Pages 1 to 12 VOL. XXVII. NO 4 PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING. JANUARY 26, 1908. PRICE FIVE CENTS. WILL BREAK AH MONOPOLY Bonaparte Starts Suit Under Sherman Law. STOCK CONTROL ILLEGAL Creates Monopoly of Trans continental Traffic West of Missouri. CLARK WAS FORCED TO SELL Southern Pacific Absolutely Ruled by Union Pacific. HOLD ON OTHER ROADS Strong Voice in Management of the Santa Fe, Great Northern, Korth . ern Pacific and Burling ton by Stock Holdings. r GROUNDS OF SriT A (i AT VST HAR J RIM AN SYSTEM. i That tha holding of stock .of the I following competing roads by the I Union Pacific Railroad Company 1. . 1n violation of the Sherman enti- j truat taw: J Southern Pacific. ' 4 San Pedro, Loa Anreles eV Salt Lake. Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe. Great Northern. J 'Northern Pacific. , 4 Chicago, Burlington & Quincy, t which Is owned Jointly by the two t last named roads. 4 The following individuals are also 4 to be made defendants: ' EJ. H. Harrlman, .Jacob H. fichiiT, I Otto H. Kahn. Jamea Stlllman. Henry 4 C. Frick. H. H. Rogers and W. A. Clark. ...... ....... .....a WASHINGTON, Jan. In. Attorney General Bonaparte today directed that a bill In equity be filed to set aside the control by the Union Pacific Hallway Company and its subsidiary corporations of the Southern Paclflo and the San Pedro, Los Angeles & Salt Lake Railroads: also to have de clared Ullegal the ownership by the Union Pacific or the Oregon Short Line of stock in the Santa Fc, the Great Northern and Northern Pacific, all of said lines being; competitors of the Union Pacific. The Attorney-General today issued ai official statement to this effect, which, after referring to the extended investigation by the Interstate Com merce Commission into the relations existing among the various lines of - road engaged In transcontinental traffic, says: "From the evidence so adduced and from Independent Investigation the de partment has arrived at the conclu sion that the stockholding of the Union Pacific and Its subsidiary companies In the corporations men tioned above is in direct violation of the Sherman act. Violates Sherman Act. "The Department regards the suit ns of first importance, as it Is sought by means thereof to brralt up a sub t I t al Place tm a tlraalttve saenev. stantial monopoly of the transporta tion business of the. country between the Missouri River on the east and the entire Pacific Coast south of Portland on the west." Aside' from tho railway companies above named, the other, defendants In the suit are the Farmers Loan & Trust Company of New York, which is the depository of all the stock of the San Pedro road under a contract by which It Is required to give proxies' to such persons as may be named by Mr. Har rlman and Mr. Clark for a period of years. There are also individual de fendants who are alleged to have con ceived and carried out the conspiracy complained of, towlt: E. H. Harrlman, Jacob H.. Schlff, Otto H. Kahn. James Stlllman, Henry C. Frick, Henry H. Rogers and William A. Clark. While naming the Individual defendants the statement makes no -mention of any Intention to prosecute any of these of ficials personally in any criminal proceed ings. The statement continues: Aimed at Monopoly in West. "It appears by the testimony in the possession of the Department that a com bination was formed about the beginning of the year 190t by B. H. Harriman, of New York, the president of the Union I jl?' V t Frank B. KeUocK, IVa Will Prosecute Gorerameat Suit Against Harrlman. Pacific, and certain of his associates, for the purpose of obtaining a monopoly of all transcontinental transportation busi ness. The first move, was the acquisition of sufficient stock of the Southern Pacific Company to insure its control. That com pany owned a line of railroad extending from New Orleans and points in Texas on tidewater through California to Port land, Oregon; also a line from Ogden, Utah, to San Francisco.' The Southern Pacific had been for years one of the principal competitors of the Union Pacific. As the result of such control by the stockowners, .the management of the two companies had1 been amalgamated and since 1903 a majority of the board of di rectors of the Southern Pacific have been members of the board of directors of the Union Pacific. Competition between the two companies had 'been substantially eliminated. Clark's Road Absorbed. "The San Pedro,. Los Angeles & Salt (Lake Road was projected as an inde pendent line by W. A. Clark and his as sociates, to run from San Pedro, on tide water in California, through Los Angeles to Salt ' Lake City, having connection at that point with - the Union Pacific and with the Gould system. After the work of construction was In progress the parties in control of the Union Pacific, by means of harassing litigation designed to prevent the acquisition of necessary right of way and by threats of parallel ing the line, if consolidated, so as to ren der the same unprofitable and by other means. Induced Clark and his associates to abandon the sceheme of an independ ent road and to join' with the Oregon Short Line, taking- over certain track owned or controlled by that company in Southern Utah and Eastern Nevada and giving the Oregon Short Line an equal stock interest In the San Pedro, Los An geles ft Salt Lake . Road with that held by Clark and his associates. Then addi tional t raffia agreements and contracts were made between the San Pedro and various corporations included In the Harrlman system, so-called, which de prive the San Pedro of Its Independence and makes it In effect a part of the same system. . "As to the Santa Fe, which Is a competing line with both the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific, It appears that Sir. Harrlman and his associates acquired sufficient Interest In the San- (Concluded on Pas - WALL STREET IS FULL OF REMORSE Purified by Fire, It Mends Its Ways. MORGAN STANDS AS COLOSSUS Made Panic-Stricken Cowards Be Decent. DISGUST AT GREAT CRIMES Catalogue of Wrongdoings Which Made Nation Scourge New York With Fury Money Drained to Gambling ' Den. CHICAGO, Jan. 2o. (Special.) Wiring from New York to the Record-Herald to night, Walter Wellman says In part: Purification by fire, shrinkage by elimi nation of dross, regeneration In remorse this is a fair characterization of the new, fie revolutionized, the minimized Wall street. - The fire has come partly from without, in the form of public opinion, in the moral uplift which the whole country has felt under the leadership of President Roosevelt. It has come from within. In the form of discovery of cancers and tumors, which must be cut out if the patient Is to live. How much of the credit for the new and better order of things Is due to one influence, how much to the other, I am unable to say. Adversity Brings Repentance. Probably Wall street would never have realized how bad It was and how much In need of a surgeon if the country had not first made the discovery- Probably also. Wall street would have paid little heed to the country's condemnatory warning, but for the discovery that New York wall losing ground. losing confidence, losing in fluence, losing . power, losing money, through its own wrong-doing. Vice Is never repentant in prosperity. Certain It la that last Autumn's crisis precipitated and effected the revolution! When New York began to look into itself, it was appalled at what it found. As soon as Introspection began, remorse and peni tence and good resolutions sprang into life. Morgan Masters the Storm. It was a lucky thing for New York, for the whole country, that there was a John Pierpont Morgan 'here the day the storm came. What he did and how he did it all the world knows in part. The full story has never been' -written, cannot be written. In short.' to use the language of one who was an actor in the drama, Mr. Morgan showed him self to be one of the few really great men this country has produced. There was not another man In the country who could have met the crisis as he met It. He took a crowd of panic stricken, selfish, moral-coward finan ciers by the throat, shook them as a terrier shakes a rat, banged their heads together and made them be de cent by the sheer force of his will and his commanding personality. When a man like Morgan, with ls insight, his knowledge, his habit of facing the truth, looks over the recent history of New York financiering, it is not surprising he feels a great dis gust at it Long Catalogue of Crime. The era of promotion, wind and wa ter stocks; victimising of an Innocent Investing public . The insurance scandals, which have driven some men to death, others into exile, still more into oblivion. The traction scandals, which have pulled down from his pedestal and de classed the once powerful Thomas F. Ryan. The trust company scandals, trust companies doing all the dirty work of the town, managed by Incompetents or sharks. The railroad scandals, like Alton. '' EVENTS OF LAST Panulaiestfly Mam tttmtt lirnlll -)aes as Xtevesssrtie Vtssse which have put even the great Harrl man in, a class by himself, and that unenviable. The banking scandals, plungers and gamblers using other people's money. known to all the leaders, but suffered to go on till tlie storm came, when they should have been: eliminated long before. Scandals which have led a public prose cuting official to declare within a fort night that there arc a score of bank di rectors in this town he could put in jail if he wished. The cotton scandal, which has disgust ed the South with its unjust speculative classifications. Even Rockefeller Repents. k The railway and Standard Oil rebate scandal, upon- which President Roosevelt and Judge Landis have put a quietus and brought even John D. Rockefeller to the stool of repentance. .The greatest scandal of all, the drain ing of money from ell over the United States to carry on' the great gambling game known as the Stock Exchange. The scourged, purged, shrunken Wall Street Is not only whipped by public opin ion and by adversity, but It shows signs of being a better Wall Street, at least for a time. CONTENTS TODAYS PAPER Th Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 49 degrees; minimum, ,1.1. TODAY'S Fair; northerly win da. Forelrn. Boycott of British roods In India. Section 4. page 1. Ex-Jesuit criticises Pope's attitude toward modernism.- Section 4. page 1. Oulda, the novelist, dies at Florence. Section 1, page 2.. National. Bonaparte announces suit to dissolve Har rlman merger. Section 1, page 1. Democratic Senators will offer currency bill. Section 1. page 6. Torpedo 'flotilla will reach Buenos Ayres today. Sertion page New Mexico to be admitted next session of Congress. Section 1, page S. . s I'olitlrs. Gridiron Club has fun with candidates. Section 1, page 7. Records of campaign of 1906 show silver mine-owners contributed most of Bryan's funds. Section 1, page 1. Domestic. Mohler reduces Union Pacific forces and blames Roosevelt. Section 1. page A. Freight rebaters plead guilty and Judge MacPherson sentences them. Section 2. page ft. ' Snell's love letters s oread terror among Illinois women. Section 1. page 2. Austrian Consul defends Szechenyt and criti cises American husbands. Section X, page 2. Several Atlantic steamers delayed by storm. Section 1. page 4. Sport. Montgomery wins Burns Handicap. Section 1 page 5. , Close finish of six-day bicycle race. Sec tion 1, page 6. Dan Kelly av candidate for Olympic games team.-- Secion 1 page 5. Change ijf football rules,'' 'Section 1 1, pa 0. 7 - - .- Portland ball team may train at Tucson. Section 4, pages 7. Both Dan Kelly and Forrest Smlthson enter In Eastern indoor track meets. Section -4 pae 7. Joe Wo loot t a has-been at 32 years. Section 4, page 7. Referee discusses change of annual U. of O. O. A. C. game to Portland. Section 4, page 6. Faclflo Coast. Jack London arrives at San Francisco, leaving yacht at Panette. Section X. page . Senator Perkins' daughter engaged to Cleve land Baber. Section 1 page 2. Utopian Brotherhood goes bankrupt. Sec tlon 1 page 2. Many saloons fall In San Francisco. Section X page IX. Wallace Times baa trouble with printers union and manager suspends publication. Section. 1, page 7- Seattle Fair made no offer of float for Port land Rose Carnival. Section X. page 4. Tillamook Sheriff arrests band of youthful burglars. Section 1, page 4. Rate on wheat twice that on lumber. Sec tion 1, page 4. Commercial and Marine. Excltment in local onion market. Section 4, page 9. "Wheat weak and lower at Chicago. Section 4, page . . , New York stock market almost lifeless. Sec tion 4, page 9. Big cajfh gain shown by New York bankers. Section 4. page 9. Local builders do a fast Job on the Bessie Dollar. Section 4, page 8. Portland and Vicinity. F. P. Mays letter tells how he exerted strong pull with Hall to help Stelwer. Section 1, page 1. - Letters of Mitchell and Futton reveal polit ical secrets of the part. Seotlon 1, page 10. Receiver Devlin, of Oregon Savings Bank, will ask two yeans In which to pay all claims. Section 2, page lO. Four outside cities to enter- floats In Rose Festival parade. Section 1. page 10. Sunshine brings out candidates for office. Sec tion 1, page 8. Qns Lowlt and Gus Moser exchange compli ments. Section 8, page 7. Multnomah. Bar passes) resolutions of regret on death of Judge Frazcr. Section 2, page 10. Council refuses to pass appropriation for lab- . oratory. .Section 1. page 8. Officers of Title Bank bring up new techni calities. Section J. page S. f ' WEEK, VIEWED BY F. P. MAYS TRIED TO HELP STE1WER Induced Hall to Drop Criminal Charge. LETTER TELLS OF SUCCESS Ex-Senator Writes of Strong Pull He Exerted. . HIS MEMORY IS IMPAIRED Witness Shows Effect of Long 111 ness and Heney Announces In : tention Not to Prosecute Hlra on the Pending Indictments. Franklin Pierce Mays. ex-State Senator, was the principal witness for the Gov ernment yesterday In the Hall-Mays con spiracy case in the Federal Court. A treacherous and falling memory prevented the witness from positively associating his various conversations with Hall and the dates of the letters that passed be tween them. Probably the most -damag ing evidence against Hall, adduced from the witness, was his Identification of a letter written by himself ' to Stelwer in which Mays told of his successful efforts in dissuading Hall from Instituting criminal proceedings against the members of the Butte Creek Company for unlawful fencing.- Before Mays was called Into the court room, Heney announced that he wished the indictment dismissed against Mays, who was a co-defendant with Hall and Edwin Mays In making this request of the court,' Heney said he did not con sider that the Government was in pos session of sufficient evidence with which to convict Mays of the alleged conspiracy. Later in the examination of Maya, Heney repeated the declaration he has made be fore, that it was not his Intention ' to prosecute Mays on any of the other' re maining Indictments against him be cause of his physical condition. Judge Hunt consented to the dismissal of the Indictment and at the same time ex onerated the bond Mays had furnished. Mays was then sworn as a witness for the prosecution. J. W. Renick. the special agent who Investigated the fences of the Butte Creek Company in August, 1904, under in structions from Hall, identified the letter of Instructions he had received from Hall ordering him to do the work and In which Hall Informed Renick that he would be expected only to see that the company had substantially complied with the law. In. his report, which was submitted-to Hall In September, 1904, Renick reported that the fences had not been disturbed. This report was also admitted in evidence for the Government. Stelwer Is Evasive. W. W. Stelwer, president of the Butte Creek Company, -was temporarily excused yesterday as a witness, following a care ful questioning by Judge Webster. Stelwer evasively answered many of the questions relating to Important .details of which he professed to have no recol lection. It was evident that the witness was doing all he could to shield both Fulton and Hall from any unpleasant dis closures that Heney sought to elicit in his re-direct examination, in which a num ber of pertinent questions were asked concerning the Senatorial contest of 1903, when Fulton was elected. Heney endeav ored to cause the witness to charge that both Hall and Fulton exerted their in fluence on the closing night of that ses sion to Induce Stelwer to vote for Fulton, which he did on the last ballot. But to all such questions, the witness asserted that he did net remember any suoh In cidents. ; ' . ! ' Charles B. Moores. ex-Register of the Oregon City LaniJ Office, will undoubted ly be a witness for the Government be fore the prosecution closes Its case either tomorrow or Tuesday. Just what Moores will testify can only be conjectured but It will be recalled that aside from being con- HARRY MURPHY nected with the Land Office at Oregon City shortly before the date of the land- fraud disclosures, he ' was a tentative candidate for Congressman' to succeed late Thomas H. Tongue, lie may relate further interesting facts in connection with the political history of the state at that time, particularly as they affected the relations of the different principals that have been dragged cither directly or indirectly into the case now on trial. Henry Melclrum. ex-United States Surveyor-General for Oregon, will also be a witness for tho Government, prob ably tomorrow. Mr. Meldrum reached Portland yesterday from McNell'e Isl and, where he is serving a. sentence for approving fraudulent surveys of Gov ernment land. He will probably testify to flic fact that the alleged signatures of George C. Brownell to field notes and applications for surveys were for geries, having recently made. a written confession to Brownell that he (Mel drum) forged Browneirs nAme to t:io papers.- It was these forged signatures that Inspector Greene discovered and on which Hall's insinuations of pos sible prosecution of Brownell for com plicity in the land-frauds was based. Because of these indirect threats of indictment and prosecution, Brownell Franklin Pierre Slays, Who Tea fled Yesterday In Hall - Mays Trial. testified Friday that he was forced to withdraw from the contest for appoint ment as United States Attorney, a job promised him both by Mitchell and Fulton, and finally to Indorse Hall for reappointment. ' Among other witnesses that may be called by Heney. before the Govern ment concludes its testimony, are a number, of prominent residents of Portland who attended the legislative session of 1903. Heney announced Fri day that he would subpenae a number of witnesses for the purpose of prov ing that Hall attended that session and was activeTy "vorklng in. the ntereat of the election of Senator Fulton. More About Fulton. None of the testimony offered yes terday served further to associate Fulton with the generally' complicated political situation in this state between 1899 and 1905,' nor did "itTefleet un favorably on the Senator. Honey, how ever, says he has furthe- surprising and Incriminating- evidence Involvi-ig Fulton that will be sprung before, the Government rests Jts, case.. Mays, was called as a witness about 11 o'clock yesterday morning end tes tified that shortly after he had been employed as . attorney for the Butte Creek Company, he telephoned Hall to come to his office in the Chamber of Commerce building. At that time Mays said he, told Hall that Steiwer had in formed him (Mays) that criminal pro ceedings were likely to be instituted by the Government against either the Butte Creek Company or the. individual members of the company for violating the fence- laws. Mays said that he pointed out to Hall that' the alleged violation was punishable by either of two procedures a civil or a criminal suit and he said he urged- Hall to institute only a civil suit, contending that a man of the high standing of Steiwer throughout the state should not be humiliated by arrest' when any doubt might exist as to an actual vio lation of the law. The witness Identified the letter he had written to Stelwer In 1908, followr ing this conference with HalL This letter was Introduced by the Govern ment and was as follows: Offices of Carey A Mays, attorneys-at-law. Chamber of Commerce building, Portland, Or., October 7, 1903. . Hon. W. W. Steiwer. Fossil, Or., My Dear Wlnlock. 1 was up to The Conclnded on Pago 10-) O r "Wefcodr Bess Is Me." f ! I -A i V -t , t f FRIED FAT FROM SILVER MINERS Figures on Bryan's 1896 Campaign. BIG COMPANIES ARE GENEROUS Nine-Tenths of Total Came From That Source. MARCUS DALY LEADS ALL1 Mining King of Montana Raised! 9159,000 of $288,000 Given by Silver Interests Jones De- : , stroys Detailed Record. SILVER MINING COMBINATIONS FINANCING BRYAN IN I89S. . Marcus Daly, fer himmlf and others, 1 68,000. W. A. Cl&rk'a personal' contribu tions, 148.000. " Colorado mining- combination : ' D. H. MofTatt, tI-3.000. ' W. -H. Stratton, 12.000. ; D. M. Hyman, tTM'. Dennis Sheedy. ST0O0. Smaller donations, S6000. ' Utah silver fund. l,0O0. ' i Charles D. Lane, California, 4! ft. 000. Total mining contributions. 1288,000. Total Democratic National Commit tee's fund, 1321,000. ... NEW.. YORK, Jan. 5. (Special.) Records of the financial backing of William J. Bryan's campaign for the.' Presidency in 1896, when he made the issue of free and unlimited coinage of silver at the ratio . of 16 to 1, show1 that Western mine-owners and sliver, producers financed the canvass to thai extent of $288,000, nearly 90 per cent1 of all the money received by the I'-r., ocratirf. National committee, '-o'i ' I , ex -Senator James K. Jones, of J - -sas. was chairman. - The figures here presented a.f; .' - ; authority of officers of the Democfe j National committee for 1896, men J . actually received the money and j v. the books. Some of the principal ' r tributors have aided with their recof, . v Two Sets of Books. I Two sets of books were kept in- . i . campaign. One was the formal srtj which was preserved for reference in case of necessity. It tells nothing of Inner history, only totals and sum maries being carried In it For ex ample, all the money raised by Marcus raly ie credited to him alone, no re cord being kept of the National banks and the mining corporations that turned In their contributions through him. There was another book which con tained the names ol actual contributors, so far as known to the committee. This was a Journal In which were 'en tered the names of those who made up combination contributions. In It were dozen of names of mining companies, of smelting companies, of corporatione interested in the production of silver. The book remained in the possession of Chairman Jones. It is supposed not to be in existence now. Only Half of What Was Spent. 1 Tho total received by the Democratic; National committee for the campaign Of 1896 was $321,000. This $321,000 by no means represents all the expendi tures In behalf of Mr. Bryan, being considerably less than one half, ac-' cording to the best estimates. Many' separate elements of free silver or ganizations entered into that campaign,' each with Its own fund, working lnde-' pendently of the National committee. Marcus Daly led off with a big con tribution out of hie own pocket, the. exact amount of which cannot be de-' termined. ' He had the directors or the' Anaconda Mining Company ' vote a! (Concluded on Page a. J la Tibi mt Bematsr