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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1914)
3 - THE MORXIXG- r ' OKEGOXIAX, CONGRESS EXPECTS TO ADJOURN EARLY Prospect of Agreement to De fer Most of Trust Bills Gives New Hope. CANAL DEBATE TO WAIT 191 1. FOUR YORK ' 'GUNMEN'; ROOMED TO DIE FOR MURDER OF " unmnum, amaAH ROSENTHAL. Senate Coinuiiitee to Hear ex-Ambassador Cboatc and Other Men of Prominence Labor Men Drop Caucus Demand. WASHINGTON, April 12. Repeal of toll exemption for American ships passinsr through the Panama Canal still holds the center of Interest In Congress, with prospect of further enlivening- rtificuKsion during the week In the Senate, where the committee on inter-oceanic canals is to resume hear ings on the iBsue tomorrow. With the tolls controversy 3raa:jjinp and little chance for final action "on it for anothermonth, membersof the. Senate nd House have been restive lest early adjournment for the Summer campaign miht he impeded. The development, .however, that Administration leaders are preparing a plan to postpone anti trust legislation until next session, save for the creation of an Interstate Trade I Commission, has revived hope that! " ongre.ss may get back to the country and Into the campaigns for the elec tion of Senators and Representatives rs cany as July. Opposition Gains in Visor. i-niii me nanus or the opposition to canal tolls repeal are clearly shown, it cannot be foretold how long the .Senate will confine itself to discussion of this all-absorbing subject, but there Is little likelihood general debate on the issue win begin for two weeks, the canal committee puhposlng to give 11 days more to hearings on bills In troduced and the House repeal bill. Opposition to tlie repeal Is growing more vigorous as the time for disposi tion of the controversy approaches, but Senators supporting the President In sist this opposition Is not extending Itself. They still maintain confidence that the repeal bill will pass wlfhoui amendment. Kucli Democratic opponents of repea as Senators O'liurman and Chamber Jain retain the hope that repeal will be defeated or that the bill at least will bo amended in such a way as to pro claim forcibly the sovereignty of the United States aver the Panama Canal. AmhiuMdon l Br Heard. Senators Owen and Fimons, who are leading tin- fight for the President In the canals committee, expect to present important information as to just what this Government had In mind in the negotiations of the Hay - Pauncefote treaty with reference to treating all nations on an equal basis In the canal. Some of this Information they hope to get from Joseph H. Choate. Ambassador to England when the treaty was nego tiated, and Henry White, who was In charge of the American embassy In London at that time. These and other men of prominence are to appear be fore the canals committee In the course of the week. Senator O'Uorman ami ntliec nnn- Jients of the repeal plan to make cap ital of the treaty negotiated with Colombia which would extend to the South American republic the use of the canal free of tolls for warships The fact that members of the Senate's Interstate Commerce Commission plan to amend the proposed interstate trade commission bill so as to give that Com mission authority to Investigate the re lation to business of interlocking directorates, holding companies, stock watering, destructive price discrimina tion and like evils, has struck a re sponsive chord In the minds of many democrats in both houses, and there Is a growing feeling that the trade-commission measure would be the only trust legislation passed at this session. Revised Trade Bill Ready. Meanwhile the House interstate com merce committee remains active, and a trade commission clothed with the power and authority to prevent "unfair and oppressive competition" is pro posed in a bin to be introduced tomor row by Mr. Stevens, of New Hampshire. rhlB committee will report tomorrow its revised trade commission bill in order to clothe the committee with au thority to regulate competition between corporations the Stevens bill declares to be unlawful "all unfair or oppressive competition in commerce" and empow ers the commission to prevent such competition. Plans for caucusing on the question of pressing the Bartlett-Bacon antl Injunction bill have been dropped on an understanding of the labor group in the House that when the anti-trust ?,.Jf. f,naUy sha eman-t. -nm the judiciary committee there will be In cluded some provision to limit the in junction power of the courts. So labor element action is dependent also on the probability that general trust legislation may be dropped at this ses- "')?"; Secretary Garrison. Chairman Adarason. of the House Interstate com merce committee, and Stevens of Min nesota, of that committee, still are wrestling: over the form that general ?hi'?r.'"?0wer conservation legislation (hall take at this session. EYE GRAFTING SUCCEEDS Experiments "Wltn Plg'a Cornea Seems to Have Given Sight to Babe. BALTIMORE. April 12. (Special.) The success of the operation performed several weeks ago at the Baltimore Kye. Ear and Throat Hospital, in which the cornea of a pig's eye was grafted onto the blind eye of David Kane, a six months old infant, is now practi cally assured. Dr. Floyd B. Whitman, the surgeon who performed the opera tion, still refuses to make a statement with reference to it. but it is learned that the eye on which the pig's cornea was grafted is Still clear. There is reason to believe that It will remain clear for the few days left of the time allotted for the test by the surgeon If by end of this week the eye has not clouded, the mother of the infant probably will be able to take him from the hospital virtually cured of the blindness in whioh he was born and seeing through a pig's eye. ' Portland Resolutions Protest. A resolution pleading for the lives of the four gunmen who killed Herman Rosenthal was adopted at a meeting of the Oregon League for the Abolition of Capital Punishment in the Plasa block yesterday. a message urging the commutation of the sentence of death to life imprisonment was tele graphed to Governor Glynn, of New Tork. A. new automobile headlight has Just been rut on the market In France, whlfr. repro nt a radical departure from prmnt da aina. The lamp haa the shape of a human eyeball and turns In Its socket In exactly tie una manner as the eye in its supprt. : aAaH. ' .' I i ' J' - '."r;' " - "zJ - L r : f : 1 f , ' v i A""'V l-t-KT. "lEfTIB I.OI IK" BOSKMJKKfil RKiHT, HIRRV W ITZ. I-GYP THE Bl.OOn n , BEI.OW. I.KKT. - DMiO F t IROFItl, HIIiBT. FRANK SKIDE.N SH Kit MVHITEV" I.KWIS) HORO- PRASK" FOUR AWAIT DOOM First "Gunman" Who Flinches to Be First to Die. NUNS VISIT PRISONERS Day .Spent in Devotion, Spirit of Which Spreads to Whole Cham ber, In Which 1 Condemned Men Await End. 'Continue,! From First Fajfe. an instant during the day or night. Until the moment or the electrocution they will be under the observation of Dr. Farr and Dr. Mereemo, the prison physicians. In addition to the guards. At 3 o'clock In the morning the final prayers will be said. Father Cashion will kneel with "Dago Frank" and re ceive his final confession. The Kabbis Golstein and Kopfsten will prepare the other gunmen for the end. The condemned mens' last word from their chief counsel. C. G. F. Wahle. came in the form of a telegram from Albany telling of the Governor's flnal refusal to Interfere. GLYX DENIES IxAST PlyEAS Attorneys Plead Two Hours, Disre garding Personal Sympathy. ALBANY. N. T.. April" 12 The last faint glimmer of hope that a reprieve might be granted for the four New York gunmen passed late today. In the executive chamber of the de serted state capitol Governor Glynn heard the final appeals of two attor neys of the men. C. G. F. Wahle and H. L. Kringle, for a stay of the death sentence and then again and for the last time declined to interfere. For two hours the attorneys pleaded with the governor. All appeals to 1118 sympathies were disregarded. Only the new evidence that was placed before Justice Goff In New York yesterday was presented. Every scrap of evidence was gone over carefully and every affidavit read fully by the governor and his legal ad viser, John G. Saxe. Then the gun men's attorneys were sent for. Pale and a trifle nervous, but with a firm voice, the Governor said: "Gentlemen, I am sorry, but I cannot see my way clear to change -my decision." "It seems the boys must die," Mr. Wahle said. "Unless the governor changes his decision before morning they are doomed." "Did he hold out any hope?" waa asked. "No." he replied. "On the contrary, he said his decision was final." "The governor seemed anxious to know every new fact In the case." he said. "We presented all of the evi dence and affidavits produced before Judge Goff yesterday, set forth verb ally the salient features of the evi dence, then gave him and his counsel the affidavits for their own examina tion. There is nothing left for us to do but continue our duties as bearers of bad news." While the attorneys were with the governor a report became current that the mother and sister of "Dago Frank" Ciroflcl were coming to see the execu tive. One rumor was that they bore confessions from the gunmen. Another was that they thought a last personal appeal to the governor might save the gunmen's lives. When the governor heard the re port of the women's Intended visit he said ho would not grant them an audi ence. He decided several days ago not to talk with anyone of the relatives of the condemned men. POLICE 'SYSTEM' INVOLVED Crime for Which Gunmen Pay Re sult or Wave of Reform. NEW YORK. April 12.Hope for the four gunmen was closed six days before their execution when Governor Glynn refused to grant a stay, pending the second trial of Charles Becker, ex- po lice lieutenant. Becker was convicted In the lower courts of having plotted the murder of Herman Rosenthal to prevent him from making graft revela tions to District Attorney Whitman. The Court of Appeals, in reversing the decision for Becker, declared itself unconvinced that he had directed the murder, but upheld the judgment of the lower court that the four gunmen had been the instruments. Motions for a new trial on the ground of new evi dence were denied and they were sen tenced to die during the week begin ning April 13. The real names of the men who have been known as "Gyp the Blood," "Lefty Louie," "Dago Frank" and "Whltey Lewis" were Harry Horrowitz, Louis Rosenberg, Frank Ciroficl and Frank Seldenshner. The youngest. "Lefty Louie" was 21. the oldest, "Dago Frank." 27. Except "Dago Frank.", the men were Jews. As the nickname implies, he was an Italian. "Gyp the Blood" and "Lefty Louie" were married. Their young widows survive them. The crime for which the gunmen paid the penalty started a wave of police reform, from which the ripples have not yet subsided. Through the revelat tions made at the. time and subsequent ly, stalked the vague monster known as the "police system." Rosenthal was shot down early on the morning of July 16, 1912, In front of the Hotel Metropole in the heart of the tenderloin. On receiving an an nouncement from a man who came Into the hotel, he walked out and fell dead before a fusillade of bullets. The mur derers leaped Into an automobile and escaped. Weeks later, after Becker had been arrested, the gunmen were found in a flat in Brooklyn. Their conviction and Becker's were based chiefly on the testimony of three go-betweens who turned state's evi dence. These men. Jack Rose, Brldrie Webber and Harry Vallon. declared that they had hired the gunmen to kill the gambler, Rosenthal, at Becker's re quest. Sam Schepps. a little gambler, corroborated their testimony and waa not adjudged an accomplice. Becker was a police lieutenant In charge of the "strong arm" squad, whose duties were to keep in subjec tion the gangs of the city and to regu late gambling houses and places of ill fame. Rose, Webber and Vallon said that Becker had made use of his posi tion to collect money from these houses. Rosenthal, according to these same wit nesses, having a grievance against Becker, was about to give evidence against Becker to the district attorney. CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS LEADING- DIRECTLY TO EXECU TION OF NEW YORK "GUNMEN" TOR MURDER. exposing pub- July 13, 1912 Herman Rosenthal publishes affidavit lie graft. July 1 Rosenthal murdered. July 30 Inspector Charles Becker indicted August 12 Sam Schepps arrested. August 20 Schepps confesses he saw gunmen paid August 21 Becker and six others indicted. September 1 Several witnesses vanish. September 15 "Gyp the Blood" and "Lefty Louie" arrested OcJohfr uli'S,Us- lmpor,tnt Witness for state, assassinated. October 8 Becker trial opens. October J5 Becker found guilty of murder In first degree October 1 Becker in death cell, execution set for December November 8 Trial of four gunmen opens. November 17 Trial of gunmen ends. November 20 Four gunmen found guilty. cuserlelnbr 11 In"urnce companies reject risks on gunmen's ae November 22 Informers freed, pursued by crowd. rile!" eZBrldey" WebDer denies repudiating confession. , December 20 Appeal stays execution of gunmen tionember Sl TrU1" f Becke' n1 gunmen lead to graft Investlga- May 1, 1913 Four police captains sentenced for graft June 14 "Brldgey" Webber, informer, stabbed february 25. 1914 Court of Appeals grants Becker new trial February 25 Four gunmen denied new trial. governor Glynn rerusea to Interfere In men. April 11 Justice Goff denies new trial. April li Governor Glynn again refuses to Interfere. execution of gun- ROLE TO CONFINE DEOATE IS NEEDED Effort in Senate Is Coupled With Move to Restrict Ex . ecutive Sessions. BOTH CHANGES DESIRABLE Members of Cpper Body at Present Permitted to DIm-uss Any Snb jccl. Without Reference to One Being Considered. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ingion, April 13. There is strong Democratic opposition In the Senate to the proposal of Senator Kenyon to d away with executive . sessions, except for the consideration of treaties, but there is also keen support for the pro posal of Senator Hoke Smith to compel Senators, when ad-diessing the Senate, to speak only on the subject then pending. Senators who take a broad view of the Senate rules agree that both pro posals should be adopted, and that the two changes should be made in the rules. There are intense partisans, however, who view both proposal from the viewpoint of party advantage, and these Senators cannot support both propositions. Objeetloa Made to Srereey. Under the rules all nominations made by the President are considered In executive session, and only the final action of the Senate is officially an nounced. The proceedings of the Sen ate behind closed doors are usually fully reported in the dally papers, but the reports are not official, a xi there fore are subject to some dou'n. It is- argued by Senators who object to executive sessions that nominations made by the President should- receive open discussion, as do nominations made by the people for elective cfflccs. The secrecy thrown about Presidential appointments operates to protect an appointee who Is subject to legitimate criticism and also affords Senators so disposed an opportunity to make reck less charges. If appointments were considered In open esslon. men who are vulnerable would not seek public of fices as freely as they do. and Senators would be less free to prefer charges. Daniels' lSamlnatlosj ia Mlad. The discussion over executive ses sions Is the direct result of the fight against the confirmation of Winthrop M. Daniels for Interstate Commerce Commissioner. Senators who took part In that contest agee that had Daniels' nomination been considered in the open Senate It would have been re1tri notwithstanding he was the personal appointee of the President. ' While Senator Hoke Smith is mak ing his fight against the Kenvon amendment to the rules, he Ih insist ing on amending the rules so that Sen ators cannot discuss any subject under the sun at any time they may be rec ognised. On this issue, the Democrats are at a disadvantage, under present rules, for Republican Senators are breaking Into the Senate proceedings at all times and when all manner of subjects are pending, and are hainmur ng President Wilson and the Admin istration for its stand on the Panama Canal tolls question. This Is not pleas ant music to the ears of Senator Smith, and he wants to shut off all discussion on the tolls question until tho tolls bill is reported and before the Senate for consideration. Present Rule Indefeasible. Partisanship aside, there Is no de fense of the present Senate rule which permits Senators to discuss any sub ject at any time. There Is every rea son why discussion should be eon fined, as it is in the House, to the bill pending. Such a change would re store order to the Senate proceedings uur ue eminently lair to both Sides. This change, however, is no more desirable than that proposed by Sena tor Kenyon. An effort is being made to combine both proposals and adopt both amendments at the same time. If the Senate can do this. It will have mnde a step forward. TREATY IS NOT CONSTRUED eontlmied From Flrat Paie. treaty. It is simply a refusal on the part of the United States to raise that question in that way." Discussing the President's right to expect the support of Congress when he deals with ( International questions. Secretary Bryan adds: "The Chief Ex ecutive speaks for the Nation in inter national nfTstr and It Is only fair to assume that he speaks advisedly when he declares that intercourse with other nations Is seriously embarrassed by ths free tolls law which he seeks to re Peal. occupy today a proud position among tho nations; we are the fore most advocate of . peace and arbitra tion; we are becoming more and more a moral factur throughout tho world. Can we afford to surrender this posi tion? Can wo afford to belittle the screat enterprise which has reached Its consummation at the lsllimus? The question is not what we can do, but wliat we ought to do. This question must be decided on moral principles :md not by counting of our regiments and battleships." Ilalllmore Platform loaatrara. Mr. Bryan was a memher of the res olutions conimitteo of the Baltimore convention and his observations on the platform constitute his Mrst utterance on the subject. He arcuea that there are two planks in the Baltimore plat form pertinent to the discussion, one which dcolares the belief of the Demo natic party In the encouragement of fie merchant marine, but says that It should bo developed "without imposing autilt'onal burdens upon the people and without, bounty or subsidies from the public treasuries." and a second plank declaring in favor of tho exemption froin'tclls of American coastwise ships. Mr. Bryan declares that the opposi tion t.t bounties is a doctrine "for which the Democratic party has stood from liaie immemorial." He rcfera to the exemption plank as a "little plank" and to the pronouncement on bounties and subsidies as the "larger plank. anrt says: "What opiate docs the little plank contain that It can make those who accept it oblivious of tho larger plank? By what rule of construction can the small plank be made binding and the larieer one Ignored? The secret of the strange power exerted by the lit tle plank is to be found in the fact thai it careful? conceals the means by which It is to be carried out. Had the woid subsidy' or 'bounty' been inserted in this plank, it could not have secured the indorsement uf the convention, be cause the contradiction between this plank and the larger plank would ha-ve been immediately apparent. . hana'd CeadKloaa Alao Pleaded. "But even If ths platform had not contained within itself a complete refu tation of the position taken bv the ad vocates of free tolls, the President would have been justified in the posi tion that he took by the changed con ditions which confronted him. "A platform is a pledge and is as binding upon an official as the com mand of a military Ufflcer Is upon a subordinate the statement cannot be made stronger. But the subordinate officer Is sometimes compelled to act upon his Judgment where a change of which the commanding officer Is not aware has taken place In conditions. It Is not -only the rlKht of the subordi nate to Judge the situation for himself where conditions have changed elnce the order was given, but It is his duty to do so. "In the case under consideration tiic president takes responsibility for an official act which he regards as neces sary for his country's welfare and the people must decide whether or not he Is Justified; and those who refuse to act with him also assume responsibility and .they. too. must abide the Judgment of the public. Such a change has taken place since the Baltimore platform was adopted. C'eamtlaa Velea la liaaraarr. "Had the Democrats In convention assembled been confronted by the con dition which now exists and had they known what those now. know who voted for repeal, no such plank would ever have been placed In the nlatrorm The convention's attention was not even brought to the fact that a ma jority of the Democrats In the. House had voted against the free tolls meas- ' i. re ana mat it nad In tact been passed by a combination of a minority of the Democrats and a majority of the Re publicans." Mr. Bryan says that platform planks dealing with international questions must be accepted with the understand ing that we act Jointly with other na tions in International affairs, that even If a plank had not been contradicted by another plank in the platform and even if it "had not concealed a subsidy pol icy repugnant to Democratic princi ples and history." that even if condi tions had nut changed, a platform plank should be taken on International questions "as the expression of a wish rather than as the expression of a de termination, for no nation can afford to purchase a small advantage in the face -of a universal protest." Diplomatic Relatloas Disturbed. "It is best," the Secretary continued. "If a nation desire to array itself against the world, it should be sure that the thing which it is to gain is worth what it costs. The President, knowing that every commercial nation except our own construes the treaty as a pledge of equal treatment, would have been recreant to his trust had he failed to point out to the American people that our diplomatic relations would be seriously disturbed by the carrying out of the free tolls policy." Considering the repeal measure upon its merits. Mr. Bryan said there were Just two questions to be decided: First. Is It desirable for tho Demo- pi Why Hrink water when you can get SALEM BEER the most popular beverage on the Pacific Coast? If1 BE.?E r? br!.we,lil1 one of tfc "aw modern p ants on th Pacific Coast, It is aged in steel glass-lined tanks. It u conveyed by modem pinQ lane) system direct to the bottle house, bottled under FsT!VrVnd .herfora D?ver comps in intact with th tje timo it leave the fermenting tank until the bottle is opened by the consumer? The consumer absolutely assured a beer of ideal effervescence, snap and puritv. A trial will surely convince any one of the ex cellence of balera Bottled Beer. The family trade of Portland Is snrplied b" the firm of PENNEY BROS. 379 EAST MORRISON STREET 31) Telephone : Bell, E. 2S7 Home, B-2426. cratle party to abandon Its historic position and become the advocate of subsidies and bounties? And. second, if it is deairable. what is the Demo cratic parly willing to sacrifice in in ternational prestige and world influ ence In order to secure the advance which these subsidies promise to a few people? FAIR WEEK IS FORECAST onditioii Declared Probable Next 1'rv Days, at Least. for WASHINGTON-. April 1 J. Generally fair weather for Eaatcr week in all parts of the country, except South Atlantic states, where rain is indicat ed for the first day or two, was fore cast tonight by the bureau. "It will be cool and frosty over the centrsl and Eastern districts." the bul letin says. "As there are no indica tions of the approach of a storm over the Northwest for several da vs. at least, the fair weather is likely to continue during the greater portion of the week. "After the middle of the week a dis turbance win appear on the Xorth Pa cific coast or in British Columbia, but without disturbance other than somi local rains in the North Pacific sni the far West on Thursday or Kridav and some unsettled weather over the Northwest generally by the end of the week." Jacob' Kurth Xot in Danger. SAX FRANCISCO, April 1. Jacob Furth. Seattle financier, taken to a sanitarium here yesterday suffering from heart trouble, was reported to night to be "about the same" and in no immediate danger. New Cannery Being; Built. WHITE SALMON. Wash.. April (Special.) Work on the excavation for the new cannery building has been commenced. The plant will be located along the railroad tracks below White Salmon. VANCOUVER MAU AFTER SIEGE SUPPLE AS BOY OF RHEUMATISM G. R. 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