a purely unofficial capacity and save for the Informal dinner tendered him by the Portland Press Club at the Sargent Grill, there was no pnblio dem onstration in his honor. The second citizen of the land was ac companied only by Private Secretary King and took his chances on securing a room at the Portland Hotel like any ordinary private citizen. Banquet Feature of Visit. The Press Club had, the night before. extended Mr. Fairbanks an invitation by telegraph to be the guest of honor at dinner, which Invitation he accepted by wire, and that dinner was the feature of his visit and one of the most successful affairs ever held here in compliment to a public man. AH the arrangements were completed within a few hours, but the dinner pro ceeded without a single hitch. Mayor Lane on the part of the city, extended a cordial welcome to the visitor to which Mr. Fairbanks replied in a most feeling and eloquent manner. A number of citizens prominent in affairs spoke ln- FAIRBANKS- 1 1 TS t s i i s s s s s s s s .TTs uiiiiiiiu i usssssssssssss . . . t I id In every particular the " ": a notable success. . , : son at Arlington Club. was met at the Union Depot Charles F. Bcebe and C. El S. : : a was accompanied by Gover- e E. Chamberlain. ex-United - ator John M. Gearin, ex-Unit' Senator F. W. Mulkey, Post . i ihn . W. Minto. Collector of In- venue David M. Dunne, and a of other distinguished citizens ials He was escorted at once rlington Club where a luncheon lered him by . W. D. Wheel- iuncheon he called upon Mrs. H. de, widow of the late president Lewis and Clark Fair, who en d the Vice-President on . the oo- of his visit here two years ago e opened the Exposition. Visits Indiana Friends. . in the afternoon Mr. Fairbanks Dr. Charles Boxton, Arttsisr Mayor of San Franrlsco Whose Place Will Be Filled oy Dr. . Edward R. Taylor. visited with a number of former Indiana and Ohio friends and then went to his rooms for a brief rest. At 6 o'clock Mr. Fairbanks was escorted by John L. Travis and O. C. Lelter, president and ' vice president, respectively, of the Press Club, in Harry I Keats' new 1908 automobile, to the Sargent Grill. A number of In vited guests and some 60 members of the club were waiting to receive him. As soon as the auto carrying the guest of honor came in view, Schilzonyi's band, which D. C. Freeman had brought from the Oaks for the occasion, struck up "Hail to the Chief." . After introductions and an informal reception In the rooms of the Bast Side Club, the party adjourned to the grillroom. where the dinner was served. The room was elaborately decorated with American flags and flowers and presented a beautiful ap pearance. Mayor Introduces Guest. After an excellent menu, which In cluded no wine, was served, John I Travis" who presided as toastmaster, introduced Mayor Lane, who, in a witty and appreciative speech, pre sented the guest of the evening. Vice-President Fairbanks had al ready made himself en rapport with all the diners by his unaffected friendli ness, but It remained for his address, which was entirely Impromptu, to dis prove completely the charge of frigid ity so often made against him. . While he attempted no oratory, his (Concluded on Page 10.) 'WHO SAYS I AM AN T 1 i H " , f i ORCHARD'S STORY IS Defense Answered on Vindicator Mine. WOOD'S STORY CONTRADICTED Assassin Testifies in Aller's Perjury Trial. SHERIFF ROUTAN WITNESS Telia of Colorado Reign of Terror and Forcible) Deportation of TTnlon Miners Another Blow at McGee. BOISE, Idaho, July 16. In the last stages of the case against William D. Haywood, the prosecution put si wit nesses on the stand today to rebut the evidence of the defense. They testified to conditions in the Coeur d'Alenes in 18B9, and to the situation in Colorado during the strike period of 1903 and 1904. The Important witnesses of the day were called to contradict the show ing made by witnesses for the defense that there was no reason for calling out the militia of Colorado other than a desire upon the part of the mine- owriers to drive members of the West ern Federation of Miners from the min ing district. One witness flatly con tradicted the evidence Introduced by the defense to show that the explosion at the Vindicator mine was due to 'an accident. Trying Aller for Perjury. While the big trial was going on in the District Court, before Judge Fre mont Wood, an interesting offshoot of the case was being heard by Justice of the Peace Savage. W. H. Aller, the depot agent, who was arrested yester day charged with perjury, was brought before! the magistrate for apreliminary hearing. The state was represented by Prosecuting Attorney Koelsch, and the prisoner by Peter Breen, an attor ney of Butte, who has been associated with Haywood's counsel, having been retained by the Miners' Union of Butte to watch the case. Fred Miller, who was ' Orchard's counsel at his prelimi nary hearing at Caldwell, immediately after the murder of Governor Steunen berg, assisted Mr. Breen. Orchard la Chief Witness. Th principal witness in the perjury hearing was Orchard himself. The prisoner was brought in from the Pen itentiary in charge of Warden Whitney and a Penitentiary guard. No more than half a dozen people outside of the principals in the case and the other witnesses were present when Orchard went over his testimony as to his con nection with D. 0. Scott, the railroad agent, who had sworn he interviewed Orchard In Cripple Creek two or three weeks before the explosion at Inde- ICEBERG?' CORROBORATED pendence in 1904. Orchard was closely cross-examined by Mr. Breen, but no amount of questioning brought out any material change in the original story. Mr. Breen was more severe in the little magistrate's court than was the cross examiner when Orchard was the star witness for the state in the Haywood rial; but Orchard maintained the same calm exterior and answered each dues tlon with quiet posltiveness. A number of the other witnesses were examined. the case taking up most of the day. A motion to dismiss will be argued tomorrow afternoon. Aller was released on deposit of $2500 bonds. Disproving Orchard Alibi. In the Haywood trial Edward Alvard, a physician of Burke, one of the min lng towns of the Coeur d'Alenes. swore that he saw Orchard on the day of the blowing up of the concentrator at Wardner, and that he came from there on the train returning from Wardner, The train was In possession of the mob, which blew up the mill. Alvard's testimony was in direct contradiction of that of Dr. McGee, who swore he saw Orchard playing cards at Mullan, several miles away. A. T. Holman swore in rebuttal of the testimony of Thomas Wood, a wit ness for the defense. Air. Wood had said that he saw Beck and McCormack, the two men killed by the explosion at the Vindicator mine, in the eighth level before the explosion, and afterward found their bodies in the sixth level. He said that Beck carried a revolver on that day, and that he saw a box of powder on a water barrel in the eighth level Just before Beck and McCormack went up to the sixth, where the ex plosion occurred a few minutes later, The impression created was that the two men carried the powder with them, and that Berk dropped his revolver, which exploded and the powder went off. This would also account for the finding of the shattered parts of a re volver near the bodies. Flatly Contradicted Wood. Orchard swore that he fired the pow der with a pistol. Mr. Holman was superintendent of a neighboring mine and formerly superintendent of the Vindicator. He was one of the first to go down the shaft of the Vindicator after the explosion. His evidence given largely from a prepared chart of the Interior of the mine, contradicted Mr. Wood on many points. L. G. Ramsey, a young man and a relative of McCormack, followed Mr. Holman. He was In charge of the pow der In the mine at the time of the ex plosion. He knew , Beck and McCor mack well, and swore that neither of them ever carried a revolver; that there was no powder in the mine at the time, eo far as he knew, and that there was no water barrel on the eighth level, as Mr. Wood had stated. Sheriff ftoutan, of San Miguel Coun ty, Colo., was the last witness of the day. .He testified as .to strike condi tions. Under a searching cross-examination by E. F. Richardson, he admit ted that union miners were deported and driven by force from the county while he was Sheriff, and that no at tempt was made to prevent or punish those who attacked the union men. He said that the deportations were the work of the leading citizens of Tellu ride. Impeaching the Defense. Lawrence Guibbinl. th Ran Fran cisco grocer, having been recalled and answered a lew Questions of thn d tense about the topography of the scene of the Bradley explosion, A. C. Cogswell, of Wallace, Idaho, came forward to further Impeach Dr. McGee. The doctor had fixed certain dates by reference to the date of the Repub lican County Convention, and Mr. Cogswell, who was chairman of the convention, gave different dates. The State offered In evidence a copy or toe laano Tribune, the official or gan of the Western Federation In the Coeur d Alenes, containing a long ac count of the Bunker Hill and Sulllvaii outrage, for the purpose of answering Mr. Darrow'a opening statement that the mill was attacked by an unorgan ized mob. A heated argument ensued between Messrs. Hawley and Richard son as to its admissibility, -and Judge wood finally ruled It out, the defense having offered no evidence to sub stantiate Mr. Darrow's statement. Dr. Edward R. Alvard, a druggist of Bunker, testified that he did not see about that town while the mob was at Wardner, but did see Orchard Imme diately after its return. He .denied having a grudge against the Federa tion, though be admitted having a member arrested for ordering hira to leave the country. Explosion in Vindicator. A. L Holman, manager of the Golden Cycle Mine, at Cripple Creek, since 1903, prior to that date of the Vindi cator Mine, gave a description of the Vindicator explosion, saying he reached the sixth level, whore Beck and McCormick were killed, within 20 minutes after. His evidence was in tended to rebut that of Mr. Wood, who testified that the explosion was acci dental. Under cross-examination, Mr. Hol man said he took an active part in the strike as a member of the Mineown ers' Association. He had been told of the bfcating of Stewart, who worked at the Vindicator during the strike, but had never heard that Stewart went home drunk and was beaten by his wife. The mining companies paid quarterly assessments to the Mtn own ers' Association and bought the state certificates of debt Issued to pay the expenses of the militia. "You decided to get rid of the West ern Federation of Miners because it had called a strike and you got the militia out to help you, didn't you?" demanded Mr. Richardson. "No," replied Mr. Holman; "we got the militia because the sheriff couldn't keep order and protect - the mining property." "Didn't the military, the Mlneowners' Association and the Citizens' Alliance all work together?" "All law-and-order people did, yes, sir." In reference to the beating of Stew art and other disorderly Incidents, Mr. Richardson asked questions aimed to make them appear mere ordinary inci dents of mining camp life. j Wood's Story Dissected. I G. Ramsey, an assayer, of Victor, Colo., who was powder man at the Vin dicator at the time of the explosion, contradicted Mr. Wood's evidence to the effect that the explosion was an t Concluded on Page 4.) J T CORRUPT SITE Terrible Arraignment by Lindsey. GRAFT EVEN REACHES WOMEN Probfem of Throttling Legisla tion Solved. CORPORATIONS' FULL SWAY Father of Juvenile Court Say Wealth Elects Legislators and Roosevelt's Influence Is Only Hope of State's Salvation. CHICAGO, July 16. (Special.) "Cola, rado is the most corrupt state in the Union. It is overriden with graft. Even the women, who are possessed of the right of franchise, have been reached by corporate interests. A franchise grant in Denver is Indorsed by the people, no matter how bad it Is. Throughout the commonwealth wealth overrides honesty and the popular will is smothered in dol lars." Judge Ben B. Lindsey. Denver's bellig erent Juvenile Court Judge, sat In the Great Northern Hotel tonight and recited the story of a politically-rotten state. He is the La Follette of Colorado, and ad mits that he Is the most cordially hated man in the Rocky Mountain region. He Is sick and tired, so he says, of the methods that prevail in the state that has Just elevated Simon Guesenhelm. the smelter king, to the United States Senate. He says: Corruption a Fine Art. "That Colorado leads all states in its up-to-date methods of defeating the peo ple's will: that it has solved the problem of throttling legislation and, instead of buying legislators, sends men to the Gen eral Assembly who are servile to the cor porations; that the motto, 'It Is easier to elect a friendly man as member of the Statehouse or Senate than it is to buy one after he lands there,' is the dominant policy in Colorado politics; that, more over, it is much cheaper to elect your man than to purchase a stranger who has happened to receive the people's In dorsement; that the Legislature on this account has been the tool of the cor porate Interests In Colorado; that men of the Guggenhetovytripe remain triumphant in the saddle; that not so long ago the big corporations in Colorado supported Governor Peabody for chief executive and In exchange were permitted to select a committee that named as counsellors for the Governor two members of the State Supreme Court: that 'the Colorado Supreme Court about that time held the eight-hour law Invalid and threw this question, a vital one to the miners and laborers, back into the Legislature tor settlement. Roosevelt Is Only Hope. 'I have no special auarrnl with Mv Guggenheim," said Judge Lindsey, "He is a millionaire, but has as much riirht to go to the United States Senate as a cab- driver or a painter of fine pictures. I object, however, to the methods used bv the machine which boosted Guggenheim into the Senate." 'You say Colorado is ridden down with corruption; now what can save it?" was asked. 'I feel that the Roosevelt influence is our only hope," he replied quickly. "I am a Democrat In National politics, but I pin my faith Just the same to such men as Roosevelt, La Follette, .Hughes and Folk." ' i Guards Against Slocum Horrors. NEW YORK, July 16. The Federal Government is determined there shall be no overcrowding of excursion and other craft running outof New York Harbor, and no repetition of the Gen eral Slocum horror. A large force of customs officers has inspected every portion of the boats, with the result that 15 passenger-carrying boats were put out of commission and tied up. It was found some of the masters did not even have licenses. Moreover, hun dreds of persons were obliged to disem bark from vessels because of over crowding. Fugitive Millionaire Caught. TORONTO. Ont.. July 16. Herman Battels, the millionaire brewer, who es caped from the custody of Sheriff Smith, of Welland, on July 4, at Osgood Hall, while he was appearing in an appeal against an order for his extradition to Auburn, N. Y., was recaptured by the Toronto police last night In a house in McMillan street, a block distant from where he escaped. Bartels had not been out of the house for ten days. When Bartels was locked in the cell he made his will and aske4 permission of the police to sign it. Fearing suicide, they refused. Missouri Passes Flood Stage. KANSAS CITY, July 16. The Missouri River at Kansas City and vicinity this morning was stationary, the stage here being 21.5 feet, half a foot above the flood point. Bankhead Fleeted Senator. MONTGOMERY, Ala.. July 16.-The two houses of the Legislature today in sepa rate sessions elected ex-Congressman John H. Bankhead to the United States Senate to succeed the late Senator r- COLORADO US gan.