V DEBTOR ONOHflD STRIPPED IN DEAL Steel Trust Helped to Get Iron Range. BULLION GROWS 700 FOLD Victim Blames Baptist Minis ter .'ore Than Rockefeller. OIL MAN TO BE WITNESS Engineer Rj n Wm Ordered to Id Cost of Mlssabo Itallroad to Oimmlwloii to Jutlfy Ore Katrs Charged. WASHINGTON. Not. II. Alfred Mer rltt. of Duluth, Minn.. flrt president of the Duluth. Mlssabe Northern Rall rosd. who .tried himself a "lumber Jsck." unacquainted with the method! of the -money trust - told the House Steel Trust Investigating committee to. ,lar that through loans of lees than 1. ftnn.soo from John I. Rockefeller, he had lost hl holdings In the Mlssabe Iron mines and the railroad property n..w owned by the Tnlted States Steel Corporation and estimated to be worth to.1y aa high a $700.00O.O0. Mrrltt and his brother. Leonldas M.rrltt. who will testify tomorrow, were among the original mine owners In the Lake Superior region and part owners and builders of the Duluth. Mlssabe A Northern Railroad. The eld rr Merrlt declared that he was Induced. thrnuKh F. D. Gates. Mr. Rockefeller's secretary In charge of his charitable work.- to put up all hla holdings aa collateral for loana from Mr. Rocke feller In U9I and 1S93. One loan waa for :.o0. Mlalater A 14a raeae. r.atea, he said, waa a Baptist p'reach er. In whom be had confidence. The witness related how. two. months after he had put up his collateral mi-Jt Mr. Rockefeller during the panic of llfl. Rockefeller called In the loan. Tiring him 24 hours to raise t:0.0OO. and that being unable to raise tha money, he and hla brother lost their property. He admitted that Mr. Rocke. Teller offered him an opportunity to buy hla property back within a year, but declared that the oil king told fi nanciers to "keep handa off and that he waa unable to raise money any where- Dlspute aa to the nature of the transaction arose when A. A. Reld, rounset for the United States Steel Corporation, said that the Merrttta had made actual sales of their stock hold ings to Rockefeller to raise money and that they had never taken advantage of the opportunity to repurchase with in a year. Another. Mr. Reld declared, had redeemed his stock and secured his pro rata share at l:o a share when It waa taken orer at the time of the or ganisation of the t'nlted Statea Steel Corporation. Rockefeller Be Tallea. Tha Introduction of Mr. Rockefeller"! name In thla manner almost resulted In the Issuance of aubpena ducea tecum for him to appear before the commit tee with the contract made at the time of the Merrltt loans. Representative Heal!, of Tetas. moved that this be done. No objection were heard when Chairman Stanley put the motion, but tha committee decided later In the executive seaslon not to call Mr. Rocke feller until Leonldaa Merrltt had tes tified. The Menitta were first parties to a transaction with Mr. Rockefeller and others In the formation of the Lake Superior Consolidated Iron Mines. In this tha mines of the region of tha Duluth. Mlssabe at Northern were con solidated. Out or thla a suit by tha Merrttta against Rockefeller developed en the ground of misrepresentation of the value of mining properties turned in by t:.e Rockefeller Interests. Offer rrasa Jha IX Rehura, v Subsequently Rockefeller paid the Merrttta 32.ooo la settlement for this. Before the settlement and after he had lost hla holdings and ceased to be president of the railroad. Mr. Merrltt testified. Mr. Gates went to him and aid that Mr. Rockefeller wanted him to continue as president of the road for another yeur. "Waa that the Baptist preacher Gate, olio .a me to you?" asked Chairman Stanley. "Tea. Mr. Merrltt replied. "He aald Mr. Rockefeller had confidence In ma and knew that L through my acquaint ance witn tha boys on the range, would be able to get more shipping bualcess than anyone els could do. I guesa that waa true." "Then Rev. Lr. Cates seemed to be serving the Lord and John D. Rocke feller, didn't her the chairman Inter rupted. "But I refused the offer." Mr. Merrltt answered emphatically. "I told Cates that I couldn't retain my manhood and tsork for Rockefeller." Traaaarf lea la I atria-ate. The Intricacies of the transactions war Involved and with difficulty drawn from the witness. Representa tive Beall. of Texas, finally summed the matter up thus:. "Tou d- know this. then, before you tCveciwdi aa 1 ae - POLICE JOB LISTED WITH PROFESSIONS MANKIND S SINS MAKE CAClIXG, SAYS CIintCHMAN. Doctor. IJtvryrr. Minl-tcr and Officer Are Among Learned," Is Preface to Chiefs Talk. OREGON C1TT. Or, Nov. (Spe cial.) Classification of policemen aa members of the learned professions, along with doctor, lawyers and min isters, was made by President T. J. Gary, of the Congregational Brother hood, when he Introduced Acting Chief of Police Slover. of Portland, at a meet ing of the organisation here last night. President Gary explained that tha ministers, lawyers and doctors made their living because of the sins of man kind, and pointed out that Mr. Slover qualified In the same category. Mayor Rushlight, of Portland, was to have been the principal speaker, but delegated Mr. Slover In hla stead. Acting Chief Slover urged the neces sity In cities of special officers whose province should be the care of chil dren. He strongly Indorsed the curfew law and dwelt at length on tha quali fications that must be possessed If a man Is to be a good policeman. Tact, he said, was perhaps the most necessary In the regulation of children, and in appeasing the wrath of the children's parents, tact, diplomacy and other qual ities are required, he said. PATRONS FIGHT. CARMEN Seattle Police Time Bon to So That Law, May Bo Obeyed. SEATTLE. Wash.. Nov. II. Special) With tha police standing aside and holding a stop watch on the fights be tween passengers and conductora and motortnoR. the Seattle, Renton South ern and Seattle Electrlo companies are complaining of a lack of protection from the city authorities. They aay they are practically helpless against the rowdyism of a vicious element of the city, who declare themselves rep resentatives of the people of Rainier Valley, but who really constitute an Infinitesimal part of that community. Mayor Dllllng's defense to thla charge Is that be declines to have policemen act as Judges In the brawls that have become frequent of late, especially on the Seattle Renton Southern. The executive also has decreed that If these lights detain the cars on which they occur more than Ave mlnutee the train crew must be arrested on the spot. Firtbi iCE MOVEMENT' OUT Nome Report Roadstead Will Re Closed Soon by Floes. NOME. Alaska. Nov. II. The first Ice movement In Bering Sea thla sea son moved down from the Arctic and drifted Into the roadstead. The floes did not remain long and aoon were carried out to aea by the tide. The oldest pioneer can recall no season In which the Ice has been so late. The floes are moving southward and It Is believed the roadstead will aoon be closed. The Chamber of Commerce. City Council and other organisations met today and Indorsed the movement to secure Congressional legislation for a harbor In the Snake River to afford protection to Nome's mosquito fleet, which suffera severely every Winter from the ice Jam In the open roadstead. 1:30 OWL CARS TO BE TRIED On Sunday Morning- Street Railway Company Will Start Move. Beginning Sunday morning at 1:S0 the streetcar company will start Its "owl" car service. Announcement was made yesterday by officiate of their In tention to put on one more car on each line to make the run at that tlma every morning of the week, except Monday The company has decided to put on thla service aa an experiment. Cara will be run from their terminal points In the down-town district to the end of the lines, from which they will return to the barns. Thla will necesal. tate a service on some lines as late as 1:10 A. M. The only exceptions made In thla 1:10 A. M. schedule are the Oregon City, Casadero and Vancouver lines. HOUND DIES FROM DRINK Dally Round of Saloons Fatal. So Veterinary Surgeons Say. TRENTON. N. J Nov. 21. (Special.) Ben Franklin, a valuable English greyhound owned by Edward Tachopp, is dead, and the cause of bis demise, veterinary aurgeona agree, waa Bright' a disease superinduced by alcoholism. Ben could drink more beer In a day than any two men, and for . tha paat two years ha scarcely drew a sober breath. Those who knew Ben's mother aay that she was even a worse tippler than her offspring. He had a regular round of saloons to cover almost dally. CASTRO VICTOR IN BATTLE VeneineU's ex-President Return at Head or Great Army. MEXICO CITT. Nov. II. A dispatch to the Nuevo Era from Caracas today aays that General Clprlano Castro, ex prealdent of Venexuela, has won In a battle which occurred In Venexuela day before yeaterday. having entered his native country with thousands of follower REBELS MASSING OUTSIDE HflllUG Attack on City Is Be lieved .Imminent. BESIEGERS ARE WELL ARMED Canton Officials Reported De serting Posts. ATTACK ON PEKIN PLANNED Republican Commander in Southern City Holds Troop In Readiness for Movement Against Im perial Capital. SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. II. Revolu tionary, troops are assembling In great numbers Just outside of Nanking, ac cording to a cable dispatch received today by the Chinese Free Press. Ad vices say thst the troops sre com manded by General Chao Shu Chlng. former General under the Manchu gov ernment. The attack on Nanking Is expected to begin within a few hours. The revolutionists are well supplied with arms and ammunition. Hongkong advices to the Chinese Dally Paper say that the former Vice roy of Canton. Chong Ming Chi. has cut off his queue and gone to Europe. District Magistrate Ten Ping has abandoned his post to the Republican party and fled. The Commander-in-chief of the republican army In Canton la aendlng one regiment north and will head tha other troops In his command In tha attack on Pekln. . AMERICAN" 'WOMAIT 'IS SLAIN Kurllier Confirmation of Massacre of Foreigners Received. PEKIN. Nov. II. The killing of for eigners at Slan Fu, Shan SI province, has been further confirmed by two Chl nesa students who have arrived from that city. During the fighting In Stan Fu a mob attacked the China Inland Mission, Just outalde the city. The mob murdered Mrs. Beck man. who Is said to be an American, and five of the mission chil dren. Mr. Beckman was wounded, but escaped, saving an Infant. The surviving foreigners were shel tered by Chinese Christians and subse quently departed eastward toward the railroad. J. C. Keyte, an English Baptist mis sionary, will leave Pekln for Slan Fu tomorrow to ascertain tha facts con cerning the murders. He will go un- (Concluded on Fase 2.) . . i i - ..... ee eeeeeeeeee - j NOW LET THE LADIES SHOW WHAT THEY CAN DO j I H INDEX TO TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 63 degree; minimum. 44 decree. TODAY'S Fair; westerly winds. Foreign. Rebel attack on Nanking le believed Im minent. Pae 1. Suffraxettes attempt to storm Parliament meets defeat at hands of police. Page i. Domestic. Kansas lllxrs strain ears to bear girl tell of tar party. Pass 1. IdcNamara defense and prosecution clash over labor theory. Pace 6. Not a gray head Is seen on Jury to try Mrs. Patterson. Pace S. San Francisco Jewelry salesman murdered and IJOOO In Jewels stolen. Psce . Uneasiness felt alorg Mexican border. Page . Labor delerates will continue on National Civic Federation, page 6. National. Oovernment flies appeal In short haul rate cases. Page 2. Witness In steel Inquiry testtfles that Hocke feller aided steel trust to get $700,000,000 property. Page 1. Oovernment orders warships to Ban to Do mingo. Pace 2. Pacific fleet leaves 8an FTnaclaco for ma neuvers in Hawaii. Page 4. Pacific Northwest. Seattle water supply still demoralised; floods recede. Page . State and owners decide on 1450.000 aa price for Oregon City locks. Page - Policeman's calling Is classed with learned profession by Oregon City speaker. Page 1. Gambling table quarrel In blind pig at Weed, CaL, ends In murder. Page. T. Sport. Veen Oregg. famous southpaw, tells ef his alary troubles with Cleveland basebaH club. Page a. College schedules far enough gone to tell Northwest stars. Page s. Commercial and Marine. Only T000 bales of hops left In Oregon grow ers' bands. Pace 21. Bright weather In Argentina depresses wheat markets. Pace 20. Railroad and industrial stocks advancing. Page 21. Portland firm gets lumber contract tor world's largest railroad ferry. Page 20. Portland and Vicinity. Downtown business man seek relief from an noyance caused by street orators. Page 12. Worklngman carrying dinner bucket answers Gipsy Smith's appeal. Page 1. County Commissioners Inquire into right of telephone company to use county road for poles and wires. Page 14. W. T. Slater addresses fitate Bar Association on unlntelllglhlllty of Judiciary amend ment passed By people. Page IX Chinaman says he paid money to city of ficial for gambling protection. Page 9. Entry list for fifth annual Horse Show Is announced. Page IK. Retired Methodist Episcopal minister ar retted ' on accusations of young girls. Page 14. New flreboat David Campbell to be ready next August; contract la let. Page 4. 10. I.. Thompson says reduction of tariff on raw wool will endanger big Oregon industry. Page 14. Seven chicken heads are exhibit in court In trial of alleged tblef. Page 1. Seattle prisoner Is brought to Portland to trace bad-deed gsnc. Page 15. MILLION ASKED FOR ROAD Steps Taken In Flan for Bonding Chehalls County, Wash. ABERDEEN, Wash., Nov. !L (Spe cial.) Initial, steps toward bonding Chehalls County for 11.000,000 to build permanent good roads, to organize a company to finish the uncompleted part of the Aberdeen to Westport road, and to Install and operate a ferry In connec tion with the road, were among the important mattera taken tip at the reg ular weekly luncheon of the Aberdeen Chamber of Commerce at the Hotel Washington. The proposal probably will be pre sented to tha voters at the general election. SUFFRAGETTES ARE BEATEN If BATTLE Attempt to Storm Par liament Fails. LONDON POLICE VICTORIOUS Prominent Women Are Among Those Under Arrest. MUCH PROPERTY DAMAGED Premier's Refusal to Pledge Gov ernment to BUI Giving Equal Suffrage to Both Sexes Leads to Disturbance. LONDON, Nov. II. The suffragettes a red badly at the hands of the police tonight. They had threatened to force thejr way Into the House of Commons and make a protest on the floor against the Prime Minister's refusal to pledge the government to a bill giving equal suffrage to both sexes, but they failed to reach the entrance to Parliament. Thwarted by the police, who arrested 220 women and three, men, the suf fragettes resorted to a campaign of window smashing. Driven from Par liament Square by the police, 1800 of whom were on duty, the women, ac companied by sympathizers and gangs 'of rowdies, proceeded through White hall, armed with bags of stones, con cealed under their coats, and broke windows In public offices, the Liberal headquarters and the National Liberal Club. They extended their operations to the Strand, where windows of the Postofflce Bank and other private con cerns suffered from the onslaught. Premier Angers Women. The militant tactics of the suffra gettes followed a statement by Pre mier Asqulth, that the government was unable to Introduce a bill to enfran chise women, as the cabinet was di vided on the question, but would allow an amendment to be introduced to the proposed manhood suffrage bill, leav ing It to the House of Commons to de cide whether women should be given a vote. The suffragettes met early in the evening In Caxton Hall, less than a mile from Parliament Square, and, after adopting a resolution declaring that the Prime Minister's denial of their re quest was a grave and unpardonable Insult to women, called for volunteers for "dangerous service." A deputation of B0 women, headed by Mrs. Pethlck Lawrence, accompanied by Immense crowds, started shortly for the House of Commons to present the resolution or take whatever action was (Concluded on Page 3.) . i i .... . r t - -- . . . . . ............ . s t-V X 7 CHICKEN HEADS art rniiRT tfiunT nuu vjWUI 1 I ixiiu i MAN CAUGHT IN" COOP, DEAD FOWLS AROCXD HIM. Judge Must Decide Whether Slaugh ter Constitutes Theft of Which Dan Riley 19 Accused. Chicken heads for a second time re cently formed the basic evidence In a larceny case, when Dan Riley went to trial In the Municipal Court yesterday on a charge of raiding the chicken coop of John Norrls at 19 Klllingsworth avenue. Before the blanched face of the prisoner the heads of seven Buff Cochins were dumped on the table, after the defense had made strenuous efforts to exclude the exhibit. Norrls told of hearing a noise In the chicken-house and of his strategical maneuvers to keep the exit covered without going too near the Intruder. "Tou are not a brave man," said the attorney for the defense. "I may live the longer," said Norrls. Norrls said he whistled, to let the Intruder know he was about, until an other Inmate of the house came, when he went across the street for Patrol man Mallon. Mallon, with gun and flashlight entered the coop and found Riley, who was just released from jail that day, pretending to be in a drunken sleep, while the decapitated chickens lay around him, some still kicking. "Ton don't know that he wrung their heads off, do you?" asked the at torney. "No," answered Mallon, "he may have bit them off." Whether slaughter of chickens. on the premises constitutes the charge that he "did take, steal and carry away," is a question the court took under advise ment. The City Attorney was advised to file a new complaint for trespass, against the contingency that the lar ceny charge may fall. SCHOLARSHIP TAKES DROP University of Washington Students Flunked and Conditioned In Scores. UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON, Seattle, Nov. 21. (Special.) With 14 students flunked this year and E70, or one-fourth the attendance at the uni versity conditioned, scholarship stand ing at Washington is In a worse con dition than It has been for years. The number of conditions are just double that of last month. "Such a condition Is a disgrace to the university," said Dean Sewall Hag- gett today. I can see no reason or cause for such a showing as this. Some thing Is radically wrong somewhere, and the trouble must be in the student himself. Those who have received con ditions should be careful to remove them at once as they are a stain on their scholarship throughout the sem ester." The new rules which makes It pos sible for a student to get a flunk, pro bation or condition at the end of a month instead of six months are large ly responsible for the poor showing. Students will play along, according to the faculty, until toward the end of the year and then will cram enough to get through. TURKEY MARKET WAVERS Middle West Flood Coast With Birds and Price Takes Drop. ROSEBURO, Or, Nov. 21. (Special.) Aa a result of flooding the Northwest buying centers with turkeys from the Middle Western States, the Douglas County market Is today In a state of uncertainty. A week ago Roseburg buyers were offering 25 cents a pound for dressed birds, while today the same class of produce Is tentatively quoted at 20 cents. Most of the Douglas County buyers are refusing to accept turkeys until such time as the market becomes normal. CLEW TO LING IS FOUND Arrest of Murderer of Elsie Slegel May Come Soon. CLEVELAND, Nov. 21. The arrest of Leon Ling, sought for two years or more for the murder of Elsie Selgel in New York, may follow action of the Cleveland police who tonight tele graphed the authorities of a Texas city asking them to find Ling. Information on which the police acted reached them as the result of a tons feud. ITALIANS REPULSE TURKS Aeroplanes, Acting as Scouts, Tell of Enemy's Position. TRIPOLI, Nov. 21. The Italians re port that the Turks were repulsed yes terday in three outpost attacks with 29 killed. Five aeroplanes, returning to camp, reported that there had been no change In the Turkish position. They succeeded In dropping bombs Inside the Turkish camp, which was destroyed. At the same time the Italian armored cruiser Carlo Alberto bombarded the village of Amrus and the fort of Henni, a few miles from Tripoli. AVIATOR FALLS 400 FEET Kald Belton's Injuries, Say Physi cians, May Be Fatal. CHICAGO, Nov. 21. Kaid Belton, a former English army officer, studying aviation in the Pullman field here, fell 400 feet in an aeroplane today. His Injuries, physicians say, may be J. filDI TCI 10 UIIIL ILLLU 01 STORY OF TARRING Villagers Strain Ears to Catch Words. DAY IN COURT DRAMATIC Mary Chamberlain Is Csinj as She Recites Great Wrong. DECOY GIVES NEW FACTS Barber Who Led Schoolma'am Into Trap Relates How She Thwarted Part of Rustics' Plan to Humiliate Her. LINCOLN CENTER, Kan.. Nov. 21. This was Mary Chamberlain's day In court In the "tar party" case. Facing three of the men accused of com plicity In attacking her on a country road north of Shady Bend on the night of October 7. In a crowded room she told of her horrifying experience. Her story was dramatic for its sim plicity. She gave a coherent narra tive of the episode in a low. even voice. Not once did she entirely lose her self control. Nor did she speak with any feeling against the defendants. Had she been telling of the experiences of some oth er person, she could not have been calmer. Jury Listens Intently. Throughout the time she was on the stand she watched the Jury, and every Juryman gave her story the closest at tention. On cross-examination her story was unshaken. A crowd of men, the majority of whom have attended every session of the trial in the hope that they might be present when she told her story, strained their ears in an effort to catch her every word, and perhaps a hundred persons vied with one another outside the doors for places near the entrance In the hope of catching a word of her testimony. State Rests Case. The girl was on the witness stand about half an hour. The defense re served the right to recall her later. With the completion of her testimony, the state rested its case. The defense immediately began its examination of witnesses, and 10 had been questioned when adjournment was taken tonight. It waa not the freshness of Misa Chamberlain's story that held the in terest of the throng, for she told little that was not known. Her narrative set forth how Edward Ricord, a vil lage barber, decoyed her into the coun try on the pretense of going to a dance, of his alleged Insults and their decision to return home; how, when they had gone a short distance, a party of five masked men dragged her from the buggy, while Ricord fled, and the subsequent pouring of tar on her body and limbs by one man, while others rubbed It In with their hands; how by this experience she was rendered un conscious and later awoke to find her self being driven home by the com panion who had deserted her, and how the tar clung to her body for days after the attack. Asallants Kot Recognised. She said she failed to recognize any of her assailants. The different view points of the plaintiff and at least one of the defendants regarding the case stood out plainly when the defense of fered the testimony of James Booze, a 'few minutes after Miss Chamberlain had finished her dramatic story. Booze started to the "tarring," but did not reach there. "Why did you wish to go?" he was asked by Prosecutor McCanless. "I Just wanted to se the fun." he replied. "By fun you mean the process of putting tar on Miss Chamberlain?" "Yes." Boose Under Arrest. . Booze Is under arrest but not on trial now. The three defendants now be fore the court are Sherrlll Clark. A. N. Slmms and John Schmidt, charged with complicity In the attack. A. N. Slmma, Uie first defendant to take the stand, testified regarding con versation at the mill. "I heard them Bay it was the Inten tion to hold up Mary and Ed," he said. "Chester Anderson eaid It was the plan to catch the couple in a compromising position at a designated point." It was noticeable that not a woman besides Miss Chamberlain and her mother was in the courtroom. The rule regarding the exclusion of minors was strictly enforced. None of the witnesses who testified during the morning session gave any detailed testimony regarding the actual act of "tarring." The prosecution used the witnesses simply In an effort to establish a chain of evidence showing the three defendants now on trial were Involved in planning the attack and actually started to attend the "party." It Is the contention of these three men that they took no part In spreading the paint and were not present when it was done. Man's Remarks Indecent. Miss Chamberlin described Rtcord's Concluded en Pace a.)