- . - ' . .... - , i - ZTZZ : PORTLAND. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 191T. - PRICE FIVE CENTS. 11 v. aj. BOY SCOUTS ARE OF MILITIA CHARGES TO SAVE AIRSHIP 'S POLICEMAN AFTER T THIEF, SHOT DEAD SEATTLE . PATROLMAN KILLED CHASIXG PICKPOCKET. REVIEWED BY KING ARE MULTIPLYING PRESIDENT AVERS CHEERS CONCLAVE QUEEN AND OTHERS OF ROYAL COWBOTS, . ANGRY AFTER : NO FLIGHT, ROPE, CRAFT. FAMILY PRESENT. i t t DEATHS FROM EH MAN MILLIONS WOLGAST BLOWS FARMERS GAINERS KNOCK OUT MORAN Taft Answers Critics of Reciprocity. ISSUE NOT ONE OF PARTY Wheat Prices Fixed Abroad, Not Ruled by Local Demand. MARKET TO BE BROADENED Cost of I.ivlnff Will Reduced I.lt tie. If t All Policy 8me as Tht AdYoratrd by Mc kinley and Blaine. INDIANA POU5, July President Taft put the rartlnr touch on his part In the celebration of thU city s safe and sans Fourth In a speech on Canadian reciprocity at the Marion Club ban quet tonight. The President made hla answer to the arguments of other Republicans that reciprocity a he has proposed It. Is not nod Republican doctrine. lie sal.I that reciprocity as presented to ronjrress by him. differed, if at all. only :!htly from reciprocity as ad vocated br James (i. Blaine and Presi dent WcKtnley. Col or Living Not Affected. t Replying to the contention that reel proclty would be wholly at the expense of the farmer and In the Interest of the wage-earners of the large cities. Mr. Taft declared that In his Judgment, "the reciprocity agreement will not greatly reduce the cost of living. If at a'.I." Atthough the sun was not consulted by those In charge of the celebration of the Fourth, and the temperature hov ered around 119 on the streets, most of the day. the President enjoyed his part In the celebration. In spite of the crowded programme and the fact that his collars would not stand more than 10 minutes at a time. The President was the guest of ex-Vlce-Presldent Fairbanks. He had breakfast at the Fairbanks home and later In the morning reviewed a parade of floats at the Indiana Soldiers' and Sailors Monument. Woman Struck by Bullet. The only unpleasant Incident of the day ocurred In front of this stand a half hour before his arrival, when Mrs. Harry Tutewller. occupying one of the reserved seats, was struck on the thigh by a spent bullet fired by some one whom the police tonight had not Iden tified. Mrs. Tutewller was not seri ously hurt and the President was not Informed of the accident. The President arrived at the State Fair Grounds In time to witness a pre arranged collision between two rail road locomotives. The two locomotives starting under full steam on the same track, went together at high speed 100 yards from where the President sat. Both engines were reduced to scrap Iron. Issue Not Party One. President Taft began by discussing reciprocity with respect to the conten tion that It la a party issue, a conten tion with which he did not agree. "It is said that this reciprocity cov ers competitive products of each coun try." said the President, "and that the reciprocity of the former Republican leaders was Intended to Include only a lowering or abolition of duties on products of other countries which did not compete with products of this country. "Therefore It is ssld that the Cana dian reciprocity, as now proposed. Is nothing bat a Democratic measure, re ducing or abolishing the tariff on goods or products from Ganada that com pete with those raised by our own peo ple, and that It Is especially Injurious because It is so drawn as to prejudi cially affect the farmers of the country ss a class. "The Republican party In their last National platform declared In favor of tariff duties which would measure only the difference In the cost of production of articles here and of articles abroad. The Canadian reciprocity agreement squares exactly with this doctrine. Competition Is Nominal. Another answer to the objection of Republican frlenda who denounce Ca nadian reciprocity as a heresy la that the amount of competition which Is to take place In our markets between Canadian producta and those of the Vnlted States nnder this agreement Is very much less than they would by their general statements have you be lieve. In the first place, they say that by free trade In agricultural products we are c'vlng them a market of 90.000.000 peop'.e and taking only a market of 1.000.000 people for the same things, and that necessarily they de rive greater advantage. As a matter of fact. In the vast bulk of our agri cultural products, they can furnish no competition whatever, while this agree ment admits all our products free into Canada. "It is said that this Canadian reci procity agreement Is made wholly at ' the expense of the farmers and only In the Interest of those who would have farm products at a less price, to wit. the wage-earners of the large cities. Company of 55.000 From All Part of Kingdom Show How Move ment Is Crowing. WINDSOR. Kngland. July 4. King George, accompanied by Queen Mary and surrounded by a brilliant staff of distinguished officers of the navy and with other members of the royal fam ily, reviewed In Windsor Park today an army of S5.000 Boy Scouts, gathered from all ports of the United Kingdom and from some of the colonies. The weather was beautiful. Drawn up In a huge seml-clrcle In front of the royal lnclosure. the boys, dressed In the universally adopted Scouts' uniform of blue, khaki or gray, with flat-brimmed khaki bats and bril liant neckerchiefs, formed a picture. They were drawn up in eight di visions, the plsce of honor being occu pied by 1000 Kind's Scouts, selected from the various troops as a guard of honor for the King. Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Robert Baden Powell, the chief Scout, was In com mand and at his order patrols of the selected King's Scouts eave an exhibi tion of ambulance work. After this, when the King had taken up his posi tion opposite the center of the semi circle, there wss a wild scene as the entire army of boys, at the sound of the "scouts' call." charged at full speed toward him. each of the patrols shout ing Its own peculiar cell as It advanced. Then the "alert" sounded and. like clockwork, they all stood still and si lent for a few moments to enable them to recover their breath, after which they sang In wonderful unison two of their popular Scout choruses. The King expressed his srratineation at the success .of the movement. LOVE LAUGHS AT HOLIDAY Ore son "V" Boy Makes Tacoma Of ficials Give Wedding License. TOCO MA. July 4 (Special.) Tacoma officials had to open np the Courthouse today for an Oregon Uni versity boy. despite the fact that It was a legal holiday. Marrisge Clerk Nelson rould not re sist the appeal of I. F. Foot and Nettle Tallman. of Sumner, Or., who wanted to see the carnival and get married on one trip to the city. Foot is a student at the University cf Oregon. His bride 111 enter the same university next FalL Rev. W. A. Moore lster per formed the ceremony. ELY FACES PERIL IN AIR Aviator Forced by Engine Trouble to End Flight Qnlckly. RENO. Nev July 4. After barely skimming a clump of trees In the start. running the gauntlet of cold and hot air strata above the Truckee River and attaining a height of BOO feet, only to be warned by grinding noises In his motor that the machine was crippled. Eugene Ely made a perilous but suc cessful descent here this afternoon In bis Curtlss biplane after a flight of five miles. A broken wrlstptn caused the engine trouble. ERIE ROAD NOT WANTED Canadian Pacific President Denies Reported Negotiations. MONTREAL. CaL. July 4. Thomas Shaughnessy, president of the Can adian Pacific Railroad Company, made this statement today: 'Neither the Canadian Pacific nor any of Its allied companies has at any time been negotiating for a controlling Interest in, or a working arrangement with, the Erie Railroad Company. Such an alliance would not be of advantage to either company." .' -: ' - - r - - : , I ,. UK -.. v -rf-- ' -.- . - Photos copyrighted by the American Prefs Association. ABOVE KI RKt KIVI SWORD FROM LORD M4.YOR OP LODO.. BELOW SCER IX WESTMINSTER ABDEY JIST BEFOnE COROXATIOJf, SHOWING KING SUBBOUSDED BY OFFICIALS OF STATE, W ITH Q.IECN OX RIGHT, FROM A PHOTOGRAPH BY SIR RKNJAMI.N STOXB, OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE COROXATIOX. $6000 Offered Yearly to Aged Ministers. DISCIPLES OF CHRIST MEET R. A. Long, Kansas City Ad herent, Is Benefactor. HUGE ASSEMBLY FORMS Forty Preachers and 38 Widows Are Creed's Relief Family Members of Christian Denomination Come by Tliousands. Cheer from the outset for the big gest churchy convention ever held in Portland was provided yesterday by a multl-mllllonalre. Scarcely had the Annual' International Missionary Convention of Christian Churches completed its organization of members gathered from every point of the globe when R. A. Long, of Kansas City, announced that he would give $6000 a year for five years to the fund for the relief of aged ministers. "I make this contribution," said Mr. Long, "contingent upon the raising of from 120.000 to 130.000 by the Brother hood of the Disciples of Christ and provided I live five years. I propose to give a fifth as much as Is raised by the brotherhood." Beneractor Id Thanked. The board of managers of the Amer ican Christian Missionary Society, thanked Mr. Long, and recommended that the brotherhood take up the offer by raising 120.000. or more. With delegates streaming Into the reception rooms at Grace Methodist Church by the hundreds from every Incoming train and boat, with every local member of the Christian denomi- Concluded on Pars IB.) FIRST PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN t X I ... : : .. - ; -: ; - ... : : ' , . , I . js- f-. --'j' v.'j'- ' I Pv - t X .. I rZy - A- 1 - .M ,-v Li I 1 .t. T , mi,-, J mjM.JMtMai 4 J ,1 ... .j,.,,- i,-W'Wl,'',-inM 1 in ir. aramnir ....tiissisi t .. J 1 V j L v : I H-- .-4r-,w - za l r Disappointed Crowd About to Throw Aeroplane and -Aviators Into Yel lowstone When Troops Come. GLENDIVE, Mont., July 4. (Spe cial.) A company of the state militia today, by quick action and , pointed bayonets, prevented an angry crowd headed b a number of cowboys from running an aeroplane into the Yellow stone River, because It did not fly. Felix Schmiclt. a Chicago aviator, and his mechanician, Eugene Grubbin, fled panic-stricken .-. when the cowboys yelled for them to be thrown Into the river' with the airship. , Major D. J. Donohue, of the Second Regiment, Montana National Guard, saved the day for the airship. ' .Major Donohue sprang Into prominence last Sunday by Impersonating the Immortal Custer In a vrVid reproduction of Cus ter's last battle with several hundred Crow Indians. Realizing the serious ness of the situation, he ordered the soldiers to fixe their bayonets and charge back the, crowd. ' which already had the machine half way to the river, and was traveling swiftly. Several thousand spectators had waited for several hours for Schmidt to fly and when word was announced there would be no flights, a cowboy yelled to dump the thing into the river. A lariet whistled through the air. en circled itself about the propellor of the the aeroplane, a hundred hands grabbed the rope and with a cowboy astride his horse, a quick trot was made for the Yellowstone's bank. A bugle called the troops Into action and with a detail guarding the machine after Its rescue It was qqulckly at tached by the celebration committee and It Is predicted the City of Glendlye will soon own an aeroplane. Miss Cosey Smith came here as the alleged owner of the machine. SUB-TREASURY HOPE DIMS Secretary Says . Department Does Not Need Addition. OREGOXIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington. July 4. The Secretary of the ' Treasury does not favor a subtreasury at Portland. In a letter to Congressman Lafferty he says the busi ness now is handled without expense and In a satisfactory manner, and there is no need for additional offices of this sort. AT CORONATION OP ENGLAND'S KING ARE RECEIVED IN PORTLAND. Thirteenth Round End of Fierce Bout. AMERICAN RETAINS THE TITLE British Contender for Light : weight Belt. Takes Count.. FOUL CLAIM DISALLOWED English Boxer Shows Great Clever ". ness In Open Fighting, but Fe rocious Ruggedncss of Michi gan Lad Spells His Defeat. SAN' FRANCISCO, July 4. The measured swing of Referee Welsh's arm, toUing off the . fatal. 10 seconds over the writhing and unconscious body of Owen Moran, of England, brought victory to Ad Wolgast in the 13th round of today's International bat tle for the lightweight championship. It was a clean knockout and the de cisive victory was cleanly earned by the rugged strength and terrific pun ishing power of the champion. Right uppercuts to the stomach, fol lowed by a left hook to the Jaw forced the game little English fighter to take the count for the first time In his 11 years In the ring. Moran Becomes Tired. Moran came up undistressed for the unlucky 13th round, although It was plain he was tiring. Wolgast met him with a well-timed rush and forced his way to close quarters. Moran checked him with a left Jab, but was backed against the ropes In his own corner. , Suddenly, Wolgast whipped his right arm free from the clinch and. swinging from his hip, sent his glove crashing (Concluded on Pase Man Steps From Crowd In JUdst of . Pursuit and Fells Peace Guard. Assassin and Other Escape. SEATTLE, July 4. Patrolman H. L. Harris was. shot and almost Instantly killed by an unidentified assassin at Occidental and Washington streets at , o'clock tonight, while he was at tempting to capture a man fleeing from arrest. Harris attempted to ar rest a pickpocket, when the man broke away and ran. The policeman gave chase, firing two shots into the air. As Harris ran af ter. the fugitive another man, appar ently an accomplice, of the pursued. stepped out of the crowd and fired at the policeman. The first shot too'K effect behind the right ear and Harris fell, firing several shots from the side walk before he died. . The man Harris was seeking to ar rest and the one who fired the fatal revolver shot- escaped. The shooting occurred In the center of the wholesale and lodging-house dis tricts, which were thronged with la borers enjoying the Fourth of July evening. Harris is the third policeman to be killed In Seattle In as many months. QUAKE ON COAST SEVERE Shock at 3Count Hamilton Most In tense Ever Experienced. OAKLAND. Cal., July 4. The earth quake of Saturday afternoon was the severest that has ever been experi enced on Mount Hamilton and the damage done is greater than that oc casioned by any former shock. The chief damage to the scientific instru ments is the destruction of the case of the fine Riefler clock and more or less serious damage to the working parts. In addition to this, the 36-lnch tele scope was moved on its concrete pier about three-quarters of an inch to the south. The instrument, however, has been replaced and has suffered no harm. Chimneys of the dwelling houses will have to be rebuilt. A large brick building, which furnished quarters to a number of astronomers, was seri ously damaged and is unsafe for occu pancy. FIRST AID IS POLICE ROLE Emergency Medical Kits Part Seattle Officers' Burden. of SEATTLE. "Wash.. July 4, (Special.) Every member at the Seattle police force went on duty today with several newly-wrapped packages of antiseptic gauze and bandages in his pocket. While Independence day was considered a good one to Inaugurate the carrying of the first aid packages by the po lice, it will be in the future the duty of every policeman to have some of the gauza and bandages on his person ready for any emergency. There is now a stock of 10,000 emerg ency kits on hand and more-will be prepared to insure the policemen of available supplies at all times. FLOODS COVER BULGARIA Damage of $20,000,000 Done and Many Villages Threatened. PHILIPOPOLIS, Bulgaria. July 4. The damage done by the recent floods Is enormous. The monetary loss of estimated at $20,000,000. Many build ings were washed away by the rain swollen, streams and crops and market gardens were ruined in wide areas. Now a water famine threatens the city, as the mains have been uncov ered and so torn apart that a month will be required with their repair. The Inhabitant of many villages In the south of Bulgaria have sought refuge in the mountains. Babes Die by Scores Throughout East. MEN ARE DRIVEN TO SUICIDE Little Hope of Early Relief Held Out by Forecaster. 27 STRICKEN IN CHICAGO Fatalities In New York Number 16, Those In Pittsburg Reach I. Dearth of Ice Adds to Suf fering of People. 4 ' DEATHS CAISKD BY HEAT IN VARIOUS CITIES IN TNITED STATES YESTERDAY. Chicago 2S New York 20 Pittsburg 1C Philadelphia 9 Dubuque 1 Milwaukee 1 Kansas City 5 St. Louis 3 St. Paul and rlclnitv ft Toledo 1 t Springfield. Ill 1 I Davenport, la 1 e Columbus. O 1 X Topeka. Kan 2 Sedalia. Mo 1 Fort Worth 1 Cincinnati. O. 3 Rockford, III 4 Peoria. Ill 4 Des Moines, la , 2 Sioux City. Ia 1 Atchison, Kan... 1 Baltimore. Md 1 Iowa City I Fort Wayne, Ind 1 Lafayette. Ind. 2 CHICAGO. July 4. (Special.) From all over the Middle West dispatches are pouring in tonight with the mes sage that this was the hottest Fourth of July experienced since the records were first kept. From Wnstern Kan sas to the Atlantic, seaboard the ex treme heat exacted Its toll of death. drove men to suicide and left hundreds prostrate and suffering;. It was the third day of an ascending scale of temperatures and the un welcome news is offered tonight that the top of the hill may not yet have been reached. There was rain In the far northwest and a temporary lessening or the thermal stress, hut from that region comes information that six deaths made up the tribute of mortality. Chicago 04 at Midnight. In Chicago, which seems to be a spe- citl victim, the official Government thermometer in the lofty dome of the Federal building registered at one time 102. This Is a rise of three degrees ovr the maximum of Tuesday. With one exception, in June, 1901, it was the highest official temperature ever re corded in this city. In street thermom eters the mercury at midnight Is stand- lni firm at 94. Another night 01 sleeplessness and suffering Is certain, Tonight there is. vague promise of local rains tomorrow, but these are expected to be accompanied by high tempera tures. Dossibly even more humid and cruel than those of the last three days. Chicago"s toll of death today was 27. Horses seemed to suffer more than their masters. Babies Fall br Scores. Despite cooling breezes which sprang up overnight. 20 deaths were recorded In New York. Philadelphia had n!n and Pittsburg 15. and in all three cities there were hundreds of prostrations ol a serious character. In the deatn lists due directly to the heat no account is taken of babies who are dying by scores. The country at large reports an aggregate of more than 50 drown ings for the day, which properly belong In the heat casualties, as the victims were slain while trying to escape from the torridity. Kansas City reports four deaths from heat and a score of prostrations, some of them serious. Topeka, Sedalia and Atchison, Kan., sweltered under a tem perature of 104. . Texas points came within the scope of the superheated area today, and temperatures went skyrocketing. Men Driven to Suicide. In St .Louis street thermometers registered as high as 108 and 110. Two men, driven mad by the heat, took their own lives. The official temperature was 101. Pitsburg experienced temper atures quite as high as those at St. Louis. All through Ohio, Indiana. Illi nois and Southern Michigan, Fourth of July celebrations were curtailed. Chi cago shares with many others the dan ger ql a dearth of ice. Emergency de liveries are credited with saving many lives in the hospitals, and the ice com panies have sent out pleas to private families and hotels to curtail the con sumption of tee as much as possible. It was a Godsend to the poor that they did not have to work In factories today. IConcladxi os Fx J