TOE 'MORNING OREGOyiAy, TmTRSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1909. ; ; . , : i MIGUEL CLAIMS AMERICAN BRIDE Miss Anita Stewart Claims Ti tle Ceremony in Old Scotch Church. . ROYALTY LURES WEALTH Millions Fall at Feet of Prince lira ganza Scotland Rejoices Over First Royal Nuptial for Many Years. liIXGWALL, Scotland. Sept. 16. Title has strain captured gold, and the millions of another American girl has falln at the feet of a prince. The little Roman Catholic Church of Ft. Lawrence was bedecked as never before today, for Scotland witnessed the first royal wedding; since the days of Mary Queen of Scots. t'nder a bower of evergreen and smilaz. M!p Anlte Stewart, daughter of Mrs. James Henry Smith, of New York, becams the bride of Prince Miguel of Hraranza at noon today In the old Church of St. Lawrence. The congre gatlon of this church Is made up of descendants of the clans who belonged to the faith in the days of Mary, Queen of Scots. The decorations were ruby and blue, associated for generations with the House of Braganxa. The avenue lead ing from Tulloch Castle was gay with the American. Austrian and Portuguese flags. The arch at the end of the avenue bore the words In English. "Long life and happiness to the Prince and Princess." The bride was accompanied by her mother and her brother, W. R. Stewart, jr, who gave her away. Prince Miguel was supported by his younger brother. Prince Francis Joseph. Bishop Chris holm of Aberdeen officiated. The ceremony was followed by the celebration of a low mass, after which the bishop pronounced the pope's bless ing and a general benediction. The music was rendered by the choristers of the ehapel, accompanied by the band of the Zaforth Highlanders. The cere mony was witnessed only by relatives of the bride and bridegroom and their friends. WOMEN BATTLE TO DEATH (Oontlnoed Prom First Page.) stead of Its being simply a battle be tween the two women. Scream for Help, Mrs. Tripp appeared! In the hallway In front of her apartments, screaming; for help. "I am being murdered la here," she shouted to a neighbor. At almost the same time a woman In a blood-streaked rightgown was seen at the rear entrance by the janitor. - "Come ra!ck. and save me." she crled. "I am being killed." When the apartment was entered. Mood was found on the parlor curtains, several pictures had been broken and chairs overturned. In a bedroom. Mrs. Tripp waii found dead on the floor, fully dressed. Her face and walft were cov ered with blood. Mrs. Silvers lay on the bed in another room, and her nightgown and bedcloth lng were covered with blood. Blood was gushing from a deep cut In her forehead and she was unconscious. Several bul lets has passed through Mrs. Tripp's body, making wounds both in the front r.nd back. There were many powder marks . on her waist, showing that the bullets had been fired at close range. Search of the room failed to disclose the knife with which the cuts had been made. Posed a Guest Mr. Tripp, in discussing the tragedy, said: "Three months ago. Mrs. Slivers was divorced by her husband. Silvers said he had left her because of her queer actions, which led him to believe she was be coming mentally unbalanced. I wrote Mrs. Slivers to come and make her home with us. "Mrs. Tripp told Mrs. Slivers she would have to do her share of the work about the house, but Mrs. Silvers insisted that she was a guest and did not Intend to work. This caused many quarrels. Mrs. Silvers overheard Mrs. Tripp request me to ask Mrs. Silvers to help with the work. Mrs. Silvers said she would 'get my wife.' Mrs. Silvers did not appear for any of her meals Tuesday, but this morning she was at the breakfast table and appeared to have forgotten all about her differences. They went visiting to gether this morning." Mrs. Tripp bad four children, all of whom were at school when the tragedy occurred. THE OAKS CLOSES SUNDAY Manager Corflray Promises Even Better Attraction Next Tear. ' "While not yet In the. remlnscent stage, the Oaks amusement park is approach ing the day when people will be saying to each other, "Wasn't it fine at the Oaks last Summer V The park is to close for the season Sunday night. In referring to the latter end of the season Manager Cordray said yesterday that he was more than satisfied with the appreciation shown of his efforts to en tertain. "Now. what I would like to announce at this time Is that next year I'll have a better chance to make the Oaks what It should be the principal amusement resort of the Pacific Coast," he added. Ponatelll's band. Signor Dumond and Frances Hoyle are to stay until the close of the season. AUTO JARS CAR OFF TRACK Four Occupants or Machine, Includ ing Two Tots, Escape Injury. By both stopping promptly, a disastrous collision was avoided late last night, when an automobile and a Sixteenth street car collided at right angles at Six teenth and Everett streets. The auto mobile was occupied by T. A. Garbade, of 7S1 t Main street, his wife and two small children. The car and machine crashed, but as the automobile was com ing down Everett street and the car was Inbound on Sixteenth street, the auto mobile struck the streetcar on the front end glanctngly. knocking it off the track. Considerable damage was Hone the) auto, but none of the occupants was hurt. A bystander who witnessed the accident telephoned for a Red Cross ambulance, but when It arrived the automobile had gone. AMERICAN JIEIEESS TO THIRTY MILLIONS, WHO MAR . RLED-A PRINCE YESTERDAY. r ' ww-ww. j -1 : , - 'w v ' .: , - "'' ' , i V 1 : H; ' -I ' -v. V i - it V' V V . -I f v . v .- y . I ? S jT v v j t r V if. , . : - v - ' v J - . ', it. ' ' ! I . I ! : A nil 1 1 mi in i n i I'liniii ir . j, . .....-.'vw PRINCESS MIGUEL OF BRAG AN Z BALLINGER WIN S; OFF Taft Says Secretary Is With out Stain and Charges Rest on Suspicion. SPECIAL AGENT REMOVED Because He Acted as Counsel for Cunningham, He Let Glavls Hunt Tp Evidence, Though Know ing Aimed at Himself. (Continue From First PM) pointment as Secretary- Duty to the country, to you and to myseif requires that any aspersion upon the propriety of your ants or those of your subordinates be promptly met and carefully consider ed to the .end that. If Justified, proper remedy may be applied and. if not. It may publicly be refuted. j "By appointment of President Roose velt von herame Commissioner of the General Land Office In March, 1907, and resigned the position in aiarcn 1908. and then returned to Seattle, your home, to resume the practice of law. In March, 1909, I appointed you Secre tary of the Interior-and you assumed the duties of your office on the fifth day of that month. Sole Service to Cunningham. "In the Interval, when you were not holding office, one of the Cunningham coal claimants consulted you In regard to the prospect of securing a patent upon the claims and invited your at tention to the character of certain evi dence which was being given to Tm peach the validity of claims by Special Agent Glavls. Tou accepted the em ployment, visited Secretary Garfield and Commissioner Dennett, presented the question to them in respect to which you had been counselled; found that there was no probability of se curing the patent of the claims without presenting them under recent remedial legislation imposing conditions which the claimants were either unwilling or unable to meet. Tou so advised your clients. To pay your traveling ex penses and for your services you re ceived 2S0 and no more. Glavisr Inference Xot Just. "The inference which Mr. Glavis seeks to have drawn to your discredit In this connection la that you, while Commissioner of the General Land Of fice, came into possession of facts con cerning the so-called Cunningham group of coal land claims which made It Improper for you to use such facts after your resignation In the course of securing the patents. I find the fact to be that as Commissioner you acquired no knowledge in respect to the claims except that of the most formal char acter and nothing which was not properly known to your clients when they consulted you. The evidence in respect to which you were consulted professionally was not secured by Mr. Glavis until after your resignation as Commissioner of the General Land Of fice. "A second Inference sought to be drawn by Mr. 'Glavls against you Is that you have acted improperly since becoming Secretary of the Interior in reference to the Cunningham cases and have used your Influence to Interfere with Mr. Glavis efforts to defeat the claims. Ordered All Claims Hastened. "Your only action which could In any manner affect the Cunningham claims was your order that the 30,000 claims pending and undisposed of in the Land Office should be pressed to final hear ing and disposition as rapidly as pos sible consistent with justice, and these included the SSI Alaska coal claims of which the Cunningham group num bered 19. As such expedition was es sential both in the public interest and In that of the claimants It could hardry be said to be action taken In the Cun ningham claims. "The record overwhelmingly estab it.H. iKit einresslv because of your previous action as counsel to one of the claimants, rrom tne iimo you en tered upon your duties as Secretary of the Interior until the present, you have .inHinmir enllned to have any con nection whatever with the Cunningham GLAVIS HEAD i A, FORMERLY ANITA STEWART, olalms or to exercise- any control over the course of the department In re spect to those claims; that you have said so In written and verbal communi cations to your subordinates and to the claimants themselves. Moreover, In May last you came to me and made a similar statement of your course and Intention in respect to those claims. Xo Influence to Aid "Cunningham. "Mr. Glavls' statement that, while you did thus formally withdraw from any official connection with the Cunning ham claims, you continued to exercise your Influence In regard to them, is not sustained by any evidence. The truth Is that, had you or Commissioner Dennett or Chief Schwartx during the pendency of these claims been desirous, through dishonest motives and without regard to the law and the Interests of the public, of bringing them to patent, the opportunities for you to have done so were many and the circumstance that speaks, not more conclusively than many others, but Btlll most emphatically against Mr. Glavis' charges. Is the fact that, although his conviction that the claims were fraudulent or Illegal, was well known In the department, he was allowed during all the years of tKe pendency of these claims to remain In charge of them as an agent of the de partment when It would have been en tirely easy for either you or Dennett or Schwartx to remove him to Portland or Seattle, and take the claims out of his Jurisdiction. "Instead of this, with the consent of the very officer whose corrupt motives In respect to these claims he now as serts, Glavls has remained continuously In control of the taking or eviaence with respect to the claims and only when the claims were about to be sub mitted to hearing before a tribunal was It thought necessary (Mr. Glavls not having had any professional experi ence) to give them in charge of Mr. Sheridan, a lawyer whose good faith and earnestness In opposing the patent ing of the claims even Mr. Glavls has not the temerity to question. Glavls to Be Dismissed. "In vour answer you request authority to discharge Mr. Glavis from the service of the United States for disloyalty to his superior officers In making a false charge against them. When a subordi nate In a Government bureau or depart ment has trustworthy evidence upon which to-believe that his chief is dis honest and Is defrauding the Government It is of course his duty to submit that evidence to higher authority than his chief. But when he makes a charge against his chief founded upon mere suspicions and in his statement be falls to give his chief the benefit of circum stances within his knowledge that would explain the chief's action, he makes it Impossible for him to continue in the service and his Immediate separation therefrom becomes a necessity. You are therefore authorized to dismiss L. R. Glavis for unjustly Impeaching the offi cial Integrity of his superior officers. BaLllnger's Conservation Policy. "I cannot close this letter without re- ferrtng to certain other matters con nected with your conduct of the Interior Department, which have been unfairly used in the public press to support a gen eral charge that you are out of sympathy with the declared policy of this Admlnls tratlon following that of President Roose velt In favor of the conservation of nat ural resources, especially in connection with coal lands, with water-power sites and with the system of reclamation of arid lands, which are all within the juris diction of the Interior Deportment. "In the nrst place it was charged op the floor of the irrigation convention at Spokane by ex-Governor Pardee, of Cali fornia, that you had restored to the pub lic domain for settlement certain lands which had been withdrawn by the last Administration for the purpose of con serving water-power sites and that, after complaint made thereof, you had subsequently withdrawn some of the lands against some settlement; but that meantime, between the one act and the other, an opportunity had been given to the so-called 'water power trust' to file entries and obtain vested rights In valuable water-power sites In Montana. Charges About AV'ater Power. A Ka snm time that this Rharee Was made by Governor Pardee, there appeared In the puDiic press, in a iciegraiu which seems to have had the widest cir culation, a statement quoted from a Mon tana paper that a water-power company with a capital of 10.000.000 had in the in terval located and obtained vested rights in 15.000 acres of Montana land, which absorbed for the company all the valu able water-power sites In that state, and the statement was accompanied by de tailed reference to the particular land office and the particular agent through whom this'result was accomplished. "The inference which it was sought to have drawn- and was drawn by news papers hostile to you was that you had brought about the restoration to settle ment of the land for the purpose of en abling private water power companies to acquire vested interests; that after doing so you had withdrawn what remained and that you took this course because you were out of sympathy with that policy of conservation of natural re sources and were In favor of the cor porate control of such water-power sites. Power Trust Got Nothing. ' .v.. -.. o-rnmlned. it Will 1 UCU . CV- ' i.Aot. .hot iha nersnns responsible LTO ui.i ' ' for the circulation of these charges have done you cruel injustice. ie f that in January. 1909, In the last Admin istration, executive orders were made. i rw nohlir wftlement 1.600,- niuiuio.i-j, x'wu r 000 acres at the instance of the Reclama tion Service for conservation of water power sites. Soon after you became Sec retary you Drougm mis uiua uj tentlon and said that this Included a great deal of land that had no water- power sites on it, running nac miles from the rivers, and that it In cluded much land which ought to be opened to public settlement; that you had applied to the Reclamation Bureau wnnn- whether it was desired for re clamation purposes and that they had reported that It te reiumea io ne k""" domaln. You also advised me that it in.-n.Bihi tn nrnnure from the Geo- logical Survey an accurate statement of the available water-power sues wnicn wi,i anhieted to ni-H-ate ownership and that you would direct the survey- to make such statements ana inai men there could be made temporary wlth--wtm nr the lsnA needed to preserve these water-power sites until Congress could act. Pardee's Fact Knocked Out. The order nrovlding the withdrawal of 1.500,000 acres was made in April. Suf ficient Information was procured from the Geological Survey to permit an oraer withdrawing the land upon which were water-power sites In May and this with drawal covered about 300,000 acres, Instead of 1.600,000. The form of the new order was such that it set aside all filings and entries made prior to its going Into ef fect, and as a matter of fact not one sin gle filing has been attempted on any of the water-power sites since the original order of withdrawal in January, 1909. The story as to the 15,000 acres in Mon tana then presented by Governor Pardee, was reduced to 168 acres near the Mis souri River in Montana, or four traots of 40 acres each, and it now turns out from examination of the records that these filings were refilings of entries made 10 years before: that the refilings were made on the 11th of June 1909, more than two weeks after the withdrawal of the water power sites in Montana, and that the four tracts of 40 acres each filed upon have no water-power sites on them at all. Him Withdrawn Power Sites. it. ...... V. annMri frnm fl. TenOft Of .1 1 the nanffmnhlml SurVeV llltS Ulicvw .ira " " I that the order of withdrawal of January. 1909, was hastily made Dy townsmps ana by reference to inadequate maps that it Included large areas not within miles of any railway or stream and that It failed to Include- many valuable water-power It In the Immediate. vlfinltV. From the same reliable source It Is learned that under the withdrawals made cry your ae partment from time to time beginning In May last there are now withheld from settlement awaiting the action of Con gress 60 per cent more water-power sites than under previous withdrawals and that this has been effected by a with drawal of only one-nrtn oi me amoum of the land. Right In Reclamation Policy. t i,i. uin.M!nn with the same i -.eicht heen crlven the fact that you have declined to carry out the contracts made by tne iteciamauon Ice with homesteaders and entrymen by which certificates . were Issued to entry men for work done an material fur nished, with a view to enlarge the re clamation projects. You brought up the question of the legality of such certifi cates In a Cabinet meeting and was dl- . Bhmit it tA the Attornev-Gen- CUlVU w 131 . - eral. That office has very properly. In my judgment, aeciaea m variance with an explicit prohibition In . v. , umaiiA. four to issue such cer tificates that law's fundamental man date is that no projeot shall be entered upon until there Is money enough in the reclamation fund to pay for the project or the part thereoi contractus km. "The certificate system is, in fact, a system for borrowing labor and ma terial and making the Government a debtor to intending settlers a system Inhlhlteri hv IflW tTlA CRIUlOt bUt result ultimately In disaster. Of course those who have accepted sucn cernn cates for labor and material In good faith ...-hi tn he r.Mmn.nRln and I shall ask VUB"b ..v . . - Congress at the next session for special relief for them. Meantime tne worn oi - i .hmiM He nnrrled on when ever funds are available with all the dis patch possible, . and I am assured tnat this is being done. I hope that after you have made personal investigation of all the work and looked Into the finances you will be able to report to Congress showing exactly what has been done, what ought to be done and what addi tional legislation, if any, is needed and ought to be passed to further this great and Important work. Action Dictated by Law. "Another Instance in your conduct which has been mentioned as indicative of your purpose to block the general plan of conservation of National resources was your refusal to carry out a contract made in the last administration between the Secretary of the Interior and the Secre tary of Agriculture by which the Interior Department delegated to the Forestry Bureau of tne Agricultural Department the power and duty to conserve forests on the Indian reservations end to expend under the control of the Forestry Bureau the money appropriated to be expended by the Indian Bureau for such "conserva tion of Indian forests. Your declination to carry out the contract was made nec essary by a ruling of the Controller, whose ruling 1s final and without appeal even to the President, that such an ar rangement ia a delegation of responsibil ity and authority for the expenditure of money which the appropriation by Con gress for the Indian Bureau did not au thorise. While I agree that It would avoid wasteful duplication In organiza tion to authorize the Forestry Bureau to take care of and develop the forests, be cause the Forestry Bureau is much bet ter able wlUi Its trained men to do the ir with eff ioienip anri, economv. it is plainly necessary, -In view of the Con- troller's ruling, to secure uonfiressioiiai sanction for such co-operation. Mean time your withdrawal from an unauthor ized contract does not furnish the slight est basis for attributing to you unfriend liness to proper forestatlon. "In my Judgment he Is the best friend of the policy of conservation who Insists "that every step taken in that direction should be within the law and buttressed by legal authority. Insist ence on this is not inconsistent with a whole-hearted and bonaflde Interest and enthusiasm in favor of conserva tion. From my conferences with you j ,.s,m evei-vthiner T know in resDect to the conduct of your department, I am able to say that you are fully In sympathy wMh this Administration s at titude' in favor of the conservation of National resources. "Sincerely yours. "WILT JAM H. TAFT. "Hon Richard A. Balllnger, Secretary of the Interior. Washington. P. C" Teachers' Institute Closes. VANCOUVER. Wash.. Sept. 15. (Spe cial.) The 26th annual Institute of Clark County teachers closed this aft ernoon. The teachers and institute in structors declare It to have been one among the most successful sessions held In the history of the county. The at tendance was good. Interest Intense and the rural teachers are now enthusias tically returning to their work. FOREST FIRES ARE DEVOUR! JG HOMES Hundreds of Men Are Fighting Flames in Las Posas Hills Near OxnaVd. DAMAGE ALREADY $500,000 : Urgent Telephone Calls Are Sent Out for Fire-Fighters and Battle With Flames Is Contin ued All Night. OXNARD. Cal., Sept. IS. A great for est fire is burning tonight in the hills. Telephone messages from Somls at I o'clock called, for all available men to fight the flames. Four families were burned out in Las Posas Hills today. Hundreds of tons of hay 'and beans were burned. Several hun dred men fought the fires all night, and have the biggest task yet before them in saving the ranchers' homes. The fires began early Monday morning, and have burned in varying directions ever since, devastating a solid stretch of 30 miles of hills. The homes In the canyons have been destroyed, the total number of which will not be learned until the flames final ly abate. The damage done on the north and south sides of the hill Is estimated at $500,000. FIRE SPREADS NEAR URIAH Laytonvllle , Is Threatened Entire Town Fighting Flames. UKIAH, Cal., Sept. IE. Forest fires are spreading through the hills in the vicinity of Uklah. At Laytonvllle the lire is dangerously close to the margin of the valley and the entire population Is en gaged in an attempt to circuit the flames. Fires along the Point Arena, and Fort Bragg roads have cut Uklah off from communication with the Coast. Bridges and large areas of timber have been burned and several ranches have been swept clean. The Fort Bragg & South eastern Railroad is temporarily out of commission. FARMERS FIGHT FOR, CROPS Pasture Lands Swept Moor Park Now In Danger. OXNARD, CaL. Sept. 15. Fires In the hills between Somls and Moor Park burned steadily all night and did great damage. East winds are whipping the vi i v- ...i. imIrv anri the farmers U law wti i. n. . J are exhausted from the efforts to save their crops. Pasture lanos nave oeen swept clean and the flames are nearlng Moor Park. PART OF FIRE UNDER CONTROIi Damage Threatened Only by Flames In Las- Posas Valley. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 15. The numer ous forest fires that have been raging intermittently in various parts of South ern California since last Sunday night are reported tonight to be under control, witn the exception of the one In Las Posas Valley. MEETS DEATH FIGHTING FIRE Fatally Burned When Foot Catches Between Rocks. SAN DIEGO, Cal., Sept. 15. While fighting a brush fire at jjenesa toaay, r- 1 T BTa.ii vn hlimtd t O death. His foot caught between two rocks and flames swept over mm Deior tie cuuiu extricate himself. HONORS ARE DIVIDED ST. LOUIS AND LOS ANGELES STAR IN SPORT MEET. Preliminary Wrestling and Boxing Matches Are Conducted at Seattle Fair. SEATTLE. Sept. 15. Athletes from St Louis and Los Angeles divided honors with those from the Northwest athletic clubs in the preliminary events of the Amateur Athletic Union annual cham pionship wrestling and boxing meet held at the Exposition Auditorium tonight. Summary: -Wrestling 105 pounds, O. A. Rnnchey, 8. A. C won in 1 minute. 126 pounds Fred Bafros, Seattle T. M. C. A., won on aggreMiveness. 1M pounds Pulver, S. A. won ! S minutes S second.. , 186 pound O. Retser, Iea AngIea A. C, won on aggressiveness. 18S pounds R. Flakstad, Norwegian tur ners, won In 1 minute 20 seconds. 135 pounds M. Reese, S. A. C. won In 50 minutes. US pounds Jack Mlddleton, Norwegian turners, won on aggressivenees. 158 pounds Andrew Dow, a. A. won in 67 seconds. 145 pounds Oliver Monroe. S. A. O. won in 42 seconds. 158 pounds Oliver Monroe, S. A. C, won in 1 minute. ICS pounds Middleton, Norwegian turn ers won in minutes 36 seconds. 30xlng us pounds. Charles Qivlna. S. A C . won in 3 rounds. i 116 pounds George Kirkwood, St. Louis A C , won in 8 rounds. 125 pounds Fred Nord. S. A. C, won in 3 rounds. 155 pounds D. C. Dyer, S. A. C won in 8 rounds. 135 pounds Charles Boscha. Los Angeles A C , won in 8 rounds. 145 pounds Tom Swlrt, S. A. C, won in 4 rounds. 168 pounds Tom Burke, V. A. C, won In 8 rounds. ' FISHERMENG00N STRIKE Because of Trouble at Tillamook, Salmon Are Sent to Astoria. ASTORIA, Or., Sept. 15. (Special.) During the past week there was a strike among the fishermen employed by the Tillamook Cannery and as a result sever al tons of salmon were brought to the Co-operative Cannery here on the steamer Argo. 4 cents per pound being paid for them. It is now understood that the strike has been settled and the fish are being delivered to the Bwwi Packing Com pany's cannery. p$S 1 The difference is AsU your If You Are Honest In your ambition to n" ... C.-.n. can on us. liicij with a guarantee finish. Make a Note of This And when you are ready, let us tell you how easy it is to secure a piano by paying a little down and a little each month. We will rent you a piano if you desire. 336 yhinZtonStx eJZMr Fortune Telling . el . Does not take into consideration the one essential to wom an's happiness womanly health. The woman who neglects her health is neglecting the very foundation of all good fortune. For without health love loses its lustre and gold is but dross. Womanly health when lost or impaired may generally be regained by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. This Prescription has. tor orer 10 years, been carina delicate, weak, pain-wracked women, by the hundreds ot thousands and this too in the privacy ot their homes without their harlni to submit to Indeli cate questionings and offensively repug nant examinations. - - j . - 1. ll- p:eee hv letter fm- A?l roSdneld sacredly confidential. . Address World'. Di.Penry Mcdical Association, R. V. Pierce, M. 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