VOL,. XLIX. NO. 15,342 PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 1910. PRICE FIVE CENTS. 1908 BEEF PROBE GORRUPT.'TIS SI Four Grand Jurors De mand New Inquiry. FAITH HEALSW0IYIAN LONG PARALYZED IS JOHN SILAS REED DROPS FROM SIGHT TAFT MAY CONCEDE POWER TO STATES BATTLESHIP PLAGE TAKEN BY AIRSHIP GREAT FRAUD TERROR-STRICKEN DOWIE DISCIPIjB CURES BY PRAYER IX COTTAGE GROVE. PORTLAND STCDEXT ' AT HAR VARD STRANGELY MISSING. 5IEW YORK AVIATOR PREDICTS XEW WAR STYLE. pars WATINC INSURANCE UNCOVERED UNDUE INFLUENCE SUGGESTED Few Delvers Would Indict, but Prosecution Faltered. LANDIS TOLD, THEN ACTS Threats to Kxpose Former Failure Forced Present Investigation.- Assistant Attorney-General to Watch Procedure. CHICAGO. Jan. 27. Four members of the Federal grand jury which Investi gated the so-called "beef trust" in 1908 forced the Government, through Judge Landis, to start the present In quiry, according to a report current here today. Assistant Attorney-General "Wade Kills, who passed the day here, denied that there was any friction 'among Government officials concerning the present Investigation, and that District Attorney Sims would remain In charge. Concerning the Inception of the pres ent action. It Is said there would have been none, had the four dissatisfied Jurymen not sought the aid of Judge Landis. This quartet, it Is said, was willing to Indict the packers In December, 1908, and finally became so Indignant over the Increasing price of meat that they informed Judge Landis that they thought It was time for the Govern ment to begin another inquiry. Prosecntlon. Changed Heart. The report of the four Jurors alleged that enough evidence was submitted to the 1908 grand jury to warrant true bills, and that. In spite of this, there was a sudden apathy on the part of those behind the prosecution. They also said that If the Investigation was not renewed immediately they would make a statement to the public setting forth their theory of why the prosecu tion had been dropped. Following the jurors' complaint. Judge Tandls is said to have made the Investigation that resulted in the pres ent action being started. Judge Lan dis, it is asserted, got in touch with the evidence submitted to the 1908 grand Jury, and he is determined that the present action shall not be nullified by influence outside the grand jury room. In h,is statement concerning the pur pose of his visit here and the scope :l the present Investigation, Mr. EHIs aid: FrobeFmlcr AVay Long. "I have spent the dny in conference Kh the United States District Attorney and his. aR57lstfl.nt!, and In a call upon Judge Landis, whom I have known pleas antly for many years. There is no fric tion whatever in the beef Inquiry. "The Department of Justice has been at work, for five or six months Investiga ting departments of the fresh meat indus try since the last action of the Govern ment and especially the relation of the situation to the prices of food and prod ucts, with "a view to ascertaining whether a cause of action now exists. "The Investigation will be conducted under the anti-trust statute and may bo ..either civil or criminal. .Kills to Watch Ipqulry. "Proceedings now In progress before the Federal grand jury of this district are In line with this Investigation. Ordinarily, cases , presented to the grand Jury for trial in the Courts are wholly within the routine duties of the T'nlted States At torney. Where, however, the subject of Inquiry affects the country at large end especially where it Involves the complaint of a violation of the anti-trust statute having a more than local effect, the. Attorney-General exercises a special super vision. He Is particularly charged by th law with the enforcement of this act and my duties in this behalf are also fixed by statute under hte direction. "There will be no change in the pres ent instance. Mr. Sims, in -whom the Attorney-General has entire confidence, will present his testimony to the grand Jury. After this testimony is In I have no doubt the grand Jury will do its full duty, oth to the Government and those against whom" such, testimony .may be ad duced. "I expect to keep in touch with the Inquiry: to oome to Chicago whenever It may seem neoessary and participate, now or later. In any way that shall seem ad visable." BROTHERS HAD NEVER MET State Houso Watchman Meets Rela tive, 3 7, for First Time. SALEM, Or.. Jan. 27. (Special.) Charles . Holmstrom. night watchman at the State House, is entertaining his brother, 37 years old. whom he had never seen until the latter arrived here a few days ago from Sweden. The Salem man left Sweden before Ills brother was born. Rochester Editor Passes. ROCHESTER, NT. T.. Jan. 27. Al bert R. Haven, editor of the Rochester Vnion and Advertiser, died today, aged 69 years, lie wxp juivexal puucessful Playsu, Mrs. W. A. Williams Arises From Bed and Walks for First Time in 30' Years." COTTAGE GROVE, Or., Jan. 27. (Spe cial.) Mrs. W. A. Williams, who has been bed-ridden 30 years from paralysis of the legs arose from her bed today and walked around the room without assistance. Since her first successful effort tcj walk Mrs. Williams has continued to gain strength, and notwithstanding her age of more than 60 years is confident that her re covery Is complete. She believes that she has been divinely healed through a messenger of God In the person of Delovergne, at one time a follower of Dowie, and who recently came here from the Hast. Delevergne had held a long season of prayer with Mrs. Wil liams yesterday, encouraging the Invalid to believe that through faith she could be healed. Immediately after Mrs. Williams had arisen and walked friends and relatives. Including some of the ministers of the city, assembled 'and' "congratulatory prayer service was held, in which Mrs. Williams took an active part. COUNCIL CHASES MONKEY Los Angeles City Fathers Capture Runaway From Theater. LOS ANGELES, Cal., Jan. 27. (Spe cial.) Furniture was overturned in the City Council chamber today during a wild chase for a monkey. Half the employes of the City Hall engaged in the monkey hunt. The ani mal, which is a member of a troupe of trained monkeys, escaped from a theater after the performance. The monkey was discovered on the roof of the City Hall. Three men mounted the roof and the monkey was cornered, but escaped by sliding down a rain spout to the second floor. Through an open window he gained access to the Council chamber, where he was cap tured. . JOY MILLER IN CANADA Football Player Dazed and Without Funds in Strange Town. DETROIT, Jan. 27. The relatives . of Joy Miller,, the deposed captain of the University of Michigan football eleven, who has been missing since the announce ment was made early this month that he was not a bonafide student at the univer sity, have received word that he was in McGregor, Manitoba, January 14. J. Myle has sent from Spokane, Wash., a letter given to him by a strange young man whom' he befriended In McGregor and who appeared to be dazed and out of funds. The letter proved to be one given to Miller by a girl friend in Ann Arbor and was sent by Myle to the glrl"s ad dress. CONSULAR AGENT MISSING Italian Representative of Kansas City Persecuted by Clique. CHICAGO, Jan. 27. Pietro IsnardI, Italian consular agent at Kansas City. Mo., has disappeared, according to a statement made here today by Guldo Sabetta, the Italian Consul. Mr. Sabet ta. said he feared IsnardI had become mentally unbalanced 'because of perse cution by a certain element of the Kansas City Italians. , . About $2000 Is Involved in the dis appearance, but Mr. Sabetta said Is nardl's accounts with his government and with the American Express Com pany, of which he was agent, are square. SNAKE VENOM DISEASE FOE Rattler's Poison Frees Consumptive of Night Sweats. STOCKTON. Jan. 27. After three weeks of the use of venom from rat tlesnakes 'In treatment for tubercu losis of the lungs, In a Lodl case that was In Its last stages. Dr.' Hull of Stockton reported, some improvement of the patient, who Is a son of Super visor Newton. The poison is administered accord ing to a formula recommended by East ern physicians who have tried the cure. In the Lodl case the young man is reported as freed from night sweats. A permanent cure, however, is hardly looked for. WOMEN FIGHT 'RED. LIGHTS' Purity Campaign in Chicago Opens With March on City Hall. CHICAGO, Jan. 27. Under the lead ership of Mrs. Emily M. Hill, president of the Cook County Woman's Christian Temperance Union, and Dr. jillce C. O'Neal, between 400 and 500 women visited the City Hall today to present to Mayor Busse resolutions calling on the municipal officers to eliminate dis reputable districts in the city. B. C. MAY CURB ORIENTALS Dominion Asked to Pass Law Bar ring Them From Acquiring Land. VICTORIA, B. C. Jan. 27. A resolu tion calling on the provincial government to ask Ottawa to enact a law forbidding Orientals to acquire land was Introduced In the provincial Legislature by W. H. Cay ward, member for Cowichan today. The resolution will be Considered Tuesday. Seine Drops Bit, But Soon Rises Again. HISTORIC PLACES IN DANCER Streets Cave in, Walls Crum ble and Drains Burst. CREST OF FLOOD TODAY Large Part of City in Darkness and Soldiers Work by Torchlight to Build Dikes Water Supply Will Last for Several Days. ITS MANY TRIBUTARIES SWELL RIVKB SETSK TO VOLUME SOI . CONTAINED BY WALLS. Fed "by Innumerable tributaries, in turn swelled by torrential rains, which pour in their floods along- its 500 tortuous mllea. the River Seine, ordinarily a placid, gentle stream, has become a raging torrent, carrying into Paris far more water than can be contained In Its masonry walls. As It flows through Paris, the Seine Is about -500 feet broad, feut below the city It spreads out till it forms an estuary near Its mouth six miles In width. The Saine rises, 20 miles from Di jon, in the Department of v'ote d'Or, in Eastern France, part of the old province of Burgundy. Its general course Is Northwest through Corbell, Paris. Saint-Cloud, Saint-Denis, Saint-Germain. Polasy. Mantes. El beuf, Rouen and Caudebec. It flows into the English Channel . near Havre. The largest of the tribu taries are the Tonne, Eure, Aube, Maine and the Oise at Paris. A net work of canals connects It with the Rhone, Rhine, Meuse and Loire through Its tributaries, making an -area, of about l5,70O square miles In its basin. Very heavy rains have swelled all the streams In the east of France, hence the floods. PARIS, Jan. 27. Waters of the Seine creep slowly higher, each Inch widely extending the area of destruction, desolation and ruin. Flood conditions had become much worse at 2 o'clock this morning-, par ticularly, in the south and east sections. In the old Latin Quarter the situation was critical. The sidewalk of the Qual des Grandes Augustine collapsed and fell Into the Orleans Company's tunnel be neath, further extending the flood through the ancient streets, partic ularly the Rue Jacob and around the Institute of France. Sewers Burst, Causing Darkness. Many sewers burst In the Twelfth Arrondissement, one of the biggest in Paris, the whole of which Is now sub merged and has been plunged into darkness on account of the breaking of the gas mains. The half-flooded He St. Ixuis, which is: connected with the He de la Cite by means of the Pont St. Louis, Is likely to be. totally submerged wlth- ( Concluded, on Page 5.) IF : 1 Three Days' Search of Xew England Cities Fruitless and Friends Are Much Alarmed. BOSTON', Mass., Jan. 27. (Special.) John Silas Reed, of -Portland, Or., a member of the senior class at Harvard University, Is strangely missing, and the police of this city, after a fruitless search, have sought the aid of the po lice in every city in New England and New York. It is the general belief at the college and particularly among. Reed's Intimate friends, that overstudy- has brought on a nervous attack and that some harm has befallen him. Reed has been missing for three days. Every hotel In the city was searched today, but no trace of the missing student could be obtained. ; Reed has been taking up considera ble special work this year In connec tion with the regular course, and It is thought that the work has been too much for him. ' FIREMEN SHYL0CK SLAVES Iios Angeles Heroes Declared Loan Sharks' Victims Chief Acts. LOS ANGELES, Jan. 27. (Special.) "Half the firemen in this city are in peonage to loan sharks." This startling statement was -made at the meeting of the fire committee today, by Chief Lips. A committee to Investigate the 'situation and provide a remedy was at once appointed. "If the committee so empowers us," said Committee Chairman Hawley, "we can free the firemen from this down right peonage. The loan sharks can be given a choice to allow their vic tims to settle ' on a fair interest per cent basis. If they refuse to do so, then each fireman can declare himself a bankrupt. I know of a fireman who originally borrowed ?400, but now owes 600 after paying . Interest for six years. "The' evil effects of these bloodsuck ers on the department can easily 'be inferred. No man oppressed by debt is in a fit mental state for work." DR. PARKER IS STILL LOW Three Physicians In Consultation at Avaloit Surgeohs'Aro Hopeful. A V AXON, Catallna Island. Cal., Jan. 27. (Special.) Dr. E. D. Johnson of Portland, Dr. , J. I. Peckham and Dr. Nooman Bridge of Los Angeles, are In consultation here over the serious condition of. Dr. E. H. Parker of Port land. Though Dr. Parker is critically ill with pneumonia, the three surgeons attending him entertain hopes for his recovery. Mrs. Parker is on the-way here, a wireless message yesterday urging her to come to Avalon as quickly as pos sible. HOPE FOR SORROWING GIRL Body, Supposed to Be That of David Evans, Is Stranger's. j SPOKANE, Jan. 27. Alice Burney, at Walla Walla, who has been grieving for her sweetheart. David Evans, sup posed to have been killed in this city January 19, at the Langham hotel, can dry her tears and be happy. Her sweet heart is. still alive. ,, Tom Evans, brother of David Evans, arrived In the city last night from Portland.' He stated positively to .the undertakers today that the body was not that of his brother. The corpse is not yet Identified. THOSE COMETS DON'T WATCH OUT. Mind Open on Control of Water. ISSUE PRESSES IN CONGRESS Administration Plan Now Op posed to Western Idea. LONG CONTEST PROMISED Roosevelt Shown " to Have, Believed in Federal Regulation Only Until . States Took Interest Pin chot More Radical. BY HARRY J. BROmi. OREGONLVN NEWS BUREAU. Wash ington, Jan. 20. Great effort Is being made to Induce Congress to pass a bill governing the development and use of water power in the public land states of the West, but before such a bill is enacted, a long and bitter fight will oc cur in both branches of the National Legislature, and there is possibility of a deadlock, which will result In the de feat of all pending bills. However, men who are sincerely In favor of sane and practical regulation of water power de velopment are at work trying to bring the question to the front at as early a date as possible, so that existing dif ferences may bo reconciled, and a water power conservation law be written on the statute books. State Control Is Issue. The chief struggle will come over the question whether water-power develop ment and use shall be regulated by the states or by the Federal Government. Bills recognizing both, are now pending, and there are strong partisans on tho two sides of this much-discussed ques-'-tion. The . decision . Is with Congress, and unless some legislation Is enacted, "conservation" will be an issue in the coming campaign, and the inaction of Congress will be used as an argument in favor of the overthrow of the pres ent Republican majority. At this stage of he proceedings, the Administration stands with the ultra Conservationists in favor of Federal con trol, and a considerable element of Westerners in both branches of Congress agrees with, the stand taken by the Gov ernors of tho-various states at their re cent convention, in favor of state . con trol. The bill representing the Admin istration view is that introduced by Senator Nelson, of Minnesota. The ideas of the Governors and of the Western contingent generally underlie the bill in troduced by Senator Carter, of Montana. Administration Bill Evasive. The Administration bill virtually recog nizes the right of the states to control the waters of non-navigable streams within their borders, . but dodges this question, and proceeds upon the theory, as explained by the President In his message, that whoever controls the land adjacent to the streams controls the use of Its waters; in other words, the riparian owner is strategically located so as to be in a position to utilize the water, to the exclusion of all others.. And the Administration bill Is so framed (Concluded on Page 5.) 'Xo Nation Would Xbw Dare Send Warship Fleet Here," Declares Clifford Harmon in Address. PASADENA. Cal., Jan. 27. Clifford B. Harmon, the New York aeronaut, de clared today in a lecture before the Pasadena Chamber of Commerce that the day of the battleship had passed. No nation, he said, Would dare to send a fleet of warships to these shores on a hostile mission with such mas ters of the air as Curtiss, Hamilton, Willard and others ready to meet it. "It has already been demonstrated," said Mr. Harmon, "that one balloon or aeroplane can carry sufficient explo sives to annihilate any fleet in the world, (While the warships would be powerless to protect themselves. ; "Before they could reach our coast our aviators, flying at a great height, could sail out over them and sink them one by one. Within a year there prob ably will be a score of men in this country who could undertake such a task with safety." BOYS BURGLE GUN STORE Quantity of Firearms Found In Homes of Eugene Youths. " EUGENE, Or.. Jan. 27. (Special.) Vic tor Bower and Lester Deadmond, two of the four boys who pleaded guilty to have stolen brandy from Charles Knopp, a farmer, today pleaded guilty to having stolen a large quantity of revolvers, car tridges, hunting knives and other articles from HJll'9 gun store and Joe Jacogs sec ond -hsnd store. After having pleaded guilty to thai first offenoe the boys were paroled In the hope of securing a confession to the second and more serious crime of bur glary. The plunder was found In the homes of tbe boys. Bowers and Deadmond are sons of prominent and respected families here. Bowers' father is a farmer and the elder Deadmond resides In Eugene. The parents assisted the authorities as far as possi ble" in securing the confessions and the stolen property. Bowers has only one leg, the other having ben amputated after a shooting accident. ELLA GINGLES MARRIED Ijace Maker, Alleged Victim of Tor tures, Weds in Ireland. i CHICAGO, Jan. 27. (Special.) Ella Gingles, the Irish lace'maker, who was the chief figure In a sensational trial in this city, in which it was asserted that she was gagged, bound and tor tured on two occasions by "white slav ers" in the Wellington Hotel, is now a bride. The formal announcement came to day in letters that on January 12 she was married to William Drummond at Larne, Ireland. At the close of the trial here. In which persons accused by the girl failed to connect her with the alleged theft of some lace, she was deported, being placed in charge nt Mrs. G. Vandusen Cooke, who makes ihe announcement of the wedding. The girl was taken from here to her former home In Larne. She came hero from Canada, where she also had some exciting experiences, according to the testimony at the trial. HUNTER SECURES WILDCAT Climbs Tree Arter Animal, Slips Dog Collar on It, Leads It Home. ASTORIA, Or., Jan. 27. (Special.) Charles V. Brown has brought back from a hunting trip on the Upper Necanlcum a. live" wild cat. The animal Is comparatively large and as active as when in the woods. Mr. Brown was alone On the trip, and says his dog chased the cat up a tree. He took the collar off his dog and the chain from his pocket and also climbed the tree. The wild cat appeared docile so he put the collar around its neck and led it down by the chain and into Seaside. He says that If any one doubts this story he has the wild cat to prove It. FISHERMENUP IN ARMS Oregon City Objects to Closing River to Salmon Catching. OREGON CITY, Or., Jan. 27. (Spe cial.) The fishermen of this locality are up in arms over the order just promulgated by the State Board of Fish Commissioners In closing the Willam ette River at this point to Balmon fish ing from March 1 to May 1, andwill hold a mass meeting In this city Sat urday to determine what action they will take in fighting the movement. Last year Master Fish Warden Mc Allister attempted to close the river to salmon fishing In the interest of propa gation, but he failed to post the notices on the bank of the stream within tho period required by law, and the state failed to make prosecutions stick as a result. ICE BLOCKS UP THE DALLES Steamer Bailey Gatzert, Unable to Make Dock, Returns. THE DALLES, 'Or.. Jan. 27. (Spe cial.) The steamer Bailey Gatzert came up the river from Lyle, arriving about 9 o'clock today, cutting a passage through the ice part of the way, but was unable to make the dock and re turned at once. The Columbia Is slowly clearing of Ice above, so that passengers may be transferred to the North Bank road, by rowboat, but the ice is banking; in the, narrows below. , Agents and Doctors in Louisville Accused. AGED AND INFIRM INSURED Indiana and Kentucky Com panies Are Victimized, GANG NUMBERS 50 PERSONS Arrest of Three Well-Known Louis ville Agents Is First Step Per sons in Good Health Imper sonated Aged and Infirm. LOUISVILLE-, Ky Jan. 27. John JT. Keane, P. J. Needham and T. T. O'Leary, agents representing a number of Insur ance companies in Indiana, Tennessee, Kentucky and other states, tonight were arrested on warrants charging them with conspiracy to derfraud. The warrants were sworn out by S. C. Renick. secretary and treasurer of the Indiana National Life Insurance Com pany. While the amount involved Is not state. It Is understood to reach $200,000 or more in policies alleged to have been written on the lives of persons virtually certain to die within a few months the fraud consisting of the impersonation of sick and incurable persons by healthy ones employed for the purpose. It Is believed the alleged conspiracy is far-reaching and investigation will be made not only here, but In New Al bany, Ind., and perhaps in other cities. Fraud Involves 6 0 Persons. It Is stated the arrest of these men Is only the first step In the Investiga tion of an affair that Involves more than 50 persons and relates to fraudu lently obtained life insurance policies to the value of more than $200,000. It Is also said that many physicians are Involved. One physician. It Is said, has admit ted that he acted as a participant in a conspiracy by filling out medical cer tificates certifying that men and women he had never seen were good insurance risks. In many cases, It Is believed, the physicians were imposed upon. It has developed, so it is charged, that per sons examined gave false names to the (Continued 'on Page 2.) INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS Th Weather. TESTETl.D-4 Y'S "Maximum temperature. 49.8 degrees; minimum temperature, 40.7. TODAY'S Occasional rain; southerly -winds. Foreign. Japanese statesmen sorry if reply to Knox'i note seemed curt ; declare warm friend ship for irnited States. Page 2. Premier Aaqulth. preparing plan, of attack on power of Lords. Page 5. Parts await terror-stricken still higher ws ter; awful damage done. Pago 1. National. Representative Boutell declares Payne tar iff bill will toe Justified by, results. Page i Postal Savings Bank hill Introduced In Sen ate by Carter of Montana, page 2. Conservation of water power of West is growing Issue in 'Congress; Taft may yield to state control Idea. Page 1. t. Domestic. New York aviator declares day of battle ship is past. Paso 1. Aliened graft revealed through indictments of city officials of Chit-ago. Page 1. Four former beef trust probers. It is s-ald. forced present inquiry by hinting inves tigation ot 1908 was corrupt. Page 1. Rich Los Angeles parents gave babies to woman, who posed as mother of Quad ruplets. Page . Wholesale fraud on life Insurance companies by agents and doctors discovered at Louisville. Page 1. Sport. Jeffries, with troupe of athletes, to arrive here today. Page 7. Jeffries Is peevish when interviewed by Ore gon tan. Page 7. J. Cal Ewlng laughs at Dtigdale's proposal to buy Portland franchise for $2,000. Page 7. Western Fair Association planned to fur ther racing Interests west of Rockies Page 15. Rose city Athletic Club plans to bring fa mous aviators here February 23. Page 12. - Pacific Northwest. Plans of King County Republicans to unite on Senatorial candidate may fail; Hum phries against "advleory primary. Page c Washington has enough granted land to buiid two capltols and sales will soon begin. Page 8. Retail Merchants Association chooses Salem as next convention city. Page 8. Commercial and Marine. Wheat buying for Mexican shipmsnt re ported on Sound. Page 19. Good demand for wheat causes firm, prices at Chicago. Page 19. Paris flood given as reason for stock sell ing. Page 19. Tug Wallula misses rich prize by abandon ing W. H. Smith. Page 19. . Portland and Vicinity. Society will see auto show today ; manager estimates that week attendance will be 44.00u. Page 12. O. & W. railroad station at Seattle - to be rushed to completion. Page IS. Trio of prineville ranchmen fined for fenc ing in public lands. Page 14. Streetcar fender tested ; Mayor impressed by type submitted by street railway company. Page 9. Broadway bridge Question now up to Judges. ecislon soon. Pag At Judge Bronaugh sets March 15 date of trial of W. H. Moore, alleged bankwrecker. Page 14. Objection to testimony on unsigned letters In Hermann trial sustained after objec tion by defense. Page 14. Pure Breed Livestock Association declare in resolut Ion that meat boycott will in jure producers most. Page 13. Dr. Fred B- Smith, Y. M. C A., religious work secretary, addresses three meetings. Page 13. Comet reported only from San Francisco and by steamers bound from, south Page 8. .