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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1908)
THE SUXI5AT OBEGOXIAX. -PORTLAND. OCTOBER 4, 1903. 11 -SUPHEME COURT ASKEDJO DECIDE Lumber Rate Case Referred to Highest Tribunal of ; . Nation. i POWER OF COMMISSION Court or Appeal A'ks Definition f Hate-Making Pontr and Contin ues Lower Kate, Tending Ilnal Peclslon. SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. . For the first time since the paasase of the Hepburn r.llrnn.l rate law. tlie supreme our of tlie United States will be given an ni,i.rlnn!lv to DH UPOn the prai-tira ,iU.finn. involved In the law. Three l,.rt. ,.t the Federal Clrrult Court nr inwili unable to agree upon a de ilnion uDon application for an Injunc tion brought by two of the Harriman railroad, embodying all the vital riehfs and powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission. Including the matter of court review, today directed that the case be certified to the Su- nreme Court. Relying upon the statute which expe dites proceedings of this character, the attorneys In the cam expect a final d clslon will be rendered within 60 days. In the meantime, a rate fixed by the Inter ate Commerce Commission will apply on shipments of rough lumber from Wil lafnette River points to San Francisco Hay and the protest of Northwest lum bermen to the commission against an in creased rate will be effective until the 6upreme Court rules otherwise. Case I'nder Discussion. The application of the Southern Pa clflc and the Oregon & California Rail ways for an Injunction to restrain the Interstate Commerce Commission from putting Into effect the rate of $3.40 per thousand feet on lumber between the points mentioned has had two hearings beforo Judges Gilbert. Morrow and Ross, of the Circuit Court of Appeals. In the first Instance, a demurrer pre sented by the Government was upheld, the Judges unanimously declining to review the findings upon which the commission based Its refusal to per mit the rate to be increased to $5 per thousand. Luther M. Walters, solicitor for the commission, who directed the case for the Government, announced, when this decision waa rendered, that the sustained demurrer embodied not only the constitutionality of the act creating the commission, but also the right of the commission to fix and al ter railroad rates and to review any new facts or allegations presented in support of rate changes before such facts or allegations are carried before a court. The demurrer also asserted the right of th? commission to fix rates without awaiting a court review of its discretion or Judgment. Low Rate Pending Appeal. In an amended bill, filed the following day. the attorneys representing the rail roads based their chief claim to relief at tne court's hands upon the allegation that the rate fixed by the commission was confiscatory, presenting evidence and argument to support that contention. The demurrer of the Government covering practically the same ground as In the Hist Instance was followed by a clay of argument on this altered phase and It was on these premises that the three Judge of the Circuit Court were unable to agree. When the derision had been announced. P. F. pitnne, chief counsel for the rail roads, made Inquiry as to whether the status quo should be maintained until the Supreme Court should render its decision. This was. In fact, a request for a temporary Injunction permitting the railroads to establish the higher rate and Mr. Dunne reminded the court that It was vested with power to make such a ruling. In reply. Judge Gilbert simply said that the certiilcatlon of the case to the Supreme Court carried the entire matter Into the jurisdiction of that tribunal, by which It waa un derstood that the application for a temporary writ was denied. Victory fop Lumbermen. Solicitor Walters, who was assisted by Joseph N. Teal, counsel for the lumber dealers who protested against the In creased rate, and by the I'nlted States District Attorney's office of this city, ex pressed himself as well pleased with the outcome of the hearings. While refusing to discuss the probability of the Supreme Court rendering a decision In favor of the Government, he declared that the jiresentatlon to the court of all material objections to the existence of the com mission and Its powers and rights was in itself a victory of no little Importance. Late today the opposing attorneys met In the Circuit Court to agree upon the form of the questions to be submitted to the higher tribunal. Ther was a general belief that the case would be set for an early hearing no 11 was considered not improbable. In view of the far-reaching consequences of the decision that the court would hand down its opinion within 30 days. At the most. It la believed, that consideration will not be extended over double that lime. i The rate of $.140. established bv the commission, will go Into effect on Octo ber 16. It was nrst made effective for August 16. but an extension was granted upon petition of the railways. a charge of rupee for every hit. He managed to make three holes In the chief tower. Now the gun has been banded over to a well-known character. Jemadar Mir Khan, late of the Fortieth Pathans. The Jemadar aahib la a Mlshtl, and has un dertaken to level the Zanga Khel for tifications for the Mala Khel. He ha taken on the business on a contract by which he get 1000 rupee on the destruc tion of the fort. Powder la a difficulty, but projectile are available In almost unlimited quantities, having been labor iously collected from the various battle fields of the "87 war. On the death of Sarwar Khan two year ago the Waxirs seized hi estate of China rak. The In habitants of China rak have now offered the All Khel a large sum of money (said to be $10,000) if they will drive out the Waxirs. The All Khel are. of course, anxious to do so. but the Mala Khel, who would doubtlea like to take up the con tract themselves, are preventing them from offering Chinarak any assistance. The Mishtls. emulating the Malas. nav built a gun at a cost of $350. and it explosions can be heard all day In Fort Lockliart. Ita range la SuO yard, and It throws olive-wood balls bound wHh iron bands: At first 'it shot deplorably high, but the weights have been readjusted. and it Is now the terror of the neighbor DEATH OF OREGON PIONEER. A' -Sat - - Mrs. P. T. Wallace. The) funeral of Mrs. Alice Wallace, who A led at Terrace Park yesterday, will 14 beld this afternoon at S o'clock: from Pinter's chapel. Mrs. "Wallace- was born February 13. 1847. at Batd'e Creek. Mich. She waa the eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. Adams. Her mother died when she waa feme years old. She crossed the plains w ith her father, arriving In Albany August 22. 1853. She was married so P. T. Wallace January 1, lfttl3. HM r husband. P. T. Wallace, a son. Eln'er J. Wallace, of Portland; and a daxaghter. Mrs. J. Dowd, of Butte, survive her. Mrs. Wallace was a matnber or the Oregon Pio neers' Association. tng hostile towers. There seems absolute ly no prospect of matters quieting down. The A f rid Is, Za Imasht and other neigh bors are taking no Interest in the quarrel. BIG FAIR fOH GRESHAM ALL IS READY' FOR SECOND AX- XTA1 XUSPLAY. CIVIL WAR RAGES IN INDIA Intertribal Feud Brings About State of Anart'liy. CALCUTTA. Oct. J.-I Special.) Civil War. says a frontier correspondent, is raging throughout the Orakxal territory, from the Khenkl Valley and Sam an a Kunge on the south, to Tirsh on the north. The various Orakxal tribes have thrown In their lot either with the Samll faction or Gr faction., and the quarrel with regard to Chtnarak. the estate of the Ihi? Sarr Khan, has resolved It self Into a political intertribal feud, which is rending the country from end to end. Sepoys returning to their homes on leave, and other travelers, have to proceed with the greatest precaution: for. not only is every man's hand of the one tribe against every man of another, bat the present stale of anarchy and war has encouraged bands of robbers to at tack all travelers indiscriminately. The war Is being waged with particular violence and hatred between the All Khel and Mala Khel. The former are Care, the latter Stemils. The contend ing lashkars are aeparated by a narrow nullah, not more than 100 yards broad, across which a hot tire Is poured all day. The Maia Kliel have built a caunon. which ftlfae h meit - to draw It; and with this weapon are Investing the forti fied AH Khel village of Zunga Khel. Up till lately a Slku. trained in some British battery. has sms wockiM Uia gun, at Exhibits Will Utilize Every Inch of Available Space Class Entries Are Well Filled. GRESHAM, Or., Oc. 3. (Special.) The second annual deposition of the Multnomah County Palr Association will open Tuesday, ami will continue five days. Nearly every detail ha been completed for the event and a most auspicious season Is loot'ed for. Only good weather will be needed to make it successful, as tlae exhibits will occupy all the available space in the new pavilion, as well ae In the stock barns and poultry aheds. The pavilion is 50x16V feet, two stories high. The ground -.floor will be occupied by the agricultural exhibit. and the upper floor will be used as an assembly room and art gallery. The building is being wined fjor electric lights. The stock pens and poultry nous are models of convenience and win accom modate a large showing of tie best the county affords In those lines. In some respects this year a fair win surpass that given last year, as a re sult of the combined efforts otf the ten county granges. Besides, the fair Is now on a permanent footing, under di rection of a stock company. he city of Gresham having furnlahed $ts new park grounds for a site free of charge so long as a fair shall be held. The officers of the association are H. E. Davis, president: A. F. Miller. ire-president; Dr. J. M. Short, ecre- ary, and .Miss ciara l. neon, creas- urer. Under tneir management ersougn money has been secured by the a,le of stock to erect permanent buildings, while the receipts fop the week are ex pected to pay all expenses and pre miums. Attractions on The Furrow will be numerous and of an entertaining char acter. Each day will have Ita spealal features, among them being educational programmes and entertainments. Base ball and other athletic sports will Tie daily attractions. TOO ACTIVE IN POLITICS President Removes Two Civil Service Rule. WASHINGTON. Oct. 3. As the result of a report made b'y the Civil Service Com mission. President Roosevelt has re moved Lincoln Avery, collector of the port at Port Huron. Mich., and also directed the removal of Charles H. Dally, special agent of the treasury at that place. The Civil Service Commis sion found proof of charges that serious violations of the rules In regard to campaign assessments had been com mitted, and that Special Agent Dally had been involved In "pernicious activ ity in politics." Here the Giants . off are smiting the rocks of industry gold are streaming Com merce and rivers of shining forth. Here is the cornerstone of Portland's unparal leled future prosperity Watch SWINTON-the business center of the great industrial dis trict of future Portland. Join the crowds that go to SWINTON every day to see the tremendous scope of the work undertaken by Swift, Har riman and Hill on the Peninsula. People stare in amazement at it and wonder how such immense projects can be so far under way without every living , man and wo man in Portland being thrilled with enthusiasm over them. SWINTON has the business property. It will be densely built up to provide for the great mass of employes who will locate near the greatest pack ing plant in -the world. SWINTON will follow in the footsteps of busi ness properties that were near the big packing houses m Chicago, Omaha and other Eastern cities. Every lot in SWINTON will double and treble in value many times over in a very short time. People who invest now in SWINTON will reap an enormous profit within a few months. Thousands are seeing the work Swift is doing the proximity of SWINTON -and realize that at present prices fortunes are to be made here on a small outlay of capital. Go to SWINTON today. See the wonderful things that are going on around it. You'll be im pressed with the enormity of them and want to buy all of SWINTON you can carry. SWINTON offers a ground floor opportunity NOW. Easiness property in SWINTON is selling for less than residence property in any other part of the city. Business lots in SWINTON are selling for a third less than other property in the same local ity not as well located. SWINTON is offered on easy terms. SWINTON is selling faster than any other property in the city. There's a reason. See it today. Take Vancouver carline. Autos will meet every car after noon at Columbia Boulevard. COLUMBIA TRUST COMPANY, Couch Building, Portland, Or. Please send me your Booklet, "THE COMING OF SWIFT." Name Address THE COLU. TC SEVENTH FLOOR COUCH BUILDING, PORTLAND, OREGON OMPANY AMERICAN WOMAN WRITES OF VENICE, THE FAMOUS CITY Ob HUMAN AND AN 1 lUl 1 Y Emille Trances Bauer Is Disappointed on Tirst View, and First Impression Deepens Not Enthusiastic Over Gondoliers, but Marvels at Galleries and Churches. V Paint Portrait of King or Sweden. NEW YORK. Oct. S.-Misi Ava de Lagereelna. a Swedish artist, who la well known In this city, haa received a call to paint a portrait of the Kins of Sweden and she will leave New York for her native land on October 15. Her work attracted the attention of Prince Wil helm. son of the Kins;, when ha was In New York a Tear ago and paid a visit to her studio. Miss de L&gerceins Is a cou sin of Mr. Herman de la Gercelna. Swed ish Minister to the United States, who haa recently been In Sweden. She ex pects to return to New York In January. ENICE. Italy, Sept. 30. Spec!al Correspondence.) I have shocked mo many people iy expressing; a keen disappointment concerning Venice that I almost fear widening the ripples of reproach and wonder. However, as Ven ice will continue to delight those who love It whether It pleases me or not, I shall exert the good American prerogative of Under -J holding my own opinion. 1 And as I. use the word "American," it occurs to me that It was the American Independence which prevented me from appreciating those things which other leople love. When I descended from the crain which landed me in the noted Ital ian city I called for a cab. The very word la unknown in Venice, and instead I was ushered out of the station to a sheet of water In which were plying the gondolas. A sudden feeling of weakness and of helplessness came over me that I did not lose all the time I was there. I know that for once I was at the mercy of Xhe boatman, and that It waa stay at home or travel about in this manner a manner very delightful at night and un der certain conditions, but the "condi tional" were not with me in Venice and this was broad daylight. This made it possible for me to see the dark, unclean water filled with drifting melon rinds, lemon, and orange peel and other things nice emough In their place, but decidedly tnfellcdtous In a body of water which formed the alleyways to dark and dingy rear views of the homes and streets of Venice. To bv honest, there is much that Is beautiful in Venice, but coming Into that sort of picture Instead of entering the City of Romance and antiquity with the proper, 5lrlt of appreciation, I lost all the beauty until I was able to bury myself In the galleries. But what wonderful galleries and what churches! The over-lavishnees is indeed almost painful, as no mind can grasp and retain so much, especially as the hours are not convenient the galleries .close at 3 o'clock, and it is either go at 9 and stay all day or go back several times, and as there ie an admission charged in these cities, it makes it rather expensive to do otherwise than "gulp," and art swallowed in this fashion is more Indigestible than eatables. The wonders of the galleries, however, are almost exceeded by the marvelous art treasures In the churches. Although it may sound reckless, it is safe to say that until one has seen these old churches of Italy one can have no conception of what a church really means. The atmosphere is fairly Indescribable, and the only thing which prevented a complete enjoyment of roaming through them was the sense of desecration. It seemed unpardonable to enter these places as a sightseer while people were at their devotions and there to never a minute in the day when from 20 to 30 are not to be found in any of them. Not infrequently the priests are conduct ing services, if not at the great altar, at one of the Innumerable smaller ones. Some of the churches are rich in Ti ttans. In Bellinls, in Paolo Veronese, In Tiepolos, and especially In Tintorettos. These exist In large numbers in Venice, while there is not a Raphael 'in any of the galleries or in the churches. Nor chould one overlook the wonderful statu ary, which includes auperb examples of Sanaovino. The woodwork and the gold smith's art are of surpassing beauty: In deed they far surpass the most extrava gant expectations. The place of places in Venice is, of course, St. Mark's, made as famous by the pigeons as by the Doge'a palace, or the famous church, which Is one of rarest beauty. The people, however, have made the fatal error of building a new cam panile to replace the one which fell a few years ago, and needless to say that it spoils the entire outlook, as it stands squarely and uncompromisingly In front of the Doge's palace, and at. one side from the church. The square is the com mercial center as well as the stamping ground for all who prefer the feeling of terra flrma to the rocking of the waves. Sunday evening a fine brass band plays and the sides are lined with tables and chairs, where all "evening one may sit over a glass of seltzer. The particular evening I wandered up one side and down the other the programme opened with the "Stars and Stripes," by Sousa, which made me forgive Venice almost every thing but its mosquitos. The shops of Venice are as Individual as any part of the city and I might say they are notable principally for cheap, tawdry things. No matter how clever you are, you will get tricked; it is im possible to avoid it. You may not find it out until you get back to Paris and find there what you supposed could only be had in Venice, but since that Is one of the pleasures it is only a matter af charg ing it up to the amusement end of the account. The shops are literally in the open air. and many of them have their "spielers" in regular Coney Island fash Ion. By these mediums you are invited to see the lace-makers, the mosaic work ers, the glaasblowers and any number of sccalled "special attractions." but unless you fall victim with plenty of cash, their manifestation of contempt is hard to meet, and of course you can't buy everything. For me the real interest of Venice was found among the people, the common peo ple, at that, who lve in the little alley ways called streets and who are as pic turesque as they are unromantic. Nothing Is more Interesting than the market place as gondola after gondola unloads its .,..., melons nf neaches. or Iigs, or grapes indeed no pen can describe the picture and as everything must happen me in Venice, my camera refused to act Just at the critical moment. The lagoon at this point is almost a solid bed of wat ermelons and the unloading is alone worth a page of description. If we form our opinion of these people thev likewise form theirs, and trusting to the fact that one is an "Americana," they take it for granted that they'may expresB these opinions unreservedly which they do, and if you are fortunate enough to understand their Italian you may hear some things about yourself that will be new and perhaps startling. The most serious thing they said about me was that I had no business poking my nose around the back alleys of Venice, which fact was neither new nor astonishing. There is nothing more charming than Lido the seabeach a few miles out of Ven ice. This is where the Adriatic rolls in. In exquisite blue waves and as far as the eye can see the line of blue is unbroken, as one can hardly distinguish between the sky and the sea. The peacefulness is in describable and as I sat on the balcony of one of the most modern and most superb hotels of the world, it seemed really to be another world and one where there was no requirement except to dream. For those coming to Venice In the Summer It seems to me that the only way to enjoy It Is to go to Lido and to take the boats down the lagoon for the galleries and the churches, which one does even when liv ing in the city. One remains In the spirit and one dodges the mosquitoes and the amells. BMILIB FRANCES BAUER. Thaw's Keeper Xot In Contempt. SCRANTON, Pa., Oct. 3 Judge Arch bold, in the United States Circuit Court this afternoon, decided that Sheriff Charles Lane, of Westchester County, New York, was not In contempt in not having delivered Harry K. Thaw Into the , keeping of a United States Marshal to be taken to Pittsburg to answer in bank ruptcy proceedings. The reason for tills was that Thaw was now cited in habeas corpus proceedings as to his sanity he fore Justice Mills at White Plains, N. Y., and was therefore in the jurisdiction of the court and not properly within tha custody of the Sheriff. After the habeas corpus proceedings are over. Judge Arch bold will take further action. Imports Show Prospcrily. NEW YORK, Oct 3. George Wana maker, appraiserof . port, believes tha records of his office mean that pros perity has returned In the commercial world. The merchandise handled in the month Justnded amounted closely in quantity and value to the imports during the corresponding month of 1907 and 1906. The value of merchan dise handled in September this year was $59,166,034. In the corresponding month of last year and the year before it was respectively J62.755.377 and 160,799.985. Diamonds and other precious stones show a considerable increase over the preceding month, and automobiles brought in during September numbered 290, with an aggregate value of $687, 3S4, while in September, J907, they num bered only 177 cars, valued at $656,194. Want Mare Island Improved. BAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 3. As a result of the combined action of 14 commercial bodies representing the interests about San Francisco Bay, Secretary of the Navy Metcalf will receive a communica tion calling his attention to conditions at Mare Island Navy-Yard, where the channel is said to be in need of dredg ing, and requesting that he embody in his forthcoming report to the President a recommendation for the appointment of a commission which will pass upon the advisability of establishing at Mare Island a great naval bane for the Pa cific. The bodies signing the appeal hope by securing an adequate navy-yard to prepare the way for the maintenance of a strong fleet In the Pacific. Ona pound of cork is ufflrlent to upport a man of ordinary size in the wate