VOL. XL VI XO. 14,633. PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1907. PRICE FIVE CENTS. HONOR OF A CITY HANGS BALANCE Graft vs. Anti-Graft Is sue in Election. SANFRANCISCOVOTESTUESDAY Success of Dr. Taylor Depends on Labor Union Vote. M'CARTHY'S NASTY FIGHT Hopes to Win on Platform Opposed to' Prosecutions Ryan Has Fallen Into Hands ot Old Republican Machine. BT P. A. SIXSHEIMER. SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 3. (Special.) On Tuesday, November B, the voters of Ban Francisco will go to the polls to decide an Issue which has awakened the Interest of the entire United States. A full city ticket is to be elected, but the battle is waging about the Mayoralty and the District Attorneyship. The is sue that has commanded the attention of the country is the graft prosecution. Two candidates for Mayor, Edward R. Taylor and Daniel A. Ryan, are pledged to its continuance. One. P. H. McCar thy, has denounced It. McCarthy Is run ning on the Union Labor ticket, Ryan on the Republican and Taylor on the Democratic and Good Government. As the representative of the prosecution, William H. Langdon Is a candidate to succeed himself as District Attorney1. The Democrats, Republicans and Good Government League have indorsed him. Frank McGowan, nominated by the Union Labor party to oppose Langdon, says that he desires to continue the prosecution, but his alliance with Mc Carthy has cast doubt upon his words. Hurling Mud With Zest. The fight has grown warmer and warm er, until it has become exceedingly tor rid. The campaign He has done diligent service. Mud has been scraped from the gutter and hurled with zest. Although Ryan Is pledged to the con tinuance of the graft prosecution, his candidacy has not assumed proportions to make him a figure In the betting. The conservative forces of the city have re garded Ryan's action in taking the nom ination from a convention which he ab solutely controlled as a blow to the movement for good government. Senti ment was overwhelmingly for the In dorsement of Taylor. Ryan is In the - race, however, and his candidacy must be reckoned with, not so much as to any chance of Its successful outcome, but in relation to its effect upon the contest between McCarthy and Taylor. Machine Embraces Rjan. TVhen Ryan captured the Republican primaries, it was as the head of a movement against the corrupt influence of the Republican machine, which la an other name for the Southern Pacific. Af ter accepting the nomination, Ryan cast about for support. The reform Repub licans repudiated him. Then it was that Hearst took him up. Now, at the end of the campaign. Ryan Is allied with the Republican machine, the very organiza tion he fought at the primaries. There is no question about this. George A. i Knight has taken the stump for Ryan and Knight Is one of the organization stalwarts. On the platform at the Ryan meetings have been seated those old warhorses of the Republican party who for years have served as the mask be hind which the Southern Pacific has op erated. Betting Favors Taylor. During the entire campaign Taylor has been a distinct favorite in the betting. Beginning at 10 to 8. Taylor's popular ity has steadily increased, until today he Is a 2 to 1 favorite. He has made a dignified campaign, using as his dom inating note a plea for the spiritual re generation of the city. His scholarly instincts and high-mindedness have made his speeches free from personal ref erences. He has. spoken 111 of no man. He has come from the luxury of his library into the battle not because ho desires office, for in truth he has no liking for It. but simply because he believes that he had no choice In the matter but to obey the call of duty. He has been sub jected to abuse, but he has not faltered. He has been subjected to ridicule. They have called him in derision a poet and a dreamer. "They call me a poet," said Dr. Tay lor. "Well, there are worse things in the world, and besides. If you elect me Mayor, I won't have time to write any poetryi" McCarthy Shouts Conspiracy. P. H. McCarthy has made a vigor ous campaign. He has spoken at eight meetings a day. His usual method Is to denounce every leading man of wealth In the community and to charge that the capitalists are in a conspiracy to elect Taylor and to cut wages. Since the financial flurry, McCarthy has advanced the argument that Taylor Is to blame and that such a thing could not have happened under a labor administration. It Is generally understood that an un derstanding exists between McCarthy and ex-Mayor Schmltz. now in the county Jail. McCarthy is particularly violent against the graft prosecution. He never misses an occasion to denounce Francis J. Heney. Taylor has the support of a large part of the labor community. It is on this point that the election hinges. If Tay lor is to be elected, the Union Labor voter must do It. If the Union. Labor vote should go solid to McCarthy, then McCarthy would certainly be elected. The labor vote will not be solid by any means, but It is still a question if Taylor can pull enough labor votes to swing the result. Several of the best known labor leaders have done everything in their power for Taylor. One large union of carpenters has pledged its entire membership for Taylor. Large organi zations of iron workers have done the same. The longshoremen are generally for Taylor. P. H. McCarthy is president of the Building Trades Council and na turally has . the support of a large pro portion of the men employed in the building trades. Heney Active In the Fight. The registered vote is 77,000. It is fig ured that about 58,000 votes will be cast. The labor vote is estimated at something between 20.000 and 25,000. If Taylor can secure 7000 Union Labor votes, he should mm- - Saw.' - afiM - t-ittswis Anthony Comstock, Whose Attack on the Late Robert G. Iogeraoll was Answered by a Woman. win. Otherwise the result would appear to be doubtful. Although Frank McGowan has a large following, It does not appear to the writer that he can by any circumstance be elected. Langdon has been exceed ingly well greeted In every section of the city. Heney has made several speeches for Langdon and on each occasion has been accorded an ovation. Both Heney and Langdon are keeping free from the Mayoralty fight. They are confining their efforts to the office of District Attorney. MOB THIRSTS FOR BLOOD Ohio White Man Narrowly Escapes Lynching for Assiult on Girl. MARIETTA, Ohio, Nov. 3. John Sweeney, a married man, 35 years old. narrowly escaped lynching from a mob seeking revenge for his assault on Anna Koon, a 14-year-old girl,' this afternoon. Sweeney, who is the father of Ave children, was caught with the child in one of the buildings on "the Fair Grounds, which is situated in the residence district, where a crowd quickly collected, and binding him with a rope, started for the Muskingum River, bent on throwing him In. The police arrived in time to rescue him and fought the crowd back to the police station, where order waa re stored by level-headed citizens. The girl is in a precarious condition. Skull Fractured at Football. OMAHA. Neb., Nov. 3. Jay Shestaka, playing the position of left tackle on the Dietz Athletio Club football team, during a game today with a team from Missouri Valley, Iowa, suffered a fractured skull. ana is m a critical condition. . . PRINCIPALS IN MAYORALTY CONTEST IN SAN FRANCISCO ;; . h -T- j, . -.y .. ,3 pas t iliSFic r., MtTfc,s .g,.-. vn-rii'lss-rMl irn - -i" -m m ,j , L mi ' f 1AIL A. BIAX, KEFLBLICAN CANDIDATE; EDWARD B. TAYLOR. DEMOCRATIC AND GOOD GOVERNMENT CANDIDATE; P. H. M'CARTHY. UNION LABOR CANDIDATE. t EXPLOSION KILLS SEVEN LABORERS Hurls Mangled Bodies Into Columbia. PICK HITS HIDDEN POPER Workmen on North Bank Road Victims of Blunder. FIVE OF DEAD ARE HINDUS Seventy-five Kegs of Explosive Hid den in Rock Cut, and Forgotten, Explode The Luckless Work lngmen Had No Warning. LTLE, Wash., Nov.- S. (Special.) Seven men were blown to pieces last Friday by the accidental explosion of a big blast on the Portland & Seattle Railway con struction work near this place. The names of the victims of the accident are Henry Hunkelor, a Finn; Charles Kefed, a Swede; and five Hindus, Halem Singh, Zebla Pongdo, Chunda Din. Namga Dass and Gunga Doola. Five other Hindus were injured. All are laborers who have been on the work for some time. One of the party is supposed to have driven his pick into a missed coyote hole blast, con taining 75 kegs of black powder. The mine powder that was set oft is supposed to have been left there last Summer by contractors, as it failed to explode and the workmen who laid it never knew that it remained Intact. When a number of blasts are set off to gether it occasionally happens, workmen say, that in the roar of the explosions, count is lost and some of the blasts are left unexploded. The seven laborers must have been right above the deadly mine of explosive, for the blast tore them to atoms and hurled the dismembered bodies into the Columbia River, a short distance away. The dead men were all employed at the grading camp of Cochran & Wolson. sub contractors on the North Bank Road. They had been on the work for several months and were accustomed to handling powder. No other explanation of the terrible accident can be found except In the theory of Btriklng an old blast that had missed fire. Every appearance of the ground bears out this explanation. Herman Schroder, who was employed at the same camp at the time of the accident, was in Lyle yesterday and ex presses the belief that a big charge of black powder had been left by contractors who worked on that section of the road during the Summer. It is known that blasts known technically as "coyote holes," containing 75 kegs of powder each, were exploded in the rock cut where the seven men were killed. It is likely that one of these blasts remained unexploded and was left by the workmen, who did not know it had not been flred. The party of men had been sent out from the camp Friday morning to work in the deep rock cut with pick and shovel. While thus engaged, one of the men must have swung his pick into the blast, a chance spark from his tool firing it. The men returned to the camp for lunch at noon, going again to their work, which was about three-quarters of a mile from camp. The fata! explosion was (Concluded on Page 3.) EVENTS OF COMING WEEK. Elections in Twelve States. Tuesday's elections in twelve states take precedence over all other news events of the week in point of im portance. President Hoosevelt will leave Washington for Oyster Bay on Monday night In order to vote. Voters in 12 states will cast their ballots on Tuesday In Massachusetts, - Rhode Island. Maryland, Mississippi, and Kentucky for a Governor and other state officers; In New Jersey, for a Governor only; in New York, for two associate justices of the Court of Appeals; in Pennsylvania, for" a State Treasurer, and in Ne braska for a Railroad Commissioner and two regents of the State Univer sity. Municipal officers will be se lected In Ohio. Utah and California, while In New York County a number of Judges and Sheriffs will be elected. Keeping Vp Reform Work. The Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe Railroad will be sentenced for re bating at Los Angeles Monday. The Metropolitan Street Rail way investigation will be resumed ' on "Wednesday in New York. The National Reform League will meet at Buffalo on - Thursday and Friday. The 27th - annual meeting of the National Civil Reform League will begin in Buffalo on Thursday. Dan iel C. Gilman, the president, will de liver the principal address at the opening session 'and the meeting will conclude on Friday. Taft Will Leave Manila. Secretary of War Taft's recent change of plans for the remainder of his world-ctrcllng itinerary provides for his departure from Manila on Saturday of this week instead of Monday, November 4, as originally arranged. The anniversary on Saturday of the birth of King Edward of GreatiBrlt aln will be marked by the presenta tion to him on behalf of "the people of the Transvaal of the great Cultlnan diamond, the value of which 4s ap proximately $800,000. CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The TVeather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 50 degrees; minimum, 35 TODAY'S Increasing cloudiness, probably followed by rain; southerly winds. Financial Situation. Charles Fowler, chairman Congressional banking committee, explains workings ot clastic currency. Page 3. Inflow of European gold restores confidence in New York. Page S. Chicago Federation of Labor expresses con fidence in integrity of "Windy City' banks. Page 3. Foreign Many crowned heads will be guests at Wln sor Castle this month. Page 4. Domestic. Montana labor unions drop out of State . Federation because, of unpopularity of Telephone boycott. Page 3. Anthony Comstock's criticism of IngersoU answered by woman preacher. Page 2. Secret service man shot dead by miner In Colorado. Page 2. - Feud between Lieutenant-Governor Bands and Donelson Caffery. of Louisiana, at , white he t. Page 2. American heiresses spend $900,000,000 for foreign titles, which affects money mar ket. Page 8. Sport. Los Angeles takes double-header from Beavers In last game of season. Page o. " Pacific Coast. Oraft vs. anti-graft chief issue In San Fran cisco Mayoralty contest. Page 1. Seven men meet death in powder explosion at Lyle. Page 1. Towns of Southern Oregon up in arms at -the order to remove trains 11 and 12 from Southern Pacific schedule Page 1. Man at Napavlne fatally wounds wife with gun through Jealousy. Page 2. Port land and Vicinity. Banks will Issue clearing-house certificates to supply demand for circulating medium. Page 1. Better feeling prevails In regard to financial situation. Page 9. Pastors preach on financial stringency. Page 13. Benjamin Fay Mills lectures on Emerson. Page 8. Police arrest four saloonkeepers who dis pose of liquor on Sunday. Page 8. Japanese celebrate birthday of Mikado. Page 14. SOUTH OREGON 1NT5 ITS TRAINS Southern Pacific Road Loudly Condemned. REMOVAL OF II ANO 12 MISTAKE Innumerable Hardships Will Be the Result. PETITIONS BEING FORMED Various Towns Affected by Order Are Up In Arms and Will Fight to Keep Present Train Service. All Business Is Affected. EFFECT 0 SOtTHIRX OREGON" OF REMOVAL OF TRAINS JfOS. 11 AND 12. ASHLAND A demoralized mail serv ice and the neglect of express and passenger business. GRANTS PASS Inability of doctors to visit patients In the county. In convenience to lawyers and business men desiring; to so to the mining districts. GLENDALE Difficulty In getting to county seat. Further Injury to lumber Interests after raise In rates. JACKSONVILLE Failure of Rogue River Valley train to connect- with Southern Pacific. MEDFORD Further crowding- of trains left on schedule. Delay In malls and -no fresh newspapers In the morning. ROSEBURG Delay In rural mall of from 24 to 40 hours. Failure to connect with star route deliveries. MYRTLE POINT Further crippling of already poor service. SOUTHERN OREGON IN GENERAL, Delay In malls and newspaper service. Inconvenience to traveling public, further crowding of already overcrowded trains and results on very branch of industry. ASHLAND. Or.. Nov. S.-(SpecIaI.)-Dis-continuance of Southern Pacific passen ger trains Nos. 11 ana 12, without radical changes In the time schedules of the other mail-carrying trains between Portland and San Francisco, will demoralize the mail service particularly In this section of Oregon and the northern part of Cali fornia. These two trains carrv th nHnimt malls for this region, including all Eastern x-oruana and San Francisco morning newspapers now reach here 24 hours after they are Issued. On the present schedule of the other trains they could not be delivered here until nearly 36 hours after publication. ' Ashland Up in Arms. Citizens of Ashland generally condemn the proposed curtailment of train service by the Southern Pacific not only on ac count of the demoralization of the mail service but of the very best of the pas senger and express service as well. The difficulty In handling the heavy traffic over the road with the present service Is the principal cause of the trains being hours late day after day for months past. How the company expects now to take off one train each way and handle the traffic with the remaining trains, which are already overloaded. Is more than the men in the railway train service or the public either, can figure out. Done to Spite Commission. The idea Is advanced by some here that the action of the railroad management is to spite the State Railroad Commission. If that Is the case the people of this end of Oregon do not like the idea of being forced to hold the sack. It is pointed out that from the San Francisco end of the Southern Pacific a daily passenger train is run north as far as Dunsmuir, which is In addition to train service afforded the territory between Dunsmuir and Roseburg by. the Southern Pacific. In stead of curtailing the train service the people here think the Southern Pacific ought to Increase it to keep pace with the growing traffic on the Shasta route, for some of the present, passenger trains are so long that they have to be divided every day Into two and three sections. MEDFORD FINDS SIX TOO FEW With Two Trains Taken Off There Will Be Untold Inconvenience. MEDFORD, Or., Nov. 3. (Special.) Time was when one train dally through "Boss" Murphy, Who Will Dispense (75,000 of Tammany's Money Among the "Faithful" Today. the Rogue River Valley was sufficient for the needs of the population thereof but with the rapidly Increasing population came the demand for service, both freight and passenger," and at the present time three trains dally each way find a con gested condition of passenger service, de layed malls and express. The residents of the entire valley are united in their opinion, for it means an other 24 hours delay to those living on the rural routes. ......... The traveling men And trains Nos". " 11 and 12 an advantage and only yesterday a prominent veteran traveler was heard to remark that in traveling from Rose burg to Medford on No. 11 he was com pelled to stand during part of the trip on account of the crowded condition of the cars. Some of the leading citizens were asked If it would make any difference If the express were to be 24 hours later reach ing Medford. P. J. McMahon, of the Hotel Nash( said a very material difference with the traveling public In every line of business would result and every one should be loud in his protestation against the re moval of these trains from the present schedule. Beyond anything else the in convenience would be felt If the night trains were dispensed with. Mr. Vawter, of the Jackson County Bank, stated: "We will find it a very serious Incon venience to have the night trains be tween Roseburg and Ashland discon tinued." George Fawcett, "W'ells-Fargo agent said: "With the new schedule the news dealers find that no resident of the Rogue River Valley may sit at his breakfast and enjoy the luxury of a fresh dally, (Concluded on Page 9.) It f (l." ' ' I K , ."H 1 I i i i t V - AN I 6 . . . BANKS WILL ISSUE THEIR Oil PAPER Certificates to Serve Public as Cash. CLEARING HOUSE SO ORDERS Plan to Supply Need for Circu lating Medium. BASED ON GOOD SECURITY Products of Pacific Northwest Will Bo Behind Every Dollar Paper 'Will Be Redeemable in Cash February 1. FIAT MONET IN SEATTLE. As a result of ths conference among the bankers of the North west at Seattle, the Seattle banks have agreed to adopt clearing-house certificates and to stop cash pay ments except In small amounts. They did not desire to do this at first, but were persuaded by the bankers from the other cities. In order to supply the temporary need of currency and furnish means for mar keting the crops of the state, the Port land Clearing-House Association has au thorized the issuance of bank checks in denominations of to, $10 and $30 for gen eral circulation. These checks, or Clearing-House certificates, will be based upon deposits of notes, bills of exchange and other negotiable instruments that are secured by wheat, grain, canned fish, lumber actually sold, and other market able products or paper approved by the committee that has been appointed by the association and by which the certifi cates will be issued. These certificates or emergency bank notes will be Issued through the Port land Clearing-House Association to the extent of two-thirds only of the valuia of the securities. The certificates will be redeemable in cash February 1, 1908, and will be used In all transactions the same as currency. They will be received by the banks in payment of all obligations and will circulate the same as gold, sli ver or paper money. Northwest Cities Agree. This plan for providing a temporary circulating medium was adopted at a conference of the representative bank ers of the cities of Portland, Tacoma. Spokane and Seattle, held in the last named city yesterday. A supply of this emergency currency is now on the press and if the work of the printer is not de layed, the first installment will be placed in circulation tomorrow. Through the plan that has been adopt ed by the local Clearing--House Associa tion the necessary medium of exchange is assured for marketing the enormous crops of the state. Aside frbm lumber, wheat is the state's principal product, and with the price for this cereal rang ing from E8 to 90 cents In Portland, the old saying "good as wheat" is especially applicable to the local situation, since this crop will be the principal securlty that will be offered and on which the certificates will be Issued and circulated. Will Move All Crops. This crop will not only furnish the main guarantee for the issuance of a temporary circulating medium, but It will at the same time afford the very means for transporting it and the other crops to the markets of the world, re gardless of the condition of the money market. Portland alone will export this year about 20,000,000 bushels of wheat, worth over $17,000,000, only a small portion of which has been shipped. The lumber output of the state approxi mates 2,000,000,000 feet annually, repre senting a revenue of $30,000,000. The system of finance that has been devised will allow the handling of both these products, along with the other crops of the state, at a time the market Is strong and when prices are high. Products that will be covered by these certificates will bo shipped direct to the markets of the world and sold. Proceeds Will Come Here. If in the meantime the situation has not been relieved locally, the proceeds of these crops will be shipped direct to Portland and used for redeeming the certificates by which the movement of the crops was facilitated. "This la merely a plan for providing a temporary currency for marketing crops, paying wages and affording a circulating medium for all lines of busi ness," said J. C. Alnsworth, president of the United States National Bank, last night. "It is not a new plan, for it was employed during the panic of 1893-4 and San Francisco, Denver and other large cities of trie country have adopted it to relieve the existing stringency. The certificates are guar anteed by the best security and will pass as currency In all avenues of the business world. They are perfectly good and would be worth their full value, even if every bank in the coun try should suspend." "The banks will apply for these cer tificates," said William A. MacRae, manager of the Bank of California. (Concluded on Pago 5.) DTI 103.2