VOL. XLVIII. NO. 14.77.1. IOKTLAJNl, OKEGON, TUIiSDAY, APRIL, 7, 1908. PRICE FIVE CENTS. HUN DENIES HE HAS MONOPOLY Does Not Aim to Ki Competition. WHY PORTLAND HAS GOT LEFT Steamer Line Could Not Com pete With Southern. RAIL LINE IN SAME FIX fconfliprn Pacific Would Hare Taken IIrrnjte If Oregon Lines HaH Competed Sajs Competi tion Never Existed. PAL.T I.AKHJ riTT, rtah, April 6 The anmer pt the defendants in the suit of the I "nltrci Stntcs to dissolve the Knrrimnn Kyptrni of railroads as being a muiiopuly In restraint of trade were filed In the I"eil"rl Court here today. The Biiswer make a general denial of the nll"Katl"iis of the Government. Bcsldeg the answer uf K H. Harriman. signed by hlmxHf and Harley U. Williams, hta cnlMliir and counsel In Salt 1-ake City, answers were Hied by Senator V. A. Clark, president of the Salt iake route; (he Farmers" Loan k Trust Company, of Kew Turk: H. C Frltk, the Union I'a clUr. Ongull Short Line, Oregon Kail rad & NaviRHilon and Southern Pacific tomranits. To cover certain, allegations ( the Oovernment joint aru-wers were ei.j necessary and these were also filed, linrrhiiaii Oeules Conspiracy. Mr. llnrrlnian, in li is answer, denies liat he and Jn.-ob SclilfT, Otto H. Kahn, James Stiilinan or others, have owned or Mntrolle.l a majority of the. stock of the I'lilmi l'aclflc. He admits that he Is j'lesldent and the other men were direc tors. Mr. Bchlff and Mr. Kahn resigned in K and 'Mr. Stllmsn In 1S0S. He ad mits that -Mr. SclilfT and Mr. Kahn wore inflnbrrs of the firm of Kuhii, J.oeb & Co.. and this firm bought stocks and bonds of the Union J'arlfle and Oregon Fhort Line, but it Is denied that the com pany was a flsial agent" of the Union i'arlflc. He denies that he and the other de fendants conppired to restrain trade Minima- the several states and foreign countries or to restrain competition a mnug defendant steamship and railroad lincR, or to deprive the public of ad vantages of trade and commerce through Independent competition, if any tber was, or to effect a consolidation with the idea or monopolizing or restraining trade and commerce. Admitting, however, that the Union Pacific acquired a majority of the a.ltnl stock of the various lines and steamship systems, he. denies In each instance that the acquisition of the stock was to kill competition or monopolize trade, commerce or business. Union I'ni-irio Only a Lint. Adinitlins tlwt the directors of sev eral different companies' are identical, he denies that the I'nlon Pacific has control in management or operation of the affiliated lines. He avers that In the trans-continental lines of railroad reach ing the Pacific Coast south of Portland, the Union Pacific Is nut a link about 10O0 miles in length an Intermediate carrier without any power to make rates upon Mich trmc: that tlw Southern raclfic owns and controls lines betwen Ogdrn nnd the I'oast with no power to mRke rates on business east of C'gden; that no rates could be made from the Missouri River to the Const without the joint con sent, of the Southern Pacific and the Union Pacific. He says that while the Union raclfic unit Its constituent companies separately owned connecting lines operated as a single sistem from the Missouri River to Portland, nr., and operated certain steamships between Portland and San Francisco, yet such a route via Portland was not only Impracticable as a com petitor of 'the Southern Pacific, but any attempt to use It as such would have greatly Injured the Union Pacific, because the Southern Pacific would thereupon have preferred the rivals of the Union Pacific In routing and Interchange of traffic at Ogden and the business in ton nage and revenue thus lost would have grcat'y exceeded the total volume of busi ness received over such an Impracticable route in competition with the Southern Fa.-inc. Fortlaml ftonte Never Competed. Mr. Harriman denies that the rail line of the Southern Pacific, between San Francisco and Portland ass In active cempetttion with the ships of the Ore gon Railway Navigation Company be tween the two points named, and ex plains that such competition was im prat ticable. He denies that ships oiwrated liy the Portland A Asiatic Steamship Com pany between Portland and Asiatic ports , in connection with the rail lines of the a'nlon Pacific were ever in competition with the raclflc Mall Steamship Com pany. He denle that any competition ever existed between the system of rail roads and steamships owned by the Union Faclfle Railroad Company, and the Southern Pacific, or, if any such competi tion did ever exist. It was not substan tial, or that ln ludod a large volume of traffic of any kittd. He admits that the Union Pacific, in connection with the Central Iacitic, is a eompetitor of the Atchison, Tooeka A. Santa Fe for a large volume of traffic to and from the Pacific Coast. Wliy C lark .Toincd jferscr. Jienial of the conspiracy to restrain trade is made in the answer of W. A. Clark and the San Tedro, Los Angeles A Salt I.ake Railroad. Numerous contracts are admitted, biit the defendants say In explanation that it would have been im possible to build the road or to secure, freight traffic after it. -was -built without aeriuiring the old right of way owned by the Oregon Short Line and making ar rangements for a share In the through business. SPLIT OX FIXING HAIIiKOAD California Commission Cnnnot Agree on Penalty for Rebating. SAN FRANCISCO. April G. Special) "Whether the Southern Pacific C'ompany Mm. Homird Gould, Aceiwed by Her Mnttnnif nf flntnkMnnfM trnfa n If v and toven Wotm Offense. should be found guilty of giving rebates or fined for its offense or exonerated of wrongdoing is a question which has caused a sharp split ' in the State Board of R;iilroad Commissioners. The Com missioncrs have given snmft time to a study of the, evidence given against the Harriman line at the investigation con ducted In this city. Commissioner H. D. I,oveland holds that the Southern Pacific violated the law and should he punished with at leant a disciplinary fine. Commissioners Alex ander Irwin, president of the Commission, and Theodore Summerland, the member from the Southern district, are inclined to oppose such action. The differences have caused a break of w'de dimensions among1 the members of the Board. ONXK GATE EXCMSIVE RATES But Barnwell Says Santa Fe Koad Has Tteformod. I.OS- ANGBIKS. Cal.. April 6. Admis sions that prior to the Fall ,of 1505 "ex elusive' freight rates were made by the Santa Fe Railroad to some shippers on local traffic in Southern California were obtained by Attorney-General Webb from "W. G. Harwell, general freight agent of the Santa Fe, In the hearing before the State Railroad Commission today. Mr. Barnwell stated that thta system had been done away with prior to 1106 and no such "exclusive rates" are now given. LIEUTENANT RIVALS DUKE BRAVE SAILOR-MAN SEEKS THE HAND OF MISS ELKIXS. iLiootPnant Andrews Hnrrylnfr to Wnshlnfrton to Press Strit After Two Tears' Exile. SAN FRANCISCO. April fi. (Special.) Returning home from wht ho has re garded as a contrtved hanlahmeint for two yearn In Afliatie waters. Lieutenant Adol phus Andrews. U. R. N., 1s speeding from Pan Franotsoo to -Washington to become a rival of the Puke d'Abruzii in suing for the hand of dashing Katherlne Elklna. Lieutenant Andrews was attached to the staff of President Roosevelt at Wash ington and was among the most attentive adorers of the wealthy Kittle Klktns. but Mamma TSlklns did not want an un titled Lieutenant, for. a sop-ln-law. Lieu tenant Andrews was much surprised one morning to read in the Navy orders that he was gasetted to report, for duty on the cruiser Chattanooga. Lieutenant Andrews cruised for two years in Asiatic waters in. command of the Vlllalobos. His term of duty to this assignment expired about a month ago, when he was ordered back to Washing ton. He shipped on the Xippon Maru and arrived In San Francisco last week, regis tering at th Fairmont. H left for Washington two days ago. ' . Ltetrtenant R. R. Ttlggs. who la now at the St. Francis, was stationed with ths Asiatic s'Htadron and occnsakmally met Mr. Andrews. It was to Mr. Rlggs that Mr. Andrews admitted his Intentions of pressing once, mora his suit for Miss Hklns- hand. NEBRASKA RETURNS BLOW Notifies California Insurance Com panies to Quit the State. IJNOOIN. Neb. April Insurance Auditor Pierce today decided to notify agent of companies organized under the laws of California that they must ceae doing. husnss in Nebraska. Thia action followed a refusal of Commissioner Wolf, of California, to admit Nebraska .com panies. The action of luuranre Auditor Pferct affects the Firemen's Fund-, of San Fran c?'V: the lom F-'re ft Marine, of San Francisco, and the Pacirtc Mutual, of Loe Angeles. T J i. -M FINOSOPTIMISM RULES BOHTHWEST WellmanTraces Effects of Panic. WORST ON ATLANTIC COAST But No Sign of Discourage ment as He Comes West. ONLY LITTLE MARK LEFT All Have Money to Spend nnd Spend It Pan Francisco Alone Still Surfers Consequence of Graft and Strike. By Walter; Weltman to the Chicago Record -Hr a Id. BUTTE, Mont. April 6. (Special.) Optimism prevail everywhere in .the ffreat Northwest and Mountain region. Traveling; from St. paid and Minneap olis throujrh the Dakotas and Montana as far as Idaho and meetlnjc men from all tsections of this vast expanse of country, I have yet to hear the first word of discouragement as to .the bus iness outlook. It Is true, the banking and currency panic, which started last Fall In New York and almost instan taneously ran through the length and breadth of the land, did leave a little mark in this region, but it was Very small. It did not hurt much. Tid Xot Stop Faying Cash. The banks of this state, be it said to their everlasting credit, did not sus pend cash payment.! and thus virtually abdicate their functions, as banks did almost everywhere else. They met ev ery demand, cashed every check and draft. Along the Atlantic seaboard and as far west ?s Cincinnati and Columbus, Including very markedly Pittsburg, the pagic hurt to the quick. Hundreds of thousands of mef have been thrown out of employment and fctiw recovery, wb.il visible. Is coming very slowly. As far- west aa Chicago the effects of the panic were less noticeable, and w est from Chicago till the Pacific Coast is reached the barm done seems to diminish with increasing distance from Now York. But the Pacific Coast way hard hit. Jt has not yet recov ered. San FrnTicisco Hard lilt. Pan Francisco in particular, weak ened by the earthquake and conflagra tion and hampered by labor troubles and by graft In the city government. Is still said to be in a bad way. It Is difficult to find the capital with which to finish the hundreds of buildings of costly character "through which the city is rising from the ruins. We often read in the papers glowing accounts of the magnificent manner In which San Francisco Is recreating It self, but the struggle which the brave j IT'S UP TO YOVlL UNREGISTERED VOTER people of that city, are having, the dif fleuitirs they are overcoming, the han dicaps of. graft and bad reputation and grasping labor organizations, led m part by arrant demagogues. Is an untold story. Capital Is timid about investing .in. a c-Uy so . burden ed,' and men from the (loldcn Gate tell me that, if there s Lou Id come a .recurrence of the muniefpa 1 rottenness of recent, years, there will he excellent prospects of a revival .of .the vigilant commit tees of half a-century ago. The pa tience of San, Francisco Is well-nigh exhausted. , ' Northwest Has Money. Here In the Northwest they have felt. the panic less, probulily, than In itnv othc.r section -of the country. Ev ery one appears to have money to, spend, and to be spending it. ' Prosper ity and "business activity can t ' stay long ap.'pv from a country in which the consumers ' ha ve .t" . . purchasing and absoT bine power. RAKE UP THE OLD STORY Smith-Fulton Suit to Bring Out-Ancient ITlMory. . : . " SAL.KM. Or.. April fi. (Special.. Reiter ation of all the facts of the Mitchell Srth bribery transaction in the legis 'VfiTfye session of 1RT17 will probably 'he the jJtturt of the trial of the Smith -Fill ton lande suit, filed here Saturday night, ft is Mr. Smith's Intention to ftringup on the witness-stand all The parties who know anything about the affair, and to support hts. affidavit, if he -can. by. the. sworn testimony of witnesses subject to crops-examrnatlon. Thi.s purpose he indi ca ted in a statement made today after reading that Senator Fulton takes his suit for S.VKI0 diimngcs as a huge joke.' If. Mr. Smit h's plans prevail, the who! a story, will be retold nt the present term of. the Circuit Court ;n Mnrion County. TRJ3PHY FOR BEST RECORD Spokane llansrs Up (np to Cruise or Battleship of First Class. SEATTLE. April 6. A special to the Times from Spoknne, jays that when the A tlantlc fleet, now cruising in Pacific waters, reaches Seattle next month, the battleship or first-class cruiser which made the highest score at the recent target practice in Magdalena Bay will be awarded a solid silver trophy, valued at $.1500. presented by the people of Spo kane. The cup is to be competed for annually by battleships and cruisers of the first cisss of the entire American Navy. Victor IT. Met calf. Secretary of the Navy, announced some time ago that the trophy would be acceptable to the Te partmcnt. Forty Burled When House Falls. LONDON. April 6. Two old tenement-houses In Castle street collapsed early this morning. It Is believed that 4f people, mostly German waiters, are burled In the debris. I'p to 'noon, eight dead bdres had be n t - kn V tiw' 1 .-.- 0 buil.un. and iltn br 'jr V a - 1 tin ( sev eral others are still buiied in the dci-ri.. Twenty persona were taken out alive and none of them is seriously Injured. The foundations Were weakened by the excavations for a new building adjoin ing. Hangs Himself With Wire. SALT LAKB CITY. April P. F. S. Kilmar. e. young man from Spencer. Ta.. hung himself with a baling wire in the yards of the San Pedro Railroad today. A letter left by him proves that he was deranged, possibly frorti worry because he had lost his position with the smelter at McGill, New Aunt Becky Voting, War .Xurse. TES MOINES. la., April 6 Cpon the 41 st anniversary of her marriage.. Aunt Becky Young, the first woman to offer herself as a nurse when the Civil var broke out. . and famous as a leader of nurses, died todiy, aged 76, at her home here. SILVER QUESTION NO LONGER ISSUE Consigned to Tomb by Bryan at Denver. CONDITIONS NOW DIFFERENT Help .Came From Another Source, Says Nebraskan.: ' NEW PROBLEMS TO FACE Pcniocrat In Banquet Speech Claims Credit for Forcing Kepnbllcans to Mne l"p Against Trusts, Ha ilroads. Tariff. DENVER, Colo., April 6. W. J. Bry an closed a day of strenuou activity by addressing 8n0 banqueters tonight In the specious Ei Jebel Temple ban quet, hall, in addition to hundreds of others, who filled every seat in the gal leries overlooking the main room. The banquet had been arranged by the Bry an" Democratic Club of Colorado, and it, president, ex-Congressman John F. Shafroth, presided. Mr. Bryan wu the only speaker. He said, in part: I do not. come to Colorado because mis sionary work ts necessary, but for the pleas ure of coming. We carried this stat by a lanre majority in 1396 and In 1WX. We oiiirht to have a larger majority tM year than in either of those years. Every one who votd with u in 1896 oueht to vnte with u now, and thos who were againfct us fn have had time to see the vindi cation that has com to Imocratic prin ciple?. Th quantitative theory' of money has been proved to be correct, for we have Tin pr cent per capita more .xewney fn circu lation now than we .hal 4n ISPft. and with that increase we have" had higher . price and better times. m The silver question Is no lonsrer a.n Issue, but Its elimination is 5u to the fa.ct that we have secured from another source th-a Increase In currency which wa expected from the restcration of bi-metallsm. But the money question i not the only question upon "vhlch our" position has been, provtdk 1 orrert y the course or events, tnir pro-t-t aeajr'nt hi trust ria been shown to wot; lo'mdfv' and the. whte country now uii.lTSian-ja fiat a private monopoly in in d" 'T slie and unendurable. Hot Shots on TarlfT. On the tariff uuetlon also the Democrat' position is being strengthened by th Demo crats or nep'ubileans. Secretary Tsrft started out to make his campaign on a, platform wMeh. declared Tor tariff revision the re-rif-'fon to be postponed until after the elec tion. As he' traveled over the country he found the tariff reform sentiment so strotis that he Anally , reached the 00 nd union in the platform of hia state convention, that tariff reform 1 so urgent that a special ses sion of Concrei should be held immediately after the 4th of March. . But. even more significant is the surrender made by Vice-President Fairbanks, for hln state convention declare in favor of a special session of C'oiwresa to be called 1m medlately after the election four months earlier than Secretary Taft's special ses sion and we have two candidates to har front j-et. It remains to be seen whether Candidate Knox, and Candidate Hughes will Attempt to make a better bid than those already submitted by Candidates Taft and Fairbanks It I gratifying to see Republi can vieing with 'each other tn their advo cacy of tariff reform. But the people are not likely to entrust the reduction of the tariff to men who ar not willing to have tariff reform at onre and who have not dis cussed the tariff until the exigencies of the campaign made it neeewary. Vindicated on Railroads, On the question of railroad ra:iiation e have a cot her Democratic vindication. The Democrats have, been asking for reirula Hon for 1 2 yar and whn at last the President, taking his insplrat Ion from the Democratic platform, asked for an enlarge ment of the scope for the Interstate Com merce Commission he received more loyal sur.'port from the Democrat than from th Republican. But railroad legislation la not yet effective. We must know how much the railroads arc worth and must prevent the future hm of watered stock. But inc the states began to legislate on the subject of railroad regulation the rail road managers beiran to demand the sur render by the state of power to legislate, in regard to railroads and insist that Con gress tha11 exercise exclusive control. The President has yielded to thia demand and recommended th" National incorporation nt railroads and a Secretary Taft Is indorsing th President's policies he la supported to favor this. But the NaMonal Incorporation of railroads la a step bac kward rather tliai forward, and it must be resisted by the Democrats and It will be r"tted by a larice element of the Republican party, for those who have had a taJite oT state regulation I King- Edward, of Great Britain. ( rltl- ciwed I.v Ilia Subjects for I-eavIng J . His Poet at a Crista. will not be wilting to surrender the power that the state now has. .Must Protect Males National remedies ought to be. added lo state remedies, not substituted for them. CongreRa has ample power to regulate" inter state commerce without Interfering with the right of the states to regulate internal com merce. . Secretary Taft seems to be regarded as the representative of the reform element and yet he ha so little of the reform spirit and hf rcord Is xo barren of any work in behalf of reform that- he. will, hardly . satisfy, the expectations raised among Republicans by some of the President's recommendations. Ills advocacy of perpetual franchise in the Philippine Island, coupled with a perpetual guarantee of Income shows that he looks at the corporation question from the standpoint of the corporation rather than from the standpoint of the public. Colonial Poller Folly On the subject of imperialism, the lant ntne years have thown the folly of a co lonial policy. We are paying at least lo, 000.000 a year for the privilege of. follow ing at the tail nd of the European proces sion, for our rmy and Navy alone costs us more than $100,OOO.ono a year In cxcea of their cont ten years ago. Secretary Taft testified before Congress we never could hope to have more than -n.-OOO or 30. OOO Amcrtcana in the Philippines. W have not anything like that number there, but even if we had it would cot us more than S-'tOOO a year for each one of the SO. 000 to make up the 1(K, 000,000 a year of additional expense. We could better afford to Dick out the 30.000 who want to go to the Philippines and support them at good hotels, doing nothing: than to maintain an Impera'istlc jolicy for the purpose of giv ing them a chance to'llve In the Orient. Tied to Predatory Interests. ' I have mentioned several of " the questions upon which events have demonstrated the correctness of th Democratic position. Ni real Teform can-be expected from the Re publicans because they are too deeply in debted to the predatory Interests for, their support and If Secretary Taft, who Is con sidered the reform candidate, is antagon istic to labor, weak on the trust question and lacking posltlveness on the tariff ques tion, how can we hope for anything better from other Republican aspirants? The Democralic parry will enter the cam paign with confidence. Its platform and policies are strong. Its forces are united, while the Republicans are divided, and Its (Concluded, on Page 3.) CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The- Weather. YEfTF-R DAY'S Maximum temperature, ,2 degrees: minimum, 40 TOD A Fair and. warmer; northwest winds. Foreign. Asqulth goes to Plarritr: Britons criticise King Kdward for absence. Page n. More rioting at I.fabon. but Governmrnt sup preaaefl news. Page Boycott on, japane.se goods spreads rapidly In China. . Page 3. National. House pasaes employers' liability bill. Page 4. Gompera declares agralnat registering labor unions. Page 4. . politic. Brvan apeaka at Denver banquet. , Pare 1. I.iqnor election In several states. Page ?.. Taft speaka at great meeting at Omaha. Page 1. Iometlc. Howard Gould makes scandalous charges against his wife. P3ee 3. Da Nat admit wholesale forgery at Helena. Harriman replies to Government euit to dis solve merger. Page 1. Wellman finds more prosperity as he comes westward-. Page I. Uu tenant Andrews, of Navy, is rival of Duke d'Abruzsl. Page I. , Pacific Coast. Fleet, makes great preparation for voyage up' Coast. Page 4. Trials cf Ruef and Ford begin today at same time. . Page 2 Horsewhipping of presiding e'der at Salem tirs up town. Page B. Indian held negro as stave. Page 6. Portland and Vicinity. City Attorney rules that telephone companies must furjilsh municipal wiring. Tage 10 Portland now exchanging wireless message .with coast station. Page 14. Property-owners arrested for violating build ing ordinance. Page T. Registration of voters now -well past 30,000 mark. Page 10. County Clerk preparing to send Koas case documents to Salem. Page 7. Multnomah Democrats will deridt on nomi nating county ticket. Page la. Indian to be tried In Federal Court for manslaughter. Page 1- H. W: Brtc elected Mayor of St. John. Page 5.. ('mnwrial and Marine. Monday baying alow on Board of Trade. Page IS. Wheat s ! n m p 2 cent at Chicago., Page- 15. Erie difficulty checks atork speculation. Pg 15. Two ships are added to th en route list. Pa I TAFT DISCUSSES ISSUES JIT OMAHA Guet at Banquet of fvlcKinley Club. PAYS RESPECTS TO BRYAN Accuses Democratic Leader of Being Inconsistent. EXPANSION VrEWS ALTERED War Secretary Show Whrre Nebras ka n Has Changed Front Say People Approve Policies of Hoosevelt Administration. OMAHA. April ff.-r-Secrotary Taft rounde'1 " out the first day of hia trip to Nebraska with a ppeech at the Au ditorium tonlfrht, where he was the. honored fruest at a banquet Rlvn by the McK inley Club. The Secretary toon occasion Unlht to place before the people the Issues of the coming campaign as he views them and lycl dentally to reply to the recent utter ances of William J. Bryan, when ' he criticised the action of the McKinley and Roosevelt administrations for their policy in the Philippines. The Secretary stated that Mr. Bryan was not consistent in his utterances be cause he had been the means. In a large decree, of bringing- about the signing of the Treaty of Paris, whereby the Phil ippines came under the control of the Vnited States and Is now criticizing the action of the administration because of Its efforts to teach the Filipinos the art of self-govern fnent. Trusts and JEatlronrts. The War Secretary also took tip and 'dealt at length with the question of rail road legislation and Industrial combina tions which he considers on a of thf; principal issues of tho campaign, The day was fnll of functions for Sec retary Taft. It began nt Council Bluff's where his train arrived at S o'cloefc. He was met at the I'nlon Station In that cfty by a reception committee from Omaha which accompanied him across the river and acted aa escort to the Rome Hotel, where he had breakfast, A pub lic reception at the hotel took an hoar of his 'time immediately following luncheon and the Secretary was then hurried awn in an automobile to the First Congrega tional Church where he addressed tht Women's Club for an hour.. Speaks at Banquet. Returning to his hotel, Secretary Taft was soon afterward whirled away to the Auditorium. Twelve hundred persons were aeated at the banquet tables. Secretary Tft had the .last ad dress on the programme and did not speak until after 11 o'clock. In part, he said: "The issues of the next campaign are to turn on to the achievements of the McKinley and Roosevelt adminis trations which still remain the subject of discussion between us and our Dem ocratic friends, or rather between u and the gentleman who seems to have the power of leading the Democratic party against Its will. We are to ac cept nit what the Democratic party on any isue but what Mr. Brywn thinks on every issue as the real basis for the national campaign to ho ended by the election in November next." Bryan Forces Isue." "Because Mr. Bryan still keeps alive controversies which many Democrats are content to regard aa settled, we have to go hack and rediscuss matter which the verdict of history properly Interpreted ought long ago to have ended. It is true that free. silver and repudiation have for the -time been lost sight of. though I do not understand Mr. Bryan to have said anything which would prevent him from bringing- out that as a panacea should the financial situation sufrgest itself to him. 'I verily believe that four-fifths of the people of the t'nited States are entirely contented, with the way In which Mr. McKinley and Mr. Roosevelt have worked out the problem presented to n by the Spanish War. but th'g does not prevent a fierce a assault by Mr. Bryajt upon the Republican administration for what they have done in this regard." Her lews Fxpa nsion Pol loy. After reviewing the administration pol icy toward" National expansion, Mr. Taft said: "President Roosevelt has brought forward for the practical consideration of the people of the United States a democratic danger to our Institutions and our civilization that was aapping the moral foundations of our society and threatening to make u a plutoc racy. In which those who had bad health and Industrial aucceas were to be placed in a privileged class and given practical exemption from the operations of the laws. "These abuses. Insofar as they affect Interstate commerce, weer In the teeth of two great Federal statutes, the Inter state eommemrce law and the anti-trust law. By an appeal to the people and attrring messages to Cortgr, PreWeat Roosevelt secured the passage of tht so called rate bill. iF7! 104.0