REPORTER RUNS DOWN LAND FRAUD New York Times Man Claims Credit Fcr Arrest of Henry E. G. Cooke. TOLD STORY TO OFFICIALS Xewspaper Man Pretended to Be Interested in Plan to Grab Ore gon Timber' and Learned Inside of Scheme. Credit for the arrest of Henry E. G. Cooke, of New York City, at Baker City several days ago and the breaking up of what Is said to be one of the most extensive public land frauds ever called to the attention of the Federal authori ties is claimed by a reporter on the New York Times. It was he who presented to the New York Federal grand jury the Information which resulted in the indict ment of Cooke and his associates who were operating through the Oregon Ranching & Timber Company which was said tu have for its object the unlawful acquisition of several thousand acres of land in Burns County, Oregon. Cooke is now in the Multnonyih County Jail in default of $,"i000 bonds pending arrange ments for lis delivery to the Federal authorities in New York state. The following account of the alleged iwindl.j and the methods by which it as detected and submitted to the Fed ral grand jury was published in the Sew York Times, July 15: t'ooke's scheme for he was the head and front of tlie concern ran to the acquisition by the Oregon Ranching and Timber Com pany of many thousand acres of valuable timl-er lands by having dun.my entrants, under contract with himself, go out to Burns County. Or., and take out the papers necessary to obtain lt0 aures each at $iM n acre. Already a party of 38 men and women have been taken from a dozen points In this state and Pennsylvania to Baker city and were in process of being distributed, or 'located." a it Is in the official parlance, when the arrest of Cooke put an end to the enterprise. Planned to (iet Others. Cooke w as planning to come back here for more. How many more depended only upon the extent to which the huge tract of timber land which the Government is about to open up was taken by other en trants before the second of Cooke's squads could get out to Oregon. The New York office of the Oregon Ranching and Timber Company was in constant communication with applicants right up to the time that the action of the Federal authorities ended the game and the force of canvassers Cooke employed out of town on a commis sion basis was busy rounding up still others. I'nlted States District Attorney Stlmson and Assistant t'ntted States Attorneys Moore and Dorr are tracing carefully the scope of the undertaking with the result that Its ramifications appear more and more extensive as the investigation proceeds. The arrangement between Cooke and the entrants was simplicity itself. The entrant paid Cooke $100 and his own car fare to Bnker City. Cooke underti.uk to transport him to the scene of the timber fraud and to board him at a ranch during the three months necessary to take out the papers. A t the end of this time the entrant got his land and Cooke guaranteed that t would be worth fOOO to him. Meantime the entrant was obliged to commit perjury In making oath that no one other than him aelf was interested, directly or indirect. y. In taking out the land. So Cooke lias been indicted tor conspiracy to defraud the Gov ernment, conspiracy, to violate the Timber Lands Act. and fo'r subornation of per jury. It was on June 153 that the attention of the Times was drawn to a report that a land fraud gang was operating, with head quarters at l."4 Nassau street. Communica tion was had with Mr. tfllmson. who said that he was ready to act upon the presen tation of any adequate evidence. Accord ingly a reporter went to the offices of the Oregon Ranching & Timber Company, on the eighth floor of 15 Nassau street, where also two Insurance societies run by Cooke and a man named A. Gero Marshall, are op erated, and asked for Cooke. The reporter was told that Cooke was away. Then a man ho posed as the office manager ap peared. reporter said that he had been em ployed at the race tracks and was out of employment by reason of the anti-gambling law and wanted a change of scene. He had heard of a man named Miller of Scranton who had gone out to Oregon on some sort of land development deal and wanted to find out about it. The manager hesitated a moment and then said: "You've got to have some money first.' 'How much ?" queried the reporter. "About $175.' ald the manager. The reporter ssid he thoucht he could ra isa XI 2.1 t hron erh some frtenrii hut t Ka man a ire r Insisted that St ."SO was th m 11 - ' est amount within the range of possibility. "You have to pay $100 to the company, and your carfare out there will be about $MV he said "All you have to do," the manager continued, "is to take out some land, timber land, that the Government is going to sell, and we'll give you S'JOOO for it It w ill cost you about 40o for the land, but our people have arranged with a trust company out there to advance that money, so that ail you will need to get your $2000 is the $'.00 that you pay orig inally and your carfare." The manager said the company would have a place for the entrants to live while in Oregon at a cost of (l a day. the amount of the board being deducted from the f20tM at the conclusion of the negotia tions. "You'll get the 2H)0 the minute you give us the title to the land," he added. The Flrat Purch users. m Then the manager said that oS men had already gone out on June 11. including Miller of Scranton. and that some mote w ere going In the near future. Ho sug gested that the reporter should get some one to go with him. The reporter replied that he knew a good many young men who had been working at the tracks and w ere out of Jobs w ho would like to go, whereupon the manager said: "You'd better not talk about It too much. You know we have to do this on the quiet, for whlTe It's fixed so we have a dead sure thing and perfectly safe, the Government is mighty particular, and it won't do to let It get around. ' The reporter said he understood that, but wanted to know what he got for his $100 from the company. "You get a contract." aald the manager, nd he went into the other room, return ing with an em elope of papers In dupli cate, which, he said, were the contracts of the as persons ho ent out with Cooke on June 19. "Here's Miller a." said the manager, turn ing to the top one. "And here's the con tract of Peter Fair of Elmira. He's a man who broke his leg and we transferred ht contract." The manager ran over a lot of the folded contracts showing that the party of June 19 bad gone out largely from Elmira and Corning, in this state, and from Scranton. Penn.. with a sprinkling of folk from New York City. Then the manager, upon re quest, opened one of the contracts and read It over. It provided in substance that an agree ment should be made between Henrv fl G. Cooke and the applicant to the effect that Cooke undertook to loce for the applicant lrtrt acres of timber land in the State of Oregon. Cooke agreed, according to the- contract, to transport the entrant from Faker City. Or., to the place where the land was situated, and further agreed to attend to all the details and formalities connected with the matter. Form of the Contract. Cooke Indeed was even generous enough to agree to heard the entrant during his residence for $1 a day. Then the contract provided that the entrant should pay $100 to Cooke and receive therefor one share of the stock of the Oregon Ranching A Tim ber Company, on which Cooke proposed to lend the entrant $400 to buy his 160 acres of land. All this done. Cooke agreed that the land should return to the entrant $2000. less the $400 loan and the entrant' living expenses on Cooke's ranch. The entrant's monev. pending the delivery of the stock, w as to remain on deposit in Clarke Brothers' bank, at 1A4 Nassau street, where the concern tiAM been doing II banking. Having read oy er the contract, the reporter asked for a further explanation of the financial part of it. "You know." said the manager of the office, "that if we lent you the money on which to take up this land, both yt-u and we would be liable, for you have to make an oath that you are not actlnr for any body else. But we have a sure way to beat that provision, for nobody can atop us from lending you money on a share of stock of the Oregon lianchfng Timber Company, and when you have That money its yours to buy anything you please with." The manager then unfolded a plan whereby the applicant, upen obtaining the execution of contracts by ten other ceoDle. could get his own payment remitted. An ' appointment was made for the next day. I and the interview ended. t niiea states Attorney btimson ana nis assistant. Mr. Moore, who was on the case from the start, did not hesitate on hear ing a report of this Interview in declaring i the scheme a clear conspiracy to violate tne Federal statutes. Hut w ith Cooke in the West, there seemed small chance of getting a case against him for som time to come. Meantime, on June 26, tha Times r e porter again visited the offices at 154 Nas sau street, told the manager he would be able to raise the money jf he got a little, time, and wanted to know more about the security behind the contract. The manager said there was a syndicate of capitalists in Oregon backing the game, but that nothing could be said about them tecause the Gov ernment was "raising hell" and matters had to be kept quiet. This second call was on Friday, and the reporter suggested that he ccme in the fol lowing Monday to sign the contract. The manager said he wouli be away, but took the visitor out to the desk of Mrs. E. B. GatMn. carhter of the Standard Protective Society, who also appeared to act in a similar capacity in the Oregon Ranching At Timber Company. Having filled out the blank spaces in a contract and Inserted the name employed by 'lie reporter, the man ager Instructed Mrs. Gatlln to receive a payment on account. The Contract Signed. On Monday following the reporter called aain, found Mrs. Gatlln In charge of the offices, and paid $10 down to bind a con tract. The contract which the manager had filled in. signed by the nrme cf Cooke, was produced, and. then tha cashier filled in another of corresponding papar which the reported signed In his assumed n;ime. Mrs. Gatlln witnessing the signature. She ac cepted payment of the money and gave a receipt reading. "The Oregon Ranching & Timber Company. E. B. Gatlln. Cashier.;' Investigation of the Oregon Ranchlng Standard Protective combination reveals an interesting history Cooke, the dominating spirit, is an Englishman, who has been in this country for only a few years after a rather turbulent tuslness career on the other side. He came originally, it appears, from a good family, but en this side has been connected w ith one scheme after another, and incidentally has been active in the sporting life of the Tenderloin. There is reason to believe from the state ments of several individuals who knew Cooke a year or so ago, that he had the matter of land frauds under consideration for some time, and during the year 1907 made several ineffectual beginnings toward the same end as that to which the Oregon Ranching & Timber Company was di rected. For a year or so he had his of fice in the St. Paul building, where was located also one George B. Sldener, gen erally known as "Judge." a Texas land scheme promoter, who was also a well known figure along Broadway In the White iixnt district. It was Sidener who apparently brought Cooke and the Standard ProtectU e Society together, for Sldener had at one time been president of an insurance ccncTn named the Bankers' Protective Society, a sort of half-brother of the Standard. Beth are five-year-term insurance companies, offering sick benefits for the steted period, and at the end a certain maney settlement. They do most of their business in Pennsylvania, where Cooke recruited a good many of hia men for the Oregon expedition. The Oregon Ranching & Timber Com pany came into existence last January in an incorporated form, Cooke having associated with him Lillian. Ida and Julia Mayer, of Jamaica. L. I., who put. up $100 for some of the preliminary expenses. The Mayer sisters got suspicious after a short time and demanded their money back, at last reports being in negotiation with Cooke to get It. Then Cooke found new prey in the person of Mrs. Annette Ehrgood. of this city, whom he persuaded to advance $500. Mrs. Ehr good stayed by to the end. and was one of the party of 38 that Cooke led forth to Baker City in June. The others were re cruited by interesting method?. T INDIANS SAY MFATRIDGE RE TAINS MONEV DUE THEM. Vniaplne, Head of Tribe, WilV Go to Washington to Lay Cae Before Secretary Garfield. PENDLETON. Or.. July 20. Declaring that Indian Agent McFatrldge Is withholding a part of the moneys due the Indians for the rent of their lands to white men, Umapine, head man of the Umatillas. expects to leave In a few days for Washington to carry the grievances of the members of his tribe direct to the Secretary of the Interior. When told that the agent was probably merely obeying orders and paying out a little money at a time so the Indians would not spend all their substance at once and then be broke for the remainder of the year, a smile of sarcasm curled on the old red man's face, and through the interpreter he declared that the agent was only keeping the money of the old and ignorant Indians who had no way of telling how much they had coming to them, and that he was holding It back so he could collect the Interest which it draws from the banks. Umapine came to town today to find out where the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and the Secretary of the Interior are at present. Why he did not present his grievances when these officials were here last week the Indian did not say. Since the entrance of McFatrldge about a year ago. after the storming exit of Major Edwards, the Umatilla reserva tions seems to have been particularly free from those petty bickerings between the agent, renters and Indians which mark every reservation but which seem to have particularly characterized the Umatilla reservation. That there has been trouble brewing for some time has been known to many, and It now seems that it is to break out afresh with as much fury as ever. Past rumors, however, have confined the disaffection to the white renters, it being generally supposed that the Mc Fatrldge administration has been satisfac tory to the reds. PEARY MAKING GOOD TIME Arctic .Explorer Entering Strait of Belle Isle, Labrador. NEW YORK. July 20. The Arctic bound steamer Roosevelt has crossed the Gulf of St. Iwrence and entered the Straits of Belle Isle at 6 o'clock last night. This report was contained in a message to the Associated Press from Commander Peary, which read: Point Amour, via Cape Race. N. F July 19. Arrived. Point Amour Light at 6 Sun day night. Fine weather. Good run across gulf. ITospects of a clear night through the straits. All well. Peary. Point Amour, upon which Is located the lighthouse to which Commander Peary re fers, is a headland on the southeast side of Forteau Bay. Labrador. MISTAKEN' F0R A DEER Marshfield Business Man Killed by Hunting Companion. MARSHFIELD. Or.. July 10. Xewa reached here today that August Helm ing, a furrier and dealer in hides and a prominent business man of Marsh field, was shot and killed near Corbin. Curry County, while hunting. Helm ing, his wife and four friends left here last week for an outing In th mountains. While stalking a deer one of the party mistook Helming for the deer and fired. Helming was killed instantly. BEATEN 8Y NURSES Masculine Intruder Is Roughly ' Handled in Hospital. BREAKS INTO DORMITORY Thirty Indignant Young Women At tack Man VJth Pillows in San Francisco Hospital and Force Him Through Window SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.. July 20. For a space of about 15 minutes, shortly after 9 o'clock on Saturday night, there were lively doings In the nurses' dormi tory in the rear of St. Luke's Hospital. A man climbed over the fence surround ing the dormitory in the rear of the hos pital and entered by one of the windows. He got into the apartment of Miss Ethel Gurr, one of the nurses. Miss Gurr emitted a piercing scream and grabbed a pillow. At the same time the intruder caught her by the hair. A tussle ensued, with Miss Gurr scream lng and beating her assailant with the pillow. He tried to reach her throat for the purpose of stopping her screams. but she managed to keep him at bay wnne sne grasped nis coat. The screams of the frightened girl soon aroused the other nurses, and in a few minutes there was a party of 30 rescuers on the spot, armed with pillows and whatever other weapons the nurses had Deen able to pick up in their way to the scene. The beating of the intruder fol lowed to the accompaniment of shrill feminine exclamations. In the melee several of the pillows parted at the Beams and with feathers flying in clouds the scene resembled the busy center of a stage snow storm. Round and round the room the con flict was waged, with the intruder vainly trying to dodge the blows aimed at him. Some of the girls cried loudly for Dr. Allen of the hospital to come to the front and take the man into custody. One of them went in search of Dr. Allen, but before he arrived there was a sudden finish. In the tussle the intruder was pushed up against one of the' windows. There was the crash of broken glass and out into the nignt he toppled followed by a cloud of feathers. TAFT A ELECTED MEMBER OF STEAM SHOVEL MEN'S UNION". Friendship for Members of Organi zation ' He Met In Panama Brings Him Honor. HOT SPRINGS. ... July 20. When Judge Taft goes to Cincinnati to be noti fied of his nomination for the Presidency by the party, he will receive notice of his election as a member of a labor or ganization. He has been elected a mem ber of the International Society of Steam Shovel Men, of which T. J. Donlan. of Chicago, is president. Mr. Taft has a good deal to do with the steam shovel men at Panama. His notification of his membership in the union will be made on July 29. , He will probably leave here next Satur day for Cincinnati and may not return until the following Saturday. Judge Taft has concluded that it will not be possible for hli to attend any state fair before the election. After September 1 he ex pects to remain In Cincinnati until the election is over. Willis Moore, chief of the Weather Bureau, will be here tomorrow. Mr. Moore has some ideas concerning the treatment of the labor problem which he desires to talk over with Mr. Taft. Judge Taft will attend the opening of court at Germantown. five miles from Hot Springs, tomorrow and will deliver an ad dress on administration of justice. PRINCE GREETS TURNERS Oscar of Prussia Salutes Flags Carried by Americans. FRANKFORT-ON-THE-MA1N, July 20. The most interesting feature of the festivities in connection with the international gymnastic tournament, before the real tournament begins, was reached yesterday. Prince Oscar of Prus sia, in behalf of the Emperor and the Crown Prince, who are In Austria, traveled from Bonn to greet the mem bers of the Turners' Union, who gath ered in unprecedented numbers. The Turners wore costumes of various kinds, representing sports from the time of the Olympic games until the present day. Tms was followed by a parade of allthe clubs having dele gates here. The Prince gave a marked salute to each of the five American flags car ried by the visitors. Afterward he made a speech, in which he extended a warm welcome to all the Turners. Massed exercises by 15,000 Turners fol lowed, this being a most remarkable spectacle. SAY PROWE TOLD TRUTH "Eraigrados" and Political Exiles Confirm His Story. MEXICO CITY. July 20. "Emigra dos" and political exiles from the Re public of Guatemala and Salvador who for some time have taken up an en forced residence in this capital are a unit in declaring that Dr. Herman Prowe told the truth regarding Presi dent Estrada Cabrera's contribution to the Republican campaign fund of 1904. More than a dozen of them have been interviewed, and most of them expressed surprise when it was said that Dr. Prowe's statement was doubted. They declare that the payment of tha money to the American Minister was an open secret, and whetlier the Republican campa gu manager or the officers of the present Administration know any thing of the matter or not. Estrada Cabrera does not forget, for the prom ised support from the United States did not come. This, they claim, was demonstrated within the last fortnight by the presence of the cruiser Albany at the Pacific Honduran port of Amapala and of the gunboat Marietta at the Atlantic port of Puerto Cortex. The emigrados, who meet here at frequent intervals, claim to have re ceived advices from what they char acterise as an authoritative source to the effect that Cabrera. after invei gling to his support President Flgueroa, started the revolution at Honduras for the purpose of drawing President Ze- laya into the conflict and then over throwing both him and Davila. Cabrera was to name their success ors and thus become master of Central America In fact. As an argument to win over President Figueroa it is claimed that Cabrera pointed out that he had the United States assured as his friend. He referred to the stand taken by the former United States Min-. lsters at Guatemala, naming Messrs. Hunter and Lee. He concluded, it is al leged, by saying that Minister Hunter was his iriend. According to the emi grados. this argument completely won over Figueroa. When Figueroa asked what part the Republic of Mexico would play in the matter, it is de clared that Cabrera answered that an agreement between that country and the United States existed by the terms of which Mexico agreed to follow the lead of the United States in matters pertaining to Central America in gen eral and Guatemala In particular. The only discrepancies in the stories told by the emigrados were regarding the amount of the alleged contribution to the Roosevelt campaign fund. Some of them maintained that the donation was $5000, instead of $10,000, as reported by Dr. Prowe. Ministers Deny Charge. LEXINGTON, Ky., July 20. Leslie Combs, United States Minister to Peru, who was Minister to 'Guatemala during the time when President Cabrera was al leged to have contributed Jl 0.000 to the Roosevelt campaign and who is now here with relatives, this afternoon said he had never heard of the matter. Ex-Minister W. Guffey Hunter also entered an em phatic denial of the story, saying that at the time he was in Kentucky. TURKISH TROOPS REVOLT SEVEN THOUSAND MEN TURN AGAINST THE SULTAN. Officers Third Army Corps Threaten Massacre Unless Assured Men Are Released. CONSTANTINOPLE, July 20. It is rumored that 70)0 Turkish soldiers in the Monastir district are in open re volt and that 32,000 troops have been ordered to the scene of the outbreak. It is also reported that a number of officers of the Third Army Corps have threatened that unless their offi cers now awaiting court-martial on the charge of assisting the "Young Turkey" agitation are Immediately liberated all the generals in Macedonia will be killed and the army will then march to Constantinople and demand the re-establishment of the constitu tion. LOSE UNDER 3-CENT FARE Cleveland Traction Company's Re ports Show Big Monthly Deficits. CLEVELAND Ct..- Tulv on mrainj has had nearly three months of three- i-ciii larea. aim two 01 ine monthly report is predicted for July. The operat ing e.r;iises ana nxea (marges nave been ce9S of the pnrnlnirv Tho A .,, Ji 1 Traction Company, which is operating iu-tti mica uuutir a. lease, also is July 28. The revenue from transfers has lmsch auuui ajw a rnonm, a cent each having been charged. ThA Off) r in Is nf t ho rnmr,o n.. still press their belief that three-cent fares will pay in time. An important meeting uuctiuiB win De neia next xues day to consider the inauguration of free transfers and other vital points. Transfers may be made free for a time as an experiment to see if it win i the patronage. The property will not go back to the old company, if we have to charge the highest rate of fare allnweH hv mif fran chise," President Dupont has said. ine irancmse permits a rate of six cents. ThA nnprnHntr nmno chlse has been attacked in court and also win oe votea on unaer tne state initiative and referendum laws. PURE MILK IS DEMANDED Pendleton Council Will Strictly Reg ulate Dairy Industry. PENDLETON'. Or., July 20. (Spe cial.) When Dr. W. G. Cole, City Phy sician, declared recently that in his opinion a large percentage of the dairy cows which contribute to Pendleton's milk supply are affected with tubercu losis he started a crusade which is go ing to reach proportions of which he little dreamed and which will proba bly result in giving Pendleton the purest miik it has ever had. When the Council meets in regular session Wednesday evening the mem bers will be asked to pass an ordi nance which will not only provide for a complete and thorough examination and test for tuberculosis among all dairy herds and the killing of animals found to be Infected, but it will also prescribe certain strict regulations which the dairy men will be expected to observe. PERSIAN NEWS CONFLICTS Reports Are, However, That Rachin Khan Has Vpper Hand in Tabriz. LONDON". July 20. The news from Per sia coming from different routes is of a rather confusing and conflicting nature, except as indicating that Rachin Khaii still has the upper hand In Tabriz. According to the Daily Mail special dis patch from Teheran, the political side of the revolt in Tabriz for the moment Is ended, but danger still threatens through the possibility that the Shah's troops be ing overpowered and expelled from Tabrla by the revolutionists. A dispatch to the Daily Telegraph from Teheran says that perfect peace reigns there and Europeans may safely venture in any part of the city. For the time be ing, the dispatch adds, the parliamentary pa iily has fully accepted the turning again to ancient customs and standards, and Teheran's old life moves as of old. Fatally Burned by Powder. JERSEY CITY. N. J., July 30. Mrs. Josephine Faho was fatally burned in the powder and fireworks factory of John Flppo, owing to a nail in her shoe striking a spark, which ignited some powder. Her husband is employed in the place, and after taking him his luncheon she was walking about the building. The burning powder set fire to her dress, and before Faho could put out the flames she became unconscious. She died in a few minutes. Valuable Package Lost. DES MOINES, July 20. A package containing- $1000 has disappeared from the Des Moines office of the Adams Express Company. It was one of three identical packages, and while the other two readied their destination without mishap, this one has completely vanished. TUFTS MOVE INTERESTS BRYAN STtJDIES, THEN GIVES OrT STATEMENT. Wants Contributions Published. Frank Monnett, of Ohio, Frorn.- ises to Support Nebraskan. FAIRVIEW, Lincoln. "Neb.. July 30. The statement of Judge William H. Taft at Hot Springs. Va., yesterday that the Republican Xational commit tee would not accept any contributions from corporations in his campaign was viewed here with more than ordi nary interest. Mr. Bryan gave it espe cial attention. In fact, so impressed w-as he with the announcement that he broke his usual silence and dictated the following statement: '"We welcome him to this advanced ground and bid him to go further and announce that all individual contribu tions above a reasonable minimum will be made known before "the election." Late tonight Frank S. Monnett, for mer Republican Attorney-General of Ohio, who conducted the prosecutions in that state against the Standard Oil Company, and later was employed by the Interstate Commerce Commission to gather material upon which to base the Government suits, arrived here and held a lengthy conference with Mr. Bryan. Mr. Monnett announced that it is his purpose to actively support Mr. Bryan In Ohio in the campaign and that he will make numerous speeches In honor of the Democratic ticket. Mr. Monnett said he was authorized by Mr. Bryan to state that because of the Government's dereliction in prose cuting the alleged wool combine, whose headquarters he claims are in Ohio. Mr. Bryan had announced that if elected to the Presidency he woull at once put all the machinery of the Gov ernment at work to destroy any com bination that may exist. Mr. Monnett returned to Lincoln at a late hour and will depart fcr his home early tumoirow morning. SEEKS CLOSER RELATIONS China Will Cultl-vato Friendship of United States. PEKIX, July 20. The Chinese Govern ment has oecided to appoint Tang Shoy Yi, Governor of Mukden province and former president of the board of foreign affairs, as high commissioner to visit Washington for the purpose of thanking the United States Government for remit ting a portion of what is known as the Chinese "Boxer" indemnity. The decision to send a representative educated in America and conversant with American affairs, especially America's international relations, instead of a prince. as was originally intended, is due to the recognition 'by the conservatives, as well as progressives like Yuan Shi Kai, grand councillor, of the necessity for closer re lations with America. The necessity is therefore marked in view of the state of alliance and the increasing Jealously among the European and Asiatic powers within China. China's declaration of her intention to send 100 students to the United States an nually for four years and after that 50 students annually until the entire award shall be paid is only part of the present design to allay American Influence in China's affairs. The design contemplates a benefit amounting to the whole can celled indemnity. Fatally Hart In Brawl. SAN JOSE. Cal.. July 20. Frank Ce sana. a candymaker, was found with a fractured skull and a wound in the inside of the mouth evidently made by a sharp stick or parasol, at the corner of First and San Fernando streets, at an early hour this morning, by two friends, whom he had left but a moment before. His com panions say he was attacked by some member or members of a party of three men and three women, whom they pur sued several blocks, finally giving up the chase to return to the wounded man's assistance. Cesana will die. Judge Roger A. Pryor Is 80. NEW YORK, July 20. Ex-Justice Roger A. Pryor, of the Supreme Court, member of the Confederate States Con gress. Confederate General and a lifelong Democrat, celebrated his 80th birthday yesterday. A few friends called to see him and the large desk in the library of his home In West Sixty-ninth street, held two huge bunches of beautiful flowers. But he spent the day as he spends most of his time now with his books and flowers. Mrs. Pryor Is his constant com- Statement of Condition of Ladd & Tilton Bank July 15, 1908 RESOURCES Loans and DlNcounts 9 4.404.304.03 Overdrafts 4.2-4r,.H." Bonds and Stocks 5,40.-.,87fl.! Bank Premlxes , 7S.JmO.00 Cash on Hand and Due front Banks...., 8,674. 61,",. 79 Total. . . .: (13,564,042.83 LIABILITIES. Capital Stock FuHy Paid 9 l.non.OOO.OO Surplus and Undivided Profits A21,31M1.00 Demand Deposits 6.2I.74B.83 Time and Savings Deposits 519.6!M).HO Letters of Credit 6.200.00 12,042,646.63 f-0"1 13.r,64,042.63 OFFICERS. W. M. LADD. President H. S. HOWARD. Jr., Atst. Cashier EDWARD COOKINOHAM. Vlce-Pres. J. W. LADD. As faahier- W. H. DUNCKLEY, Cashier WALTER M. COOK, Asst. Cashier . DIRECTORS. EDWARD COOKINOHAM J. WESLEY LADD HENRY L. CORBKTT WILLIAM M. LADD CHARLES E. LADD AMERICAN TEAM WON THE INTERNATIONAL RIFLE MATCH At Olympic Games, England, July 9th, 10th, 11th; 1908 - WITH UNITED STATES CARTRIDGE CO. JMPNITION. Selected after four days' tests, in competition with that made by the WINCHESTER and U. M. G. Co.'s "U. S. AMMUNITION has proven SUPERIORITY in every official test reported. RECORDS SHOW THAT FACT Use "U. in WINCHESTER rifles to get best results Is your moath similar in anv m-av m th above? if so, no ned to wear a wobblv. unusable partial plate or ill-nttlnR ordinary bridge work. The Dr. Wise system of "Teeth Without Plates" The result of 21 way of replacing in fact, teeth in years' experience, the new teeth In the mouth tseth appearance, teeth to chew your food upon. bi you did upon your nat- ural ones. Our rorce is so oi anuea we Ire crown, bridge or plate necessary, positively pain Only high-class, scientific can do your ent work In a day if less extracting, work. Wise Dental Co. Inc. Dr. W. A. Wise Manager 21 years in Portland. 8cona floor Failing bldg.. Third and Washington streets. Office hours, 8 A. M to 8 P. M. Sundays. 9 to 1 P. M. Painless extracting. 50c; plates, 5 up. Phonea A and Main 229. panion. Ex-Justice Fryor was the young est member of the convention which nominated Frankln Pierce at Baltimore in 1852. WHY WE GO TO EUROPE It's to Find Freedom We Can't Get at Home. Cleveland Plain Dealer. A new theory, and an Interesting one, has been advanced to explain the Ameri can exodus to Europe. It is said that Americans go abroad in an instinctive quest for freedom that they cannot find at home. Personal freedom is what is meant. Americans in the mass, beyond doubt, are free. They can vote as they please, elect what rulers they please, gen erally speaking. But as individuals tlv.-y cannot act. speak and write as they please. The United States has less of the vital, personal form of liberty than almost any European country. For America is governed by the tyranny of public opinion, and this tyranny is almost absolute in matters of conduct and even in the ex pression of opinion on moral questions. And so, the theory is, Americans go to Europe to take a full breath, kick up their heels and, feel free in a way that the atmosohere of restraint at home makes Impossible. It is certainly true that in America a man Is bound to the will of his neighbors in a far greater extent that In Europe. The community may dictate that he shall not smoke cigarettes. And there is the vast, un escapable body of moral and social con vention, the dogmatic agreement of one's neighbors as to what one shall wear and eat and how one shall spend his time: there are the tyrannical standards of esthetic taste, of religious and economic thought and the automatic regulation, by public opinion, of nearly all the niceties of life. Americans who bo gadding to Europe may never have formulated this difference in personal freedom; but they feel It. Olympia Malt Extract, good for grand ma or baby. Only 15-100 of 1 per cent alcohol. Phones: Main 671, A 2467. No human hand touches WHEAT FLAKE CELERY from its first process of manu facture until it is served for the table. It is composed of Wheat, Celery and Salt. Not a trace of any other substance. Its daily use has a tonic and laxative ef- For sale by all Grocers S. B. I.INTHICUM FREDERIC B. PRATT THEODORE B. WILCOX LOW RATES EAST Bi BB KADI THIS. 1EA0OX 7XX 0. R. 8 N. AXD SOUTHERN PACIFIC (LIMBS IV OEEOOH) From PORTLAND A FOLLOW! i Tim Direct CalManria Chicago $72.50 $87.50 St. Louis'... 67.50 82.50 St. Paul 63.15 81.75 Omaha 60.00 75.00 Kansas City. 60.00 75.00 TICKETS WILL BB OW BAXJi July 22, 23 August 6, 7, 21, 22 , Ood for return In 90 dara with atopv prlmatea at nlaanir wlthla Umlta REMEMBER THE DATES For mt further Information call at ta Cltr Tick Office. Sd and Waabinctoa ftta, Or writs to WM. McMURRAY neral Pimocw A cent. PORTLAND. ORBOOM. (O 0GDENSHASZ! p "glS Jo DON'T RUB AND SCRATCH CURE THE SUMMER ITCHES All Forma of Ilih (aunrd by Warm Weather and Perspiration Can Quickly Be Cored. Mosquito bites nettle rash prickly iieat-r-hlves and all forms of Itch can be Instantly relieved and quickly cured , by a simple wash of oil of wlntergreen and other purely vegetable compounds. If you are troubled with prickly heat, hives, rash or any form of itch common' to .hot weather, do not rub and scratch, thereby Increasing the itch and irrita tion, and many times resulting In a' poisonous sore. Apply a few drops of this liquid and instantly the Itch is gone an! you feel soothed, calmed and relieved. Mosquito bites. Summer rashes, poison ivy and the like will no longer trouble; in fact, the second and third applications will begin to allay i.he eruption. This lljjuid is known as D. D. D. Pre scription. It is .the standard reliable eczema remedy and we positively vouch for its sffeotlveness in ull Summer rashes, mosquito bites, poison ivy, etc. Woodard, Clarke & Co., Skldmore Drug Co. EDUCATIONAL. NEED A POSITION? THE LEADING BUSINESS COLLEGE Portland, Oregon Guarantees Positions to its Graduates DAY and EVENING Phone Main 590, A 1593. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT of the University of Oregon Twenty-second annual sepilon hgtna 8V tember 14. 1.08. Address S. E. Joseph!. M Dean. 610 Dekim bids;., Portland. Manzanita Hall PALO AX TO, CAXIF. Thorough preparation of boys for eollega or business. One mile from Stanford. Ex ceptional advantages. Ideal dormitory sys tem. Ample grounds for athletics. 16th year. Illustrated catalogue. J. LrR. Dixon, Headmaster. j I