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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (May 2, 1908)
THE MORNING OREGON IAN, SATURDAY, MAY 2,' 1908. TRUST RESPECTS - NOT CONTRACTS Raises Price of Paper to Pub lishers in Defiance of Conditions. NO EFFORT TO PROSECUTE All Information Given to Attorney. General, Says Xorris, but Ig nored McCormick Tells of the Trust's Methods. WASHINGTON", May 1. Testifying today before the House" select commit tee on wood pulp and paper, Medill McCormick, publisher of the Chicago Tribune, explained his several paper contracts of the last ten years and said that, .although, he had a rive-year contract, with one year yet to run, with tne International Paper Company, the price had been raised from ll.SB per hundred to $2.20. Further evidence was submitted by John Morris, representing the Ameri can Newspaper Publishers' Association, in support of the association's declara tion that there is a combination or agreement in restraint of trade among the several groups of papermakers. The hearing will' be continued tomor row. Three Unwilling Witnesses. Mr. Norris informed the committee regarding steps taken to acquaint the Attorney-General with the existence of a paper manufacturers' pool and submitted for the private Information of the committee a copy of allegations made by the publishers embodying the names of three persons who had knowl edge of the matters complained of. Those persons, he declared, were not Willing witnesses. Mr. Norris said fur ther that practically all the evidence lie had furnished the committee had long ago been placed in the hands of the Attorney-General. "I doubt." he said, "if it was even read." How the Trust Works. Vnder a riprid cross-examination by Miller. Mr. McCormick testified that shortly before making his last contract with the International Company he had bought paper from a Watertown, N. T., mill. Subsequently a traveling repre sentative of the Watertown Company xskeri to be relieved of the contract, and on the same day, within an hour, an agent of the International Company ap peared in his office and asked for the contract. He Journeyed to New Tork In the company of both men. he said, and the contract with the Watertown Company was canceled as requested. He could not explain how .it happened that tho two agents were in Chicago at the fiame time. , Speaking of the increased price of pa per. Mr. McCormick said it meant an additional outlay by him of $100,000 a year. He added that, if the committee would look Into the condition of some of the smaller publishers, tt would find, that in many instances men ' who after years of hard work had built up a good living had lost that living. NEARLY' ALL VOTE TO STRIKE Cleveland Street Carmen Cast Bal lots Strikebreakers Ready. CLEVELAND, O.. May 1. At 1 o'clock this morning, when the night men employed on the traction lines Appeared at the Trades and Labor Hall to cast their votes, Vice-President Hehncr of the union said: "Ninety-flve per rent of the men have voted for a strike: the counting today will be a mere formality." Officers of the streetcar company said they had 4000 men on the waiting list and did not fear a strike. RESTRICTS SECRET SERVICE Mottle Passes Measure in Spite ol Violent Opposition. WASHINGTON. May. 1. Tho House spent all of today's session in considering and passing, paragraph by paragraph, under suspension of the rules, the sundry civil appropriation hill. As the outcome of a determined effort to strike from the bill a restriction prohibiting the employ ment of secret service employes in any detective work other than the guarding of the President and the running down of counterfeiters, which was vigorously opposed by members of tho appropria tions committee, the limitation was agreed to and the paragraph adopted in substantially its original form. Objection by Democratic members, in pursuance of the minority filibuster, to unanimous consent defeated the passage of a bill for the printing and distribu tion of 100.000 copies of a special report by the Department of Agriculture, de scribing diseases of cattle. LE1SIIMAX M L'ST EXPLAIN To Be Asked About Releasing Turk l'roni Prosecution. WASHINGTON, May 1. Representa tive Murdock, of Kansas, today took up with tho State Department, the alleged action of Ambassador Lelshman, in en deavoring to induce Mrs. Bernard War kentin to sign, a paper releasing the Turkish Prince, who accidentally shot her husband on a railroad train near Da mascus, from prosecution. The State Department will request an explanation of the Ambassador. The matter has not gone so far as filing a formal complaint against Mr. Leishman and probably will not. at least, until his explanation is re ceived. AGREE ON TWO BATTLESHIPS House Conferees Approve Senate Ap propriation tor Them. WASHINGTON. May l.-The House will agree to the Senate amendment, to the naval appropriation bill, which adds to that measure an appropriation for the construction of the two battleships authorized hy the bill. The House naval affairs committee, at a meeting today preliminary to the House-Senate confer ence on the amended bill, discussed the various Senate amendments and informal ly reached an understanding as to which of them ought to be accepted and which opposed. Postpone Bill Guaranteeing Bonds. WASHINGTON. May 1. After hearings lasting over a month the House commit tee on territories today voted to postpone until next December, consideration of the bill guaranteeing Interest on construction bonds for a period of 30 years on rail roads built la Alaska where $500,000 or more. has been expended on the construc tion of the roads. GREAT INCREASE IN DEFICIT Is Nearly $52,000,000 for Ten Months of Year. WASHINGTON, May 1. The monthly statement of the Government receipts and expenditures for April. 1908. shows the total receipts to have been $43,919,321 and the expenditures J59.888.7S4, leaving a deficit for the month of nearly $16, 000.000, a deficit for the ten months of the present fiscal year of $51.64,616 as against a surplus for the corresponding period last year of $o6.475fcol. The statement shows that during these last ten months there has been a falling off in the receipts of $41,397,562 and an increase In expenditures of $66,722,804. making a difference in the condition of the Treasury of $108,130,366. Corean's Case Postponed. SAN FRANCISCO, May 1. N. M. Chun, the Oorean charged with complicity in the assassination of Durham White Stev ens, the Amerlcan'diplomat, who was shot and killed by Coreans at the Ferry build ing in this city, on March 2, last, was arraigned before Judge Conlon today. At the request of the attorneys who have been retained by local Coreans to defend Chun, the hearing was continued for one week. In Wang Chang, who fired the shot that killed Stevens, was held to answer for murder. Two New Appointments. WASHINGTON, May 1. The Presi dent sent to the Senate today the fol lowing nominations:. To be United States Attorney, for the District of Mon tana, James W. Freeman; to be Assist ant Secretary of Commerce and Labor, William K. Uehler, of California. New Minister From Holland. THE HAGUE, May 1. J. Loudon, Min ister of the Netherlands at Toklo, has been appointed diplomatic representative of his government at Washington. He will succeed R. de Marees van Swlnderin, who has been made Foreign Minister of the Netherlands cabinet. Again Probe Campaign Funds. WASHINGTON. May 1. Senator Gore introduced a resolution today providing for an Investigation by the Senate com mittee on privileges and elections of Con tributions of corporations to elections. The resolution was referred to the com mittee. National Banknote Circulation. WASHINGTON, May 1. The monthly circulation statement shows the total cir culation of National bank notes on April 30, 190S, to have been $697,645.6!!, which is an Increase for the year of $97,731,857 and an increase for the month of $1,288,332. Taft Strong for Isthmus. CHARLESTON, S. C. May 1. Secretary of War Taft and party sailed for Panama on the naval transport Prairie today. The party expects to reach Panama on the morning of May 6. DEAD ON MATSHUSHIMA 207 Loss on Wrecked Japanese Warship Finally Learned. WASHINGTON, May 1. Commander Dougherty, American naval attache at Tokio, today cabled the Navy Depart ment: that the total casualties by the explosion on the cruiser Matshushlma yesterday were 207 men. His dispatch Is as follow-": "Toklo, May 1. Matshushlma was destroyed at Pescadores April 30. Mag azine explosion. Loss, 23 officers, 33 midshipmen, one . warrant officer and 150 men." Model Concrete House Probable. Percy H. Wilson in Cement Age. A brief resume of Mr. Edison's work on his plans for a cheap monolithic house seems to conclusively prove: (1) That a house can be built in the way he states; (2) That every pract'eal construction problem involved can be solved; (3) That a mixture of concrete can be obtained which will insure its flowing to all parts of the forms thus avoiding voids. Mr Edison's experiments have not gone far enough as yet to definitely determine the following: First. Does the addition of the necessary colloid delay the setting of the concrete or affect its strength? Second, Will the stone separate from the sand and cement and form a non-uniform mass either in placing, or at a later period, due to the action of the laws of gravity? The first of these items very naturally affects only the cost of the building. The second affects its stability and must be solved definitely before the building of a house In this way can be successfully accomplished. On the whole the idea is one of rather revolutionary type in engineering construction, but Judging from what Mr. Edison has al ready accomplished toward the solving of the practical difficulties which have arisen, it Is likely that he will in the end be successful in building a house in the way he has planned. Rain's Effect on Animals. New York Press. "Lions, tigers and all the cat tribe dread rain," said a soo keeper. "On a rainy day they tear nervously up and down their cages, growling and trem bling. We usually give 'them an extra ration of hot milk. That puts them to sleep. Wolves love a gray day of rain. They are then very cheery. Treacherous as the wolf is. no keeper need fear him on a rainy day. He is too happy to harm a fly. Snakes, too, like rain. They perk up wonderfully as the barometer falls and the damp makes itself felt in their warm cases of glass. Rain makes monkeys glum. They are apt from in stinct, when they see It through the window, to clasp their hands above their heads and sit for hours. That attitude, you know, makes a kind of shelter. It is the primitive umbrella. So, when it rained, the naked promltive man and woman sat gloomily in the primeval swamps of giant ferns." Wireless -Telegraph Demonstration. A demonstration of wireless teleg raphy was given last evening at the Portland Public Library by the Pro gressive Club. This club was organ ized for the purpose of furthering wireless telegraphy, and at present hag a membership of about 40. The demonstration was given by three members of the club, Mr. Austin, Mr. Bristol and William Kellaher. Mr. Bristol exhibited an induction coil con structed by himself. Mr. Austin made the instruments used to illustrate the talk. A large crowd was present and was well pleased. The public is in vited at any time to the meetings. which are held in the children's room of the Portland Public Library every Friday evening at 7:45 o clock. Helie and Anna in Rome. ROME. May 1. Madarrie Gould and Prince de Sagan. who arrived here yes terday from Naples are spending their time sightseeing. They continue to deny themselves to interviewers. . National Bank Is Closed. OIL CITY. Pa., May 1. The Controller of the Currency today directed the closing of the doora of . .the National Bank of Eajt -Bradii .. .. FROTH AND FRENZY Senator Davis Raves Against the Newspapers. CALLS .THEM SCAVENGERS Arkansan Treats Senate to Some of His "Temperate Language" in Striking Back for As saults of Press. WASHINGTON, May l.--In the Senate today. Senator Davis, of Arkansas, moved to discharge the committee on the judi ciary from the -further, consideration of his bill, "for the suppression of trusts. pools and combinations in trade." He spoke for about two hours, reading much of the time from a typewritten statement which he said he had prepared in ad vance, "that no intemperate language might escape his lips on this occasion," thing which he said he had never done before. During his speech he roundly denounced the trusts, commended the President's recent message outlining -measures for relief, spoke of the removal of the motto. In God We Trust from the coins, and declared that John D. Rockefeller, the Standard Oil Company and J. Pierpont Morgan should be indicted for treason. He also paid his respects to the press. his remarks in that connection being as follows: 'Let scavengers of plutocracy howl; truth. God's, living truth, where are its defenders? Miserable travesties upon noble manhood, post-graduates in all arts of slander or defamation, I challenge the subsidized press; the people know your designs and spurn your pretense, whether under show of argument or mere sub servient hypocrites. Go, damnable imps of pelf and greed, 4 defy your taunts. Tear to fragments my political career if it comport with your execrable will. Stifle and distort my utterance. Not sat isfied, if such be your brutal frenxy, lash my poor form into insensibility. Then, if it be your further pleasure, gnaw from my stiffening bones every vestige of quiv ering flesh. Howl in wretched bestiality through my innocent blood as it drips from your fiendish visages. Drag then. if you want, what remains. In tne tntn and vermin of your foul dens and burn It upon the altar of Baal or scatter it be fore the friendly winds of heaven to your betters the carrion crows of the fields. All that they may do, all and more, if there yet be open further depth of infamy to a polluted, besotten press. "These readv servants of greed, what have they not done or attempted to fasten still more securely an autocracy upon us? It seems to be their special function, not simply to pervert truth, but to threaten and ter rorise public men. Dare a Senator align himself with the people? What? Yes. men. illustrious servants of the people have lifted honest voices here and else where against the march of plutocracy, to fall ambtished. politically assassinated, and by whom? By the trusts wearing masks. Ah, sir, newspaper masks. But. Mr. President, insignificant as am I, if my political career be marked, let them sharpen their blade, for I will be here at the appointed hour, and while here only God can stay my voice In behalf of or ganized united labor and tne yeomanry of America." MORSE PAYING HIS DEBTS New England Friends Help De throned Trust King. with- -vrvpv Ma v 1. Charles W. Morse, former vice-president of the Na tional Bank of North America, has with his friends turned over to Charles A. Hanna, receiver, nearly $260,000 in cash i ,.itfa in settlement of close to $500,000 of the bank's claims against Morse. The money and securities were put up by certain New England friends of Mr. Morse. THE DAY'S DEATH RECORD A. B. Richards, Indian Fighter. NEBRASKA CITY. Neb., May 1. A. B. Richards, an old plainsman and Indian fighter, died here last night, aged 68 years. He came to Nebraska from Canada tn 1885, and ran a store or ranch for prairie freighters at O'Fallons Bluff, near where North Piatt now is. He was known by the Indians as O'Chilla. or "The Kid." He was engaged in many fights with the Indians in the early days. In later years he accumulated considerable wealth. Charles L. Lovering, Manufacturer. TAUNTON, Mass., May 1. Charles L. Lovering. widely known in manufactur ing circles and treasurer of the Merri- mac Manufacturing Company, died here today, aged 76 years. He . was also a trustee of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. PERS0NALMENTI0N. W. B. Glafke, who has been sick at his home for several days from ptomaine poisoning, is recovering and hopes to be on the street again Monday. J. p. O'Brien,- general manager of the Harriman lines in this territory, left the city last night for 6an Francisco, where he goes on business for the allied roads. He expecta to be away a week. Rev. Warren H. Landon, of San Anselmo Theological Seminary is ex pected next week to take charge of the services of Calvary Presbyterian Church during the rest of the month of May. CHICAGO, May 1. (Special.) W. L. Vinson, of Baker City, Or., is at the Au ditorium Annex. NO LIGHT 0NTHE MYSTERY ' (Continued From First Pace.) news to me." said Ingram, when seen at the State Prison this morning. "While I was tried and convicted of the killing of -Dunlap, the disappearance of Jones and the rumor that I had made away with him was the principal cause of my conviction. Of course the disappearance of Jones was not a matter of evidence against me in the trial, but the jurors all knew that Jones had disappeared and that I was suspected of killing him. If it had not been for that influence upon the minds of the jury I would never have been convicted. There was no evi dence against me that was worthy of credit. "Dodson confessed to the killing " of Dunlap and tn order to save his neck told a story implicating me. That evi dence, together with the prejudice that had been worked up because of the dis appearance of Jones, was all they had. upon which to convict me. , In reality I am serving here because Jones dis appeared Just at the right time to throw suspicion upon me. Now that he has returned I think the people out at Grants Pass will take a different view of my guilt. "It is not true that I made an affidavit in which I said that Jones had been mur dered for his money and that his body had. -been -cut up. and placed) in a. .sack. Baking The obIt Baking Powder marie with Royal firape Cream of Tartar mads from cranes vs o r Insures healthful and delicious food for every , nome every day Safeguards yonr alum and phosphate of lime I made no affidavit of any kind. Dis trict Attorney Reames came to my cell in the jail and talked about Jones, evi dently for the purpose of trying to get me to say something that would connect me with his disappearance. He tried in various ways to draw me out, and in the course of the conversation, which was a very Informal one, I expressed various opinions as to what might have become of Jones. I also said that if he had been murdered near his home I thought I could find his body, for I knew every inch of the ground around there. But I didn't pretend to know anything about what had become of him. "After our conversation Reames gave me a written paper of several, pages, which he said was an account of our con versation. He asked me to sign it, which I did. I did not read it and do not know now what was in it." , Regarding the remarks attributed to In SATDRDAYSPEGIALS ON SALE ALL DAY 7f Wash Ba sin Royal Enamel Ware 19c Regular Value 35c No. 8 Teakettle Royal Enamel Ware W 63c .. Regular Value $1.25 jlSfegl Don't Purge the Bowels Do as Nature Does Nature gets her laxatives from food. If you ate plenty of fruit, coarse food and green vegetables, you would get laxative enough. But you eat fine food, and too much of it. And you exercise too litUe. So it is vital that you help the bowels in another way. But don't use salts or pill cathartics. Never employ harsh physic. Nature does all things gently. Give her gentle help. Cascarets are vegetable. They have just the same effect as a laxative food. They never gripe, so you know they don't irritate. They act in Nature's way. Yet they axe just as effective as violence. Powder food against gram concerning the disappearance ' of Jones,' Andrew Dodson, who is serving a life term, says the account in today's Oregonian is substantially correct. "In the presence of myself. District At torney Reames. and several other per sons," says Dodson, 'Ingram declared that when Jones' body was found, it would be found to be cut in two pieces. He gave other details. I did not think at the time that Ingram knew anything about it. but thought he was giving them "hot air,' as was his custom. The re appearance of Jones shows that he didn't know anything about it." Both Dodson and Ingram have been model prisoners. It is apparent that there was little evidence against Ingram ex cept the testimony of accomplices. His reputation and the disappearance of Jones undoubtedly were of great Influence with the jury. 6-Qt.BerlinKettle Royal Enamel Ware 33c . Regular Value 65c 14-Qt. Dishpan RoyalEnamelWare 49c Regular Value 75c While harsh physic ruins the stomach, Cascarets aid digestion. While harsh physic callouses the bowels, Cascarets restore the natural ' functions. Every effect is curative. Those who are well informed about laxatives employ only Cascarets. Cascarets are caady tablets. They are Mid by all drutrrists, but never in balk. Be sure t. get the genuine, with CCC on every tablet. The box is marked like this: The vest-pocket box Is 10 cents. The month-treatment box 50 cents. 12,000,006 boxes sold annually. 822 1 The paper used on wsm SMPERfM.ES is of such quality that you taste just the tobacco. And the tobacco used in Imperi ales is so pure, clean, conscientious- ly selected and judiciously blended that it supplies a flavor known to no other cigarette. Furthermore, in Imperiales the paper is crimped, not pasted, and the individual mouthpieces cool the smoke. Smoke them all day long if you want to no after effects; The men of the West smoked over 125,000,000 Ivtperialcs Cigarettes in igoy. 10 for 10c Sold Everywhere THE JOHN BOIXMAN COMPANY, Manufacturer, San Francisco ppf you will be interested in the cost and nutritive value of your food. Shredded Wheat contains the greatest amount of muscle-building, brain making material in the most digestible form and at the least cost. A food for the outdoor man and the indoor man for the invalid and the athlete j For breakfast heat the Biscuit in oven, pour milk over it (hot milk in winter) and a little cream. If you like the Biscuit for breakfast you will like toasted TRISCUIT (the Shredded Wheat wafer) for luncheon or any meal with butter, cheese or manna , lade. At your grocers. ill Special Low Fares To the East and Return VIA- Northern Pacific Railway Including St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth, Chicago, St. Louis. Omaha, Kansas City, St. Joseph, Etc. 0 For full Information regarding rates, routes, etc., to points East, call on or write A. D. Charlton, A. G. P. A. ruehei Philip of 'Wurtemhrir has con trived a bajidage that Is so scientifically con structed that manufacturers have taken out patents covering the right to make It in H fen Why Not Mix Brains. With Your Eating? If you mix brains our eating 253. Morrlana Street Portland, Or. fnrrtsn countries. The Durham In raid to b the most popular of all the royal ladl'c of Germany, and much of her popularity is due ' to her Interest in the sick poor. -. ' ' J