THE SUNDAY OKEGOMAN. PORTLAND. SEPTEMBER 23. 1906. WILL ANNEX CUBA IF WE INTERVENE Beveridge Says Flag, Once ' Raised, Must Never Come Down Again. 50,000 MEN ARE REQUIRED 7 m Opening Speech of Middle West Campaign Deals With Public Ownership of Railroads, Trusts and Cuban Crlsl9. CHICAGO, Sept. 22. (Special.) That Cuba, once reoccupled by American 'troops, will always remain American ter ritory was the opinion expressed by Sen- lator Albert J. Beveridge, of Indiana, in 'the opening speech of the Republican campaign in the Middle West. The speech was delivered to a packed audience in the Auditorium under the auspices of the Hamilton Club, the Senator being givon an enthusiastic reception. He first spoke in favor of Government control of rail roads as the American system In prefer- : ence to Government ownership, which he called the European system. He discussed the pure-food law and the meat inspec tion law as instances of the American method- of controlling great industries, while leaving them under private man agement. I He began by discussing Government ownership and said: Public Control, Not Ownership. The people's govemment should do no busi nrn that the people can do better. The peo ple's government should own no business that the people can better own. But the people'8 government ahould control and regulate Industries owned by some of the people that are so great as to a fleet the wel fare of all. The people, through their government, should not permit some to practice business methods that will be unjust to all of them. But the government Bhould not own any Industry which private enterprise can efficiently man age and whose abuars government regulation can prevent. Government ownership of Nation-wide busi ness Is the European theory of Industry. I am for the American theory and against the hjropeen theory. Let Europe copy America, not America copy Europe. Government con trol of railways, but not government owner ship of railways. Control of Corporations. The day -was when individuals could do the business of communities; now nothing but great combinations of capital can supply the needs of the masws. Because one man can no longer deal with' another, but vast corpor ations with millions of men, these corpora tions become public servants. Every man ager of every Industry which touches all the people Is no longer an Individual dealing with another; he Is a statesman of affairs dealing with a Nation. He Is a trustee, managing a great business for the people's welfare as well as his own. The great organizations came becauee they were necessary because they are necessary; on that' principle .they are good. That they shall be as good in practice as in" theory, government control comes Into play government regulation, but not govern - ment ownership, unless government regula tion farts. Only .Criminals Feel Law. Government regulation will never be felt by the managers of the great enterprises who con duct business as trustees of the' -public. Just as criminal laws are not felt by the man who attends te his duties. Just as old methods of private business would be utterly Inade quate In present conditions, so the old prin ciple of arbitrary private management is ut terly Inapplicable to the new methods. . Tht railway rate law passed by the pres ent Congress may not be very effective at the beginning, and that la not Important, for It will be effective In the end. The lm .portant thing la that for the first time in cur -history the railway rate law puts into practical operation the principle of govern ment control of railways. Wiiy talk of gov ernment ownership when government, regu lation has only begun? American theories have suited American con ditions In the past Let us trust American theories -In the future. Let us Americans go on building our own free Institutions on our own models and teach mankind that law- . regulated liberty Is not only best for govern ment; . but best for business and best for life. Government ownership violates the Amer ican principle that American citizens should own and manage what individual enterprise can own and manage. .Government super vision means the Intelligence and conscience of the people laying their restraining hands on the wrongs of the railway management; Government ownership means an American -bureaucracy as' much greater than any other bureaucracy on earth as the American rail way system is than any other system on earth. i Keep Railroads Out of Politics. Those who advocate Government owner ship say that is the only way of keeping the railways out of politics. Criminal law is the way to stop them. Prison bars for corrupting railroad lobbyists; prison: bars for railway ngents in primaries and con ventions; prison bars for railway represen tatives who try to Influence the nomination and election of Senators. Congressmen, Judges or any other ' public officers. But, those' laws or prosecutions should never be written or instituted In malice. The demagogue in the statesman's chair is a drunkard handling dynamite. The man who arouses hatred among his fellow-men and then scourges victims to satisfy the fury he has caused Is a traitor. I am no enemy of the railways. Generally speaking they are unjustifiably abused. I have no fear that railway evils will continue; for even if laws prove ineffective, the conscience of the people will prove effective. Every man who by railroad Influence Is nominated to any office ought to be defeated, no matter to what party he belongs. Reasons for Pure-Food Law. Government supervision applies to any business that affects all the people. That ts why we passed a law to compel manu facturers to give the people pure food. When manufacturers sought to make fortunes by poisoning the people, there was only one way by which the people could protect them selves, and that was by requiring their gov ernment to inspect the food and medicine which manufacturers were selling them. Government supervision applies to all in dustries affecting all the people; Govern ment ownership could not. If it could, we would In a hundred years behold the Gov ernment doing everything, the Individual nothing. Instead of the Government being our servant, we would be the Government's servants. Instead of being Americans,- -we would be Russians. The same principle ap plies to the law Tegulatlng the meat inquiry. The beef trust has sold unhealthful meats to the millions because the millions cannot know whether meat is wholesome or dis eased. Cuba's Fate in Cuba's Hands. Six years ago I stood on this platform to answer Mr. Bryan, antl-lmperlallst. Today I answer Mr. Bryan, asserting that American Institutions are equal to the railway problem. Six years ago I declared the pledging of a destiny to Cuba separate to our own false and foolish. Today every Cuban patriot and . every American thanks the all-seeing director of human affairs for the Piatt amendment giv ing us power to meet the present emergency. In the '-end Cuba, must be American. The -fate ' of the Cuban people Is in the bands of the Cuban people. It they fall ui this trial with which they have been tested by a wisdom beyond human wisdom; if for the preservation of practical liberty the Amer ican flsv ought to float in Cuba, then let no man doubt that the American flag will float there, and. when It Is unfurled from Santiago to Havana, that flag will mean for Cuba what It has meant wherever It has been raised liberty regulated by law, peaceful In dustry protected by orderly government, hu man rights secured by Independent courts up held by all the force of the greatest Govern ment existing among men. Will Xever Again Lower Flag. . But let no man be deceived as to what in tervention means. It does not mean proclama tion it means soldiers. Fifty thousand Amer ican troops will be required to restore Cuba to the condition in which we left Cuba. Fifty thousand troops for at least one year will be- necessary to build up again that social order which we once established In Cuba and which' Cubans themselves have shattered. Fifty thousand American soldiers for one year will be needed to root out that brigandage which for decades has had so firm hold on Cuban soil. After this has been accomplished American administration will run smoothly without any soldiers at ah. But, when we have once more done that work, we will never again let it be undone. We have made a mistake once; we will not make that mistake twice. If the American flag again goes to Cuba, it goes to stay; ws will return again to the traditional American doctrine that wherever that flag is raised It never shall be lowered. CHIP Dill ITS SHOULDER GERMAN PRESS SEIZES OX ME TEOR INCIDENT. Explanations Will Solve Diplomatic Problem, but Rancor Will Re main in. Public's Heart. LONDON, Sept. 22. The recrudescent war spirit, noted last week as a co rollary to the huge war maneuvers, has njade the Meteor Incident awk ward. " The bitter anti-German cru sade recently carried on in the Lon don Dally Mall, which appears to have been afraid that the King's pro German actions had had too much ef fect on the English public. Is now an swered with interest by the German press. If the Meteor had anchored to a. government buoy anywhere but at Portsmouth, it would not have mat tered much, but that harbor is almost synonymous with the British navy. The Germans, chafing under what they have recently interpreted to be sev eral slights, seem to have fastened! gladly upon what they now assume to have been an Intentional Insult to their flag. Explanations between the governments are likely to be quick and satisfactory, but the public will not be so easily quieted. It is an almost comic picture a pl lotless German liner waddling into a naval harbor and trying to approach the Admiralty buoy. But, unfortunate ly, this is not all. Bitter rancor and rivalry exist between the British and German shipping companies. The Cunard and several other Brit ish South African lines are waging at this moment a fierce fight for con trol of the trade" In the North and South Atlantic The Hamburg-American and North German Lloyd compa nies and the great South African shipmaster, . Herr Wohman, with the Kaiser behind them, are making a desperate effort to oust the British mercantile flag froni almost ' every coast where it has long been seen without serious opposition. This com mercial war, involving not only .mil lions, but almost- mercantile suprem acy, lends to the Meteor Incident its. Importance. ' Herr Ballin has taken an active part in working up public feeling in Germany.- The present "affair" possibly may be only one of many ShrewS moves in the great game which the talented German shipowner Is playing. BRYAN IDEA WORKS IN JAPAN Nationalization of Railways Will Lower Rates, Saya Yamajjata. TOKIO, Sept. 22. Special.) In an In terview today Mr. Yamagata, Minister of Communications, said that by means of the nationalization of the railways expenses would be diminished and freight rates lowered, and that this would assist In the expansion of -industry and com mercial enterprises generally. A law would be enacted, he said, dealing es pecially with the management of the rail ways. The capital Invested in the rail ways would be considered a loan, to be paid back with interest from the annually increasing pront and other means would be left to defray the expenses neces sary for the Improvement and extension of lines. Mr. Yamagata expressed the opinion that the future of the nationalized railways was. full of promise. ' DAY IX SIX FOR RAILROAD MEN Are Last of French Employes' Uy Get Sunday Rest. PARIS, Sept. 22. Although' the railroads of France are specifically exempt from the operation , of the Sunday rest law, the chairmen of the six leading" railroad companies have notified Minister of Pub lic Works Barthou that they have ar ranged to grant, within 18 months, 52 holidays a year to their entire staffs, numbering in all 280.000 men. The chair men pointed out that it is impossible to make this day of rest fall on Sunday, but that It would come for different men In rotation. This new system will place the railroad men on an equality with other workmen in the matter of holidays. Lapponl Himself Is Sick Now. ROME. Sept. 22. A consultation has been held over Dr. Lapponl, physician to the Pope, who is ill with cancer of the stomach. The physicians favored an op eration, but this was opposed bv Dr. Mazzonl and other surgeons, who. consid ered the patient too weak for the ordeal, in spite of the fact that his heart Is strong. Small Tornado at Gibraltar. GIBRALTAR. Sept. 22. (Special.) The "lAvfflt Pilln art A thunrla -amm - - "--- .uaub oiutui ci ex perienced here took place last night and darnage is also reported from the Span ish towns in the vicinity of Gibraltar. DENVER CORPORATIONS WIN Franchises Acquired In Recent Elec tion Stand Permanently. DENVER, Sept. 22. (Special.) The long contest In the County Court over the result of the franchise election held lost May ended today in the utter de feat of the contestant. The result Is that the new franchises granted the Denver City Tramway Company and the Denver Gas & Electric Company are not endangered and cannot again be assailed by any legal proceeding. County Judge Lindaey made a complete canvass of the vote cost at the fran chise election and found nothing wrong except that the Judges had counted a few defective ballots, the changes made in the totals, by this not affecting tba result in the case or either franchise. TAFT SEES HOPE OF PEACE IN CUBA (Continued From Page 1.) Rosalie Abru, a wealthy Havana society woman who was recently arrested charged with holding conspiracy meet ings in her home and who la now under heavy bail bonds, drove through the vil lage of Marianao in a four-horse brake on her way to pay a visit to the rebel camp. Her outfit caused a sensation. During the afternoon members of the veterans' peace commission visited Mr. Taft and carried from him a request that General Menocal remain In Havana until a settlement had been reached. Pine Islanders Plaint. A committee representing the Ameri cans living In the Isle of Pines reported that Mayor Sanchez, who la In charge of the Isle of Pines, had resigned and stated that the island was without a local government.- It asked Mr. Taft to de mand the appointment of some officer to take charge there and the Secretary promised to consider the matter. Accord ing to the members of the committee, half a dozen Americans had requested the Mayor to return the guns recently taken from Americans In the Isle of Pines, but that he had declined to do so. It was the committee's belief that the Mayor feared the possibility of an Ameri can attack on the City Hall at " Nueva Gerona. American planters at Bahia Honda have requested of Mr. Morgan that a warship be sent there, and the Minister intimated that this would be done next week. Notwithstanding Mr. Taft's request of Friday, Acosta's revolutionary outposts were today less than half a mile from Marianao. This served to Increase gen eral excitement in the village during the afternoon and evening. Rumor of Palma's Resignation. The feature of the day In this city was a persistent rumor that Mr. Palm a had or was about to resign and would take refuge tonight on board a warship. This was denied at the palace as often as It was put forward. The Associated Press Is credibly Informed that there was some contemplation of such a move, but that the change In the outlook for a favorable settlement of the trouble made the Idea of Mr. Palma's resignation out of the question. -' All 1b reported quiet throughout the Island. The rebels generally are strong ly disposed to resume the warfare If the negotiations fall -or If their leaders t V lleve they are unfairly treated. WILL FORCE INTERVENTION Asbert Confident Roosevelt Would Not Annex Republic. NEW ORLEANS. Sept. 22. A dispatch from Havana to the Picayune today gives a signed statement by the Insurgent lead er. General Ernesto Asbert, in which lie saya tht if peace is not made by the i'alma administration the revolutionists propose to attack "all property" in order to precipitate American Intervention. And this we will do," Asbert cot tlnues, "because we are absolutely cer tain that the present Government of the United States- does--not- aspire to annex our "youthful republic, since President Roosevelt, who personally helped to de stroy the Spanish regime, has the ambi tion to be the guardian of ourllberties, and now. as before, will lend his disinter ested efforts to the work of Justice which we support." Britain Says We Must Annex. LONDON, Sept. 22. American inter vention in Cuba and the ultimate an nexation of the island by the United States are looked upon as certain in official and diplomatic circles here, where it is declared that America Is being forced to accept responsibility for Cuba Just as Great Britain has been compelled to act the policeman in other parts of the world. The following Brit ish official view was expressed to the Associated Press today: "America may not like it. but she must come to It, and from all appear ances now is the time. Capital, has been Introduced into Cuba with the understanding that America will main tain order, and It is America's duty to Intervene to protect- property and stop continuous disorders." RUSSIAN CAMPAIGN BEGUN Parties Hold Muzzled Conventions. Reaction in Trepoff's Favor. ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 22. Acts ve work in the Autumn electoral campaign was Inaugurated by the Octoberists, who today opened the Kazan Congress with delegates from 12 of the Volga Provinces and the vast central districts of Russia in attendance. Alexander Guchkoff, the Octoberist leader, was present, laboring tooth and nail. Owing to failure of the Octoberists to obtajln official sanction, the congress was held behind closed doors and members of the press were excluded. In pursuance of the decision of the Government to permit the National Con gress of the Constitutional Democratic party anywhere except in St. Petersburg, the administration has permitted the re opening of Constitutional Democratic Clubs at Moscow and elsewhere, but per sists in Kts determination to suppress po litical agitation in the capital. The most remarkable development of the week has been the change in senti ment concerning the late General Tre poff. The universal chorus of malediction and condemnation has given place since his death to a nonpartisan appreciation of his real merits and defects, and his career has been the subject of fair and even laudatory criticisms In nearly all circles. M. Demchlnski, a prominent writer and publisher, who was recently suppressed, but who Is now a contribu tor to Herelom, gives the following ver dict on the basis of lifelong acquaintance with the dead man: "General Trepoff was an excellent man and a good official, though he some times violated his own convictions be cause of a false notion of soldierly obe dience. He would have made a splendid soldier, but lacked a thorough education and, above all, the preparation necessary for the political activity thrust upon him. He possessed, howeverone great asset, lacking in all contemporary Rus sian statesmen character." DEATH FOR THE GRAND DUKES Nicholas and Vladimir Find Terror ist Messages on Tables. VIENNA, Sept. 22. Two men belong ing to a Russian revolutionary committee escaping from St. Petersburg, arrived here Wednesday. They declare .that it is not true that the plot i'scovered at Peterhof was planned against Emperor Nicholas or hi Immediate family, and say that It was directed against Grand Duke Nicholas Nlcholaievitch. who now holds all the threads of power, and Grand Duke .Vladl- I As She Looks jAl If you select your clothes with any reference to the way they look to other people, you'll select your next clothes in this store. For you can buy here, ready to wear, such clothes as even your tailor unless he is a remarkably good one cannot produce. The picture shows the regular model sack suit perfect in fit, hand tailored- correct in style. Suits, Raincoats, Topcoats $12.50 to $30.00 Sam'l Rosenblatt & Company CORNER THIRD AND MORRISON STREETS mir, who has returned to Russia under the strictest Inopgnito. Grand Duke Nicholas informed General Debulin, the commandant of the palace, who is his personal appointee, that he was firmly persuaded that revolutionists or allies of the revolutionary committee existed at Peterhof, for twice he had found death sentences on his writing table. Grand Duke Vladimir received a similar missive the morning after his ar rival, causing great surprise, as his return here was accomplished with the utmost sdcrecy. General Debulin instituted a close Bearch, examining all the officials and every apartment. While thus engaged he saw a group In the garden house who fled at his ap proach. Guards pursued and arrested three men, two of whom were footmen In the service -of Grand Duke Nicholas and the other a palace gardener. One of the footmen had in his possession a complete plan of the Peterhof palace, with the doors and gates, carefully marked. The three men were taken to the fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul. IXCITE TROOPS TO REVENGE Reactionary Paper' Gives Bloody Counsel Many Officers Resign. ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 22. The news paper Oblednleni, which Is circulated free among the soldiers and the police, appeals to the soldiers q tbeguard to break the bonds' of 'discipline and take- ten-lives for every comrade killed, should the terror ists Inaugurate a campaign of armed at tacks on police and army officers In St. Petersburg, such as was recently waged in Warsaw. The Liberals profess the greatest alarm over this possibility, and claim it Is a direct incitement to a rep etition here of the Sledlce disorders on a greater scale. According to the Rocli. one result of this rumor of terrorist designs- is that fiva captains and six lieutenants of police and S7 patrolmen have resigned within a fortnight. WILL PAY NO BLOOD MONEY Russia pecllnes to Set Precedent in Case of Herr Busch. ST. PETERSBURG, Sept, 22. In re sponse to representations with regard to the murder at Riga September 15 of Herr Busch, a partner in ti-e Busch Hinge Company and a leader of the German colony at Riga, the Foreigi Office today informed Dr. von Miqut-t" first secretary of the German embassy, that, while Russia, made every effort to discover and punish murderers, It cannot consider the question of In demnity and the laying down of a gen eral rule applicable to all foreigners. The central government declines to ac cept financial responsibility m the mat ter, though it ' says redress may be sought against the local . officials of Riga through the courts. ACHE TO GET AT THE JEWS "Black Hundreds" Restrained With Difficulty at Odessa. ODESSA. Sept. 22? Peace in this city is maintained with difficulty, owing to the persistent efforts of the "Black Hundred" organization to provoke anti-Jewish at tacks. The streets are constantly pa trolled by infantrymen and Cossacks. Sev eral collisions between the police and mobs took place today. In which one student was killed and 13 persons Injured by revolver shots or daggers. Confess Attempt on Stolypln. ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 22. Twelve persons have been arrested on charges of being implicated in the recent attempt upon the life of Premier Stolypln, when a bomb was thrown in his villa. The leader is a Jewess. All those arrested have confessed. CANAL WORK TRAINS MEET Engineer, Conductor and Flagman, All Americans, Killed. COLON, Sept. 22. In a head-on col lision yesterday near Mamel, between two canal work trains, three Ameri cans and two West Indians were killed. Four other West Indians were seri ously injured.. The Americans were the engineer, the conductor and the flagman of the train. The . accident was due to a mistake made by the block dispatcher. Stanford Tries the -Rugby Game. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Cal., Sept. 22. The first Rugby football game of the season was played this afternoon on the Stanford field between two teams chosen from the varsity squad. The reds won from the blacks by a score of 2-0 In a contest -which showed that the collegians have yet much to learn about the Im ported game. Holman, captain of last year's freshman eleven, scored a try for the reds after a brilliant 55-yard Mb. Tube Magnate Hurt In Runaway. PITTSBURG. Sept. 22. While William K. Schiller, president of the National Tube Company, was out driving near his country home at Sewickley today, his horse took fright and ran away. Mr. Schiller was thrown from the vehicle and painfully but not seriously hurt. t It READY French Clergy Wait State's Order to Vacate. LIVE AS BEST THEY CAN Though They Must Soon 'Leave , Government Property, in Spirit They ' Will Never Counte nance Separation Measure. PARIS, Sept. 22. The letter to the "Catholics of France, which was adopted by the recent council of bishops and, after having been signed by all the pre lates, was sent to Rome for the approval' of the Vatican, will be read tomorrow In all pulpits in France. This action has again brought the question of the sepa ration of church and state to the fore. Cardinal Lecot, a bishop of Bordeaux, the virtual leader of the church party, when questioned as to the attitude the episcopalate would take after reading of the letter, says it would be one of waiting. The priests would not leave the churches untfil they were requested by the authorities to do so, after which mass would be said In places which al ready were being arranged, and semina ries likewise would be transferred to other buildings. VI personally will leave the palace for a house I have rented," said Cardinal Lecot. "We have appealed to the gen erosity of the faithful and have gathered together a large amount of money, wMch I shall distribute to the neediest of the priests, and we will live as best we can. We will be careful to observe all laws except that of separation of church and state. That we cannot accept, because It tramples upon the dignity of the Pope and the bishops, not only of France, but of the whole world. "The Pope must look at the question as a whole. He cannot abdicate his au thority for a moment when the church Is the object of attacks. In other coun. tries, notably Spain, all eyes are watch. Ing to see the outcome of the struggle between the Government and the Vati can. It is impossible for Pius X to coun tenance the act which broke off the re lations between France and the Vatican, and since he rejects it, no arrangement of the matter is possible which does not modify its laws." The archbishop of Avignon has decided to remove from his palace to the small seminary, to which also the students of the larger seminary will be transferred, so as to vacate all Government property as soon as possible. POSTS ARMY ON FRONTIER Turkey Sends 40,000 .Men to Pre vent Bulgarian Invasion. SALONIKA. Sept. 22. Altogether 40,000 troops will be stationed along the Bui- 66 77 9 Humphreys' Seventy Seven Cures Grip and The first sign of a Cold is lassitude, a gone, let down feeling of weakness, caused by the shock to the syBtem. If you ever come to recognize this symptom before the sneezing begins, a dose of "Seventy-seven" will pre vent further developments and you will not have a Cold. "Seventy-seven" cures a Coldin more advanced stages but it takes longer. "Seventy-seven" is put up in a Small Vial of pleasant pellets that fits the vest pocket. At Druggists, 25 cents, or mailed. fttTDootor's Book mailed free. Humphreys' Homeo. Medicine Co., Cor. William and John Streets. New York. 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Consid ering the quality of merchandise we offer, no ower prices will be found anywhere Eastern Outfitting Company 1 Washington and Tenth THE STORE WHERE YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD H iiiiinnniM m Cathedral of St. Peter, urged the neces sity of having the tomb there empty lest the present Pope should die. ; He wishes to hasten the removal of Popo Leo's remains so as to have them placed In the provisional tomb in the Lateran within the present year, as already ar ranged, but Cardinal SatollI opposes the plan on the ground that the space is not available, and that changing the burial place would savor of lack of respect. The Great Western Railwsy Company, Knp- Iand, has an ambulance corps which it drills n rescuing supposed victims of railroad acci dents and frlvlns: firjft. nld to the Injured.. EASTERN OUTFITTING COMPANY 1