Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, May 05, 1910, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    I r
VOL.. jL. XO. 15,423.
PORTLAND, OREGON, THURSDAY; 3IAY 5, 1010.
PRICE FIVE CENTS.
TAFT STRIKES AT
HUGHES' CRITICS
'Cant of Demagogue' Is
Fling at Bryan.
WELCOME IN ST. LOUIS HEARTY
Motor Car Frequently Halted
to Receive Flowers.
TWO BALL GAMES ARE SEEN
While Guest or Trarric Club Presi
dent Discusses Kail road legis
lation, but Refuses to Go
Into Details About It.
ST. LOUIS. 'May 4. President Tafts
lve-day trip to the Middle West ended
here today, and he left late tonight for
Washington, where he Is scheduled to
arrive early Friday morning.
It remained for St. Louis to give Mr.
Taft the heartiest demonstration of his
present Journey.
The city was gaily decorated and there
were cheering throngs wherever the Pres
ident went. Several times his motor
car was stopped to receive bouquets.
These Mr. Taft later sent to St. Luke's
Hospital and to the Home for Incur
ables. Fling Taken at Bryan.
The apparent warmth of the reception
here seemed to affect the President, and
when at the luncheon of the Business
Men's League late In the afternoon.
President Walker Hill praised him for
appointing Messrs. Lurton and Hughes
to the Supreme Court, Mr. Taft launched
into a vigorous speech, paying his re
spects to Bryan for his reported criticism
of Governor Hughes. He decried the
'Cant of the demagogue" and the "Dis
position of public journals'" to matte
Unjust charges against men In public
life.
The President tonight, as guest of the
Traffic Club of St. Louis, referred In a
general way to the railroad legislation
pending at Washington, but said he was
not sufficiently Informed of the situation
to discuss it in detail.
Days of Receivers Recalled.
Mr. Taft said while ho was Federal
Judge of the Sixth Circuit, from 1S93 to
IWO, it fell to his lot to appoint receivers
for nearly all the railroads in the clrvuit.
He found at that time what he said a
Great many people eem blissfully ignor
ant of. that it takes "a whole lot of
money to run a railroad."
Earlier In the day the President spoke
on the Panama Canal at a breakfast at
the Commercial Club, and addressed the
Farmers' Union on conservation.
Two Ball Games Are Seen.
Aftr the Business Men's League lunch
eon, the President visited both of the
Mg league baseball games. He went first
to the National League Park, where he
saw the St. Louis team start out in the
very first inning with a lead of five runs
over Cincinnati. He next was whirled to
the American League Park, where lie
paw several close innings played by St.
Louis and Cleveland. At both places the
President got a rousing greeting from the
"fans."
Pome of the labor unions in the city
protested against the visit of the Presi
dent -to the American League game as
the grandstand in Cleveland was built
b- nonunion men. As the President
strongly opposes boycotts, he paid no
heed to tlve protest.
Regulation Beneficial to Roads.
Discussing railroad legislation before
the Traffic Club, and referring to the
davs of receiverships in 1S9S, Mr. Taft
ald:
"But I understand all the railroads are
on a good basis now. and" I hope they
will continue so. Railroads are very
much like other business. If the re
ceipts do not come up to expenditures.
the red balance grows larger and larger
until there Is nothing before you but
receivership. I sincerely trust we will
never experience again with respect to
railroads or other business what we had
to go through from 1S93 to 1900.
"In those days the railroads were not
run entirely according to the law and
a judge had difficulty even in keeping
his receivers out of rebates. But rail
roads and shippers can now look each
other in the face with the knowledge
they are not engaged In a violation of
the law.
Rate-Making Most Difficult.
"The problem, gentlemen, of fixing
railroad rates is a most difficult one,
and the man who says he knows how
to do it is the only one in the com
munity who thinks. so.
"There is now pending at Washing
ton an Interstate commerce bill. I
cannot comment on It because of con
ditions I do not know. But I do know
that as the bill was presented to Con
gress: It was drawn to conform to the
promises of the Republican platform
and bring the railroads more under the
control of the Interstate Commerce
Commission on the one hand and to
give the railroads a little more free
dom of action under the supervision of
the Interstate Commerce Commission
on the other.
"There has been introduced into the
House a modification of the long and
short haul clause. Just what It Is I
don't know. Some people, however.
Concluded ea Pace i.X
WOMAN RIDICULES
MARRIAGE LAWS
SAYS "STERILIZE CRIMINALS TO
PREVENT CRIME."
Statutes Against Wedding of Male
factor and Insane Are De
clared Ineffective.
ROCK FORD, III, May 4. (Special.)
The only effectual method of preventing-
crime is to remove the possibility
of propagation by sterilizing criminals.
was the declaration of Mrs. Alfred
Bayliss of Macomb in the opening ses
sion of the 11th annual meeting of the
Illinois Congress of Mothers today.
Mrs. Bayliss also ridiculed the pres
ent laws against the marriage of the
criminal and the insane to prevent
their propagation. She said these are
Ineffective and that more children of
this kind are born out of -wedlock than,
in It.
She asked If Congress would shrink
from advocating the only effective
means to this end it it Is brought up
for approval in the future?
Mrs. Bayliss also urged that news
papers be urged to print less sensa
tional accounts of crimes. These ex
aggerated stories, she declared, are the
cause of criminal ideas, and cited in
stances where crimes were committed
merely because the criminal wanted
his picture In. the paper.
The villains of the newspapers, she
said, are the heroes of the underworld.
WOMAN LURES CLUBMAN
Harry B. Elliott Deserts Wife to Go
With Affinity to Orient.
SAN FRANCISCO. May 4. (Special.)
It leaked out today that Harry B.
Elliott, ex-asslstant secretary of the
Olympic Club and a well-known cricket
and soccer football player, sailed on the
Manchuria for Hongkong, April 26,
with a notorious woman, Bessie Birch-
field, under the names' of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Russell. Elliott left a wife and
two children at his wife's mother's
home near Los Angeles. Elliott be-
came Infatuated with the woman si:
months ago.
Recently he resigned from the Olym
pic Club, saying he was going Into the
automobile business. Charles William
son, an English capitalist, furnished
$5000 to set up the . business. This
money Elliott took, out Williamson
can't prosecute him, as they had no
agreement. Elliott's books at the
Olympic Club are being experted, but
It Is not believed he left any deficit.
The Blrchfield woman Is well known
on Oriental liners ana in .Hongkong,
where she formerly lived.
RAINIER'S TOLL COUNTED
Probate Court Accepts Proof. That
T. Y. Callaghan Is ' Dead.
LOS ANGELES. May 4. That T. T.
Ca.llagb.an, globe-trotter and mountain
climber, perished in a storm on Mount
Rainier on August IS, 1909, was proved in
the Probate Court today.
The only exhibits offered in evidence
were Callaghan's alpenstock and gloves.
which were found on the trail where he
was last seen alive.
Callaghan left a smal estate, including
funds in Los Angeles banks, and proof of
his death was requlstte to the granting of
letters of administration, in order that
this might be distributed to his brother,
Owen Callaghan. of Corvallis. Or., and
his sister, Mrs. A. R. Riordan, of Clon-
tarf, Minn.
SALOONS SHOW RESPECT
Seattle Liquor Stores Close During
Funeral of Brewer.
SEATTLE, Wash., May 4. (Special.)
Every saloon in Seattle closed this after
noon from 3 to 4 o'clock as a mark of
respect to Andrew Hemrich, the deceased
president of the Seattle Brewing & Malt
ing Company. The Royal Arch, the or
ganization of the saloon owners, yester
day issued a request that the saloons re
main closed during the hour of the fu
neral. The breweries in Seattle remained
closed today. All the employes attended
the funeral, which occurred at 3 o'clock
this afternoon. Seven lodges of which Mr.
Hemrich was a member were represented
by delegations.
STEEL EMPLOYES SLAVES
Labor
Report
and
Shows Long
Low Pay.
Hours
WASHINK3TOX. May 4. The report
of the Bureau of Labor upon the con
ditions at the Bethlehem Steel Works,
of South Bethlehem, Pa., which was
submitted to the Senate today, says
that 2322 men worked 12 hours a day
for seven days a week, a large per
centage of these laborers earning- only
12 cents an hour.
MAN DIES T0SAVE $100
Member of Dyeing Firm Perishes in
Fire Recovering Coat.
NEW YORK, May 4. Edward Heide,
senior member of the dyeing firm of
Edward Heide & Co., was burned to
death today because he rushed back
to save $100 In his coat, left behind In
the dye shop from which he had been
dragged after an explosion had set the
place on fire.
Carmen Want Flat Wage Rate.
CLEVELAND. May 4. The employes
of the Cleveland Railway Company to
day presented demands for a flat wage
rate of 32 cents an hour Instead of
sliding scale depending upon length of
service.
MARY HARR1MAN
HAS FOUND MATE
Betrothal to C. C.Rum-
sey, Sculptor.
MOTHER REFUSES TO DENY IT
Man Who Made Statue of Her
Father Is Chosen One.
SHE IS FAVORITE DAUGHTER
Railroad King's Heart Won by Sim
ilarity of Tastes and Business
Ability She Manages Great
Arden Farm With Success.
NEW "FORK, May 4. Mrs. Mary
Averill Harriman, widow of tfie late vE.
H. Harriman, declined tonight to dis
cuss a report that her daughter, Mary,
will marry Charles Cary Rumsey, of
Buffalo. When Mrs. Harriman was in
formed today, that news of such an
engagement was current, she sent back
word:
"I will neither confirm nor deny the
report."
The entire bulk of the Harriman
millions was left without condition to
Mrs. Harriirnan. and it is inferred the
children in the course f time will
share the estate among themselves.
There are five children llv.ing Cor
nelia, the eldest daughter, who mar
ried Robert Livingstone Gerry; Mary,
now reported engaged to Mr. Rumsey;
Carol, who was presented to society a
year ago; William Averill, now in
Tale, and Roland, a lad of 13.
Miss Mary Harriman was said to be
her father's favorite daughter. She
shared his love of horses and cattle,
his plan-spoken ways and capacity for
affairs.
Mr. Rumsey is a sculptor. His model
was accepted by a committee chosen
to build a memorial to Harriman at
Goshen, the county seat of Orange
County, In which Arden farms are sit
uated. Mrs. Harriman and her daughter
spent the Winter at their town house
in Fifth avenue. Mrs. Rumsey also was
much In New York this Winter.
Manager of Great Estate.
Mis- Mary, who was made an ex
ecutor of the immense estate left by
her father, showed that she had in
herited a good deal of his business
capabilities when, in the month follow
ing his death, she and her mother de
cided that the girl herself ha ' better
take personal charge of the operation
of the vast estate at Arden. iahe had
always been Interested In sports and
In the natural life of outdoor excite
ment and pleasure' which, the American
girl, -when she has opportunity to do
so, usually leads.
But now she showed that she pos
sessed a talent of no mean order for
executive work on a large scale. On
October 28 she formally took charge
of the Arden farm3 dairy and took
over the management of the 46,000
acres of the Harriman Orange County
farms, and since that time she actually
has been running them herself.
Mrs. iHarriman and her daughters have
naturally kept in the quietest kind of
(Concluded on Page 3.)
INDEX OF TOWS NEWS
The Weather.
YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 62
degrees; minimum, 48 degree!.
TODAY'S Showers, followed by fair and
warmer; westerly winds.
National.
Regular Senators form coalition to suppress
insurgency and force Administration pro
gramme. ' Page 1.
Congress passes bill for sale of Sllets admin
istration lands. Page 'J.
President, at St. Louis, replies to critics of
Hughes. Page 1.
Domestic.
Anti-corporation faction captures Xfcnver
meeting, at which daughter of J. P. Mor
gan Is scheduled to speak. Page 1.
Illinois woman ridicules present-day mar
riage laws. Page 1.-
Hydee unscathed by Mrs. Swope, last wit
ness for state In famous cas. Page 3
United States Supreme Court grants writ
of error to J. Thorburn Ross, convicted
Portland banker. Page 2.
fciports.
Rain again Interferes with Vernon-Portland
game. Page 8.
Pacific Coast League results: (Fan Francisco
. 2, Uos Angeles 0; Oakland 2, Sacramento
1. Page 8.
Fight promoters and negro wrangle over
referee with no decision reached. Page 8.
Commercial and Marine.
Tocal berry market is demoralized. Page lfl.
Wheat weak and lower at Chicago. Page 19.
Large sales of bonus for foreign account.
Page 18.
Steamship company and longshoremen set
tle difficulties. Page 18.
Facino North v est.
Seattle census admitted not to exceed 215.000
Page 5.
Jury completed in Gohl murder trial. Page 6.
Kew fruit pest alarms Salem orchardists.
Pago &
Portland and Vicinity.
Portland Railway tracklaying does not mean
franchise fight with United Hallways.
Page 9.
City Engineer reports Madison-street bridge
is progressing well, considering difficul
ties. Page 11.
Morris trial on; Jury won't be locked up.
Page 18.
Puter testifies Smith, waa not party to land
fraud conspiracy. Page 1
Comprrhensive tour of Oregon arranged for
Louis W. Hill. Page 9.
COAST SHIP LINE URGED
w.
A. Hears Fears Railroads Will
'Throttle" Panama Canal.
WASHINGTON, May 4. W. A. Mears,
representing commercial interests of
Seattle and TacOma, urged favorable
action of the Flint-McLaughlin bill to
establish a Government steamship line
on the Pacific Coast at a hearing of the
House committee on Interstate Com
merce today.
He said that it was the popular be
lief that the transcontinental railroads
would throttle the Panama Canal as far
as shipping was concerned unless there
were Government lines on both the At
lantic and Pacific to regulate the rates.
Chairman Mann replied that there was
no such danger if Congress adopted
the long and short haul clause inserted
in the railroad bill by the committee.
Mr. Mears argued that Government
steamships would do more to maintain
reasonable rates on transcontinental
railroads than anything the Interstate
Commerce Commission could do.
UNIFORM DIVORCE OBJECT
Xew York Passes Bill Recognizing
Other States' Laws.
ALBANY, N. T.,' May 4. The Assem
bly today passed without dissent the
"uniform divorce bilL" It provides
for a broader recognition of divorces
granted by. other states and for sub
stitute service In divorce actions.
INCOME TAX IS DEFEATED
Massachusetts House Rejects Reso-
lution by Close Vote.
BOSTON, May 4. The Income tax
resolution was killed in the lower
branch of the Legislature today
to 126.
120
Fires Raging in Ontario.
SATJLT STE. MARIE, Mich., May 4.
Forest fires are again raging in this
section. Near Garden River, Ont., and
on Sugar Island the flames are spread
ing rapidly.
MEANS AN ERA OF GOOD FORTUNE.
STORIES GF GRAFT
STARTLE CHICAGO
Henry Terrill Adds
to
BriberyScandal.
'UBLIC IS LEFT TO JUDGE
Representative Griffin Denies
Colleague's Charges.
ADMITS FAVORS PROMISED
Report Is That Slate's Attorney
Wayman Is Applying Thumb
screws to Get Information
on Election of Lorimcr.
CHICAGO, May 4. (Special.)--From
Monmouth today cf.me a fresh contribu
tion to the legislative bribery scandal in
the form of a statement from Repre
sentative Henry Terrill, of Colchester,
that throws new light upon the stores
that bribes of $1000 were offered for votes
for Senator at Springfield.
In an interview Mr. Terrill says that
Just before breaking the deadlock, it was
suggested to him it would be "to his
pecuniary advantage to "climb into the
band wagon, and to vote, for William
Lorimer. The suggestion, he asserts,
camie from Representative John Griffin.
of the First district in Chicago.
Political Favors Promised.
Mr. Terrill makes no specific charges
that a bribe was offered him directly or
indirectly, but says that the public may
draw its own Inferences.
When seen tinight. Representative
Griffin denied the accusations of Ter
rill. He declared that he had not men
tioned money to the down-state legisla
tor, but had told Terrill that political
favors would follow a vote for Lorimer.
Both men will be subnenaed before the
special grand Jury. Three down-state
legislators appeared before . the special
grand Jury today when that body-took up
the task of searching for evidence' cor
roborative of the legislative bribery
charges made by Representative Charles
A. White, of O'Fallon, the 46th Senatorial
district, occupying the most prominent
place under the spotlight.
Courtroom Air Is Charged.
The return of State's Attorney Way-
man, from St. Louis, heralde by the
announcement that he personally had in
terviewed a legislator in a city near the
Missouri metropolis, and a second man
In St. Louis, and that both would ap
pear before the grand Jury, filled the air
of the Criminal Court building with ex
pectancy when the Jurors met.
As the day wore on and the witnesses
appeared and departed. Insistent re
ports appeared that the public prosecu
tor was applying the thumbscrews to
certain members of the Assembly,
Identity for the present unknown, who
are supposed to possess information
corroborating White's accusations of
and corruption at Springfield.
Bank Accounts Examined.
Mr. Wayman himself refused to make
known whether bis personal inter
views were a success, although in St.
Louts Detective Murnane, of the tSate's
Concluded on Page 3.)
- A
TRUST FOES ROUT
MISS ANNE MORGAN
DACGHTK.lt OF FINANCIER GETS
TASTE OF POLITICS.
Voung Woman Scheduled to Speak
in Denver Changes Mind When
Father's Enemies Get Control.
DENVER, May 4. An Illustration of
practical politics, with herself as storm
center, was given today to Miss Anne
Morgan, daughter of J. P. Morgan, who
came to Denver to study woman suffrage
on its own stamping grounds.
Miss Morgan had agreed to address a
mass meeting of the Woman's Public
Serve League, to ratify the candidacy
of a woman for election commissioner,
tonight. It was understood the meeting
was to be non-partisan. '
Correctly anticipating that this would
draw a tremendous crowd, the municipal
ownership faction of the league captured
the meeting.
Miss Morgan, not relishing the idea of
being the drawing card at a meeting,
the principal object of which was to flay
corporations of which her father Is the
generally accepted personification, de
clined to be Introduced, but compromised
by occupying a box in the audience from
which she heard a number of speakers
voice bitter protests against corporation
methods.
Miss Morgan spent the morning in the
J uvenlle Court, and in the afternoon made
an inspection of the State Reform School
the Girls' Industrial and the Detention
Home, where prisoners of the Juvenil
Court are kept. In the evening she ad
dressed a meeting of newsboys In the
Juvenile courtroom.
Miss Morgan and ner mother left for
the East tonight-
TROUT NOT CANCER CAUSE
Doctor Argues Disease May Be
Caused by Overnutrition,
WASHINGTON. May 4. The Con
gress of American Physicians and
Surgeons' In its session here today be
gan a discussion of medical, surgical
and therapeutic Questions. More than
thousand delegates are attending
Uie conference.
In a paper presented to the Ameri
can Climatological As-sociatlon Dr. R.
G. Curtin, of Philadelphia, took issue
with those who have contended re
cently that cancer was caused by eat
ing fish, particularly trout.
He argued that statistics showed
that cancer was more common in cen
ters of population where not one per
son in 50 ate trout. The. country lad
who lived on trout, he continued, was
seldom afflicted.
His position was that cancer prob
ably was caused by over-nutrition.
Dr. Curtain maintained in his paper
that cancer is increasing and that it
seems to be hereditary.
SHIP MAY DON WAR PAINT
Estrada Faction Wants Federal Ves
sels to Watch Venus.
WASHINGTON. May 4. It was said
today that the steamer Venus, which
cleared from New Orleans on Satur
day night, supposedly laden with muni
tions of war for . the Madriz army in
Nicaragua, sailed under sealed orders
to put In at Port- Belize, British Hon
duras, where there is no cable, and
change ier peaceful dress of a mer
chantman for the war paint of a fight
ing ship.
Backed with what they believe is
evidence of such a plan, the represent
atives of the Estrada faction In Wash
ington are preparing to ask the United
States to have warships off the Nlc-
araguan coast watch the vessel.
PENSION FUND IS FOUNDED
Steel Corporation Sets Aside $8,-
000,000 for Its Men.
NEW YORK, May 4.The United
States Steel . Corporation today an
nounced that it had established a fund
of $8,000,000 for pension purposes and
would consolidate this fund with th
4,000,000 fund heretofore created by
Andrew Carnegie.
This Joint fund will be administered
for the benefit of employes by a board
selected Jointly by the corporation and
Mr. Carnegie.
SALE OF ALCOHOL DECRIED
American Pharmaceutical Associa
tion Would Eliminate Its Sale.
RICHMOND, Va.. May 4. The Amer
ican Pharmaceutical Association today
placed itself on record as advocating
the abolition of alcohol as a commodity
of sale In all American drug stores and
earnestly urged the elimination of all
traffic in what are termed "habit-form
ing drugs."
RANCHER GORED TO DEATH
Neighbors Powerless to Save Man
From Attack by Bull.
SEATTLE, May 4. George Jones, a 70-year-old
rancher of Edmonds, 15 miles
north of Seattle, was gored to death by
an angry bull today.
Jones was leading the beast, which sud
denly charged and tossed him into the air
several times. A number of neighbors
witnessed the tragedy but were helpless.
Xew Building Announced.
EUGENE, Or.. May 4. (Special.) F. L.
Chambers announced this afternoon that
he would build a two-story brick 4o by
SO on his lot south of the one on which
I ! mcnt store. The Chambers building is
I leased and will be completed by Fall.
SENATE REGULARS
E
6rganization Meant to
Block Insurgents.
CONFERENCE IS BELLIGERENT
Intention Is to Force Action on
President's Bills.
IDEA INDORSED BY TAFT
Aldrich, Who AVill Lead Movement,
Points Out Party Danger From
Permitting Defeat of Admin
istration's Programme,
WASHINGTON, May 4. Through tie
formation today of an organization which
Its leaders assert represents a clear ma
jority of the entire Senate and Is to be
made up wholly of regular Republicans, a
movement was started, to settle whether
the Senate eball remain conservative, be
come radical, or be thrown into political
chaos as far as concerns any coherent
policy on the Administration: programme.
Senator Aldrich called the regular Re
publicans together and confronted them
with a grim description of the possible
political effect of their apparent defeat
at the hands of the Insurgent Republi
cans and Democrats in the fight over the
traffic agreement section of the Adminis
tration railroad bill. He asked his as
sociates whether they were ready to
submit to domination by such a com
bination. Any such, surrender, he warned
them, meant failure of the Taft policies
and the downfall of conservative control
not only in Congress but in the Republi
can party generally.
Coalition Declared Imperative.
Someone reminded Senator Aldrich that
the Senators then eathereil tnth,.
were not in agreement on all points,
whereupon he replied they must get to
gether and agree to stand together and
let the details be secondary. Otherwise,
ne said. Congress would adjourn without
accomplishing a single item of the Taft
programme.
The entire tone of this conference
was belligerent toward the Insurgents.
This was the dominant note: "Let us
get together and stand v as a unit
against every Insurgent proposition.
If the insurgents propose anything
good, we'll take It over bodily and 'put
It through as our own; if they propose
anjining baa, we ll stamp It out."
Taft Pledged to Plan.
It was said that President Taft had
been kept fully advised of the situa
tion and was entirely In sympathy with.
the plan and virtually pledjd to it.
It was said in behalf of the conferees
that while the measures resorted to
were heroic, they were necessary in
defense of the Administration and the
integrity of the Republican party and
as a means to any effective legislation
whatever.
To Senator Aldrich was given the
leadership of the new movement. He
left late today for Rhode Island and
will not return before Tuesday. The
plan meanwhile is to "mark time" and
hold the fort." There will be many
conferences at the White House and
elsewhere to perfect the militant plan.
The intention Is to avoid test votes on
any subject of Importance until next
week.
Conservative Majority Gone.
Every hour brings additional evi
dence of the widening breach between
the regulars and the Insurgents in
both Houses. Conservative Republican
leaders with hardly an exception con
fess that in neither House is there a
coherent majority. Even those unfa
miliar as yet with the plans of the
new Senate organization seem to be
awaiting the return of President Taft
to see what. If anything, he can do to
get at least some remnants of his pro
gramme through Congress. As mat
ters stand tonight the prospect from
the Republican point of view is any
thing but alluring.
The situation has developed almost
without halt from the beginning ot
the last session, when the warfare be
gan in jthe House over the Speakership
and the adoption of the rules.
Split Dates Far Back.
Some locate the beginning of the
split as far back as the 59th Congress
and trace It down to the suddenly
widening break of last year's tariff
session, since when there bas been lit.
tie semblance of harmony on the ma
jority side, especially in the House.
The Inability of the two factions of the
Republican party to get together Is the
Immediate cause of danger to the legis
lative programme. Each side blames the
other. The insurgents say the fault lies
in the arrogance and intolerance of the
long-time leaders of the majority toward
the progressive policies represented by
most of the Republicans of the Middle
West. The regulars charge the Insurgents
are simply trying to destroy the Re
publican party by attempting to discredit
Its time-honored leadership and principles
and to ride over the ruins to power.
Both Sides Sincere.
The striking thing about the whole
situation, to the Impartial observer, is the
evidently sincere conviction by each party
that it is, Itself, loyal to Republicanism
iConcluded oa Face &..
NOWPUMGOMBN