PRESIDENT ROOSEVELFS VIEIVS Oil HII-SUFFRAGE Believeslin it, But is Not Enthusiastic Advocate IS NOT IMPORTANT h nks the Proper Place lor Woman is at Her Homo DR. ABBOTT MAKES ADDRESS Pmldent' Attitude it Dlcloel at lining Under th Ample of th National League ol Civic Improve ment of Woman. work in the household, in tht hom, ber work in bearing and rearing the I children, which i more thin any niani work, and it i that work which should be normally the woman' ipecial work, jut a normally the man' work thould be that of the breadwinner, the itipporter of the home and, W necesry, the oldier who will fight for the home. There arc exception a regard both man and woman; but the Cult and perfect life, the life of higheit happine and of highest uufulnei to the ttate i the life of the man and woman who are hutband and wife, who live in the partnerihip of love and duty, the one earning enough to keep th home, the other managing the home and children. Sincerely your, "THEODORE ROOSEVELT." Dr. Abbott, who wu .the princi pal (pcaker at the meeting, argued against whit he held would be the nfliction of new and unnatural re sponsibilities and duty upon women by forcing upon them the obligation of public life. The title of hi address wi "The Assault on Womanhood." IU0I1UTS COSTLY GIFTS THE LATE EMPRESS DOWAGER PRESENTS MRS. LONOWORTH WITH JEWELED BRACELETS NEW YORK, Dec. 4-Tfa attitude ol Preiident Rooievclt and Secretary of State Eiibu Root on tht tubject of woman tuffrtge waa dicloed today at t meeting under tht auspice of the National League of Civic Education of Women. , The Rev. Dr. Lyman Abbott, in the court of an addrea In oppoiition to ranting th right to vote to women, read the following letter from Roosevlt which he ald he read with tht Preiident' permission, although 'I 11 not written for publication nor for thl occaiion. "Practically I believe in woman auffrage," aay Mr. Rooevelt at the outlet of the letter, which ia dated November 10, 1908. "but I am not an enthuilaitic advocate of it, becauie I don't regard It a a very Important itiattcr. I am unable to et that there ha been any pecla1 Improve ment in the poltion of women in those itatet in the Weit that havt adopted woman luffrage, aa compar ed with thoie itatei adjoining them that have not adopted it. I do not think that giving the women luffrage will oroduce any marked improve ment in the condition of women. I do not believe that It will produce any of the evil feared, and I am very certain that when women, a a whole, take any ipecial interest in the mat , ter they will have the luffrage if they "desire it. But at preient I think moit of them are lukewarm; I find lome ac tlvely for it and lome actively against it. I am for the reaioni given above rather what you would regard ai luke warm or tepid In my mpport of it. because, while I believe In It, I do jno regard It at of very much import ance, I believe that men and women should tand on an equality of right, tout I do not believe that equality of -right mean identity of function; and 1 am more and more convinced that the great usefulness of women it aa 4he mother of the family. It I her TEDDY GETS CHINESE BOOKS Stveralflundred Beautifully Bound Volume Are Sent to Preiident To gether With Gift For Alice end Mr. Roosevelt WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.-Mr Nichols Longworth, daughter of the Preiident, wal presented with a beau tiful pair of jeweled bracelets, gifti of the late Emprea Dowager of China to whom (he paid a visit aome year ago. Alio iome present! for Mr. Rooie vclt, while the preiident wa given everal hundred volume of Chinese literature printed in the Chinese lan guage handsomely bound. MURDERED BY THUGS. WALLACE, Idaho, Dec 4. -Two fearful gaihe in the head, hi face beaten to a jelly, and hi neck broken man known a "Billy a team ster bv occupation, wai found on the track on the Idaho Northern, about 15 mile from Enaville today, Evidently the victim wai killed by a gang of murderou thug who in feted the railroad construction camp in thi ectlon, and who have committed many murder and lesser crime. The motive war robbery. There ii no clue. MADE LUCKY STRIKE. Miner And Hi Son Get Rich In An Alaika Mine. SEATTLE, Dec. 4. Two yean ago u h James of Fairbanks, Alas ka, purchased a claim for wo on Gold Stream, which wa pasted over by thousand of miner who followed the road to what were termed the rich creeks. James had the utmost confidence In the grounds but he used up all his money looking for a pay streak. Then he sold other property and got in debt. When the last pot of beam in the cabin were on the table Mr. James held a conference with hit son and admitted that he wa discouraged James, his son said they felt that if they worked a few dayi more they would hit the pay. That wai in April. They worked a few daya long er and then itruck the richeit kind of pay ground. Ai a result of his ilulcing Mr. Jame cleaned up a triflle leu than SJ0O,0OO and expect to have nearly three quarter of a million dollar a result of thi Winter and the coming Summer' work. He gave hi ion Bennett a check for $20,- 000 and declared him hit partner for life in all deali he ventured in. Mr. Jamei wai famoua aa base ball manager In the early dayi of San Francisco. WIS TO OUST S. D. REED Mrs Goode Seeks His Re moval as Administrator WHAT HAPPENED TO A GIRL. Widow of Portland's Late Trac tion Magnate Files Petition With Judge Webster SOME SENSATIONAL CHARGES AUTO ACCIDENT. Aaron Schublnger of Seattle Injured it San Franciaco. SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 4 Aaron Schutzinger, said to be a wealthv fur buyer of Seattle, wa perhaps fatally injured tonight fall ing or jumping from a rapidly mov- ing automobile returning from Colma where he had been spending the evening. Hi chauffeur declared Scbulxinger had been drinking. It wa stated at the hospital that Schulzinger will recover. What happened to seventeen-yeai old Lucy Green last winter when she arrived in New 'York seeking work, without friends or money, ii the real story of a real girl, told by the girl herself in a late Woman'i Home Companion. t The first day she wai directed to the Margaret Louisa Home, conduc ted by the Young Women'i Christian Auociation. After many waits and delays she was passed on to the chaplain of the institution. Thi is what took place with the chaplain; "A gently a possible she broke I the newi that the Margaret Louisa Home was not the boarding place NEGLIGENCE CHARGED ifor whieh f seekin The ratM were I'M J Jgn ullc a in who was already well fixed in busi ness. A single room would cost me sixty cents a day, breakfast and lun cheon twenty-five cents each and din ner thirty-five cents. I was probably j looking for a working-girls' home. I apologized for my mistake, saying that I heard much of the Margaret Louisa Home and supposed it wa a home for working girls. And then as gently as before she explained that it wa a transient hotel for self-supporting women, not for-er-working girls. I saw the distinction. "She then gave me the addresses of real homes for working girls M re. Huntington' at 140 East 16th Street and "The Co-operato 444 Weit 23d Street "Can you tuggest where I had best look for work? I inquired hastily. 'Work? Well, this is a very bad time of the year to get into the store. They are letting girl out Governesses, too, Tiave all been en gaged!. . "By this time she was standing up. She hoped I would enroll with the association. It cost only one dollar a aw a 1 a I ?1 - year, and I would enjoy wie iiumry. The Tuesday night lecture for mem bers was especially interesting. She said goob-bye, without offering to shake hands and my relation with the Young Women' Christian Asso ciation were closed. "Apparently the New York branch of the Y. W. C. A. is for women who have proven their ability to be self supporting. It offers nothing to the irirls starting on the road to self- support. The Margaret Louisa Home is not a 'home.' It is an admirably conducted, reasonably priced tran sient hotel for women -who do not care to patronize hotels where men are admitted." Will HDD 111 Sill ADO! HIP LOADED WITH ARMS. NEW YORK, Dec. 3 Loaded with arm and ammunition supposed ly for the use of the revolutionists in Hayti, the iwift schooner Alice has left her moorings in a Long Island harbor and is now well on her way. According to rumor along the water front, the schooner was formerly known as the Gloucester, having her name changed for her dangerous journey. Just when the schooner got under way is not known, but mid night Tuesday is supposed to have been about the hour. The vessel is in Three Citi Reported are Aire Captured dill SO SAY THE REPORTS charge of Capt Jas. fearless Scotchman. McPherson, a Mrs. Edith Goode'a Instrument Con tains Several Serious Charges Against Reed Which Will Probable be Made Public Later. YANKEE IS FLOATED. NEWPORT, R. I., Dec. 4.-The cruiser Yankee which has been agrrund on-the shoals of Buzzard' Bay for ten weeks has been floated and has started for New Bedford in tow. HENRY GUSHAW WAS A VICTIM OF THUGS UNFORTUNATE MAN - WHO WAS FOUND UNCONSCIOUS ON PORTLAND STREET. PORTLAND. Dec. 4.-Charging negligence, unfaithfulness, improvi dence and even more serious derelic tions against S. G. Reed, administra tor of the estate of the late Henry W. Goode and Frederick V. Homan, hia attorney, in the management of the estate, Mr. Edith Goode, widow of Portland's late traction magnate and president of the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition today filed a petition with County Judge Webster seeking the removal of Reed and the appointment of herself as administra tor. The petition contains numerous sensational charges against Reed, who was treasurer of the Portland Railway Light & Power Company of which Goode was president, and against Homan who was and still is general counsel for the same company. Goode left an estate which is free from debt, was worth at the time of his death approximately $200,000. Goode died at Atlantic City, New Jersey, on March 31, 1907. ARBITRATION IS CONGRESS KEYNOTE leading Theme of American Miner's Meeting at Pittsburg Many Addresses are Made PITTSBURG. Dec. 4,-Arbltration I was tho thine at tonight'a session of the American Mining Congress. .Pres ident T. L. Lewis of the United Mine Worker of America, made the open ing address, tuking the stand of arbi tration in which a third party or out sider had to be utilized was unsatis factory and failed to bring about permanent settlement, but that the arbitration in which the employer and i employe got together and between themselves adjusted the differences had done more for the betterment of the mining industry than any other agency. The congress today adopted a resolution offered by II. H. Greg, of Missouri, opposing free import tion of zinc ores into this country and urging a duty sufficiently high to protect the American producers. G. W. Traer, of Chicago, whose ob servation of English speaking miners were more often desired than the foreign miners. HAD $400 WHEN HE ARRIVED Post Mortem of GusHaVa Body De velop! Unquestionable Facta Waa a Wholesale Fih Dealer of For tune, Cat PORTLAND, Dec. 4. -A post mortem of the body of Henry Gu shaw, a wholesale fish dealer of For tuna, Cal., who died last night, de veloped the fact that he was a victim of thugs and was beaten with slungshot until a bloodclot settled on the brain. He was picked up on the street on Thanksgivihg day uncon sclous. v . He had $400 when he arrived Portland. , NTERESTillG FIGURES BYHARRIMH MINERAL PRODUCTION OF U. S, $525,000,000 DURING PAST YEAR. Same Foreign Newspapers Ex press Belief That .Castro Has Deserted Venezuela TROOPS GGSKS TO CATTAHO ! Hague Correspondent Saya a Dis patch Waa Received Stating That Four American Battleship Are Ex pected at Curacao in January. in LITTLE CHRISTMAS SERMON, We are the edge of a new Christ mas festival-the anniversary of the most significant event in the history of the world. Jesus came with the greatest message ever spoken in the hearing of the human race. It was all a summons to a new, heroic life to a new principle of personal con duct and a new principle of social ef fort. It was the purpose of Jesus to awake the God in man, and to estab lish a new social order with the Gol den Rule as its working principle. Here and there we fin d men and women who tive and labor -in the light of this lofty ideal. They are the conscripts of the dream. A wise Seer has described them in beautiful words beautiful, heart-warm, inspiring words: ' "Their main characteristics are, that they serve for the goo dof oth ers; that they are in the persistent ef fort to keep down the will of self, to live beyond themselves. They are careful to produce rather, than to consume; to save for humane purpos es rather than to waste; to avoid contention; to promote good will and charity; to walk carefully; to stand for the defense of the injured and the oppressed. Again, they seek -to alle viate sufferings; to strew the path of life with gentle courtesies; to avoid flattering titles; to shun the meretricious and ostentatious socie ty; to esteem the ties oif human fra ternity as above the ligatures of her edity, creed, or nationality. It is theirs to hate the impure in all things; to criticize with a keen eye their own evils, but to abstain from a prying introspection into the conduct of others; to despise the habit of scan dal; to hold themselves as dignified yet lowly; to abominate self-right eousness; to reject with loathing the way of the spy and tale-bearer. Such will seek to embody a divine chasti ty to the most extreme of senses; never to obtrude by an unwelcome person reepiaencsor rj akuakua personal presence or unneeded opin ion; to sanctify the temple of worship with in their own heart; never to glorify themselves, but always, by the sweetness and light of life, to glorify their Father in heaven." The Morning Astorian contains all the local and Associated Press report. ALL TESTIMONY FOR THIRD T TRANSPORTATION IS BETTER Claim That Farmer Received Kin Per Cent Return on Their Invest ments While Railroad Only Earn Only 4 Per Cent . PITTSBURG, Dec. 4.-In his let ter to the mining congress Harriman said during the past year the mineral production of the United States was $325,000,000 tons value over two bd lion dollars. . Harriman said the rail roads are doing their utmost to pro- de faster and better transportation and that inequalities in the matter of freight rates are being eliminated as fast as the situation in each case is realized, and that while the country is developed and the railroads develop ing the freight rates have been dun inishing. That in 1907 the farmers re ceived nine per cent return on their investments; manufacturer 19.4, while the roads earnel scarcely four per cent . PROSECUTION RESTS POLITI CAL BOSS'S CASE LATE YESTERDAY. WILL CONTINUE KONDAY Attorneys For the Defense Will Make Known Their Plan of Action Mon dayTook Ten Weeks ;o Get Jury Together. , SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 4.-With all the testimony for the state before the jury the1 prosecuted rested the case late this afternoon the third trial of Ruef the former political boss of San Francisco charged with having offered a bribe to former supervisor, John J. Furey to vote for the trolley franchise for the United Railroads in 1906. Adjournment was had until Monday when the attorneys for the defense will make known their plan of action in th case, which has been ton trial 14 weeks, 10 weeks of which was consumed in getting the jury. POPE IS, WELL. x ROME, Dec. 4. A correspondent of Romano, a Vatican organ, assert that contrary to reports, Pope Tius has practically recovered from his recent indisposition and today visited his official quarters. SEAMEN STRIKE. MANILA, Dec. 3.-The Coastwise Seameai's Union declared a strike to day as a result of which six large coasting steamers are tied up at their berths here unable to go to sea as their crew have quit The men de mand a 100 per cent increase of pay for all overtime work and that Sun day work be paid over on the over time schedule. They also demand horter working hours. Thus far the shipowners have refused to accede to the -demands of the union. It expected that the crews of many of the coasting steamers due to arrive here in the next few days will quit as soon as their vessels reach port MANAGUA, Dec 4 The , revolu tion has begun in Salvador under the , leadership of former Vice-President Prudencio Alfaro. Three cities are reported captured by revolutionist. VIENNA, Dec 4. Two steamer with troops aboard left Fiume today under sailed . orders. Two other steamers follow tomorrow. The sup posed destination is Cattaro, seaport of Austria on Adriatic, contiguous to Montenegro territory. War rumcr continue, though there is an optimis tic feeling in official circles. , LONDON, Dec. 4.The Daily Tel egraph' correspondent for the Hague says a dispatch received from there are that four American warships are expected at Curacao in January and says it is certain that the United States will staunchly support Holland as against Venezuela. PARIS, Dec. 4.--A special dispatch from Vienna says a message from Cattaro branch of the Hungarian bank states that Cattaro was bom barded today. "A dispatch adds that at the ministry of war it was said no information on the subject could be obtained but "It wa impossible to deny the news." ; PARIS, Dec 5. Some of the news papers express the belief that Castro has deserted Venezuela forever. They say for years he has been sending money to England and France where they estimate he has sixty million dollar deposited. SAN SALVADOR, Dec. 4. In no single instance have the revolution ists a semblance of success. The re bellion was immediately and com pletely put down. The country i generally quiet, business was not in terrupted on the gathering of the coffee crop, is proceeding. GRAND JURY BUSY WITH CHICAGOANS Some Extraordinary Frauds Unearthed of Last Primaries in Illinois City CHICAGO, Dec. 4,-Ballots of the men of long residents in other cities, temporary absentees of the insane and even of the dead, were kept in the primary election late last August in Chicago. "Repeaters" voted in the platoons with the connivance of wil fully unseeing judges and clerks of election, and fraud, rampant and hith erto unknown in a city never famous for purity in its political atmosphere were scntional allegations made today in a report of the special grand jury. Indictments to the number of 81 were returned against two score or more of the politicians and others. The investigation, owing to physical limitations, merely scratched the sur face of the situation, according to the report. Voting machines are advocat ed as a step in the remedial direction and a wider application of civil serv ice is recommended.