THE--OREGGN JOURNAL - i - ;.THB WEATHER. "'t'onlght -and Sundav, occasional rain; southerly winds. : PORTLAND, OREGON. SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 29. 1602. VOL. I. NO. -227. PRICE , FIVE CENTS. MTTHEWS TO DDP REPUBLICAN CHAIRMANSHIP 'flmmtrnm. genera HOYT ORDERS PORTLAND POLITICAL BOSS MUST MAKE HIS CHOICE Refuses to State Whether He Will Resign the State Chairmanship or the Federal Office. Tfie Journal's Expose of His Political Partisanship Results in His Being Called Down Hard by the Department at Washington. Asslsant Attorney-General Hoyt telegraphed "Jack" Matthews, United States Marshal, this morning, calllno his attention to the recent department circular In which federal employes were strictly prohibited from displaying, undue political activity, and demanding his Immediate resignation from the chairmanship of the Republican State Central Committee. Mr. Matthews has not declared himself as to what action he will take in the matter. He refused to deny that ho was (till a member of the committee. In fact, he refused to deny that he was still chairman of the committee, and in no case can he successfully contro vert the assertion that he has been displaying a most reprehensible political activity. Henry McGinn, who is an Intimate friend of Boss Matthews, said to The Journal this morning that Matthews claimed to him last evening that he had resigned as chairman of the committee in last July. Matthews said this morning that he I-ast evening the Journal sent the following: telegram to the Department of Justice: To the Department of Justice. Washington W. F. Matthews. T'nileii States Marshal for Orwm, also holding the position of Chairman Republican State Central Committee, is offensively imrlisan. Is interfering in administration of the alternative of resignation us chairman of the committee. What will detriment do'.' OKKUON DAILY JOURNAL. THE TF.LF.GRAM TO ROOSEVELT. Following this The Journal wired President Roosevelt s follows: To l'resirlent Roosevelt. Washington W, f . Matthews. I' nl tod States Marshal for Oregon, also holding the position of Chairman of the Republican State Central Committee, is offensively partisan. He is interfering In the admlnWmUoH of,, the postofflce here to; the UfsarJproval o - many, prominent cltlaens. This paer- lias wired rum-plaint to -the Department of Justice. Would be glad to know your attitude on the question. OKKCON DAILY JOURNAL. These dispatches were supplemented Vy letters addressed to Attorney-General Knox and to the President. In which clippings from the various Portland newspapers were enclosed detailing the violent attempts made by the I'nifed States Marshal to dictate the conduct of the local postoffice. QUICK ACTION FOLLOWS. This morning the following telegram was received rrom The-Journal's Washington correspondent: Assistant Attorney-General Hoyt, immediately after receipt of your telegram, wired Matthews calling his attention to the imperative rule of the department against political activity and demanding his resignation from the state chairmanship. A Journal reporter took a copy of about It. Mr. Matthews seized the telegram and endeavored to look dignified. "I have nothing to say," said he, after the manner of Pierpont Morgan. "Are you chairman of the state central committee?" i . ' ; ' ': ' '.'.' ' I couldn't say." . . ' - ' "Will you resign your chairmanship or will you reaign as marshal?" "I don't know a thing about it." said Mr. Matthews. "It was reported to The Journal thts morning." pursued the reporter, in a cheerful voice, "that you made the state Went last night that you had already resigned as chairman of the central committee." "I never said any such thing." said the man of two Jobs, and then he retired as gracefully as It is possible for a disgruntled politician to do. I. II. POPE M(K in ip w He Relates Occurrences While There An Oregon Permanent Exhibit Is Needed in New York and Washington. W. H. Pope, ex-rounty auditor of Mult nomah County, is back from an extended trip to the East, where he visited his old home at New Bedford, after tin absence of 40. years. In an Interview with a Journal representative thts morning, he d: "Of all the cities I visited In the East ONLY.,500 LIVING OF 2500 Death and Smallpox Go Hand in Hand . in Island of Furni Awful Pestilence VIENNA Nov .-SSr-Onry- 6tM imngouf"Sf a T6uTpbpu1a tlon of f.5W5 Is The terrible story of death from smallpox on the Island of Furni. m the Aegean Sea. The greatest terror prevails and hundreds of dead bodies are unburled. strewn about the shores. Survivors fear to approach the dead, and the stench arising from the decaying remains is awful. An epidemic of smallpox broke out on the island arid the natives sought to check It by employing vaccination. Not haying the proper virus they extracted pus from the sores of the sick and Inoculated ' the wall. The penult has been that nearly every patient died. had never made any such statement, who MATTHEWS IS STRANGELY IGNORANT. the dispatch and went forth to see what read It. Then he swallowed vigorously. for the past couple of months I prefer j Portland to any. They have no idea of 1 what Tortland is out there. The ques- ; Hons asked me about this part of the coun- j try. while East, were the most ridiculous I have ever heard. One man in New York asked me: "Isn't It cold up there? , You are so far up North." I answered , htm that we were -within a few miles f j the North Pole, yet we had a very tem perate climate. PERMANENT EXHIBITS "NEEDETJ. "I Bperl" atJout fl dayVtff New York. While there I visited the museum In Cen tral Park, where, they have a permanent exhibit of building materials from every state in the 1'nion. except Oregon. There seems to be no reason for this. The same condition prevails In the National Museum at Washington, which I also visited. "I stopped in Washington for about 1! days and took In everything of interest. I visited Mount Ve,rnon and Arlington, as also Georgetown and other historic points. From Washington I took one of the most delightful boat rides down the Potomac to Norfolk. Virginia, where 1 visited the Navy Yards, the Government Hospital and old Fort Norfolk, The har bor In Norfolk 1s very Interesting and there were fully 73 ships In the port the day I was there. SUBSTITUTION IN BOSTON. "That reminds me I was In Boston, and would you believe it. the old ?lye pork on4 beans, "brown bread' and clam chow - (Continued on Second Page.) PEOPLE is tening ine trutnr th political boss was going to da When speech returned the marshal INew York Banker to Aid Venezuela May Do It But Will Operate En tirely at His Own Risk, U. S. Will Not Help. WASHINGTON. Nov. 19. Isaac Selig masi. a New York banker. Is in this city with the purpose of interviewing the president and state department on' a rl':?,e ..,f.,,!"a",',inl' .th" Venezuelan. In, ','b,M,,?sa - rt. ' understood that the firm proposes to take up the Britain Germany claims, accepting Venezuela's bond as security. This action would be pleasing to the states, but It Is stated that If it is a part of Sellgman's proposi tion to secure from the l.'nijed States a guarantee of the bonds or even of the moral Influence of the government, he will be disappointed. The state depart ment is opposed to such arrangements t- and wm make -it -4a-r to-8tligmnn that he must opt uite entirely at his own- risk. Sriigman will ribn the mattef with the president this afternoon. - SECRET ENVOYS. PARIS. Nov. ?9. It is believed In Eu rope tlmt secret delijigations have been sent to both England and Germany for the purpose of negotiating In favor of Venezuela. It Is understood that dele gates are endoweil with power either to settle the claims in full or to make offers whlrrL.lt. la ..believed-. jtllLliO-Jisteiuid-toby both Britain and the Kaiser. Vene zuela will not enternto any arrangement usjess her course in the matter Is com pletely to the satisfaction of the I'nited States. REED-JURY TRIAL W. H. H. Reed, is being tried by a Jury In Justice Reld's court this afternoon. Iffe" Is charged with violating an order of the court In visiting the premises of Mrs. Jennie Lawtoh. against "Whom be had made threats to kill. HE WOULD PHI MTI01I Offil bbbj saw BBS BjBr MOB H WE I Swift Ice Plant Blown to Atoms kt Chicago This Morning Boiling Water Slowly Scalds Im prisoned Victims to Death While Cries of Agony Pierce Palf of Steam. (Journal -Special -Service.) CHICAGO, Nov. 29. With steam, scalding water, debris and Jagged Iron hurling In every direction, car rying death and general devasta tion over a large area, five boilers In Swift oV Co.'s Ice plant, No. 3, exploded simultaneously at 10:40 o'clock this morning. More than a dozen bodies of the dead have al ready been discovered and many others are believed to be beneath the wreck and ruin still. At least 50 have been more or less seriously Injured. Nothing Is left of the huge build ing but a heap of tangled ruins. Splintered wood and twisted Iron are buried beneath a heap of stone and broken brick. AWFUL DEATH. Creat tanka Of boiling water, opened ny mr rerce or ine snocK, leaked down through the wreckage !and slowly bolted alive many who were caught beneath the Jam. The work of rescue was earrled on beneath, a pall, of steam-that rendered It Impossible for. the Wre men to see three Inches before their faces. They had to feel their way about. Many of the rescuert were badly scalded while working to as sist those Imprisoned In the tomb of death. The shock of the explosion came while all employes were at their work. There was no warning. In an Instant death groped blindly Into life and a score were crushed Into Inert clay or maimed and broken. WORK OF RESCUE. The explosion was heard all over Chicago. Firemen hurried to the scene with all possible speed and ambulances from every hospital In the city were speedily on hand with a corps of physiclana, rendering what service they could. A vast crowd gathered and fought with the cordon of police) for ad mission Into the great dome of escaping steam. Each man ap peared to wish to be of some as sistance to those whose screams of agony could be heard. According to the deductions of experts, the main boiler exploded an Instant In advance of the other four. With the velocity of a 13-Inch shell, fragments of the Iron shot upward through the floors and ceil ings above, cutting them In two as though they had been paper. Great steel girders; wefeshattlred and the walls fell ' In. The other four boilers crashed and a volcano of debris was let loose. Men were killed blocks away by the falling bricks and stones. NO ONE LIVES. Of 23 men known to have been In the Ice house when the explosion came not one escaped. All are dead. Only four bodies taken from the ruins have been Identified. All others are too frightfully mangled to be recognizable. Fifty men wars hurt in adjoining buildings. The hospitals are unable to give a complete list of the Injured, as many were taken to their homes. It will be days before the names of the dead are all known. VAGRANCY C &SEAFIERMATH When Pansy Young was brought be fore Judge llofiii.- ysterday. on a chaVg" of vagrancy. Hi" 'ju.stioning of Deputy City Attorney Kit zg raid brought out the information that the girl was under age. and had been harbored about the Home Ranch concert hall, selling drinks, and was living with a man named Archie Kay. Kitigerald had a warrant Issued for the arrest of ieotge Lane, the man-ager-of- Ue !.,n. d ?s -for Fay.- J.n was arrested last "iirtit and at this morn ing's session of court his case was con tinued to 'Peeembei' 1. " Mr. Kitigerald made the statement- that ho Intended to enforce the laws bearing on this Issue. BAD GAS EXPLOSION. MARIETTA. Nov. 1'9.-,F gas explosion in the residence of Mrs. Mary Tucker de molished the hous this afternoon. Mrs. Tucker and four daughters were all in jured by being pinioned beneath burning timbers and were rescued with difficult y. Adjoining houses were cracked and ren dered unsafe. The explosion was so vio lent that all windows within two blocks were shattered. RAILROAD SOLD. OAKLAND. Cal.. Nov. 29. The Call- fociA 4c Nevada Railway,' uncompleted fine, was sold today to the Santa Ke for $50,000. 'S ACTING MAYOR ZIMMERMAN COMMENDS JOURNAL'S STAND Hundreds of the People of Portland Send Congratulations to the Office of This Paper. Councilmen, Physicians, and Qtizens Delighted With the Outcome of Pure Food Products, "The meat and milk ordinance will be taken up at the next meeting of the Common Council. The. old ordinance Introduced by F. W. Mulkey are the ones I refer to at this time. That some vigorous steps must be taken to correct the evils that Infest Portland, relative to bad meat particularly, and milk also. Is, I think, apparent to everybody. I am not familiar with the documents Introduced by Mr. Mulkey at the council meeting last June, but I shall know all about them In a few days. The Journal Is In the front in this matter and that Is a position that ahould be com mended by all." l. ZIMMERMAN, President of the Council. I-ast Monday The Journai exuosed the rottenness of conditions that made It possible for diseased cattle by the herd to be killed and sold in Portland for fresh, prime meat. The Journal has made plain through a score of valuable opinions, that the milk taken from Infected cows la detri mental to health, not alone of infants but of adults as well. Food Inspector Bailey, when asked the question. "Would you feed an infant of yur own milk that had been taken from n cow suffering from tuberculosis?" said. "No, 1 would not." Within five days hundreds of congratulations have come to The Journal because of the public spirit displayed In bring ing to tin- attention of the people, that which they should know, telling, them of an evlj ,thLouidJtsi('9ote4.--''''''''a' ..,, .Wttm' ,)v;jUtow.U..Jta means by which wholesome meat and lime milk could In- sold to the consumer, who has no way of protecting himself against unscrupulous dealers. Professional men. business men. working men. mothers and fathers, have voiced their commendation on The Journal's course. And so It has come about at last that there is a certainty that the cltv authorities will take a hand and remedy the I- tnluultoua -practice of some ow iu .d;Lv.Ui the. public, because that Rubltc doesirot, and wun tror,;knoW." ., ACTING MAYOR ZIMMERMAN'S OPINION. - . - - 'Infected meat and Impure milk constitute an evil that has no place In any community,"' said L. Zimmerman, presi dent of the Common Council, today. "I understand the subject Will be brought up at the meeting of the council next Wednesday afternoon. I am vigorously in favor of taking measures that will Insure to Portland meat and milk untainted by adulterations or disease.'" Mr. Zimmerman was asked if the old Mulkey ordinances would be revived. lie replied: "I am not sure that the same documents will receive attention, but the matter will be Investigated and this time something will be done." Councilman Ttentley. who was present, when Mr. Zimmerman expressed himself on the subject, asked what manner ot Inspection Mr. Zimmerman favored. . "1 believe that meat should be inspected on the hoof. Animals to be killed and their meat sold In Portland should each one be .cnrcfully examined by an expert while nllve. TJie operation could easily be arranged, and furthermore, I believe that We can arrange matters so that it would not cost the city a cent. I believe that we could secure one or two government Inspectors who would act for Portland alone. Whichever way It may adjust Itself it will be toward the end of wholesome food for the City of Portland. It is shameful," continued Mr. Zimmerman, "the class of meat that Is ' hung up In some of our markets, and the time has come to act. "The milk proposition I am not so well acquainted with, but adulterated milk or that sold which has come from an Infected cow is about us disagreeable to contemplate as bad meat. It might be well to correct the meat first. However, they are such companions that I believe both should be wrestled with at once." lillt) i BATTLE Army arid':Navy Cadets Meet in Annual Game Today Generals and Admirals Forget Their Dignity and Cheer in Unison With Meanest Private Jack Tar. or PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 29.-Final score: West Point, '22; Annapolis., 8. PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 29. The first half of the West Point-Annapolis football game ended with a score of 10 to 0 In favor of the soldiers. West Point used the old-fashioned tandem and the Em- nlu Cwn- nlaw Tim. a r. H main tHv hammered right through the line of the I sailors and could not be stopped, although I the naval cadets put up a very game fight. The soldiers" depended upon thelf exces- 1 slve weight and made-that weight tell.- j I'illlADKI-l'IIIA, Nov. 29 From top ' rank generals, in their gold lace and j brass, and admirals In full imtform. down i th.. e:rtet nrlvates of both arinv and t navy, the lighting fohce of the I'nited Slates lias forgotten Its rank and is shouting and cheering, gesticulating In frenzy and alternately sinking into de spair, at Franklin Held this afternoon. Football Is the cause. It is the game of the year West Point against Annapolis. Tale and Harvard, Cornell and Prince ton may play better football, their coaches may come at higher salary and more time may be devoted to practice by their teams, but wide and fnr throughout tbe Length and breadth of t he tanoLan.4. whereve.- American keels plows the foam ing deep, there Is impatience to hear the score of the Army-Navy game. Foreign military attaches leave standing orders for the results to be cabled at their ex pense, and Admiral Robley D. Evans, on the Chinense Station, hos nrrangVd for returns to be brought to him on a swift 10 'fit' it dispatch boat. There Is more money wagered on the annual football bout between the Army and the Navy cadets than upon any other game In America. Today the betting was early In favor of the young men from the upper Hudson River, but after th? two teams were on the field and the husky strength of the sea dogs had be come apparent, odds changed slightly, and there were not so many calls of de fiance from the military side of the field. There were many notables present on the grounds. Secretary of War Hoot wore the cplors of the Army, while on ' the J,noa.( Iwwifit of Secretary of the Navy Moody showed the pennant of the oppo sition. Oen. Curbliv Gen. Chaffee and many other noted fighters were on hand 'eaTftcsnd thejtrfotjjbt Welf ajgnlty un.d high station and yelled like school boys for their respective favorites. THE TWO TEAMS. Close followers of the sport and who have watched the records of the two teams since the beginning of the pres ent season, expressed the opinion that the Army would win. Their defensive work was considered superior and It was believed by football experts that they moved faster behind the line. The inter ference of the sailors, in the short prac tice before the teftrns lined up awaiting the call of the whistle, however, moved swiftly and showed hard and compact formation. It looked an ugly thing to butt against and there were expressions of doubt 011 the faces of Army advocates. There waa a whisper along tho side lines Just before the men went Into posi tion that it was to be a kicking game on the part of the West Pointers,, whose ends were considered faster than the htid'dles: Ffffifght rtne'priinglrig arid iSardi 00M PAUL BEGS TO DIE ON VELDT Former President of Transvaal Asks English to Let Him Come Home at Last LONDON, Nov. 29. Three men sailed from England today on a Strang mis- sloiv aixl w-wh1eh-wm mean Wtteh-tf-tt is .successful. -All aie outcasts telurn Ing to their native land. Former Acting President Schalkberger, of the Transvaal, returns to the country in which he was once the supreme and ruling power, to ba a favor from Colonial Secretary Chamberlain. It Is said that Oom Paul Kruger. once president of the South African Republic, will be permitted to come baric ,; and die on the veldt. With Schalkberger go Weasels and Wolmorans, the Boer delegates who solicited funds In the iTnlted States. Both these men have Jheert warned never to return to Cape Town, but they so In the hope that the autaort ? ties will relent and permit them to remain, ' . . ' of All Classes Are the Fight for - .:.-..r.,.-r end rushes was the declared policy of the followers of Neptune. . INTENSE FEELING. A party of drunken soldiers at the south gate became mixed up with sailors from a revenue cutter and distracted the attention of a portion of the audience just as the ball soared down the field. The disturbers Were arrested, but sev eral less intoxicated than the rest watched the game under police protection. HELD TO GRAND JURY. : - Louis Robinson.. charged .jsith secreting assets, after having filed a petition In baulu-upteyv was bound over to- he grand jury this morning by Commissioner Mc Kee. Robinson was released on a J1.600 , bond. Harry Thomas was bound over to the grand jury this morning on a bond of 11,000. He Is charged with the larceny of a diamond from S. P. Haniwalt, on an . "S" street car. Thomas tried to prove an alibi, through a woman called Bell, who testified that on the night that the robbery was committed, he had been, at her house from S in the evening until after midnight. Haniwalt and a number of others, were positive that he was On the cur the evening in question. CHARGED WITH CRIME Frederick Kettler was arrested last evening by Constable Adkins, charged with attempting a serious crime. The complaining -witness is Mrs. Ottila Buschke, an aged woman residing at 469 MJasUisippi. avenue. , Kettler, who is . married man, was-Veleased on $500 balk a n -.y,.i.;..:- -4'