9 VOL. XLVI.- NO. 14,641. PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY,. NOVEMBER 11, 1907, PRICE FIVE CENTS- DISLIKE ATTITUDE CORPORATIONS Democrats Will Assail the President. ATTACK POLICIES IN CONGRESS Minority Will Try to Shake Public Confidence. LEADER OUTLINES POLICY John Sharp 'Williams Declares That Roosevelt Errs by Attacking Or ganizations Instead of Individ uals Who Compose Them. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington. Nov. 10. President Roosevelt's corporation policies are to be assailed by the Democrats at the coming session of Congress. This Is a session when men of both parties will make political speeches for use In the campaign next year, and naturally the Democrats will be as active In this line as the Repub licans. Notwithstanding the tremendous popularity of the President, among Dem ocrats as" well as Republicans, certain men of the minority party have deter- (- mined to assail the President with the view of trying to shake public confidence' in the Republican leader. The line of attack has been (outlined In an .interview given by John Sharp Wil liams, recently elected Senator from Mississippi, but who still is a member of the House -of Representatives, and is also the Democratic .leader In that body.. In criticising the President's attitude to wards corporations, Mr. Williams said: "The President's idea that great crim inals oanngt be punished or great evils corrected without conferring upon the Federal government the. power of national Incorporation of all concerns engaged In Interstate commerce Is a. very mistaken one. The President's clilef mistake con sists In the fact that he has seemingly forgotten that a corporation per se can- , not commit a. crime; that whenever a cor porate action results in a public hurt it is and must be due to some man or some men who have used or misused corporate power. Cannot Fix Responsibility. "A corporation not only has no soul, but is not a eentlent being and cannot as such commit a crime. Under the law as written now the man, or men, who use It to violate law can be held to strict per sonal liability, and nothing short of so holding them will stop the great evils the exposure of which has come very nearly bringing about National hysteria. "It may be that somewhere an obscure agent of a corporation Is used by the magnates to perpetrate an offense, as Is sometimes the case In railroad rebates, and there are those who "would cry out against punishing the subordinate merely because he obeyed the orders of his su perior. On second thought, it will, how ever, lead ene to this conclusion: "That any American citizen who is an agent or servant of a corporation must ,be taught the lesson that his real ultimate boss is not the magnate, but the law, and that he must obey the law at his peril. In great abuses, however, it Is the mag nate, and not th,e subordinate, who com mits the sin. The recent Standard Oil disclosures, and facts which are known . about the United States Steel corporation, constitute abundant proof of the asser tion. We must get back to individualism, holding the Individual responsible for crimes, whether perpetrated by tolm In' the name of the corporation or not. Aim at Individual. "We are forgetting too much the cor ner stone of all civic righteousness, which la individual responBiblllty. Landing be hind the bars three men, whose names . are constantly upon the publio tongue for plain violation of both State and National law, will do more good to check trusts and Interstate commerce evils than any number of injunctions or receiverships. Then when you come to think about it what good are injunctions or receiver ships to people and what harm Is done to the malefactors? Again, what good does the fine do the people and what harm does it do to the criminals? Say the Government fines the Standard Oil Com pany $29,000,000 and collects It. "Have you punished Rockefeller or Rogers? Not at all. "Have you punished the Standard Oil Company Itself? There Is no such thing; It Is a legal fiction, and cannot feel pun ishment. "You have taken JM.000,000 out of the surplus and thereby hurt many innocent stockholders as well as the real criminals. Shift Fine on Consumers. "If not. you have caused the Standard OH to levy an assessment on the stock holders which would also punish the In nocent as well as the guilty, or else the directors would meet the situation, by raising the price of oil from a ij to 1 cent per gallon, whereupon you punish the consumers. "The tiling to do Is to find the male factor through whose vote as director or through whose action as an officer the crime found Its' perpetration In violation of the law and punish him. The Standard Oil is an exception to the general rule, as It has very few stockholders. - What I have indicated would apply a great deal more to any other large corporation. "What we need in this country more than anything else Is a more virile and strenuous expression of the powers of the State, both In making laws to meet new conditions and in executing those on the statute books. Especially Is '"the latter, course to be commended." EXPECT A SHORT SESSION ; 0 Many Important Bills Will Have to Go Over Because of Convention. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, Nov. 10. Republican leaders In the House of Representatives propose to prevent all general legislation that Is not absolutely necessary at the com ing session of Congress. Representa tive Watson, of Indiana, who Is very : ; - . v,'o) 1 Nicholas Murray Butler, Who Makes Appeal for More Money for Colom bia University. " close to the Speaker, says that Mr. Can non . believes it will be advisable to pass the necessary appropriation bills and then adjourn. MONEY FDR FORT STEVENS IMPROVEMENTS WILIi BE MADE ' TO COAST DEFENSE.. - Policy of Concentration Will Be Pursued, Leaving Half the Forts In the Hands of Caretakers. WASHINGTON, Nov. 10. The annual report of Secretary Taft to be submitted to Congress at its convening In December, will contain estimates aggregating $5,525. 920 for construction and other work In the Coast Artillery Service during- the fiscal year 1909. This construction work Is to provide in part for shelter for the coast artillery troops authorized by the act of January 25 last, for which It is necessary to erect 30 company barracks, six band barracks. 178 sets of officers quarters and 218 sets of non-commissioned staff officers quarters. By the legislation of the last Congress, the Coast Artillery received an Increase of 44 companies, with a corresponding number of officers. In accordance with the decision of iSec retary Taft last November a concentra tion scheme Is being worked out In the Coast Artillery service by which some of the 78 separate forts of modern coast de fences are to be completely manned and the remainder placed In the hands of care takers. Thirty-two of the principal forts we're selected as main posts, having as nearly as practicable garrisons of 100 per cent of a full manning detail, the re maining forts being regarded as sub-posts, will be left to such care-taking detach ments as are necessary for the proper care and preservation of the defenses. It Is proposed in furtherance of the con centration scheme to concentrate at the main posts the necessary barracks and quarters for accommodating the Increment to the Coast, Artillery provided for by Congress, and to follow this with the con centration at those main posts of the bar racks and quarters necessary for the ac commodation of the troops now at the sub-posts. The posts at which work is to be done and for which appropriations are to be asked for are given in round numbers: Baker. Cal., $185,000; Stevens Or., $107,000; Wlnfleld Scott. Cal., $392,000 and Worden, Wash., $334.000 DEMOCRATS ASK RECOUNT New Jersey Voters Not Satisfied With the Official Returns. NEWARK, N. J., Nov. 10. Governor Stokes will be petitioned by the Demo cratic members of both branches of the Legislature, It is said, to call a special session of the Legislature for the pur pose of ordsring a recount of the entire state vote for Governor as recorded last Tuesday. This decision was reached at the close of a conference at the Conti nental Hotel in Newark today at which Democrats, independents and others from various parts of the state were in at tendance. VICTIM STRUGGLES HARD Quarter-Acre of Ground Torn ' Vp WheSfe Dead Body Is Found. " 1 JOHNSTOWN. Pa., Nov. 1. Badly mutilated and bearing marks showing that he had been shot repeatedly and ter ribly beaten, the body of William Cline. a prominent citizen of Bolivar. Pa., near here, was found today in a field a short distance from that town. The earth was torn up over a space of a quarter of an acre around the body. Indicating that Cline had made a hard struggle for - his life. The motive of the crime is thought to have been robbery. Shot In Kentucky Duel. FERNANDA. Ky., Nov. 10. As the re sult of a quarrel over an election bet, William Hopkins,' son of Rev. Thomas Hopkins, and Frank Foley, of this place, fought a duel here today. Hopkins was instantly killed and Foley is slightly injured. KILLS HUSBAND DUG QUARREL Minon Glaze Shot Back by Wife. in ASKED HER AID IN SWINDLE Woman Becomes Hysterical; Tells Incoherent Story. SHE SAYS IT WAS SUICIDE Circumstances Against Truth of Her Statement Couple Recent Arrivals From Russia Well : Dressed, but Without Money. Mlnon Glaxe, a Russian wine salesman who came to this city a week ago from San' Francisco with his young wife' and little son, was shot In the back and in stantly killed yesterday afternoon in the rooms occupied by the family at 229 Eleventh street. The fatal shot was un doubtedly fired by Mrs. Mary Glaze, the man's wife, who was alone with him at the time. .They 'had been quarreling vio lently nearly all day and twice the wife had called up the police station by . tele phone saying she was afraid Glaze would kill her. Immediately before the" firing of the shot loud words . were heard by other occupants of the house. ' 'Mrs. dase, who is In the St. Vincent Hospital Jn a state of nervous collapse, declares that her husband shot himself. A post mortem examination, however, shows the bullet entered behind the left shoulder blade, and that the man could not have- fired it. , Absence' of powder burns indicate that the shot was fired from a distance. ' - W ife Called on Police,.' ' - " . It is' known that Glaze tad been abus ing the woman shamefully, and it is said by the police that he was demanding of her, earlier in the day, that she engage In a plot to swindle a local merchant out of goods so that they could raise- money to leave the city. They came to the United States less than six months ago from Russia, and Glaze was able to speak little English. Mrs. Glaze must have collapsed at the moment of firing the shot, for her screams followed the report Immediately and she staggered out Into the street crying out that her husband had killed himself.'. She fell in the street in a swoon, real or feigned, and lay until picked up and as sisted to the home of a neighbor, where she was kept until arrangements were made to send her to a hospital. The little son, Victor, ( years old, pre sented a pathetic spectacle as he mingled with the crowd that was gathering and described graphically how his father had killed himself. The little fellow was not old enough' to realize what had happened and prattled In a childlike way, telling how his father had shot himself in the mouth and eyes. The child was taken care of by neigh bors. The lad was playing in the street at the time of the tragedy and saw noth ing of it Glaze's body was found lying face up EXPORT TRADE BREAKS ALL Flow of Gold Certain to Come Hither Through Entirely Natural Causes "Comparisons," said Mrs. Partington, "are ' odorous, '. " but a comparison of Portland's export trade, in this season of legal holidays and financial stringency, with the trade for the corresponding period last year, or any other year when the banks were all open, speaks eloquently of the underlying strength which will enable the Pacific Northwest to weather any financial gale that blows. Here are some of the exports from Portland during the -first week of the November "closed season": . - Wheat, bushels '. 244,015 Flour, barrels 140,978 Barley, bushels 205,804 Lumber, feet 6,000,000 This immense tonnage of Oregon staples was shipped on six steamships and one sailing vessel, and the total value was $957,136. There was no legal holiday in the first week of November, 1893, which has some times been recalled in connection with the present situation ; but, with no special clogging of the financial wheels, the best we could do in the first ten days of November, 1893, was to export four small cargoes of wheat and flour of a gross valuation of $244,550, or about one-fourth the amount cleared in the week end ing last Saturday. ' . There were no legal holidays in November, 1906, when our general prosperity was flooding full and strong, but the total value of all exports for the first ten days of November, 1906, was but $310,154. That last week's export business was not a temporary spurt, is shown by the . fleet, now in port and en route. Four mammoth freighters; for which cargoes of. an aggregate value of more than $800,000 are now waiting on the Portland docks, arrived in yesterday, and twice that number was: already .here receiving ' cargo or discharging inward cargo preparatory to loading outward with wheat, flour and barley. In the face of the financial difficulties whichhave checked the normal flow of gold to this country to pay for these rich cargoes, it' has not been an easy matter for Portland exporters to make such a remark able showing so early in the season; but, fortunately for Oregon and for the entire Northwest, the prod ucts which this country have for sale are all strict necessities for which the buyer must settle in any kind of coin demanded. Payment of drafts covering these cargoes may be delayed, but it cannot be deferred indefi nitely, and, if our exporters can continue to -float cargoes as expeditiously as they have since the trouble began, it is only a matter of a short time before the gold will be drawn in this direction in spite of a!14he efforts that can be put forth to retard its flow.- But this -immense export trade is not the only magnet .that is drawing gold to the Pacific Northwest. While we are sending out cargoes of wheat, flour, barley and lumber to Europe, Asia,' Africa and Austra lia, the East and Middle West are still buying Oregon fruit and livestock in large quantities. Hops are not selling at very good prices, and the rail lumber trade is feeling the effect of the Eastern money panic; but the returns from both of these commodities will,- in the aggregate, reach a large gum. - permost. The woman's statement that he had committed suicide was at first ac cepted by the police and those who en tered the room. The shot appeared to have taken effect in the breast, directly over the heart. The police dropped the matter until the -post mortem examina tion at the morgue revealed that the bul let had entered .from behind and had emerged at what, was at first thought to be the point of entrance. This discovery at once stamped the tragedy as a mur der and two detectives hurried to the hospital, where they' remained to see that the woman did not escape. J Not Taken to Jail. As, Mrs. Glaze's condition was such that-lt was thought best to keep. her at the hospital last night, the officers "were detailed to remain on guard. She will be taken to the City Jail this morning. "'"xy ,v'-:: Victor Glue, 6-Year-Old Son of the Murdered Man. Little is known of the Glazes, further than that they came here from San Fran cisco early in the week and rented the rooms where the tragedy occurred yes terday. When the police were called by Mrs. Glaze, they failed to arrest Glaze on Jhe charges preferred by the wife that he had threatened her life, the husband assuring the officers, in broken English, ("Concluded on Pace .) CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The Weather. -TESTETtDATS Maximum temperature, MJ degrees; minimum temperature, 46 degrees- ' ; TODAY'S Fair; easterly winds. Foreign. Str Percy Ecott starts sensation by flippant retort to Admiral. Page I. Thousands perish In Earthquake In Turkes tan." Page 2? , Financial Sit nation. Strain lifted from financiers tn Kew York. - Pass 1. . Inland Empire bankers report country In stitutions In good shape. Page 5. ' National. Roosevelt gets suggestions for reform laws from Chicago lawyer. Page 3. ' - Navy getting big fleet ready for cruise to Pacific. Page 8. ; Democrats oppose Roosevelt's attitude to ward corporations. Page 1. .. Faclflo Coast. Sentiment that the delegates to th Repub lican Convention from Alaska should go uninstructed. Page 9. Sensational murder and suicide in Victoria, B. C. Page 2. Portland and Vicinity. - Mlnon Glaze shot and killed by wife during quarrel; case has mysterious features Page l. Depositors of Title Guarantee & Trust Com pany hold turbulent meeting; demand removal of Receiver Hill; W. M. Ladd guarantees Interest on savings 'accounts. Page 5. Benjamin Fay Mills lectures on Walt Whit man. Page 9 , Record for one day's sailings broken by ves sels crossing .Columbia bar. Page 9. Rev. J. C. Corby denounces state banking laws and scores recklean bankers. Page 5. Hunt Club plans another horse show for next year. Page 10. TK. 4- s -b 1 PHUT IS MORE THAN EMERY Sir Percy Scott Sends Flippant Command. ANSWERED BY THE ADMIRAL Order Called "Contemptuous and Insubordinate." THOUGHT HE MAY RESIGN Storm of Consternation, Stirred Cp. Sir . Percy Best Versed Man on ' ' Gunnery' in British (Navy. .:' Hero of South Africa. LONDON. Nov. lO.The German Im perial yacht Hohenzollern, which Is bring ing Emperor William "and hl party . to visit. England land which was expected to enter Sando'wn Bay; Isle of Wight, to night, . has been greatly delayed by a heavy fog and has been obliged to anchor with' the cruisers escorting her for the night.',' " ' An -extraordinary Incident has come to light In connection with the visit of Emperor William. It Is related that at the conclusion of the recent maneuvers, the Channel fleet and 'the first cruiser squadron were ordered by the admiralty to repaint, etc., in honor of the German Emperor. Upon receipt of this order. Sir Percy Scott, commander of the cruiser squadron, sent the following signal to two of his vessels: "Paint work appears to be more In demand than gunnery, so you had better come in in time to look pretty by the eighth instant." . Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, In a general order to the fleet repeating the instructions to repaint, refers to. the signal sent out by Sir Percy Scott as "Contemptuous in tone and insubordinate in character," and orders Sir Percy to have it stricken from the signal logs. Sir Percy Bcott and the members of his staff were summoned aboard Admiral Beresford' s flagship last Friday and the admiral's reprimand was read t to them. This affair has created consternation tn the fleet and there is a probability that It will lead to the 'resignation of Sir Percy. Rear Admiral Sir' Percy Scott Is prob ably the .best-versed officer In, gunnery in the British Navy, and he la well-known as the man who "saved Ladysmith" in 1S99, because he devised a special carriage for B-lnch and. 4.7-inch guns from the cruiser Terrible, which he commanded at Durban, whereby these, pieces were carried by rail into Ladysmith just before Its investment by the Boers. Sir Percy was noted In and about Durban, of which port he was made commandant, for his blunt and direct statements. Sir Percy Scott commanded the gunnery school of the' Royal Navy in 1903-05, and be has been director of naval target prac tice. He was naval aid to King Edward in 1903-05. -He is the Inventor of the night RECORDS signal apparatus now in use in the British Navy. NASI'S SENSATIONAL DEFENSE Former Spanish Minister Makes Ugly Charges. MILAN, Nov. 10. A local newspaper, known as the organ of the law courts, has ' published a sensational statement concerning the defense to be made by Nonzlo Nasi, former Minister of Public Instruction, who Is being tried before the Senate Committee charged with falsifying documents and defrauding the state treasury. According to this paper, Nasi Is ready to produce letters that the late Premier Zanardelll asked for funds for the purpose of subsidizing the press. He will produce also receipts from certain pawnbrokers alleged to have been signi by Zanardelll. If Nasi follows the-course Emperor William, Who Will Be the Guest This Week of King Edward. Intimated by the paper he will arouse much indignation. ENTOMBED ALIVE IN UE COAIj worker -beyond all means of rescue. Slow Death ' by Starvation Awaits Michael McCabe, of Mahanoy City, Pa, MAHANOY CITY, Pa., Nov. 10. (Spe cial.) Alive, and unhurt, but in darkness that will never be lifted, Michael McCabe, a miner, is awaiting certain death by starvation 800 feet below the surface of the earth in the Draper colliery near here. While McCabe was at work yesterday he fired a blast that blew away one of the mine pillars, and fleeing In the wrong direction got Into a blind shaft. A fellow workman managed to get out before the roof caved In. The mine breach extends to the sur face where It yawns 60 feet wide right In front of McCabe's home, where his wife and six children vainly hope for his res cue. Mine officials say it may be a year before It will be possible to reach the place where the man is shut up. There is no communication with him. COLUMBIA NEEDS MQNEY President Butler Points Out Im perative Need for Larger Income. NEW YORK, Nov. 10. President But ler of Columbia University makes a plea for further endowments In nis annual report to the trustees of the university, made public tonight. President Butler says that the amount of the gifts re ceived In money during the year amount ed to $459,070, and that the deficiency In the cost of maintaining the work of the university reached 158.109. "This sum," he states. "Is exclusive of the interest charge of $S8.043. Naturally, this result Is ground for grave concern. It points once more and with new empha sis to the undeniable fact that Columbia University is not sufficiently endowed to carry on the work which has oeen laid upon it. The cost of Instruction is con stantly Increasing. It Is within the mark to say that an additional free Income of $100,000 a year Is an absolute necessity if the university is not to restrict Its educational opportunities." TEXAS PROBES MiLL TRUST Action Began ' on Charge of Con spiracy In Restraint of Trade. AUSTIN, Tex., Nov. 10 An anti-trust stilt has been filed by the Attorney-General In the Twenty-sixth District Court against 130 Texas milling companies al leged to be In conspiracy In restraint of trade. The state alleges that the defend ant companies have violated both the 18H9 and 1903 acts and asks for penalties against each defendant In the sum of $75. 000 for the alleged violation of the act of 1899, and $56,250 for violation of the act of 1903. The state also asks for judgment for forfeiture of charter rights and the fran chise of each domestic corporation and cancelling the permit to each foreign cor poration, and fo an injunction perpetu ally enjoining the defendants from trans acting any further business in the state. DISAPPEARS WITH MONEY Northern Pacific Cashier Missing Along With Young Woman. ABERDEEN, Wash., Nov. 10. (Spe cial.) R. E. Lewis, who came here from Ohio to take the position of cashier at the Northern Pacific Railway Company's office, has disappeared, and while the lo cal officials are reticent about the amount of funds that are missing it Is variously alleged to be from $1000 to $1500. Lewis is still at large. In going away he is said to have been accompanied by a young woman on whom he has spent his earnings- t I - - f f j. . f It ( , $ f .' f i ' 1 ; sV ' ') A FINANCIAL DAY BREAKS BRIGHT European Gold Eases Situation. DANGER GENERAL CRASH OYER New York Banks Are Sending Money to West and South. SMALL NUMBER FAILURES Interesting Comparison Made With Record of Bank Suspensions in . 189 3 New York Reserves Will Be Further Strengthened. NEW YORK, Nov. 10. The most event ful week in the financial history of the present generation came to a close on Saturday with conditions much clearer than a week before, but with some clouds still hanging over the financial horizon. The previous week had closed with the disquieting announcement that the New York bank reserves had lost $a,000.000 in cash In spite of deposits by the Govern ment during the week of nearly an equal sum, representing a net cash loss of $W. 000,000. The bank statement of yesterday changes this situation. While It shows a nominal decrease In required reserves of $13,085,800, more than two-thirds of this decrease Is due to the reserve require ments caused by Increase In deposits be cause of the taking over of loans from the trust companies by the banks. More over, the actual cash loss of $4,313,000 is due to the system of averaging accounts for the entire week( Including several days before the arrival of the new gold. Unless demands from the country are very heavy next week the arrival of ad ditional gold will more than offset the loss of cash last week and make a credit able showing tor reserve on Saturday next. Strenuous Days for Financiers. The week began on Monday with a feel- - ing of grave doubt as to the future of the two trust companies which had been subjected to severe runs. The, possibility that they might go down and drag with them such financial structures which still stood erect, kept Mr. Morgan, the trust companies' president and other financial leaders In almost continuous suspension until last Sunday morning and again on Wednesday until 3 o'clock In the morning. When it was finally announced early on Wednesday by President King, of the Lincoln Trust Company, acting as chair man of the committee of trust company presidents, that the management of the Trust Company of America and the Lincoln Trust Company were to receive all the assistance they required In re' turn for depositing the majority of their stocks In the banks of the committee, the situation cleared, confidence returned and the stock market advanced generally from 2 to 3 points. It was felt that the danger of a general crash in New York was over and the wave of the storm would gradually subside. Europe Guards Her Gold. The restoration of comparative security in New York was obtained only by de mands on the markets of Europe which created a tension not before experienced since the Boer War. Indeed, the Bank of England, in -order to protect Its gold re sources, raised its discounts on Thursday to 7 per cent, a rate which had not be fore been fixed since 1S37. The Bank of France raised its rate for discounts to 4 per cent, the Bank of Belgium to 6 per cent, and tlie Bank of Germany at a special meeting called on Friday, fixed the unusual rate of 7 per cent. It is not surprising that these pre cautions were taken to protect European bank reserves in view of the fact that nearly $50,000,000 In gold was engaged by American banking Institutions within less than two weeks. The first arrival of the yellow metal came at the critical mo ment when the trust company situation was uncertain on Tuesday. Then came smaller consignments on Wednesday and on Friday the delivery of $12,361,000 by the Lusitania. The demand for gold from Europe came at a favorable time In some respects for the outward movement of American products of which the leading ones are cotton and wheat. Sending Gold to West. The cotton movement has been a great deal congested by the absence of small bills in the Southern banks, but every thing possible is being done by Secretary of the Treasury Cortelyou and New York bankers to aid the Southern banks in meeting the situation. The same is true In regard to the movement of grain, which has thus far been easily handled at Duluth and other Northwestern points with the aid of Western banks. New York bankers are sending forward to the West and South all the currency they can spare, especially to those points wherein the money is most needed. The premium on currency, which rose sls high as 3 per cent during the week, though it closed somewhat lower, has had a curious effect upon exchange and the price of United States bonds. It has distributed the calculations based upon gold parities of exchange and has made it possible to pay a higher price to get gold and to acquire bonds as a basis of circulation than If no such premium prevailed. One of the features of the situation thus far is the small number of failures of Na- (Concluded on Page 3- 4 ' ' ' - ; ! ID 101.2L