TIIE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, POIJTLAND, JULY 10, lUlO. P RUGFIESSIVE FJGHT ONLY JUST BEGUN PRECEDENT CALLS INSURGENT LEADER SAYS FIGHT OF "PROGRESSIVES" IS ONLY JUST BEGUN. t FOR ANOTHER tein-Bloch mart Business ouits Hughes Nor Any Associate Justice Is in Line for Fuller's Chair. Bristow Says Issue Is Joined Between Interests and People in Congress. MEMBERS REFUSE TO TALK CORPORATE GREED FOUGHT Mi Kansas Insurgent Senator Sounds Slogan and Exults Over Defeat of Cannon Calls on Kansas to Strengthen Insurgents. WINFIELD. Kan.. July 9. Emphatic ally declaring that the fight of the progressives" had only Just begun,. :lrnited States Senator Joseph L. Bris tow, of Salina, delivered here his first jrublic utterance since his visit, Satur day last, with Representatives Murdock 'end Madison to 'Oyster Bay to confer Svith Colonel Theodore Roosevelt. ""The House 'progressives,' " said the 'Senator, "have made great progress. They have practically overthrown 'the domination of Cannon and the men who surrounded him. But." he added significantly, "the great work is but 'fairly begun." Mr. Bristow's speech was delivered at the Winfield Chautauqua. He analyzed Vthe tariff and sketched the work of the 'progressive" Republicans in amending 'Jhe railroad bill. T'iere r.ever had been '. time in American History, he said, 'when greater responsibility rested upon 'the average citizen than today. The Country had never faced problems more jperplexing. The fundamental question to be determined, he asserted, was "'should this Government be admlnis 'tared in the interests of the average nan, or for the benefit of special priv ileges?" ConTIlct Is Fundamental. "The conflict in American politics today," argued Mr. Bristow, "is based !ipon the. same fundamental principles' Bs was that which preceded the Civil "War. The corporate interests of the country have dominated the affairs of .the Nation as completely as did the Wslave interests In the days of Its great est strength. Just as every effort !made for the restriction of slavery was o-esisted by the slave trad3, so every ffort to protect the people from the (Injustice of corporate greed is resisted y the great corporations of this coun try. "The representatives of the slave jiower had seats in the halls of Con gress and contended for the perpetuity of slavery because of their financial interest in the institution. And now the gigantic monopolies of this day (have representatives in the halls of Congress, whose sole purpose is to pro mote their interests and keep open the "opportunity which they have now to plunder the American public Tariff Illustrates Issue. . " "This was forcibly demonstrated In the tariff fight a year ago. The Repub lican party, in its National convention, declared for a revision of the tariff (maintaining the principle of protection and further stated that tariffs should fbe based upon the difference in the cost 5f production at home and abroad, plus a reasonable profit to the home manu facturer. "Upon that platform the party won the fight, and -I believe that nine-tenths of the Republicans throughout the land expected the pledge to be carried out in good faith. This, I believe, would have been done had it not been for the per fidy and selfishness of certain designing legislators who were more desirous of favoring special interests than of promot ing the welfare of the people. "Under the leadership of these men, instead of revising the tariff as was promised, duties were fixed not with a view of protecting legitimate American Industrie? or of securing revenue for the Government, but for the purpose of pro moting the financial interests of certain Individuals or concern Great Work Only Begun. "The great work before us is but fairly begun. This year we had to fight as hard to hold what had been secured in years past as we did to get additional legisla tion. To hold what we now have and secure these other necessary provisions '3s the fight for" the future. It cannot be won without the determined support, of the people. "Our hope is in the intelligent and patriotic purposes of the people them sselvea. The combined influences of crim inal selfishness and greed are great. Their tneans are unlimited, but If the people 'will select as their representatives in "Congress men with not only the inclina tion but the courage to stand against the 'powers of greed and evil, right will triumph; and as a Republican I want St to triumph under the banner of the ld Republican party. Appeal Made to Kansas. "I appeal to my fellow-Republicans and ito all good citizens to give us their 'aid. The responsibility Is with you" and it he results are in your hands, and I 'fJiave an abiding confidence in a trium phant victory. "Let Kansas in the coming primary de clare for progress and reform, and let ithat declaration be made with such en iphasia that It will be heard from ocean ao ocean and from the .Lakes to the Gulf, jl'ou should not only uphold the hands of the men who have fought the good fight, 'but add a goodly number of sturdy re cruits to their ranks and by so doing you will have rendered a patriotic service to Sour country." OKRIS SCORES JOE CAXXON: "He W ill Never Be Speaker Again," Nebraska n Tells Chautauqua. LA9 ANIMAS. Colo.. July 9. "Joe Can non is 20 years behind the times. He will never be elected Speaker again," de clared Congressman George W. Norrig, of Nebraska, in a talk here today at the local Chautauqua. Mr. Norris declared that an effort would be made to elect as the next Speaker a man who will "act as Speaker and servant of the House- lnsteads of Its master." He declared that Cannon would rather see a Democratic House elected than a "progressive" Republican House ; that the true-blue Republicans of the House are the progressives, and that party pledges were fulfilled because the progressives held the balance of power. KIks Will Go on Picnic. SPRINGFIELD. Or., July 9. (Spe cial.) Twenty local Elks have bought tickets and will join the big Elks' cele bration tomorrow at Stafford's on the Mohawk River. A special train will be run from Eugene, and a car of the Springfield delegation will be picked up here. Plans for this celebration have been laid for the past two weeks, and ; representatives from all the organlza ' ' tions In the county will take part. The 1 Via i nil A ' jiif 11 7 Ks ' - ' S V I . . V Y V : ' - " v X lilllliliiiiillli 1 SENATOR J. L.. BRISTOW, OP KANSAS HARMON HAS HAND Governor Hurries to Scene of Newark Lynching. INVESTIGATION IS BEGUN Executive Keeps Plans Secret, but May Try to Remove Mayor and. Sheriff Big lleivard Ofrered, for lynchers' Conviction. COLUMBUS, O.. July 9. Although Gov ernor Harmon has sent word that he will arrive In Columbus at noon tomorrow from Charlevoix, Mich., he has not given his secretary, George O. Long, any inti mation of what action he will take with reference to last night's lynching at Newark. Among prophecies was one that he would seek to remove both Sheriff Links and Mayor Atherton. There is consider able doubt as to what authority he has In the latter instance. The Legislature passed a. bill providing for the removal of Sheriffs who do not prevent lynchings, but defeated one providing for the re moval of Mayors who fail to enforce the law. Dispatches from Newark say that Prosecutor Smyth called upon Common Pleas Judge Seward today for the im mediate lnpanelllng of a special grand jury to investigate the lynching of Carl M. Etherlngton, the special officer of the anti-saloon workers. Judge Seward said he would give his answer Monday. Prosecutor Smyth today said at Newark that he would use every means at his disposal to bring those guilty of mob violence to justice. The Commissioners of Licking County have offered a reward of $1000 for the detention and conviction of persons connected with the lynching. QUIET RESTORED IS NEWARK Morbid Relic-Hunters Hack Pole on Which Detective Was Lynched. NEWARK. O., July 9. Newark is quiet today for the first time since the lynch ing of Detective Carl Etherlngton, who was taken from the jail and hanged from a telegraph pole yesterday by an angry mob, after he had confessed to firing the shot that killed William Howard in , the raid by anti-saloon forces on alleged ""speak-easles." Ail morning a crowd " of several hun dred persons surrounded the morgue where the bodies ofcHoward and . Ether lngton are held, awaiting word from rela tives. The pole from which the detec tive was hanged Is guarded-from the rav ages of relic-hunters,- but before the city officials encased it in sheet-iron It had been hacked half through by those who sought mementos of the night's work. Adjutant-General Weybrecht, Colonel Byron Barger, of the Fourth Regiment. Ohio National Guard, and Lieutenant Benjamin Chamberlain, of Troop B, who cams to Newark to make an investiga tion of the affair, returned to Columbus today. No further trouble is anticipated. The next grand Jury will investigate the lynching. "The lynching easily could have been prevented," says General Weybrecht. "The established fact that the mob worked at the jail for two hours tells the story of negligence. If troops had been sent for when they should have been, the State of Ohio would not now be disgraced." Sheriff Links did not call out the New ark company of the Ohio National Guard nor Company G of the Fourth Regiment. Captain Priest says he was informed that it was not even necessary to have men at the Armory in case of emergency. LIGHTNING BOLT KILLS TWO (Continued From First Page.) Vegetable gardens and pastures are parched almost beyond salvation. The killing of Miss Larson makes the eighth violent death in Evanston in less than a week. These Include three drownings and three electrocu tions. Dispatches from nearby cities tonight tell of three deaths by light ning where no rain fell. A number of drownings also were reported from resorts in this state, Iowa, Michigan and Indiana. ASTORIA MERCURY JUMPS TO 7 9 Highest Record of Season Reached With Breeze Tempering Heat. ASTORIA, Or., July 9. (Special.) This was by far the hottest day of the season, Jiu far the. thermometer at the local weather bureau registering 79 degrees. The nearest approach to this was on June 10, when the mercury rose to 75 degrees. This afternoon there was a brisk northwest breeze blowing across the bay so that conditions in" the city were materially bettered. HEAT KILLS TRIO IX NEW l'ORK Prostrations Record 30 Before Sun down; Boy Eats Ice Cream, Dies. NEW YORK, July 9. The cumulative effects of a week of excessive humidity and high temperatures began to make themselves felt today in three deaths and a list of prostrations that had reached 30 before sundown. The official thermometer registered 90 degrees at 4 o'clock this afternoon, with a humidity of 46. The maximum hu midity today was 67 at 6 o'clock this morning. Walter Stare, a schoolboy, ate four plates of ice cream and swallowed five glasses of 8 ode. water in an effort to get cool. His mother found -him dead from ptomaine poisoning shortly afterward. HEAT WAVE IS 2100 FEET DEEP Balloonist Plies High, Making In teresting Discovery. ANDOVER, Mass., July '9. The heat wave under which New England swel tered today was 2100 feet deep, accord ing to an interesting discovery made by Charles J. Glldden, of Boston, in the balloon Massachusetts. Mr. Glldden went up from Lowell late This after noon. The thermometer stood at 90 degrees all the way from earth up to 2100 feet. Here there was a sudden change and the mercury fell to 70 degrees and a comfortable east wind was blowing. SUNDAY PROMISES HOT, TOO Heat Wave Will Xot Be Broken for at Least 3 6 Hours. WASHINGTON, July 9.--For the next 36 hours at least, there will be no break in the heat wave over the east ern section of the country. Hot nights are predicted everywhere except in the Lake region. A cooler area now in the mountain states is moving East. Indi cations are the weather will continue generally fair today and tomorrow. MERCURY CLIMBS 36 DEGREES Vancouver Has Hottest Day of En tire Season. VANCOUVER, Wash., July 9. (Spe cial.) For heat today a record was broken. The thermometer registered degrees at the hottest part of the after noon. This morning it was 58 degrees, so the mercury climbed during the day 36V4 degrees. The record is kept by Weather Observer A. A. Quamberg, for the Government. HEAT IS CAUSE OF INSANITY Wisconsin Folk Suffer Loss of Mind Through Hot Wave. MILWAUKEE, July 9. Twenty-five cases of Insanity in the last two weeks, breaking all local records, were before the Probate Court of Milwaukee Coun ty. That Intense heat had . a direct effect on these cases is the belief of Judge Karr. Secretary Norton's Wife Under Knife BEVERLY. Mass.. July 9. Mrs. Charles D. Norton, wife of the Secretary to the President, was operated on today for appendicitis at the Beverly Hospital. The operation is said to have been suc cessful. Three Die of Heat in Washington. WASHINGTON, July 1). Three dead and seven prostrations is the record for the heat wave which spread over Washington at noon yesterday. WOMAN GETS WARRANT Slayer of Helen Griffin Charges Husband With Nonsupport. LOS ANGELES, Cal., July 9. Mrs. Lilla F. de Arman of Monrovia, who shot and killed Mrs. Helen Griffin in the Monrovia postoffice two years ago, has caused a complaint to be issued charging her husband, U. Z. de Arman, formerly a prominent turfman, with failing to provide for her and her two children. De Arman left his wife last April, according to the latter's story, and went to Victoria, B. C. Efforts are being made to locate him in' the North. Mrs. de Arman was arrested after shooting Mrs. Griffin, but was re leased on the ground that she was temporarily deranged. After the trag edy, the De Armans lived together ap parently happily, until a few months ago. ... - - .: ' . Discussion of Reorganization of Su preme Court Is Avoided by Judges at Chicago Funeral Exigencies Are Peculiar. CHICAGO. July 9. (Special.) Im portant information concerning the process of re-organization that the Su preme Court of the United States will undergo as a result of the death of Chief Justice Fuller was brought to light today through the presence in Chicago of five associate judges, who came to attend the funeral of their late chief. Although none of the" justices was willing to discuss the subject, they are said to be aware that the choice for the chair of Chief Justice will not fall upon any of them unless time-honored custom is abandoned. The situation as now seen, is as follows: The new Chief Justice probably will not be one of the men who now are associate justices. The new Chief Justice in the same degree of probability, will not be Governor Hughes, unless he resigns his present appointment by President Taft as Associate Justice. One Appointment Sure. There will be at least one more ap pointee, either as Chief or Associate Justice to make up the number les sened by the death of Chief Justice Fuller. There will be a second appointee if one of the present justices accepts the act of Congress recently passed to re tire him. There will be still another if the second associate justice decides on retirement, which he is said to have in mind, although he is believed to be considering retirement only on condi tion that his son be appointed in his place. Hughes May Resign. According to a statement made by a man well informed concerning the Su preme Court situation, not even Gov ernor Hughes will be appointed as Chief Justice, unless a precedent is to be established. Should he decline the confirmation of his appointment as As sociate Justice or resign from the po sition he might, of course, be appointed to the chief place. It is conceded that President Taft would be unwilling to depart from the established custom and raise one of the present Associate Justices to a more important place The exigency of the situation, how ever, may cause him to disregard this unwillingness and to establish a prece dent by placing one of the Chicago visitors of yesterday and today in the chair left vacant by the death of Chief Justice Fuller. FRUIT LANDS PROMISING Capitalists Visit Lane County to In vestlgate Conditions. SPRINGFIELD, Or., July 9. (Special.) -That the future of the Upper Willam ette Valley lies in its fruit crop is the opinion of a number of expert fruit growers and capitalists who have visited this city with the intention of looking up conditions here. All say about the same thing, that the land, although at present almost undeveloped, is far the best fruit land in the state, and when capital can be concentrated here It will become famous all over the world. During the past three days A. D. Coulver, one of the largest orchard own ers in Southern Oregon, has been inspect ing the fruit conditions here. He says he expects, this Winter, to invest in a tract in Lane County and: start a com mercial apple orchard. There is a party of Seattle capitalists being shown the country about here to- day in automobiles and whose intention it is to invest here for fruitraising. NEW EQUIPMENT IS ADDED To Keep Up With Growth, Raymond Company Gets New Machinery. RAYMOND, Wash., July 9. (Special.) To keep pace with the growth of Ray mond, the South Bend-Raymond Electric Company has installed a new 1100-horse- power General Electric turbine genera tor of improved pattern. The problem of how to procure wood fuel in sizes suit able for purpose of power generation has been solved by putting In a "hog chip ping" machine for chopping slab wood to chips. This reduces the force by 15 men and, in consequence, the expenses, and increases the capacity of the plant Dy more than twice its former output. The company has also put up a com plete conveyor system, connecting the plant with the Slier Mill Company, thus receiving fuel without loss of time in transportation. These improvements makes this one of the most complete of tne small plants In Washington. GRAIN PRICES DRIVEN UP (Continued From First Page.) which Spring wheat figures are given is Washington, which planted 4.2 per cent of the total In the country. The condition of Washington Spring wheat July 1 was 68; on June 1 was 93, and July 1, 1909, was 90. The ten years' average for Washington is 91. CORN CROP WILL BE LARGE Increased Acreage This Year Is Fig ured at 5,000,000 Acres. WASHINGTON, July 9. According to the opinion of the statisticians, the fall ing off of the crop of Spring wheat was considerably exaggerated throughout the country, so far as its effect on the great transportat'on companies and upon the total yield of the crops is con cerned. It was pointed out that the corn acre age showed an increase of more than 5,000,000 of acres, while the condition of Winter wheat, a more Important crop than Spring wheat, showed an Increase for July over the report of June 1. The corn crop promises to be so large that, in the opinion of many of these statis ticians, the amount to be transported will exceed that of last year. There is no barren land in Manchuria. Almost every acre is cultivated. The yield of beans, th leading staple, is helwfm 10. 000. 000 and 18,000,000 koku tkoku Hv REGULAR SELLING PRICE $20 Suits now $15.00 $30 Suits now $25 Suits now $18.75 $35 Suits now $40 Suits now $30.00 Being made by the world's most skillful tailors, these ready- to-wear garments should not be confounded with the usual type of ready-made clothes SLAYER FREED ON BAIL PRECEDENT SET ASIDE IX CASE OF RICH MAN'S SON. Wallace A. Bussell, Adjudged In sane, to Go to Private Sanitarium Under $10,000 Bond. SEATTLE, July 9. Wallace A. Bus sell, son of C. B. Bussell. millionaire tideland owner, will neither be sent to the state insane asylum under the finding of the lunacy commission, which adjudged him of unsound ,mind yes terday, nor will he be tried for the murder of Joseph Bonner, a bartender, whom he shot down while making an individSal raid on a gambling resort in the Ktng-street district. May 12. Instead the youth will be released to the guardianship of his father un der $10,000 bonds and will be placed in a private sanitarium at Liverraore, Cal. In a conference between Bussell's attorneys and the County Prosecutor today it was decided to recommend this plan to the court and Judge A. W. Frater has decided to accept the recommendation. According to attorneys, the release of Bussell on bond will be the first case in the history of the state in which a person charged with murder in the first degree has been released from the county or other jail on bail. T. R. OUT FOR COMMANDER Colonel Will Be Candidate to Lead Spanish War Veterans. LOS ANGELES. July 9. When the Spanish War veterans of the United States hold their annual encampment in Dr. A: P. De Keyser CHIROPRACTOR AND OPTICIAN, of the Firm HAMPTON & DE KEYSER, Room 704 DeRum BldK-t Tbird and Washington Streets. GLASSES will not be prescribed nor treatment advised unless we ran assure you decided relief. The Spattering of Mud will often ruin the most dainty and costly gown ' temporarily at least. Send to us the dress, it can be speedily cleansed and restored to its original beauty and freshness by our famous Dry Cleaning process, and this, too without the slightest damage to the fabric or change in the color. Fabrics treated by our process do not shrink in the operation. Mali Orders Receive Prompt Attention The Vienna Steam Cleaning and Dyeing Works PHONES MAIN J45. A 34SO. 224-220 THIRD ST. . FORTLAAD, OR. liL -" WHERE TO GET THE BEST Washington Street, Near Fifth Denver, September 2, there will be two candidates for Commander-in-Chief. One will be Theodore Roosevelt, candidate of the East, and the other will be J. I. Mc Laughlin, candidate of the West. The Los Angeles man, who is at pres ent junior vice-commander of the or ganization, has been indorsed by 17 Western states. In the East Colonel Roosevelt is re garded as an invincible candidate for the office. BOOKMAKERS GO TO JAIL New York Court Sentences Men Run ning Handbook "Under New Law. NEW YORK, July 9. The first prison sentence ever inflicted in this city on persons making a handbook on the races was pronounced in the Court of Special Sessions here yesterday on Pat rick Flanagan, of Philadelphia, and Ed ward McCarthy, of this city. Both were sentenced to five days' imprisonment. o 19H Has ur Frank C. Riggs Seventh and Oak Streets. After July 15 in onr new Packard Service Buil'llnB. Cornell Road. Twenty third and Washington St". B. IS. Walker. LI.. I)., President. Established 1867. The Canadian Bank of Commerce HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. London Office, I Lombard Street, 3. C Branches Throughout the Dominion of Canada; Also at San Francisco. Seattle and Skagway. Cnnadlan Collections. This bank, having over ISO branches, distributed throughout the Do minion, is enabled to offer unsurpassed facilities for making collections In any part oC Canada. Portland Branch, Cor. Second nnd r Present this Coupon and 25c at Oregonian Office and receive one of The Oregonian's Three-Dollar Special City and State Maps $22.50 $26.25 The complainant, a policeman, testified that the two men took him to a local cafe where they accepted a $3 bet on a. horse running at Belmont Park and made a memorandum of the transaption on the edge of a newspaper. Fire Damages Albany .Hotel. ALBANV, Or., July 9. (Special.') Th Russ house, a local hotel, caught fire at noon today and only hard work pre vented its destruction. The fire started from sparks In moss on the rear roof and though a large section of the roof was afire the flames were confined to' the roof and the garret above the second' floor celling. The loss, $1500, is covered by insurance. Ferry Traffic Is Heavy. VANCOUVER. Wash., July 9. (Spe cial.) So great has the traffic become on the ferry between Hayden Island and Vancouver that the Portland Railway, Light & Power Company has ordered four Homer registers put In for the con venience of the pursers. . . cvVTOTOR CARS 9 Ql THE MAN IDA . who owns IV M. ONE" Demonstrator Arrived A- lialrd General Manaareit New York Office. 16 Exchange Place. Stark Streets. F. C Malpas. Minarer