' 'I
PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1908.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
VOL. XIVIII. NO. 14,946.
ROMANCE BEGINS
RUTHLESS WAR OF
GREAT SECRECY IN
ABRUZZI'S MOVES
CLEVELAND DID
COACHMAN POSES
AS GERMAN BARON
TAFT RIDICULES
, IN ENGINE'S CAB
STRENUOUS FIGHT
T SPARE
BUT ITALY ASSIGNS WARSHIPS
AS BRIDAL ESCORT.
BORROWS SI 6,000 FROM TX'FT
HCXTERS AXD GOES.
TBAIXMAX WEDS GIRL HE CAR
RIED FROM FERN IE FIRE.
HUGHES
GAINS
POWDER
COMBINE
BRYAN
BRYAN'S CHARGES
No Bribery in Promises
to Employes.
IS SIMPLY PLAIN BUSINESS
More Work and Bigger Orders
if Republicans Win. .
SPEAKS TO THOUSANDS
Oh loan Explains Hti Steadfast Po
sition on Injunction to Hundreds
of Coal Miners Takes
Positive Stand.
Ind., Oct 22. During
thh. the nrst of the three days ho 1
to speak In Indiana. W. H. Taft has
talked to more people than on any pre
vious day of the campaign.
' In earh of his 1 speeches, the listen
er and applauders have numbered thou
sand?. Rejuvenated In voice, energy and
enthusiasm by his on day of rest, the
candidate handled the campaign with
even a greater degree of positivenesa than
heretofore. In the first speech he mad
he ridiculed Mr. Bryan's charge of "brib
ery." In connection with the promises of
employers to their employes of more work
with Republican success and the order
of business men for goods said to be
made contingent upon the. same result.
These w. re not bribes, he said, but bust
re?e. They did not represent false con
ditions, but far Lb.
Talks to Thousands.
Judge Taft talked today to many 'aud
iences and It was noticeable that what he
said was more educational than hereto
fore. At Linton. -where he spoke to several
thousand coalmlners, he gave them the
history of the writ of injunction, some
thing he has not previously done.
At Terr Haute, he made a clear dis
tinction between the Republican and Dem
ocratic platforms on the question of in
junction and declared business to be, prop
erty. There "were two occasion during
the day when Candidate Debs came In
for attention. These were at the Terre
Haute meeting, the home of Iebs and at
the two meetings at Evansvllle.
The largest outdoor gathering Mr. Taft
said he had ever addressed was assembled
at Terre Haute, when the Taft special
arrived there this afternoon. Many pres
ent said it was the largest gathering; In
the history of the state.
States Stand Clearly.
The Injunction was the subject of the
speech at Terre Haute, and as It had
been explained and the position of the
two parties set forth, the candidate de
clared with great vehemence:
Protects the Poor.
That Is where the Republican party
stands; that la where I stand, and I do
not care what happens politically, that la
where I am going to stand. I have Issued
Injunctions strain! lawless laboring men
who wr violating somebody else's rights.
If I had pot doo It. I a WuUl not have
the right to. be here asking; for your auf
fnR. What kind of Judg do you want?
Io you want a Judge- that distinguishes be
tween clashes, decides In favor of one class
and aaalnat another Is It not the Juiix
who unrir his oath, with the law as It is
laid down In-the textbook and the statute
acd with the evidence before htm. under
Ms oath decides according to the Justice
ef the ca and then tssui the order that
the law requires him to isue?
leflnes Injunction.
What Is an Injunction? An Injunction Is
mere i y an order Uh reference to the pre
vention of the abu made before the fact
occurs, which is to injure or not Injure Che
party. Where an Injury has been done a
man brings suit to rynver damages for the
injury but where the Injury is of a charac
ter recurring from time to time In small
a-ts f-r which you cannot recover dama.r
that are adequate, there equity save that
a man may have prevention rather than
cur.
Then he may go to court and say, 'This
man t glng to cut down my tree. That
tree won t grow In years. It belongs Ui
me; It Is on my place, and he's my t-n-ant
He ts g"lng to injure It by was;ing
mat tree He goes Into court and aK
tf-e Jude to Insue an Injunction to prevent
the cutting down of the tree. Is preven
tion better than cure In such a case? Why
then should a judff refuse to issue the In
junction ?
W rit of Justice.
That k!rd of remedy has been In force
for year, and Is the most remedial
writ that we have. It am?e to protect
por men. n-t to oppress them. For In
stance, the way it arose wXa this: A man
borrowed $An on hn farm. He gave a
n-ortgnge whwi In form was an al-polute
or.veyance subject t bing made void by
t he payment of $0. hut the farm was
worth i lO.iHM. He failed to pay the
,mh on the dut and in law they brought a
f :'t in ectr:ent and thev put the man
of the Suvi farm for $V.
He r:it to the king in the o'.d days, and
he acid. "This is a fine k!rd of justice
that ou are g:vlrg me. You allow this
ir.an to take my $li.0i farm for $."rO0."
Th k'Ci otM to h: Lord Keep, who tub
enuntly became the l-ord "hanoellnr:
Her. rou take ovrr This case and see
whether It t J-ntJce." The L.rd Keep was
then an ecel-tsst. and he sent f r the
r 'fire" who hs,1 enforced that order or
was aNv.ir to. and he -.aid: "This is un
constitutional. 1 am nt going to permit
jou to do it I enjoin ;ou from prose
cui'ng a suit."
That Is the way the Injunction came on
The Ird 'hnt:;or said; "I am going to
enjoin you and you hae got to come Into
cnurt. I will enjoin you writ 11 vou pee
that the farm ahou'd be sold, thut $SO0
shall be aprl ed on the debt, with Interest,
and thct ::. stall go to this man who
owns the farm."
That Is the way the Injunction grew
up It grew up to protect the poor again:
In 1urle fr which they cou'.d not have
adequat" remedy at law It ! a. remedv
that should be enforced against anyone
who does a lawless act. who cannot have
adequate remedy at law. and t hav It
abolished mere'y because It has sometimes
been abused and somftlme Issued cralnst
laeorirg men la to destroy the character
of your courts. Is to destroy the science
of the law and enact claes legislation, that
Concluded on Page 7.)
Psendo - Aristocratic Ratcatcher
Finds Ample Funds for Cham
pagne, Anto Rides, Etc.
SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 22. (Special.)
A bogus German "Baron," known as
Von Senden at the Pacific Union Club
and as "K. Miller" on the Board of
Health's list of -rat-catchers." and In
an Oakland livery stable, where he
worked. Is missing. He disappeared
October 13, taking with htm $15,000
In gold contributed by some of the
most prominent of San Francisco busi
ness men.
With a month's salary as a rat
catcher for his original capital, he
patronized the most fashionable cafes
and established unlimited credit by
borrowing from one restaurant man to
pay another. He spent thousands on
champagne, automobiles and the gay
company of the tenderloin. He was in
troduced at the Pacific Union Club.
He asserted that he was the propri
etor of a 6000-acre Marin County dairy
farm, delivering 1000 pounds of butter
a day to local commission men, and
borrowed large sums from Meyerfeld,
of the Louvre, and other cafe proprie
tors. Tuesday he had borrowed $15,000
In cash and disappeared.
Investigation indicates the probabil
ity that the "Baron" was once a coach
man on the famed Von Senden estates
In Germany.
SWEARS TO "STICK TO HIM"
Daughter of Late Senator Gorman
Faithful to Her Husband.
LOUISVILLE, Oct. Captain Joseph
Magnus, husband of Miss Ada Gorman,
daughter of the late Senator Arthur Pua
Gorman, of Maryland, who was arrested
yesterday on the charge of being a de
serter from the Navy, probably will be
taken to Philadelphia tonight.
Mrs. Magnus visited her husband at the
jail this morning. She stated that she
would accompany him to Philadelphia
and "stick to him forever." She would say
but little about her marriage to Magnus.
"How did you meet Mr. Magnus?" was
asked her.
"Oh, we both live In Maryland," waa
her reply; "that's easy enough to under
stand." Magnus seems to 4ake his change from
a sumptuous apartment at the Seelbach
to the jail with good grace. He regards
bis predicament as a temporary Incon
venience only.
KING'S MESSENGER DIES
Lieutenant Jeppson, Who Was With
Stanley, Passes Away.
LONDON". Oct. 22. Lieutenant A. Jer
myn Mountenay Jeppson, who has .been
the King's messenger since 1901, and prior
to that the Queen's messenger since 1SS5.
died today. Lieutenant Jeppson com
manded a detachment in the 2mln Pasha
relief expedition under Henry M. Stan
ley In 1887-90. In 1904 he married Miss
Anna Head, the daughter of the late Ad
dison 0. Head, of San '.Francisco.
Lieutenant Jeppson was enabled to Join
the Stanley expedition through the lib
erality of his aunt. Lady Jeppson, who
paid $flCO for that privilege. Jeppson
came out of the expedition with credit.
His health was broken by African fever,
however, and he went to California to
recuperate. There he met Mtes Head,
but her father was opposed to the mar
riage and it waa not until about 12 years
later that Mis Head, accompanied by
her mother, proceeded to London, where
the wedding took place. Miss Head was
said to have had a fortune in her own
right of nearly Jl.OOO.000.
SEND WATER FROM ALTON
Illinois Town Supplies ' Drouth
Stricken Sections of State.
ALTON', III.. Oct. 22. The continuous
drouth of more than 60 days In the in
land towns of Illinois tributary to Al
ton, has forced the residents of that
section to send away for water for oook
lng and drinking purposes.
Each day a train of flvs cars ts being
sent out from Alton, loaded with water
for the various towns in ' the blighted
district. Large steel coal cars have been
pressed into service and are loaded with
15.000 gallons each. Most of the water
is sent to Gillespie and Chlpman, but
other towns receive their quota,
Tli ere Is danger, according to Alton
Water Company officials, of the supply
being cut off if the Mississippi River
falls much more The stage of the
stream is lower than it has been before
In CO years, and the in-take pipe of the
company is now only SO Inches under
water. Unless the river rises, Alton will
soon be short of water.
MINERS FALL DOWN SHAFT
One of Three, Terribly Injured,
Shows Marvelous Stoicism.
RENO. Nev., Oct. 22. Three miners fell
63 feet down the shaft of the Rattler
No. 3 mine at Ramsey yesterday and two
of them were so terribly injured that they I
were brought to Reno for treatment.
C. Magaroll, the most severely hurt.
stood a 20-mile trip in a wagon without a
groan, although his back is broken. His
stoicism, physicians say, surpasses any- I
thing they ever had seen.
Peter Hultz had ribs broken, a shoulder
dislocated and his left ear torn from his
head. He will recover. Magaroll's case
Is doubtful. '
C. Trimble, the other miner, sustained
only a few bruises.
Democrats Struggle to
Defeat Him.
CHANLER PLAYS SAFE GAME
Makes Speeches but Leaves
Issues Severely Alone.
GOVERNOR CORNERS HIM
Whole State Watches With Unabated
Interest Outcome of Battle.
Difficult to Figure Exactly
Where Each Stands. -
BY LLOYD F. LONEHOAN.
NEW YORK. Oct. 22. (Special.) What
chance has Governor Hughes of re-election?
Ask any Democrat, any organization
Democrat, and he will tell you "no
chance at all." Inquire of Republican
leaders, and they will tell you privately
that he will be defeated. If you know
them well enough to gain their confidence
they will add that they are glad of it
But there is no organized effort to cut
Hugtfea. It might react on Taft, and that
fact has been Impressed upon the leaders.
So the word has gone out to loyally sup
port the entire ticket, and the subleaders
are carrying out the order, although
without enlhusla&jn.
Lacking; In Enthusiasm.
It is plain to any student of politics
that they are not working. . No effort is
being made to draw anti-Hughes Repub
licans back into line. It is not a cam
paign of education but a campaign of in
difference. Last Summer the local lead
ers were standing about remarking that
Hughes was not a Republican. "When he
went "West in September and easily as
sumed the place of star National cam
paign orator, they wanted to know why
he did not remain in his own state. Now
that he has taken up the fight here, a
fight that nobody else seemed energetic
enough to Inaugurate, they claim that be
Is "selfishly , pushing his own' Interests
to the detriment or everybody else."
T.wo years ago Hughes made a single
handed fight and won, last year he
stumped in the -state to work up senti
ment for his anti-racetrack gambling leg
islation and won again. Now he is labor
ing, lonehanded as usual, and travelling
the stats from one end to the other.
In 1906 Hughes was handicapped by in
experience, and a state committee that
was Incompetent to say the least. He
was assigned to open his campaign In a
little country town, with a scanty popula
tion, an Inadequate hall, and an almost
solid Republican constituency. Before
the campaign was half over Hughes had
"learned the ropes." At the start his
meetings were what are technically
called "frosts." They improved as the
days passed on, but never reached the
enthuslastlo heights of the Hearst rallies.
Hughes won that year, and the betting
was against him then as it is now.
Here are the principal counts in the
Indictment against the Governor;
That he forced his antl-bettlng laws
(Concluded on Page 6.)
Canadian Faciflo Engineer Takes
for Wife Woman Whom He
' Helped From Burning town. .
SPOKANE. Wash., Oct. 22. (Special.)
Another romance of the Fernle lire
culminated this afternoon when J. A.
Murray, locomotive engineer on the Can
adian Pacific, was married to Miss Llllle
A. Gullyaason. They first met when the
fire was at Its height at Fernle. Miss
Gullyaason was a passenger on the loco
motive when the fearless Murray braved
death to haul refugees through walls of
fire. The train was crowded to its ca
pacity, and the bride of today was given
a place in the cab.
"Wo got pretty well' acquainted - dur
ing ' the ride to Cranbrook,' said the
bride, "but we came to know each other
much better since; for I remained In
Cranbrook, where Mr. Murray resides."
Both bride and groom were ' covered
with confusion when the best man stole
a march on the engineer and kissed the
bride before the bridegroom had pres
ence of mind to do so.
PUNISH OFFICEHOLDERS
Civil Service Men Suffer for Their
Political Activity.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 22. More pun
ishment has been meted out as the re
sult of charges of pernicious activity In
the political campaign. The Civil Serv
ice Commission today announced that J.
H. Fordham, a deputy collector of In
ternal revenue at Orangeburg, 8. C, had
been reprimanded and suspended with
out pay for IB days for active partici
pation in the Republican State Conven
tion at Columbia. Robert A. Stewart,
temporary deputy oollector, who was
county chairman of the executive com
mittee of Clarendon County, S. C, has
been reprimanded. R. O. Pierce, an em
ploye of the Mare Island Navy-Yard,
who announced his candidacy as Su
pervisor in the First District,' has been
discharged. Clyde Knock, a letter-carrier
at Independence, Kan., who became
the Independent' candidate for the Dis
trict Court clerkship, has resigned to
avoid dismissal.
GAMBLERS FIGHT HARD
Business Section of Reno Dark in
Aid of Cause.
RENO, Nev., Oct. 22. The business por
tion of Rene is dark . tonight oaused by
the owners .of gambling houses and hotels
turning off the lights to show how the
city would appear In case the Anti-Gam
bling League drives gambling out of the
corporate limits at a special election Oc
tober 24.
The fight between the Anti-Gambling
League and the gamblers is very bitter.
The gamblers claim they will play Just
over the city limits in case they are de
feated. The limits of the city are very
close to the present business center.
AFRAID TO - FACE TRIAL
Young Doctor, Charged With Man-
slaughter, Commits Suicide.
NEW YORK. Oct. 22. Rather than
face trial over manslaughter In the first
degree, growing out of a ease of alleged
criminal practice. Dr. Irving J. Cook, a
young' doctor of this city, drank a dose
of a powerful poison and shot himself
at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel today.
"YOU'RE IT!" -
Absorbs Nearly All of
American Trade.
ROUNDS UP ALL COMPETITORS
Waddell Tells Methods of Kill
ing Opposition.
RAILROADS HELP TRUST
Indiana Company Brought to Terms
by Jelng Undersold in All Min
ing Supplies Deal With
Foreign Company.
NEW YORK, Oct. 22. His story of the
ruthless methods by which the powder
trust crushed out all competition until
it now practically controlled the United
States was continued by R. S. Waddell,
ex-general sales agent of the trust, at
the hearing today in the Government's
suit under the anti-trust law. He told how
one company after another was forced to
Join the trust or be exterminated, and
how foreign manufacturers were brought
to terms, railroad rates being fixed to
suit the trust's ends.
He told of the formation of the South
ern Powder Company in Cincinnati, with
mills in Georgia, which was absorbed a
few months later.
"We went right after the Southern as
soon as they entered the market," said
Sir. Waddell. "The fight continued un
til the general round-up in July, 189."
'What do you mean by the 'general
round-up?' was aeked.
'I mean the complete elimination of
competition by absorbing the competi
tors," was the reply.
Mr. Waddell said he had been Informed
by the officers of the company that there
was an agreement with the foreign man
ufacturers on sales of dynamite. This
Information was given him after foreign
mills had been erected in Jamestown,
and was known as the "Jamestown
Agreement."
Deal With Foreign Importers. -
'I was told that one of our officers had
been to Europe and that thereafter we
would have no further trouble," said he.
This was when there waa some dis
turbance in the market over the cutting
of prices on smokeless powder. He said
a new agreement was drawn by mem
bers of the pool after practically all the
competitors had been absorbed. He
identified a copy of the agreement.
air. Waddell was rather severely han
dled by counsel for the defense on cross
examination and was asked why, when
he found that the paper was in his pos
session after he had left the employ of
the company, he did not return it to the
company.
"It never occurred to me," he an
swered. "I could have taken trunks
full of records, had I wanted them."
"Did you find this paper when you
were concocting a scheme to build a
plant and sell it to the company?" asked
the attorney.
"No. I was concocting no scheme. I
(Concluded on Page 6.)
Two Cruisers to Accompany Royal
' Couple From America Title
for Senator Elklns.
NAPLES, Oct. 23. The Duke of the
Abruzzl arrived here today. He is trav
eling with the greatest secrecy. No one
met him at the railway station. He
drove in a public cab to the royal palace
at Cape DImonte, where he had a con
ference with his brother, the Duke of
Aosta.
The Italian cruiser Fleramosca has been
ordered to await the Duke of the Abruzzl
at New York, whither the cruiser Etrurua
als'o will be dispatched. It Is understood
that the two warships will escort the
Duke and his bride to Italy.
The statement is made also that no
member of the Elkinsy family will attend
the official ceremony'of the transcription
of the marriage deed in Rome, and that
when Senator BlUlns visits Italy, he will
be given the title of Chevalier of An
nunciade.
The cruiser Fleramosca is at present
in New York waters, having arrived there
Saturday night from Bridgeport, where
she took part in the Columbus day cele
bratloh.
The report from Rome that the Duke of
the Abruzzi would be a passenger on the
French Line steamer La Lorraine could
not be substantiated today at the Paris
offices of the company. Inquiries were
met with the statement that Duke had not
yet taken passage on this steamer.
READY FOR BIG CUP RACE
Seventeen CarssTry Out for Vander
bllt Trophy Event Saturday.
NEW YORK. Oct. 22. Every one of
the 17 cars expected to face the starter
at daybreak on Saturday for the fourth
running of the Vanderbilt cup race was
taken over the 23.45-mile course this
morning for final practice. Although no
attempts were made by any of the pros
pective contestants to approximate rac
ing speed for any considerable distance,
a number let out to the last notch com
ing down the eight-mile straightaway of
the Jericho turnpike from "Woodbury to
Westbury, and in this stretch repeatedly
whizzed by at better time than 70 miles
an hour. .
This year the distance to be covered
will be 268 miles, as against 297 in 1906,
2S3 In 1905 and 284 In 1904.
Several cars covered the course at bet
ter than a mlle-a-minute speed' today.
George Robertson sent his big racing
machine over the 23.45 miles in 20 min
utes and Foxhall P. Keene covered 4U.90
miles' in 42 minutes.
FIND NO TRACE OF HUNTERS
Men From Green River Springs Be
lieved to Have Perished in Snow.
TACOMA, Wash., Oct. 22. (Special.)
Forty men and four bloodhounds
scouring the country for ten miles
around Green River Hot Springs have
failed to find Fred W. Kloeber and
Julius Kumle, who left the hotel at- 10
o'clock yesterday morning on a short
hunting trip and have not been seen
since.
The missing hunters have been ex
posed to the terrific cold above the
snow line for 89 hours and searchers
who toiled all day and are still search
ing during the night have all but
abandoned hope of finding the. hunters
alive. '
KERN AT SON'S BEDSIDE
Campaign Tour Checked Pending
Outcome of Serious Illness.
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Oct. 22. The
condition of John W. Kern, Jr., the
8-year-old son of the Democratic Vice
Presidential candidate who Is suffering
from infantile paralysis complicated by
acute indigestion, showed 'no improve
ment tonight. His father, who was
called home from his speaking campaign
In New York and Ohio, reached the city
early in the morning and scarcely left
the bedside during the day, although
himself worn out. Mr. Kern said tonight
.that all plans for the immediate future'
were in abeyance pending the outcome
of his son's illness.
WAR ON FAKE MEDIUMS
National Spiritualists' Association
to Follow Portland Move.
INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 22. At the con
vention of the National Spiritualists As
sociation this afternoon, steps were takun
to put out of business ail "fakers and
false mediums," who practice their, pro
fession on pretenses of having communi
cation with spirits. The action taken
by the Portland, Or., association in this
regard was indorsed. Mediums whose
character and ability to establish spirit
communication are beyond .reproach are
to be exempted from this order.
URGE DEFEAT OF CANNON
Presbyterian Sjrood After Scalp of
Vncle Joe.
MONMOUTH, 111., Oct. 22. The Pres
byterian synod of Illinois here Aoday
passed resolutions urging the defeat of
Speaker Cannon of the Natlorfal House
of Representative, who ia seeking reelection.
Letter Gives Late Presi
flent's Opinion.
CAN'TCOVERUNREPENTEDSINS
Political Conditions in 1896
Saddened Him.
SUGAR COAT ON BRYANISM
Dumbfounded by Democracy's Wil
lingness to Turn Again to Bryan-
ism, Whose Deficiencies Xo
Platform Can Cover.
CLEVELAND'S WRITINGS ON
BRYAN.
The letter from President Cleve
land to Colonel Reeve is not the
document which Broughton Branden
burg is alleged to have forged.
About a month afro Brandenburg
old to the New Tork Times an
article which he said had been dic
tated to him by Mr. Cleveland as
the first of a series. This article
made severe criticism of Mr. Bryan.
After Its publication Its authen
ticity was questioned, and Mr. Cleve
land's executor. F. S. Hastings, waa
quoted as denying Its genuineness.
He denied having made any such
statement. Mr. Brandenburg was
quoted as admitting that the arti
cle waa prepared by him from notes
furnished by Mr. Cleveland. He de
nied having made any such admis
sion. Mr. Hastings said It was in
Mr. Cleveland's style, but he had
not found it among the ex-President's
papers.
The whole matter is being inves
tigated by the New York grand jury,
at the instance of District Attorney
Jerome, who is a Democrat. That
inquiry does not affect the genuine
ness of the Reeve letter, which has
been verified by Its recipient.
NEW YORKVOrt.- (Special.) From
an authentic source the New York Timet
received today the following copy of a
letter written by . Grover Cleveland at
Tam worth, N. H., on July 14, 1906, to
Colonel Felix A. Reeve, of Washington,
D. C:
"Tam worth. N. H., July 14, 1906.-My
Dear Mr. Reeve I desire to thank you
for your very friendly letter of the lit li
instant. I recovered sufficiently a few
dags ago to undertake the journey to our
Summer home here, where amid pure air
and family delights I expect to entirely
regain my health.
"I note what you say in regard to the
unfortunate plight of Democracy. I am
dumbfounded when I see its apparent
willingness to turn again to Bryanism
sugarcoated, but otherwise unchanged
as manifested by the cool and character
istically modest interview of 'the peer
less' published in the newspapers of yes
terday. -
"I cannot put out of my mind the Idea
that, however good a party platform may
(Concluded on Page 5.)
INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS
The Weather.
YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature,
degrees; minimum. 42.8 degree,.
TODAY'S Fair; easterly wtnds.
Foreign.
Abruzzt ifoe. to Naplea and Italian Kins as
signs warships to escort mm ana nis onae
home. Page 1.
National.
Greatest celebration In history of Japan given
In honor of fleet. Page 4.
Waddell tells methods of powder trust In
crushing competition. Page 1.
Politics.
Murphy refuse, to poll New York for Bryan,
but arranges Dig meeting, rign i.
Hughes gaining In New York, but has hard
light ahead. Page 1.
Bryan's secret agent stops Democratic light
on Idaho Mormons. Pag. 6.
Ralney demands investigation of purchase of
Panama Canal. Page T.
Bryan talks to West Virginia miners and
farmers. Page 6.
Taft speaks to Indiana minem on Injunc
tions. Page 1.
Letter written by Cleveland in 1896 Is severe
with Bryanism. Page 1.
Domestic.
Broughton Brandenburg arrested on charga
of forglr.g Cleveland article, page 1.
Deaths by Luzon storm reach BOO. Pag. 6.
Floods cover large part of Oklahoma. Pag. 4.
Filipino Commissioner to Congress speaks for
Independence. Page 6.
True reafon why suit against Colonel Tucker
was dropped. Page 7.
Boguc .German Baron victimizes San Fran
cisco people. Page 1.
Great snowstorm In Montana and Canada
blocks railroads and causes death. Page 6.
Faciflo Cost.
Problem of state-wide interest to be dis
cussed at TJregon-Idaho Development Con
gress, which convene. In Roseburg today.
p"Ke 7.
6 port.
Coast League scores: Portland 4, Oakland 1;
San Francisco 10. Los Angeles 0. Pag. 11.
Commercial and Marine.
California hop men want duty on foreign
hops doubled. Page 17.
Wheat strong on crop damage report from
Argentina. Page 17.
Pront-taklng skillfully conducted In stock
market. Page 17.
Steamship Dleke Blckmers the twelfth whit
hlp to clear during October. Page 18.
Portland and Vicinity.
Mrs Isaac Roberts, thought demented
through socialism, leaves home. Pag. 13.
Suspect arrested for Butterworth murder may
be released todsy. Psge 12.
Mavor Lane Ignores City Engineer In mak
ing street inspection.. Page 12.
Serstor Fulton speaks at South Portland R-
publlcan rally. Page .
Feed desler charge. Battalion Chief Bvi
lih dl.crlmln.tlan. Pag. !
Comparative valuations alf ol
etc tests. FM 1