THE MORNTXO ORECOXIA5. MONDAY, MAY 1, 1910. RQOSEM IIIDS 'ELTF RED BLOOD IN WEST WOMAN ACQUITTED IN NEW YORK OF MURDER OF HER BABES. Reception of His Preparedness Speech Causes Him to Postpone Statement. ANTI-CLIMAX IS AVOIDED Atlantic, Says Colonel, Rolls Kigtu l to Middle or Mississippi Vat ic y Ea ster 11 Propl et s of Gloom Proved Wrong. CHICAGO, April 30. (Special.) Colonel Roosevelt returned to Oyster Bay tonight convinced "down to his boots." as he phrased it, that the Mid dle West is awake to the need of pre paredness. His tentative plan to speak in Kansas City and Des Moines was dropped for the present. He did not give out a statement on political conditions as intended. "With the shouts with which 1300 banqueters greeted him cry of "Prepare, prepare!" till ringing" in his ears, the Colonel decided an utterance on politics would be anti-climax. The scene when his listeners at the Bar Association dinner n'mbed on chairs and tables and yelled their approval of universal training nd universal service led the sage of Sagamore Hill to conclude that a politi cal statement might rob the demonstra tion for preparedness of some of its value. So he let things ride with brief interview on Mid-West pa triotism. Colonel Highly Gratified. As he boarded the train for the East, his black slouch hat pulled down on his brow and his neck swathed in a blue bandanna, the Colonel barred his teeth away back to his wisdom molars in a 24-karat Rooseveltian smile and said: "My last word to Chicago? Well, it's this: I wouldn't have missed that demonstration over universal service for the world. Red blood beats in the pulse of the West." Before leaving for church in the forenoon the Colonel amplified his com ment. "I am gratified beyond measure ; last night's demonstration," he said. mean the demonstration over the idea that everyone should do his bit. When they jumped to their chairs and yelled their approval of the idea of universal service it convinced down to my boots that the people want to prepare. KnMtern Cave Dweller Wrong. "By George, the Middle West is filled x ith men with red blood. Why, back Kast the cave dwellers and the gloom purveyors told me that I wou Id find the West pathetic, that the West was indifferent to the dangers that might confront cities on the Atlantic. I told 1 hem they were wrong and that the West never failed me. It was ready w ith its boys for the Navy and. the Army always. "When they jumped to their chairs and tore loose over this idea that you should do it and I should do it, why they showed the spirit of the state of Lincoln and Grant. By George, the Wst has just as much good red blood as the Kast and the Atlantic Ocean, for that matter, rolls right up the middle oi' the Mississippi Valley. The West never failed the Nation; there is no di vision of Americanism by geographical section, and never for a moment have I doubted it. I would not have missed that outpouring of sentiment for the world." Dominant Sentiment Awakening. Observers who attended Saturday night's banquet said today that the re-t-ept ion accorded the Roosevelt shout for National preparedness indicates that whenever sentiment has been dormant it gives signs of awakening. The politicians studied the possible effects in the Republican National con vention. Senator Sherman's friends were especially busy in this line of in quiry. Some of them estimated that about 45 per cent of the Illinois delega tion would be ready to vote for Roose velt as soon as they had discharged their pledge to vote for Sherman. The rest, they estimate, will be split be tween Hughes, Root and Mann. i 'yl If . t - , - ' V x ' ' I . ' A ' i 'pvt. ' I - : J ?.;, :.;:;.!:. . . - i g ... '. ss4f-v. I a A I " ' " , 4 if' ' . ' "' I "1 I i j l si'" " WILSON'S PUZZLE MOTIVES LEADERS Ignoring of Senators on Home Town Postoffice Jobs Is Hard to Explain. UNWRITTEN LAW VIOLATED 32 . MKS. IDA WALIKHS HOGEKS. Mrs. Ida Walters Rogers, photographed in court, where she wa tried and acquitted last Thursday for the murd er of her 2-year-old son John. Mrs. Rogers also was under indictment for the fatal poisoning of her 8-months-old daughter, Lorida. Seated beside her 1 n court was her husband, Larya Elton Rogers, who was the father of her dead children, and who has since married her, a former wife, a sister of Professor Kranklyn Giddings, of Columbia Uni versity, having divorced him. INTEREST IS LOST President Making No Strong Fight for Brandeis. COMMITTEE KILLS TIME Contest On for Brainiest Student. MINNEAPOLIS, April 24. A contest to determine the "brainiest students at the University of Minnesota" will take place April Zl, at the annual Gopher day dance in the armory. Charles W. Cole, manager of the Gopher, the junior annual, is planning the contest, which will have the avowed purpose of "con vincing the reform element of the fac ulty and the student body that the uni versity is interested in other things- than frivolous popularity contests for women." Report From New York Urging Law yer lor Senate Apparently In spired, but Arouses No En thusiasm in Candidate. OREGONIAX NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, April 30. Is the Administration losing interest in the appointment of Louis r. Brandeis as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court? . The nomination of Mr. Brandeis was sent to the Senate on .January 28. At the time President Wilson nominated Mr. Brandeis, he let it be known that the appointment was a personal one with him, and that notwithstanding any opposition, he would stand by-ithe man of his choice and force his early confirmation by the Senate. As a matter of fact, the President never has turned a hand to force action on the Brandeis nomination, but rather has displayed remarkable indifference, while the Senate committee has killed time. Not long ago a report, apparently in spired, went out from New York, urg ing Mr. Brandeis for the United States Senate, and mentioning him as the logi cal Democrat to oppose Senator Lodge. Mr. Brandeis, himself, has never public ly displayed any enthusiasm over the mention of his name for the Senate, but has been sitting tight, confident that the Senate ultimately would confirm his nomination and seat him on the Su preme bench. The manner in which the Brandeis Senatorial boom was sprung and the continued silence at the White House while the Brandeis nomination has been under attack has given rise to a general impression that the President would shed no tears if the nomination should be rejected. He has accompl is tied everything by sending in the nomination. office of District Attorney, it was the duty of Mr. Evans to "familiarize' himself with the work of that office and to do the work and not permit it to be done by special counsel at a great and unnecessary expense to the tax payers. JOHN C. M'CUE. The Oregonian is quite aware that Mr. McCue"is most anxious to make the issue between himself and Mr. Kvans something which has only smal bearing on the real question. It is wholly, or almost wholly, a matter of the rigor and capacity of the one or the other to enforce the law, and The Oregonian is most emphatically of opinion that a great mistake will be made if the voters substitute Mr. Mc- Cue t or Mr. Kvans. It is also of opinion that if Mr. McCue shall be chosen it will be tantamount to a pub lic instruction to him as District At torney to be lenient in hi prosecution of violator? of the prohibition statute. 800 VIE IN SPELLINC f H VASHI(iTO. COfT V SCHOOLS K KPKKSE.N'TKD AT If ILLSBUKO. Th world's prorlm ion of tv hale oil In " barrels. Diploma For Perfect Mark In Only Prize Offered In Contest of Advanced Clauses and Grades. MRS. W. T. SMALL IS DEAD Corvallis Woman Succumbs to Pneu monia After JO Days' Illness. CORVALLIS, Or.. April 30. (Spe cial.) Mrs. W. T. Small, a resident of Corvallis since 1891, died here today after one day's illness from pneumonia. During her residence here she had been engaged in the mercantile business with her husband. Mrs. Small was born in Pennsylvania in 1S4 5. She was married in 1SK3 in Missouri and lived 10 years in Kansas, later coming West. Her husband, one son and one daughter survive. The funeral will be Tuesday after noon from the Christian Church at Corvallis. HILLS BO HO. Or.. April DO. (Spe cial.! Between 800 and 900 children representing S Washington county schools, competed in Hillsboro Saturday for the honor of being perfect spellers. With the spelling contest was held the annual juvenile carnival. The contest is the final of district contests con- ducted throughout the year and those participating today were pupils who had maintained the necessary average. Three classes, including groups from the third grade to and including the high school, participate, words spelled being appropriate to each class. Kach contestant today wrote 100 words and results will not be known until the pa pers have been examined. The only prize offered is a diploma given by the county school superintendent certify ing that the holder Is a perfect speller. The contest was conducted in the morning, contestants being divided be tween the two Hiilsboro school build ings. In the afternon the carnival programme was given on the lawn of the courthouse square. A feature was the crowning of the May queen. Miss Eva Kmmott, of Hills boro, by Dr. F. A. Bailey, whose intro ductory remarks dwelt upon the im portance of good spelling and the value ot the competition which had just ended. A programme of music. May dances and figures by gaily dressed little children followed. A crowd of visitors, estimated at 5000, was attracted by the event. Slap at O'Gorman Apparently Failed When Appointee Refused Job and Denial to Lewis In Chicago Is More Mysterious. OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington, April SO. Politicians, particu larly Democrats, are still trying to fig ure out the political motives that in spired the President to ignore the Democratic Senators from New York and Chicago in appointing postmasters at those two cities. The course of the President is the more difficult to understand because it is an unwritten rule of long standing, recognized by both parties, that a Senator belonging to the Administration party shall have the right to name the postmaster in his home city. When the President appointed Robert F. Wagner postmaster at New York he did not consult Senator O'Gorman, nor did he consult Senator Lewis when he appointed Dixon C. Williams, post master at Chicago. On the contrary, he turned down men recommended by the Senators and made selections of his own. New York Man Refuses Job. If the President was striving for per sonal political advantage by appoint Ing Mr. Wagner in New York, he ap pears to have lost, because Wagner, after his nomination had been sent to the Senate, said he would not accept the appointment. If he was striving to put Senator O'Gorman in a hole, he seems to have failed again. The Lest line of speculation devel oped regarding the New York appoint ment has It that the President, after ignoring Tammany for more than three years, is now trying to curry favor with that organization, and as a bid for Tammany support picked a Tammany State Senator for the New York post office. By making his own selection and by taking a Tammany man he may have figured that he would accom plish more with Tammany than if he appointed a Tammany man recommend ed by Senator O'Gorman. At the same time, having selected and appointed a Tammany man, he plased Senator O'Gorman in a position where he could not afford to fight the Administration choice. Chicago Problem More LMfflcult. Why the President should have de nied Senator Lewis the right to name the postmaster at Chicago is more diffi cult to explain. Senator Lewis is the Democratic whip in the Senate. He has given the Administration loyal sup port. It is true that just before the Presi dent named the Chicago postmaster. Senator Lewis, going further than the Administration, urged the sending of a large and adequate force into Mexico, and it is possible th President took this means of letting the Senator know he must not proceed at a speed greater than that set by the "captain of the team." This one Incident, however, is the only thing that has occurred to array Senator Lewis in any way against the President of late, and the Senator's friends do not fci that his slight digression was justification for denying him the right to name his own postmaster. The new welt edge COLLAR 2 for 25c It's the Linocord Unbreakable Biittonlioles in Ide Collars which prevent spreading at the top, insuring continu ance of style and fit. This is a feature found I in no other make. eiO. r. IDE C0-. KiVws, T0T H. T. J. ELZINK SURRENDERS FRIKXD PER SI" A DES MAX TO SIB MIT TO ALBANY SHERIFF. GRANTS PASS GETS MILL PLANT WITH 50,000 FEKT CAPACITY TO BE INSTALLED. FIlKht to Woods Follows Resistance With Hide Woman Wanted Is Taken From His Home. Equipment Now Brine Loaded for Transportation to Site on Twoky Road on Rohm River. UliANTS rASS, Or., April 30. (Spe cial.) That Grants I'ass is to resume Its former prestiue as tlie null city ot Southern Orcpon is evidenced by the fart that although there are three saw mills and box factories within the city already running to capacity, the larg est mill ever constructed in the city is to be built within the next few weeks, announcement of tho fact having been made public last night. Seven Southern 1'acific cars bearing the machinery and equipment arrived today and will be at once reloaded on the Twohy roaxl for transportation to the site for tho new mill, construction of which will be be gun early next week. The new sawmill will have a dall: capacity of 50.000 feet and will be the largest mill in teoutnern uregon. The mill was Intended for Butte Falls some four years ago to cut the lumber belonging to the Hart Interests, but when Mr. Hart died some time ago the estate was closed up without the mil ever having been put In operation. It was then taken over by the Owens of Medford. by whom it has now been transferred to tho new company mov ing it from Jackson to Josephine Coun tv. The mill will be placed along the new Twohy road on the north side o Rogue River and within the city limits of Grants Pass. MR. M'CUE HAS GRIEVANCE Object ion Made to Kmploynient of Outside Counsel by Mr. Kvans. PORTLAND, April 30. (To the Edi tor.) In your editorial today, entitled "Quite Heroic.' you say: "Mr. Evans has soup: lit to fulfill literally the re quirements of the statute that he shall act as counsel for various other county departments; and the necessity for spe cial legal service has thus been obvi ated." Since, as you further state, "The Oregonian has great sympathy for any practicable plan to ease the load carried by the taxpayers." I am con strained to believe the Lombard f ore cloure suit has not been brought to your attention. Upon the "sug:sre.tion" of Oistrict At torney Kvans, Multnomah County em Ployed Attorney A. E. Clark to fore close the Lombard mortgage and thereby obligated the taxpayers to pay the special counsel a large sum of money, the court having found his services to be worth $4500. I under stand the county has not as yet settled with Mr. Clark. It has been stated by Mr. Evans friends that this suit was a "hand over" from Mr. Cameron's administra tion and that Mr. Clark was "familiar" with the matter. The facts are the suit was filed on the 13th day of Sep tember, some nine months after Mr. Evans took office. The work done : bv Mr. Clark for Mr. Cameron was t biousht to a close on the 27th. day lot November, Upon entering the You can ust as well have a Sensible Cigarette ALBANY. Or., April 30. (Special.) J. E. E. Zink, of Shelburn. who, rifle In hand, defied arrest yesterday, and who had been hiding all last night and most of today, surrendered without trouble to Sheriff Bodine late this afternoon, j He was brought to Albany, and is now in the County Jail. John y. 4 Leffler. who is acquainted with Zink. located him in the woods near his home, and talked him into ceasing opposition to arrest. With him Zink walked out to the road and gave himself up to the Sheriff. With Zink Sheriff Bodine arrested Haze! Huit, iu dictetd jointly with Zink for a statu tory offense. She had been at Zink's house all the time, and made no effort to avoid arrest, but because she has a young child no effort was made to take her into custody until Zink had been arrested. When Deputy . Sheriff Llndley, of Scio. went to Zink's house yesterday to ar rest him the latter met him at the door with & rifle and compelled him to leave. Before Sheriff Bodine reached Shelburn Zink left the house and hid in nearby woods. In order to prevent a tragedy Sheriff Bodine arranged with friends of Zink to induce him to give himseir up, and Mr. Leffler succeeded in finding him. ,000 THE DALLES C'LVB SAYS (Ol.XTV FOIl ROAD BONO ISHE. From the Sinking Fund. Baltimore American. "This building of submarines must b a very expensive business.' "Yes; bui I su ppose they pay for them with a sinking fund.'- Oongrfssman M'ller of Delaware is thf 'baby member" of the House of Rpreeenta- And why not? There ejre several genuinely sensible cigarettes being sold today. Fatimas are not the only one. And you would sooner smoke a sensible cigarette than the other kind -every man would. So here's the way to pick out one of the sensii ble ones: 1st It must suit your taste. 2nd. It must be com fortable to your tongue end throat no burn or bite. 3rd. It must leave you feeling tip-top free from any heady or heavy feel ing after you have Bmoked as many as you want to. Now, one of these sen sible cigarettes is Fatima. And Fatimas please so many men that they out sell any other cigarette costing over 5c The thing for you to do is to see if they please you too. If they do, be sensible stick to Fatimas. They'll be good to you. Start in today. 1 1 nv. b Oct f y?t. "v (OIGARE7TES $W uoocrrt trtMsrotAcaoea.tuctas Stf FATIMA mm9thm rmttm m thm Pa intmrmmttommt A Sensible Cigarette GRANT BILL APPROVED HOISTO.X. HOWEVKK, INSISTS 0 ADDING TO RESERVES. KlKht to Prevent Homentradinic of Cot- Over Lands la Expected to De velop In the Houk, OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington. April 30. The Secretary of Agriculture, In a letter to the House public lands committee today, half heartedly Indorsed the Orepon A Cali fornia land-grant biil as finally drawn by this committee, but offers enough protest to Justify the conservationist In the House when the bill Is up for consideration in making: a flpht to have 3oo.0ft0 or 400,000 acres thrown Into for est reserves. The letter also paves the way for a ftRht to prevent the homesteadinjc of those cut-over lands which the Forest Servlr-e my reirn rd as more valuable for timber growing: than for agricul ture. The Secretary says that, although the bill docs not contain all the provisions recommended by his department, it is a fair and satisfactory measure, and he approves Its passage. The report, however, criticises the designation of all lands as agricultural not classified as power sites or timber lands and in sists that landb not physically fit for farming purposes should not be des ignated as agricultural. The report also reiterates the con tention of the department that 30u,oou acres in the grant lying within the boundaries of existing National forests should be added to such forests, and suggests a separate bill to accomplish this plan. CONCESSIONS TO BE MADE K'onttniid FVom First Pnc, been obvious since German occupation of Belgium and Northern France. In German diplomatic quarters it Is be lieved the Irish revolt and the sur render of General Townshend's expedi tion at Kut-el-Anmra will xerci. n The nfcot. urt and purest poith yen ra bay. Keeps hmworiilTermui I cl instrument like J Dew. Uot to work V J and m i 1 v . Sold 4 I In two ! vn hr I if I U tiroevrr. Hard. fufc Iter Pfct mm Cm tremendous influence on the British government. If these events should be followed within a reasonable lime by the fall of Verdun, it is Insisted a situation will develop among the allies which will cause thm to lend a willing ear to peace suggestions. Germany would like these suggestions to originate in the United States. The President, how ever, has no Intention of being snubbed and will act only when all the belliger ents) intimate a desire to have him do so. A ToliFh mot ion- p!i-t lire cm rifti in tho hand mi minprfiMd mir ai prow-neH. .-!ntit If the Inventor of a re timrm w ht-h can ha car- il which i op-rtt bv long as a button ta Sr t High vt ay ( ommlimlon la Requested Mot to Apportion Share to Any Other District. SAL.fc,M. Or., April 30. (Special.) Wasco County is determined to comp with the conditions laid down by the State Highway Commission and bond Itself, that it may obtain $90,000 in the next two years from the state for road purposes, according to word received today from The Ialles Chamber cj Commerce, protesting against the com mission's diverting any of the Wasco County allotment to another county. The Cnamber of Commerce declares that the necessary aurveys will be completed shortly on the roads to be Improved and that steps soon will be taken to obtain a bond Issue. At the last meeting of the highway commission tt was announced that there wa little chance of Wasco Coun ty bonding itself and the commission decided to divert the $45,000 condition ally promise this year to Wasco Coun ty to other channels. The commission has assured WTasoo County of 945,000 from the 1916 high way fund and an equal amount from the 1917 fund if it votes bonds. See Victor Companya Special Advertise ment on Opposite Page PERFECT nnnnnnnsnsnnnnnsnnnssns? Victor Service Seven Well -Fur hi shed. Large Sound-Proof Demonstration Rooms Perfect Ventilation Competent Demonstrators All the Victor Records Telephone Orders Delivered Immediately Victrolas for Every Home ($15 up) The Easiest Payment Plan Ac Sherman , play & Go. Sixth and Morrison Streets Opposite Postoffice Also Dealers in Steinway and Othtr Pianos. Pianola Pianos. Music C ahinets. Piayzr Afua"c. Etc.