Ilk Simtlait llll ri)irttm Pages 1 to 12 I ruiNFSF RORN IN I HAMS BLAMES WOMEN TAFT J L c GOMPERS' BOMB PROVES HARMLESS PROSPERITY WAVE V I 1 'W ftW an W a w AMERICA BARRED FOR HARD TIMES T SAX FRANCISCO SCHOOL BOARD CONSULTS LAWYER. ' ALL THEY LIVE FOR IS DRESS, SAYS HETTY GREEX. CHARGE THAT CAPITALISTS PAY FOR "RED SPECIAL" MET. -. , t-nPTi tvn nuTr-nx. SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 30. 1908. PRICE FIVE CENTS. VOL. XX 11. oji v--.---. - -i i i NTD nnrnnm nnrm nun nr I w MAKES UMPS iUtlLbUll IV1LN DnnnL GLORY WITH HAYES Mrs ERIOUS MOVE ray T PR ROLLING ONWARD ) v 4 r t v 1 Times Improve Despite Politics. WILLS AND FACTORIES OPEN Railroads Prepare for Big Volume of Business. MONEY EASY, SAY BANKERS Makers of Automobiles Say Their Output Is Bought Two Years Ahead of Capacity of Factories. Heavy Steel Orders. CHICAGO Aug. 29.-Speclal.) Pros perity, slowly perhaps, but none the less surely. Is again spreading over the entire country. Traces of the recent depression re being obliterated and men In all lines of business are working with their faces toward the light. Interviews with leaders In all lines of business show- that trade Is booming. Bteel mills, car shops and manufactories of all kinds are reopening with full forces. Interviews with heads of 20 great rail way systems may be summarized in the statement that all expect a tremendous crop movement. This they say, will stimu late all lines of business. With crop funds circulating over the entire country, there will follow a permanent heavy traffic In merchandise, for stocks have been per mitted, to run to the lowest notch and must be built up rapidly. Expect Deluge of Business. The chief concern of railroad men now is to get their equipment in order to handle a big business, although all say they have foreseen the turn In affairs and are prepared to meet the deluge of business. One of the best indications of returning prosperity Is the activity in steeL Mills are booking large orders for structural Iron. Bankers say there is plenty of money at very easy rates. TexUle mills In the East say their orders are Increas ing. Manufacturers of automobiles' say their output is bought two years ahead of the capacity of their manufactories, which is mother striking evidence that money is plentiful. The election bugaboo is held out still in o . a deterrent to business wakening, but W. D. Cantilllon. assistant general manager of the Chicago & North western Railway, expressed the sentiment of many business men with the declara tion: "It is a case of business forcing Itself forward in spite of politics." The lessons of the business, depression, however, have been well learned. Cau tion and conservatism have superseded blind confidence in continuous prosperity. In every branch of business the new sea son Inaugurates not a boom, but a return to normal, healthful conditions. Picture of Future Bright. The Commercial National Bank, in its eighth annual report on crops and gen eral business conditions, sees pronounced recovery from the unsettled financial condition which caused retrenchmen and general uneasiness the latter part of last year and the forepart of this year, and pictures a future full of hope and en couragement. The report is based upon the views of 4000 bankers and business men in all sections of the United States. After reviewing the unfavorable condi tions which marked the final months of 1907 and the start of the present year, the statement dwells upon the Improv ing credit and the activity in expansion in almost all lines of trade and Industry. Farmers Have Plenty of Money. "With the harvesting and movement of crops and the flow of money into the . pockets of the farmers there must inevit ably come general replenishment of stocks of merchandise,'! says the report. "The profits of the year are, or soon will be. In hand and there will be a strong 1........ ......... .11. ..tttTtTTTT--TT - j tfARRY MURPHY DRAWS SOME PICTURES ON A FEW OF THE INTERESTING EVENTS OF THE WEEK j , 1 . V ' ! 1 y - at'. Ao' t 1 j t I. This Acllag Sweet's Ontslde View of the Washlnsjttm Why Xot TBI for Army Officers T Welrdly Ever. David Comes "Out For" Maybe the Flsh WUNot Get a The Latent "JoKKernant." 1 Ideal f Campalsra. Bryan Thla Way t - Chance. I I '. ' Socialists Promptly Publish Contri butions to Fund Only Four Rich Men Subscribe. CHICAGO, Aug. 29. (Special.) Are cap italists paying for the trip of the "Red Special," which is to carry the Socialist candidates on their speechmaking tour of the Nation? This bomb was thrown into the Washington-street National headquarters of the Socialists by Samuel Gompers, In an article In the American Federationist, but it has failed to ex plode, according to the followers of Debs. Mr. Gompers charged that the trip of the train was being made with the In tention of taking votes from the Demo crats, assuring Republicans of victory by splitting the labor vote. As an an ewer to Mr. Gompers, a list of subscrib ers to the "Red Special" fund was print ed and is being circulated. The only "capitalists" whose names appear are Joseph Medlll Patterson and William English Walling, of this city, and J. G. Phelps-Stokes and Robert Hunter, of New York, all of whom are open supporters of the Socialist ticket. Each of the quartet, except Mr. Phelps- Stokes, subscribed J100. He gave J300. KILLED IN STAGE WRECK Nevada Tragedy Prevents Reunion of Father and Son. ALTURAS. Cal., Aug. 29. (Special. ) The north-bound stage from the terminus of the Nevada, California A Oregonover turned eight miles below here today. One passenger,, a man named Baxter, was killed and a woman was badly Injured. Seven other passengers and the driver escaped without Injury. Baxter was en route from Scotland to join his father, James Baxter, a well known stonecutter -of Alturas, and his long Journey . lacked but eight miles of completion. When the stage was over turned a heavy iron casting, being car ried as express matter, fell on his head, crushing it and causing Instant death. The names of the Injured woman and the other passengers are not given in ad vices sent here. The cause of the acci dent Is not told. FIGHT TO DEATH FOR GIRL Pole Tries to Cremate Rival and Is Killed. CHICAGO, Aug. 29. Through the death today of Nicolas Vldovlcm, the story of a dramatic hand-to-hand struggle on the top of a blast furnace of the Iroquois Iron Company for the hand of a pretty Polish girl was made known. Vldovlcm, according to George Detllck, an eye-witness, crept up behind his rival, Ivan Meaiitch, and attempted - to throw him into the fl?ry pit below. Both men fell to the narrow platform, but recovered their footing and continued the struggle. The news was spread about the place and work was dropped by all hands to watch the thrilling struggle with Its background of flames. Suddenly Meaiitch broke away and felled his an tagonist with a crowbar. Meaiitch then gave himself up to a policeman. He declared that his rival had long been seeking a chance to throw him into the furnace. GAVE OUT NO INTERVIEW Judge Baker Repudiates His De fense of Judge Grosscup. GOSHEN, Ind., Aug. 29. Judge Francis H. Baker, of the United States Court of Appeals, today authorized the Associated Press to make a denial of an alleged in terview with him on the subject of the Standard Oil case, which was printed in many newspapers August 26 and 27. Judge Baker says he was not properly quoted and he did not authorize any in terview and added: "I have never given out, nor shall I ever give out, or knowingly permit to be given out, any statement concerning a case before me, except from the bench and In a form befitting the occasion. FIRST SNOW IN MONTANA Early Opening of Winter Reported From Anaconda. BUTTE, Mont., Aug. 29. A dispatch from Anaconda, Mont., says that the first snow of the season fell there to day, Follow New York's Idol in Great Parade. DEWEY OVATION IS SURPASSED Fifty Thousand March in Streets of Metropolis. MILLIONS CHEER HEROES Splendid Welcome Given Athletes : Who Won In Olympic Games. Smithson Equals World's Rec ord In Festival Sleet, BT W. J. PETRAIN. NEW YORK, Aug. 30. (Special.) Fifty thousand men In the line of march and 2,500,000 citizens and visi tors standing on the curbs, sitting in windows and on porches, or clinging to the railings of the elevated stations. were the features of New York's dem onstration in honor of the B0 returning Olympic game heroes today. For three solid hours the parade In the streets of the metropolis continued, taking mare than an hour to pass the City Hall Park reviewing stand. It was a greater and more enthusiastic demon stration than the home-coming of Ad miral Dewey a,fter the Spanish War, say people who saw both. Hayes Is Popular Idol. The parade was headed by a float bearing the Marathan trophy, won by John J. Hayes, of New York, the little chap who Is the idol of the public here. Following the float came the athletes in automobiles, Hayes occupying the first marrhiire and the three Oregon champions, Kelly, Smithson and Gil bert, the next. Ralph Rose, the larg est member of the American team, rode In the machine with Flanagan and Garretts and carried the American flag which he bore at the head of the Amer ican athletes as they filed into the stadium at London the first day of the games. On their arrival at the City Hall, the athletes were conducted to the review ing stand and presented with handsome gold medal watch charms with fobs. The trophies are handsome affairs and each man Is proud of hta souvenir and filled with gratitude for the splendid treatment accorded them by the citi zens of New York. Loving Cup for Three. Acting Mayor McGowan delivered a speech, presenting the watch charm Three of the athletes Hayes, the Mara thon winner; and J. C. Carpenter, of Cornell, and W. C Bobbins, of Yale, who were first and second In the 400-meter race, which was eventually awarded to Lieutenant Halsewell, the English runner, because of an alleged foul got the lov ing cup. Then the Mayor extended the freedom of the city to the athletes. Following the parade and public recep tion, a n umbo of 'the athletes went to the Celtic Park track to attend the firemen's memorial meet, held to ralBe a fund to build a monument to the memory of First Chief Kruger and men of the department who lost their lives discharg ing their duties. Smithson's Great Race. Forrest Smithson, the Oregon boy, holder of the Olympic 110-meter hurdle race, was entered In a 100-meter race and won his heat In fine style, getting home from scratch and equalling the world's record. J. A. Biller and Piatt Adams, of the Olympic team, competed in the standing high Jump. Melvin W. Sheppard gave an exhibi tion . 1000-yard run, in which Joe Brownlow, Jr., and J. Van Thum were Mongolians Despite Native Birth Is . Attorney's A'erdict on Three Little Yellow Maids. SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 29. (Spe cial.) City Attorney Long has fur nished the Board of Education an opin ion dealing with the question of the admissibility of native-born Chinese children to public schools other than schools established for them. In brief, he holds that the question of nativity has no bearing on the case; that Chi nese children are Mongolians, irrespec tive of birthplace, and that if special schools of equal standing are not pro vided for them, they are entitled to at tend any school. The opinion Is given in response to a query from the Board of Education with reference to the re quest of the parents of three native born Chinese maidens who wished their daughters to attend schools other than the Oriental school. The political code provides that every school shall be open for the adn-'sslon of all children between 6 and 21 years of age, residing in the district. This section also authorizes boards of edu cation to establish separate schools for Indian, Chinese or Mongolian children, and provides that when such schools are established, such children must not be admitted to any other school. The object of the law is clearly to segregate the. white children of the public schools from those of Mongolian or Indian descent, and Is not to deny the latter of any of the equal rights guaranteed by the constitution. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTER DAY'S Mexlmum temperature, 68.5 . degrees; minimum, 62.4 decrees. Domestic. Business condition in East indicate riturn of prosperity. Section 1. page 1. Atlantic City shooting uncleared' Williams make mysterious move. Bectlon 1, page 1. Telephone op-irator at Folsom gives up' life in warning people of coming flood. Sec tion 1 natrc a Chicago father attempts to feurl daughter from top of Auditorium hotel; wild, tsrug gle ensues. Section 1, page 3. roiittcaL Taft delivers stirring of- ringing speeches In Ohio; gives He to enemies. Section 1. page 1. . Idaho Republicans prepore to convene Sep tember 1; Brady has no opposition for Oubernatorial nomination fraction... .tf page V. Sports. Oregon football season, soon opens. Section 4, page 7. - Autos great aid to physicians in their work. Section 4, pago 7. Squires put up great fight against Burns. Section 4, page 7. Many Portland entries in Seattle horse show. Section 4. page 6. Portland defeats Oakland. Section 4, page 8. Oregon boys share honors with Hayes, New York athletic idol, in reception to re turning Olympic game victors. Section 1. page 1. Chicago Nationals defeat New York 8 to 2; big crowd seas game. Section 2, page 2. Keene's filly Maskette wins classic futurity; sum crowd attends, section 2, page 1. Los Angeles . defeats San Francisco la 15 Innings. 5-3. bectlon 2. page 2. Pacific Coast. Decision by District Judge Quarles, of Madi son, v is.. Indicates beginning of end in Idaho land-fraud cases. (Section 4. page 10. Fire at starbuck wipes out business section. causing loss or Strfl.ouo, Section 1. page 7. Commercial and Marine. Great reduction in English hop acreage. Section 4, page tf. Wheat lower at Chicago on heavy selling. bectlon ' 4. page tt. Stock traders arrayed on bull side. . Section 4, page 8. Money continues to pile up in New Tork banks. Section 4, page O. , I.Vi .t..m.hln Minlal, X7. - " castle tor Portland. Section 4, page S. Portland and Vicinity. German laborer probably fatally shot in Sec ond-street saloon. Section 1. page Coroner believes negligence contributed to death of Charles Scholl. Section 3, page 7. Lawyers plan to entertain American Bar Association, section 2. page 12. Seattle embezzler arrested admits his guilt- section 2, page 12.. Suffragettes to ask ballot for women tax payers. Section 1, page -10. Municipal Association supports crusade of Mayor Lane. Section 4. page 10. Oregon Methodists to meet September 25. Section 3, page 12. Southern Pacific Company to run farming demonstration train through Willamette VaHey. Section 8, page 12. Liquor dealers are reducing duration of leases. Section S, page 8. Sullivan's Gulch bridge is nearing comple tion, section s, page . Commercial travelers hold picnic at Glad stone park, bectlon l. page iu. Democrats plan series of Bryan rallies. Sec tion 4. page a. Boards Train Late in Afternoon. QUESTIONED BY DETECTIVES Shooting of Roberts at Atlan tic City Still Uncleared. PROBING FOR EVIDENCE Remarks Made by Roberts and Mrs. Williams in Rolling Chair and Overheard by Attendant Said to Be Significant. BALTIMORE, Md., Aug. 29. Will iams is reported on -reliable authority to have left here by the Pennsylvania Rail road at 3:30 ' o'clock this afternoon, whether for Atlantic City or elsewhere has not been ascertained. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Aug. 29. Up to this afternoon the police have made little progress toward solving the mystery surrounding; the shooting of Charles B. Roberts, the wealthy Baltimorean, on the board walk Wednesday night while . he was riding In a closed rolling chair with Mrs. W. S. G. Williams, also of Balti more. Detectives Sifting Clews. No warrants have been issued for any person and no such action will be taken until the police are satisfied that they know who did the. shooting. In running- down the clews the author ities are trying to find out where all per sons mentioned in the case were on the night of the shooting. Among these is the husband of Mrs. Williams. He Bays, and he Is corroborated by his friends, that he was in Baltimore , Wednesday night. Chief Woodruff soys that be wants it distinctly understood that he does not deny these statements, but that It is his duty to learn to his own satis faction that they are true. Roberts Resting Easy. Reports from the bedside of Mr. Rob erts are to the effect that he Is resting easy. ' Mrs. Roberts may be allowed- to see him later in the day. Police officials have so far not been allowed to Inter view the wounded man. The bullet is still In his liver and .there are still fears that complications may set in. Mrs. Roberts wife of the wounded man, today denied absolutely that there were any relations between her husband and Mrs. Williams which would lead her to believe anything other than the robbery motive as the cause of the shooting. Spoke In Endearing Terms. Two disclosures Just made " by the negro who -was pushing the chair in which Roberts and Mrs. Williams were riding are considered important by the police. When questioned in regard to the conversation which passed between Roberts and Mrs. Williams during the chair ride, Jesse Jackson, the negro, said: "I did not hear anything except one remark of the gentleman. I heard him say Just before the man with a mask came up to us, 'You have broken my heart.' I did not hear what the lady answered." In addition to the fact first related by him. In regard to the shooting, Jackson now says that, the masked stranger ap plied an epithet to Roberts as he ordered him to get out of the chair. The negro also Insists that he heard no demand for money following the first order, "Hold up your hands." Malcolm Woodruff, chief of police, said today: Her Feelings Toward Husband. "Many things that Mrs. Williams has told us of her husband are Important as showing their feelings toward each other. She said that her eighteen years of married life have been misery to her. Three times, she declared, she has had I Concluded on Pajre s. "Xone Too Particular How They Get Clothes, or Who Pays," She Adds. BELLOWS FALLS Vt., Aug. 29. Spe cial.) "The . women of America have helped to make hard times. All they iyg for, all they care for, is clothes the lat est shape in skirts. And they are none too particular how they get what they want, or who pays for it." - This is the declaration of Hetty Green, the richest woman in the world, who to day began her annual vacation of a monjh. When dinner was announced on the train, she produced an apple and three crackers from her reticule and cheated the dining-car. "I do not say the American women are immoral," she continued, "but they do not care what fearful prices their hus bands, fathers and brothers may be com pelled to pay for their finery. Times are bad in New York, and New York de serves hard times. All are spendthrifts and money wasters down there. "This will be a hard Winter and we will not see good times before Spring. The election will not help. The panic must run its course. Money men are doing nothing to stop it. Standard Oil could stop the hard times with one stroke of the pen, but Rockefeller will not do it. It will cost the Government $28,000,000 to collect that $29,000,000 from him." WIFE WOULDN'T LIVE LIE Loveless Marriage Revealed Too Late Wrecks Pastor's Career. LOS ANGELES, Cal., Aug. 29. (Spe cial.) Dr. Luclen L. Knight, philosopher, lecturer, former pastor of the Central Presbyterian Church, Washington, D. C, and former associate editor of the Atlanta Constitution, was granted a divorce to day from Mrs. Edith N. Knight. He broke down on the stand while telling the bitter story of his domestic woes. He testified that some years after their mar riage his wife told him frankly that she could no longer continue to live a He; that she had never loved him, having married him out of deference to the wishes of her parents, who were dead when she revealed the tragedy. Dr. Knight loved her deeply, he swore, and the shock was terrible, wrecking his health and cutting short his ministerial career." He'Tbok trips abroad in the hope W bettering his mental and physical con dition, was 111 for months In a Baltimore hospital and then came to California not long ago. He despaired at last of winning his wife's love and sought a legal separation. CHURCH OPEN TO LOVERS May TTse Parlors for Courting, Says St. Louis Pastor. ST. LOUIS, Aug. 29. Announcement was made today by Rev. W. F. An drews, pastor of the Centenary M. E. Church South, that on Friday evening the church parlors will open for the Fall season for the reception of young men and their sweethearts. There will be music, recitations and refreshments, and chaperons will be provided for Friday girl gatherings. "A great many young women have no place to entertain their beaux at home or In boarding-houses," said Dr. Andrews, "and they have to stroll around the city to enjoy each other's company. Our church parlors will be open to Just such young people. Our chaperons will be those whom moth ers can have confidence In, and girls who come without escorts will be well looked after. "The expenses connected with the social evenings will be met from the church general fund." CARGO WORTH $2,000,000 Asia Brings Great Shipment of Raw Silk From Orient. SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 29. The richest cargo of raw silk Imported from the Orient in several years reached this port today on the steamer Asia. It consisted of 2660 bales, valued at $2,000,000, and will be sent to New York on a special train, which was In waiting at the dock when the Asia arrived. Proves Reaf Live Wire An Contest. MAKES SPEECHES IN OHIO Denounces as Lie Report He Is ' Enemy of Laboring Men. COMPARES TWO PARTIES; Democratic Doctrines Have Proved False, While Republican Poli cies Have Advanced Nation to Era of Great .Progress. COLUMBUS. O.. Aug. 29. W. H. '. Taft today went through the State of! Ohio, leaving behind him a trail of : speeches that doubtless will' surprise i his campaign managers, who expected : his trip from Virginia Hot Springs to ; the Middle Bass Fishing Club would! be devoid of politics, but at Athens, after delivering the speech he hnd pre- pared for the veterans and which had : ho politics in it, Mr. Taft was whisked : away to the Taft Club, where follow ing an Introduction by Arthur I. Vorys, ' he spoke for 40 minutes. Uses Short and t'gly Term. "There Is one brief way to deal with . the story which has circulated that I; have said that a dollar a day was; enough for any laboring man," de-, clnred Judge Taft, "it's a lie." The speaker came down on both heels emphatically. Judge Taft then defended his Judi cial decisions in labor cases, with the statement that when acting as a Judge he endeavored to render Judgment in accordance with the law and the facts, ; "and I have no apologies to make." In this connection Mr. Taftr said he , would be willing to receive Judgment of any man who would read the rec- ords In theso cases and the recent de-. cislor. he rendered. Taft Friend of Labor. He expressed his approval of labor or ganizations and dissected the labor plank of the Democrats with the conclusion that If enforced, it would be a weak end ing of the powers of the courts and re-J suit In loss In the rights of labor. Political demands on Mr. Taft began before 6 A. M. at Charles, W Va., and continued In all the towns and cities he j passed through. Including Toledo, which was reached shortly before 11 o'clock to-; night. Taft Smile In Evidence. He spoke briefly at Columbus to the gathering crowd headed by the Buckeye Club and the ColumbtiS Glee Club, and responded with the "Taft smile" to the ' enthusiasm of Toledo. Mr. Taft admitted that the day had demonstrated that the campaign was on and added that he was not sorry. Mr. Vorys, who Joined Mr. Taft this morning, regards the utterances of the , candidate as pitching the tone of the . campaign and demonstrating the candl-' dote to be a real "11'e wire" in the con-; test. ' Republican Party's Record. In his address to the Taft Club at ' Athens, which is regarded as' the Im portant political utterance of the day, j Mr. Taft enumerated the problems of the government, beginning with the j Spanish War, the Philippine question, ! the Panama Canal, Cuba, the irrigation I of arid lands, the reclamation lands, and "Yet," he said, "I ask you whether ! there is a single stain upon the es- ' cutcheon of the Republican party un- der Theodore Roosevelt in meeting all these new problems. Not only that, ! but In respect to our foreign affairs, i never In the history of the nation has j the standard of the United States occu- i pled a higher place before the nations ! of the world than It is today. "My friends, you can recollect that I 1 i IaT 100.2