VOL. XL VI.- XO. 14,649 PORTLAND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1907. PRICE FIVE CENTS. FORBIDS PLEDGE FOR THIRD TERM Roosevelt Wants No Federal Brigade. SENDS NOTICE TO THE SOUTH Takes Wind Out of Anti-Administration Sails. MAKES POLITICIANS GUESS Southern Officials Not to Go to the Convention Supporting Third Term Silent About Renewing the Renunciation Pledge. WASHINGTON. Nov. 19. (Special.) President Roosevelt has instructed First Assistant Postmaster-General Frank H. Hitchcock not to permit any Federal of ficeholders In the Southern States to go to the Republican National Convention next Summer under instructions for, or otherwise favoring the nomination of the President for a third term. This fact, which came to light today. Is by far the most interesting piece of Republican political news that has de veloped In the last several months. It will be likely to take away the breath of the antl-admlnistratlon element, which has been exploiting the alleged efforts of the President's representatives to corral the Southern Republican organization for a renomlnatlon. and, when Its breath is recovered, It will be put to harder guess ing than ever as to the political game the executive is playing. Keeps Politicians Guessing. While keeping pretty much all factions among the politicians on the anxious seat most of the time and letting it be un derstood that the policy of the adminis tration Is not to cross bridges until they actually are reached, the President now and then shoots In a chip that adds to the gaiety of the game. The Instruc tions to Mr. Hitchcock form one of the now-and-then incidents. All the time, however, the executive keeps to an enigmatical silence under the entreaties that he consent to place himself in the hands of the people on the one hand and under the demands that he forcibly reiterate his declaration of election night, 1WM. on the other. The President has issued no ukase as the one having the power of ap pointment and removal over Federal officeholders, forbidding the minor officials of the Government to partici pate in the conventions of their party. All that he has done, according to the best of information, is to Insist that those who owe their positions to him shall not allow such personal al legiance to be turned Into a movement bearing the stamp of a desire or de mand to continue his occupancy of the White Hquse. May Attend Conventions. It Is understood that the President does not regard participation in party conventions as offensive partisanship. Apparently he believes that the office holder has as much right to attend a National Convention as any one else, and so will not assume to dictate who shall and who shall not stand for elec tion as delegates. When all this be comes folly apparent It may he realized that the puissance of the off Iceholdlng contingent In the South, where the Republican organization is controlled so largely by it, will not be diminished by the injunction regarding third term instructions or favor. In prohibiting third-term activity on the part of the officeholders some of the politicians will be sure to note that the President has not said anything as to what private citizens may do. Result: More guessing and more allegations of deep-laid schemes in certain quarters. One actual effect, however, to change the breath-exhausting metaphor, may be to take the wind out of the sails of the reactionaries who have bullded so strongly on involving the President in a , plot to organize his forces for a renomlnatlon. JOHNSON NOT IX THE RUXXIXG Says His Sphere of Duty Is In Cleve land 3-t'cnt Uare Fight. CLEVELAND, I).. Nov. 18.-(Special.) Tom L. Johnson has put himself out of the running for the Democratic Presi dential nomination. Organizations and Democrats in various parts of the coun try had begun to boom Mayor Johnson, whose fourth, election to the Mayoralty, tills time In the face of the opposition of Theodore E. Burton, urged into the con test by President Roosevelt, made him more of a National figure than ever. Mayor Johtisonalso made public his de clination of invitation to speak at the Bryan banquet In Washington and at the Kansas City Commercial Club banquet. Kansas City has been urging him to accept, and James J. Hill declared in Minneapolis that should Mayor Johnson consent to attend, Kansas City would not be graced by the presence of James J. Hill on tliat occasion. The announcement of Johnson's posi tion was put forth by Burr R. Gongwer, private secretary to the. Mayor, just after the latter had bosrrieri a train for New York City. Politics is believed to have nothing to do with the flying trip to the East. "Mayor Johnson authorizes me to say that under no circumstances will he be a candidate for the Presidency," said Mr. Gongwer. "He wants it to be known that he con siders Cleveland the sphere of his duty at this time. He has given himself to bringing about 3-cent traction fares in this city, and will consider nothing else than that issue." , "If the traction troubles are ended in a victory for 3-cent fare before May. there may he a difference," commented Thomas Coughlin, City Auditor and a Democratic leader, when told of the announcement that his chief would refuse to dabble in National politics. HEARST GETS NO RECOUNT New York Appeal Court Finds Law Unconstitutional. ALBANY, N. T., Nov. 19. The Court of Appeals today decided that the act passed at the last session of the Leg islature providing for a recount of the votes cast at the Mayoralty election in H. Ti. Loveland. President of Trans Mlsslsslppl Commercial Congress. New York In November, 1905, Is uncon stitutional. The contest was instituted on behalf of William R. Hearst to un seat Mayor George B. McClellan on the ground of fraud in the counting of the votes. The decision was unanimous. COUNT DE LA VATJLX' AERO PLANE COMBS CRASH. Champion Aeronaut Pinned Under Wreckage, While Gasoline Takea Fire Saved by Promptness. PARIS. Nov. IS.Count Henri de la Vaulx. the well-known French aeronaut, had a narrow escape from death while experimenting with an aeroplane near this city today. The machine collapsed while speeding through the air at a rate of 30 miles an hour, and crashed to the ground with great force. The Count was pinned under the mass of wreckage. The gasoline caught fire and this greatly increased the danger of the aeronaut. Friends hurried to the scene, however, and succeeded in releas ing him in the nick of time. His Injuries were slight. CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 55 degrees; minimum, 42. TODAY'S Rain followed by clearing and cooler weather; westerly winds. Foreign. Druce's secretary teatiflee he was Duke of Portland. Page 5 Rusalan female assassin loses nerve and commits suicide. Page 5. Count de la Vaulx' aeroplane break down in the air. Page 1. Kaiser Wilhelm resting and working in England. Page 5. Canal bonds and certificates likely to be oversubscribed. Page 3. Politics. Roosevelt forbids Southern Federal officials to work for third term. Page 1. Prohibition bill passes Alabama Senate through efforts of women and children. Page 1 New York Court of Appeals refuses Hearst a recount. Page 1. Domestic J. J. Hill appeals for cessation of anti-railroad agitation. Page 1. Evidence Walsh drew $2,000,000 from banks for his railroads. Page 4. Opening of Trans-Mississippi Congress. Page Mrs. Bradley tells story of relations with Brown. Page 1. Raymond Hitchcock refuses to testify Steamer Mauretanla in storm on Atlanalc Page 2. Pacific Coast. Salmon King Hume has heated Interview with Governor Chamberlain. Page a. Adams spends entire day on witness stand Page 6 Hoquiam agog over Mrs. Todd's position In murder of her husband. Page 6. Extra session opens in California; -Railroad Commissioner Wilson resigns. Page 3. Swell Women's Club at San Francisco bars passionate novel. Page 4. Commercial and Marine. Wholesale price of turkeys will be lower than last year. Page 15. Eastern wheat markets weak and lower Page 15. Important stocks under pressure. Page 15. Shipping is again active at Portland four charters yesterday. Page T. Portland and Vicinity. State Bar Association meets in annua ses sion; retiring president attacks initiative and referendum. Page 10. Last spike driven on Oregon Electric Rail way between Portland and Salem Page 14. Coos County makes fine display of anni Page 11. pp Portland woman given hearing on charge of fleecing Alaska miner. Page 14. Portland Deputy Marshal now en route for yji sil 10 recapture iana truer MrKlnlev Page 9. Rumor has It that Police Chief Gritzmacher will resign. Page 11. Washington Tax Commissioner tells Oregon lawyers franchises should be assessed Page 10. Two city tickets nominated at Milwauki Page 10. COUNTRY NEEDS Tfl SOBER DOWN Hill Calls For Quarter For Railroads. ASKS THAT ATTACKS CEASE Can't Get Money to Improve Without Credit. TALKS ABOUT HYPOCRISY Great Northern's Builder Appeals for Fair Treatment That Invest ors May Be Induced to Fur nish Vast Sums Needed. KANSAS CITY, Nov. 19. James J. HIII, of St. Paul, executive head of the Great Northern Railroad, was the principal speaker at the thirteenth an nual banquet of the Commercial Club in this city tonight. Mr. Hill dis cussed the question, "Commercial De velopment of the Mississippi Valley." and gave a comparative history and review of industrial conditions as they exist today. The transportation facilities of the whole country are. and have been, unequal to Its present means. They must be made equal to the burdens they bear or the country can not prosper. How far the railroad construc tion hae been unable to keep pace with the domestic commerce, the country even now does not realize. Railroad managements have met the situa tion by every effort to increase shipment and Increajse efficiency In the operation. In both directions what they have accompl ished to little short of wonderful. Everything that available capital, ingenuity, cheap service, high-protected labor and skillful management can accomplish has been done. The problem that remains Is both physical and financial, to bring construction up to the needs of our immense domestic commerce, and to raise the necessary money to do this. Jf both or one of these l impossible. It Is not the fault of the railway system, and only gross Ig norance of the truth or the prejudice of dis turbers can conceal the true facts. Only by Improved methods of operation In the oast have the roads avoided a blockade of traffic, such as would have dretroyed business activ ity or turned it Into a game of confusion and chance. Thi achievement 1 ee with a constant re duction of rates that has brought the average per mile for each passenger In the country in the last ten years , to about. 2 cents and the freight rate to .74 of a cent per ton per mile, a saving that amounts to billions of dollars In the aggregate, will be better ap preciated after a comparison between the statistics) of railroads in the United States and the system of other countries. The per centage of net earnings available fr dis tribution on the capitalized cost of the rail road systems of England is 3y per cent, in Germany 6. The average of these is 4 per cent on a much Mgher cap italization per mile, amounting in Kngla-nd to over four times as much. The total divi dends declared by all the railroads of the United States In 1906 were but 4 per cent of the total capital stock outstanding. On ovp-r 3,T per cent of outstanding stock no divi dend whatever were paid. In other business. It Is judged by its average conduct. Its aver age returns. The railroad system of the country' Is not The raliroadyem ef th country Is not ' (Conclud.d on Page 6.) ' ence, but once or twice by members I "MY POLICY" : rrr. ........ . . ........,,,..,..,,,,,...,...........? a failure, as has been charged by men who are without knowledge of the facts, and whose opinion Is consequently of no value. On the contrary. It Is, when Judged by re sults, by official records, perhaps the most conspicuous success achieved in th develop ment of the United States: Costing but from one-half to one-fifth as much as the systems of other countries and charKinir rates from one-half to one-third as great. It carries nearly double the business per mile, and pays twice the rates of wages. In the number of engines produced by American genius, prob ably no other Industry founded and perfected by American enterprise can show a com paratively good record, which. In the essen tials of practical value, so distances all com parison. Under conditions most difficult, w have created a transportation system at lowest first cost which gives the most ef ficient service to the public at the lowest charge and pays its employes the highest known scale of wages. Limit of Capacity Reached. The ral'road men of this country have a right to be proud of their record, and recent criticism is supported by nothing better than ignorant ceclamatlon. The people should realize that there is a physical limit to the capacity of a railroad. It has been their habft to regard the railway as a means of trnsportation over which an Indefinite busi ness may be done, limited only by the policy or the wishes of its management. The truth, of course, is that neither the desire to serve nor the prospect of gain can get out of the railway work beyond its ability to perform. Common falrnesB reauires the .application of the tame treatment to railroads as to other property, and comparisons as to rates, as to efficiency, as to capitalization per mile and as to earning power place the railway sys tems of the United States far above that of any other country In the world, in service. In value and in useful conduct. The capital now Invested in railways Is well employed and the men In charge of the rail ways In this country have struggled for neaT- ly 15 years with the greatest problem of our time how to move a load whose weight in creases from 10 to 15 per cent a year with an engine whose power Increases at the rate of about 2-2 per cent a year. The limit of safe, speedy, reasonable service with existing facili ties has been reached. The measure of pros perity Is the ease and certainty with which commodities may be moved. Need 91,100,000,000 to Invest. The whole situation declares that we must have more new lines, more double tracks. more and greatiy enlarged terminal facili ties. How are these to be had and what In ducement can we offer to the capital which must be willing to Invest before anybody will build them? There la no subject, no right to be asserted or wrong to be rectified, real or alleged, that can take precedence over an Issue so vital, one so nearly concerning the Income, the employment, the comfort, happi ness and prosperity of every one of our 86,- 000.000 people. A year ago I said that It would require $5,500,000,000, ior 11,100,000.000 a year for five years, to make our railroad facilities equal to the demands upon them. Although sub stantially the amount of money suggested by me as indispensable has been collected and spent, the railroads have barely held their own, and the future remains to be provided for. Not less, but. In the opinion of com petent judges, more, perhaps 60 per cent more, must be spent annually for the five years to come. There are but two reasons, actual scarcity of money and reluctance to invest, which overshadow the outlook. Promising enter prises can no longer be financed on any basis consistent with present rates and conditions. Wild Raid on Railroads. A more serious factor, perhaps the con trolling factor of the situation, in this coun try. Is the shock given to confidence In our investments ail over the world, and the con sequent limitations of credit. Credit Is the atmosphere which Inflates the lungs of busi nrss and. when it Is greatly lessened, busi ness must be reduced In proportion or be quietly smothered. For this reason attacks, not on the Individual transgression, not on dishonest finance, but upon existing business systems, representing the fabric of society Itself, may destroy, by Impairing credit, what a generation could not rebuild. Political campaigns In many states have been made on the issue of a general assault on the in tegrity of railroad property and management. There followed a wild raid in which over 170 acts more or less confiscatory of railroad property were enacted by the Legislatures of more than a score of states. The consequence to the transportation system, to railroad con struction and through these to the price of farm products and to the success of every form of business, have already made them selves felt and the country suffers under the blow. If such continues to be the attitude of the public mind, there will presently be no power short of a pledge of the credit of the Government itself able to secure the funds necessary to provide more tracks. It behooves every business man to con- 'S STORY OF HER WRONGS Mrs. Bradley Tells Moving Narrative. WAS LOVED AND CAST ASIDE Promises of Marriage Broken When Time Came. PASSION WRECKED HEALTH Slayer of Arthur Brown Draws Tears From Jurors by Recital of Pas sion and Deception End ing in Murder. WASHINGTON, Nov. 19. "I am so tired!" said Mrs. Annie M. Bradley, the defendant in the trial now in progress in the Criminal Court in this city, a few minutes before 3 o'clock today, after she had spent about four hours on the witness-stand relating the de tails of her acquaintance and intimacy with ex-United StateB Senator Brown, with whose murder she stands accused. Judge Stafford immediately gave orders for the adjournment of the court. As he had not reached the events directly connected with the tragedy in which Brown was killed, but had very closely approached them, they will be the sub ject of the first testimony to be given tomorrow. Today's story dealt with the first ac quaintance of Mrs. Bradley with Brown, and told how that acquaintance grad ually ripened into friendship and final ly into leve. It was a long and pathetic narrative of illicit affection; of prom ises of marriage which could at first be made only on the condition of di vorce on both sides, and then of dis appointment and grief when both be came free and could have been legally untted, if Brown had been willing. Mrs. Bradley gave the particulars of many pledges made to her; told how Brown had introduced her as his wife and of how he had given his name to one of their children, and also of how he had aided her In no less than three criminal operations. She related many pleasant Incidents of their life together. She wore a smile when she spoke of her pride in his intellectual attainments, and told of their reading together the principal poets. She said that he told her over and over again that she was the only woman he had ever loved, and averred that by his manner to her and his superior attainments he had gained a complete mastery over her. Jurors Moved to Tears. The courtroom was crowded during the entire day. and many of the specta tors were women. Tears were frequent ly shed, not only by the general audi ence, but once or twice by members WOMAN of the Jury. Mrs. Bradley was quite emotional, and her voice was scarcely audible at times. Her attorneys, how ever, expressed confidence after the witness left the stand that she would be able to proceed to the end without a breakdown. Mrs. Bradley said her health had failed during her associa tion with Brown, and she told of one occasion when she was tempted to com mit suicide. In calling Mrs. Bradley to the stand, her counsel, Judge Powers, made an un fortunate slip of the tongue and named 'her successful rival for Brown's affec tions, Mrs. Annie M. Adams, mother of Maude Adams, the actress. He quickly corrected himself, and the woman nerved herself for the task. How She First Met Brown. Mrs. Bradley said she was 35 years old; that she was born In Kansas City and educated in Denver; that she had had smallpox and pneumonia and had been Katherine Clemmons Gould, Whose Character Is Assailed by Her Husband. badly hurt 'by a blow on the head while a child. She went to Salt Lake City 1890, and had lived there ever since. She had occupied a clerical position In the Salt Lake CMy waterworks for three years and eight months. A week after she left that position, she married Clarence Bradley, by whom she had a boy and a girl. She had Joined the Sale l.ik City Women's Club, of which she became sec retary-treasurer soon after her wedding, and became a member of the Women's Press Club ana Poets' Round Table. She gave much attention to civic reform Through these and political organizations she became acquainted with Brown. An objection to her telling her connection with politics was overruled and she said she took an active part In Utah politics. women voting In that state. Her relations with Bradley were un happy and she was divorced from him In 1905. She was introduced to Brown by her uncle and came to know him well while serving on a Republican committee. Loved Him Beyond Expression. Mrs. Bradley was asked to give a de scription of her relationship with Brown, whereupon she fell into tears and for some time she was unable to proceed. When she did open her lips no one heard her except the stenographer, who stood at the desk before her. He Interpreted her answer to the court. "The acquaintance grew into a very intimate relationship," she said. 'Did the acquaintanceship ripen into af fection?" she was next apked. "It did. after August, 1S9R. I discovered he loved me and afterward I loved him." "Did he at first manifest affection toward you?" "Yes, many, many times." "Did he make manifestations of love toward you?" "Many times, yes." "Tell the Jury how strongly you loved him." "It was quite beyond expression." "Was a child born to you and him?" "Yes. In February, 1R99." -"Tell the Jury how you came to enter into these relations." This Inquiry brought out a long narra tive which was so mingled with sobs and tears and told in such a low-toned voice that the stenographer was compelled to repeat the story, which he did, as fol lows: Finally Yielded to Him. "The Senator told me he was very un happy, very wretched. I told him that our relationship could only result in grief and sorrow and he replied that he would stand by me all my life. Finally he came to me and said: 'Darling, we are going on together all through life. You can't avoid me, and I want you to have a son.' "Finally, after several months, I con sented." "Consented to what?" asked Judga Pow ers. "To his proposition." She said the son had been christened in Brown's presence and It had been given the Senator's name. He had wanted to get a divorce and marry her, she said, but she would not consent to break up his home and had tried to break the relationship, but he would not have it so and would frequent ly come to her, saying she was the only bright spot in his life. "Did you believe In hie protestations of affection ?" "I didn't believe it possible for any one to ask a woman to have a child and not be fond of her." She had a second child by him, and he performed a criminal operation on her in 1901, which made her very 111 for two weeks. She was not well for a long time and her doctor told her she qould not expect to be well. She felt it was very wrong to perform the operation, but It was "so hard to tell one's feelings." She cried when Brown was defeated for the Senate, but he cheered her by saying they would stay together. He wrote her as many as five letters a day and she loved him as deeply as it was possible to love. When the second son by Brown was born he was in California, and on his (Concluded on Paso i. ALABAMA IS WOf FOR PROHIBITION Women and Children as Lobbyists. THEY SWAMP LIQUOR FORCES Only Two Senators Against Measure. Vote NO WHISKEY AFTER 1908 Swarm or Fair and Youthful Lob byists Crowds Liquor Men Out of. Galleries and Cheers Over Victory. MONTGOMERY, Ala., Not. 19. Un precedented scenes were enacted in the Senate Chamber of the historical Capt tol of Alabama today when the statu tory Prohibition bill was passed by a vote of 32 to 2. Women and children thronged the corridors and galleries and even invaded the sanctity of the floor itself, pushing the Senators from their seats and giving vent to their enthusiasm by shouts and cheers that echoed and re-echoed through the building. Senators who opposed the bill were hissed down when they arose to speak agaln'st the measure. When two carloads of Mobile men came to lobby against the bill they found that delegates who favored that measure had filled the. Senate galleries until not a seat was left. It was the plan to crowd them out and It succeeded. Little children stood In the lobbies and pinned ribbons on everyone who came in. Children were kept out of school today to work against liquor. The statutory Prohibition blll'whlch was passed today, was in the nature of a compromise between the antls and Prohibitionists. The antls, seeing th handwriting on the wall, agreed to give up the fight, provided the time waa extended until January 1, 1909, when the sale of whisky will be forbidden In the State of Alabama. This amend ment will be sent to the House anrf will be concurred In without a fight. WILL WED FRENCH DUKE SHONTS' DAUGHTER Evr.tr.in; TO MARRY IX JANUARY. One of Old Nobility With Vast Es tates and Debts Is Due de Chauincs. CHICAGO. Nov. 20. A dispatch to th Tribune from Washington says: Mr. and Mrs. Theodore P. Shouts an nounce the engagement of their daugh ter, Theodora, to Due de Chaulnes et d Plcqulny. of France, the wedding to tak place at their New York home In Jan uary. The Due Is now In New York, where he has been since the arrival of Mrs. Shonts and her daughters from Europe several months ago, but will sail for France on Thursday. The persistent courtship of the Duo covers a space of over IS months and has been most fervent. He met Miss Shonts in Paris and fell in love with her shortly after her presentation at the court of King Edward. The Due comes from the oldest of French nobility and Is possessed of vast estates, though they are said to be em barrassed with debts. Miss Shonts Is a splendid linguist, pretty and 20 years old. Her maternal grandfather was the late Governor Drake, of Iowa. NOTED ACTRESS BANKRUPT Creditors Say Mrs. Leslie Carter Payne Owes $11,000. NEW YORK, Nov. 19. An involun tary petition in bankruptcy was filed in the United States District Court today by the creditors against Mrs. Leslie Carter Payne, the actress. The claims of the creditors amount to over fl 1,000, of which Laura G. Cook claims 1228 on notes and $6891 for clothing. The other claims are small. It Is alleged that Mrs. Carter Payne committed an act of bankruptcy in paying out $1700 to preferred creditors knowing herself to be Insolvent. Het total assets are estimated at $3000. Judge Hough appointed Ezra P. Pren tice receiver. GREEK PADRONES FINED Made False Affidavits to Import Boy Slaves to America. CHICAGO. Nov. 19. Three Greeks, found guilty of having Imported boys from their native country to be farmed out to proprietors of shoe-shining estab lishments and fruit stores, were fined by Federal Judge Bethca today. The fines were accompanied by a threat of penitentiary sentences should the offenses be repeated. The fines, which ranged from $25 to $500. were based on the mak ing of false affidavits in securing en trance of the boys to the United States. 4