MEN WOMEN It Always Pays to Read Journal Wait Ads.' Read Them Everyday.1 ; f Journal Circulation yesterday Was Th weathr Fair tonight,' and Sunday; eaaterly wlnda. ! r PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY : EVENING, NOVEMBER 0, 1907. TWO SECTIONS 18 PAGES. PRICE TWO CENTS. JJa'it"!' VOL. VI. NO. 213. am ' urn ... , . GOWERMOR-AMD-ATTORNEY-GENERAL " :MM10ME S TEEUS REmSMMBi I - ' ' ' ' . i- 1 1 : ; i - CONSULT AS TO COURSE TO, P0R8UE t ' J, Thorburn Ross, T; T. Burkhart, John E. Aitchison, F. M. Warren, and George II. Hill, officers and directors of the Title Guarantee & Irust company, are made defendants in a prose cution for feloniously accepting deposits for an insolvent bank. Bail is fixed at $2,500 each. Warrants are issued and Ross, Burkhart and Hill are arrested and released under $2,500 bail each.- J. C. Bayer, president Bayer Furnace company, and A.. Lindsley, department manager Title Guarantee & Trust company deposit $5,000 bonds each as surety for Burk hart and Hill. F. Quackenbush, president investment company, and A. A. Lindsjey deposit $5,000 bond as surety for Ross. Aitchison is in New York and Warren out of the city so no servjee could be had. Clerk Hennessy refuses to accept bonds except for double the amount of cash bail. Defense will probably contend that state banking law is not yet in effect and therefore suit cannot be brought by district attorney. STEEL WILL Authorities Jlaiiitain That He Had Xo Ial Hight to Deimsit State Funds as in the Case of the Title Guar- - outee and Trust Company: Shall proceedings be instituted against State Treasurer George A Steel for the purpose of ousting him from office, because of his illegal deposits of state funds in the Title Guarantee and Trust bank? That Is the grave question which is occupying the attention today of Governor Chamberlain and Attorney-General Crawford. While neither of them will discuss the matter for publication, saying only that at this time it would not be proper to mate any public statement as to the course they will pursue, both the governor t and the attorney-general have declared repeatedly that so long as Mr. Steel remains in office it will be exceedingly difficult if not impossible for the state to recover from his bondsmen the money lost through the Title Guarantee failure. The state treasurer declares that he will not resign hie office. If he per slats in this determination the state will undoubtedly be 'forced to commence proceeding through the criminal courts to oust him. Section IV of article 7 of the state constitution provides: "Public officers shall not' be impeached; but Incompe tency, corruption, malfeasance or "de Unquency In office may be tried In the ' same manner as criminal offenses and Judgment may be given of dismissal from office - and such further punish ment as may nave oeen prescribed by law. Acted J31erUy . There can be no question that the state treasurer acted Illegally in depos iting the state school funds in the Title Guarantee bank. In the opinion of some attorneys he had. no right to place school funds - In aity bank, but even if they are to oe regarded in the same light as other state moneys which come Into the treasurer's hands, It was his duty under the law to exact from the bank securities to the full amount of the deposit. The amount which Steel had on deposit in the bank at the time of tne raiiure was issu.ouu; ne received from the bank tn the first place surety bonds to the amount of 1100.000. and It was not until a few hours before the failure that he obtained the additional security of timber land mortgages. It Is the almost universal opinion among lawyers that this last transaction will be set aside, as an attempt to make the state a preferred creditor. In addition to the constitutional pro vision above quoted, there Is a statutory enactment wmc,n may cover tne case. Section 1892, BelllngnrCotton, provides: "If any. officer of this state or of any county, town or other municipal corpor ation therein - shall wilfully neglect or refuse to perform sny duty or service pertaining to his office to the Injury of anyone, or the manifest hindrance or obstruction of public Jus tice or business, whether such Injury, hindrance or obstruction was particu larly intended or not, such officer, upon conviction- thereof shall be punished by Imprisonment In the penitentiary not leas than six months nor more than one I ' v -"a ' 1 ') - trsi Vr A 'A ii in J. THQRBURN ROSS. JAPS , SMUGGLED ACROSS BORDER Ten Thousand Orientals En ter Canada With Hope of Beaching: States. year, or bv Imprisonment In the county Jail not ' less than three months nor more than one year; i "by dismissal from office with or without either or any of such punishments." , -, X - ..; Wkat Xw Xsqoirss. There can be-. no accounting bV'-the .state with the state treasurer until he goes out of office, for'the law requires (Continued on Page Three.) (United Free Leated Wire.) Vancouver, 'B, C., Nov. 9. Ten thou sand three hundred orientals have ar rived in Vancouver since the beginning of this year. Of these. 8,600 are Japa nese, 2,000 are Hindus, and 300. Chinese. Two thousand of the Japanese have crossed the boundary line Into the United States, at .least 500 of them Ille gally. One third . of , the Chinese who have reached here have smuggled them selves into the United States. TO BE Warrants for J. Thorburn Boss, Hill, Aitchison, Burkhart and Others Is sued by District Attor ney's Office Law Quoted. FINANCIAL HORIZON CLEARING Portland Situation Shows Greatest Improvement To day Since Flurry Hean Xew Certificates Keadily Accepted and Help (iieutly 10 SEE 1INII OFF Wheat Movement to Knr- land Will IJrinjr Large Balances Within Short Time Today's Clearing House J'eport Favorable, Wsrranta for the arrest of J. Thor burn Ross, president of the Title Guar antee & Trust company; George H. Hill, vice-president; John E. Aitchison, secretary; T. T. Burkhart, treasurer, and F. M- Warren, the fifth member o the board of directors, were issued from the municipal court this morning upon a warrant charging the men with felony. The specific allegation set out In the Information which was filed by Deputy District Attorney Haney - about 10 o'clock was that the men, ' being the owners ana orncuus or tne Title uuar- antee A Trust company, had accented do posits arter tbey knew the bank to be Insolvent. This act. It is alleged. Is contrary to section - is. oi onapier iss, or tire new state banking act, making the accept ance of deposits when an Institution Is insolvent a reiony. punisnaoie bv fine of not more than 11.000. or bv Im prisonment in tne penitentiary for not more than two years, or by both fine nd imprisonment. Konds for the as- pearanoe or tne rive oiricera ana atrect ors were fixed by Municipal Judge Cameron at $2,500 each, and officers were sent out at once to serve the war rants upon the defendants. Ui. Manning Acts. This action was brought by the dls trlct attorney's office as a result of the Investigation which Mr. Manning nas oen carrying on ror the past two days and in it C. K. lilmian, a real estute man having an office at 9 FlrHt street, appears as the complaining witness. Mr. E.iinan swears In his statement ta the district attorney that he took $560 (Continued on Page Three.) Ii OUR EliePs Burglar Gets : Religion' at Revival Meeting and Surrenders Himself Conscience Played Import ant Part in Remarkable Career of Crook. The mosL Improved conditions since he beginning of the financial flurry are visible in the Portland banking sit uation today. At the various banks the Ines of people waiting to make de posits of money are as long as the lines I of those with checks to tie cashed. "AVIieat money" M In active demand and certificates of small denominations of wme dollar and upwards are being Issued. The many details necessarily attending their Issue renders the pro cess clow and the- demand from banks desiring them for clrcuatlon Is much greater than the supply. The usual Saturday activity Is ap parent at the various counting rooms, payroll checks being the principal cash demand. The governor has continued the holiday, and while It does not Im- oe any notlceuble check on business It s serviceable us an-absolute guarantee of continued financial safety. Wheat KOTementa Will But. The local situation depends for permanent relief upon the changing conditions in New York, Boston and other eastern centers. As soon a they regain normal conditions an im mediate response will be felt here, as large cash balances of Portland hanking funds curried in New irorK oanKs whi become available and the coin can be se cured within a few days by express The wheat movement, which has tied up n large amount of Portland cash. Is a 60-dnv transaction. When a Portland bank cashes a draft with bill of lading attached on a cargo of wheat for Liverpool It is often more than 60 days before the cash comes from England. In ordinary times the Portland bank can realize on the ex change through New York, but at the present time the New York banks are not only keening an tne wneat receipts thev aret. but are hanging on to the ordinary balances carried there by the coast Dunss. r Clearings Show Increase. "I retard the situation today as de cldedlv Im uroved." said John L. Hart man. secretary of the clearing house "HuHlneAf Is going on nicely, the cer tificate plan is working well, and the banks are In satisfactory condition. The clearing house is now issuing certifi cates in denominations or )i ana up wards, and cannot get them out fast enough to accommodate all of the banks today. The amount to be Issued will denend unon the demand and tho amount of approved securities avail ahle We expect the situation here and elsewhere to improve steadily from this date forward. As an nd cation or tne persistent nrosneritv locally, und the facility with which business Is transacted under the unusual monetary conditions, today s record at the clearing nouse snowed clearings of 1914,212.91 as compared 'o $a9,SS8.o7 ciearea tne same aay last year. Today's clearing house balances were $184,!3 .., as against (121,068.10 the same day a year ago. ' Portland Pastors Pelieve the Words "In God We Trust" Should Have Itoen Ieft on the New Mintage of Gold Coin. Xo Reason Apparent for Omission, as the Senti ment Offers no Offense to Any One's Religious Sensibilities. MAY BE OUSTED (Si ' 'V'.J ansswiiii jn.-ss Sfc ma - t STATE TREASURER STEEL (Doited Preit Leiied Wire.) Chicago, Nov. 9. "Ellel'a Burglar" got religion and surrendered himself to the police of Chicago last night He admit ted that he is the housebreaker who helped ' himself to cigarettes, chatted with Evanston millionaires as they lay In their beds, kissed their pretty ba bies, spared the little kcensakes of their wives and departed witn a cneery -uooa night" and their jewelry, diamonds and money. "Eliel's Burglar" walked Into the big tent on the north side and heard Evan gelist R. A. Torrey plead with men to 'get right with God" Then the bur glar was converted and gave himself up. xe is Anthony mitev. 43 years old,, and carries the "distinction" of being the most gentlemanly robber Known in toe annals of the Chicago po lice, Klltey won the title of "Eliel's Bur glar" following the invasion of the home of a wealthy insurance broker named Eliel. who resides in Evanston. MICHIGAN PROFESSOR PROPOSES TO CROWN AS KING ((Jotted Press lAfti Wire. Ann Arbor, -Mich-, No vt 9. Joseph H. Drake , of the law department of the University of Michigan startled his class by declaring that he would favor electing Roosevelt king of this country. The students at first took the statement M i loke, but it was - reiterated. - and Professor Drake asserted that -It was given with all seriousness and sincerity. The nomination of "the . president to the throne of the United States eame after a discussion- of the corporation Eroblem of this country. Professor irsks declared; that although an ttack upon vested interests had been attended with many dangers to the prosperity of the nation, the president had wisely handled the situation and as a final so lution of corporation encroachments upon the rights of the public could not be reached before the passing of many decades, ne favored, retaining Roose velt at the helm through the thickest of th fight RAILROAD I'll PAY ill CASH Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul to Circulate Million Each Month in West. (Special Diapttch to The Journal.)' Spokane, Wash., Nov.1 S. The Chi cago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, in order to keep business moving In the west, will pay out In cash instead of checks dur ing the next year several millions. The road is building to the coast and has a monthly payroll In this state of $1,000. 000. This information is given out by a representative of the road, wm says President Williams . of that company gave him this information personally. Oakesdale, Wash., Nov.. 9. There is a great rusn of work on the Chicago, Mil waukee &- St Paul railroad, and there are plenty of men to push the work along. The contractors expect to pay all the men In cash from this on, in stead of n checks, as has been hereto fore the custom. The cash will be shipped direct from the east. and. 100, 000 a month will be let loose in this district for the next 10 months. Does the omission of the words "In God We Trust" from the new issue of t'nlted States coins mean that the country Is abandoning Its ancient faith and going the way of Rome? Pastors of the prominent Portland churches are aroused over the omission of the motto from the new gold pieces, and may send a protest to Washington against the innovation. Some of them see in it a portent of a general and wiaesprean agnosiisism others read hito the ehanire a rana-l feral of fnlth in Ood to a faith in gold. None of them can see the necessity for sush a move at this time. Tho first gold pieces to be Issued without the motto have had their ap pearance this week. They were de signed by the late Augustus St. Gau-i dens at the Instance of President Roose velt, It Is said. Here ia what some of the Portland pastors think about the omission of the motto: raith Is Graven Deep. Rev. William Hiram Foulkes. D. D.. of First Presbyterian church Christian raltn, even of a formal sort, Is graven so deep In our civilization that It will take more than the omission of a phrase from a coin to efface It. We will still have the formal oath in the name of God and the words Anno Domini as the seal and sign of commercial, and legal transactions, besides being the calendar of common life. As to the case in hand I presume many are saying, "GIvb us the gold and we won't worry about It's superscription." 8lnce, however, confidence Is the basis of business. It is a poor time to make light of that age-long confidence which STEEL DENIES HE jlDED BANK Admits Using Bad Judg ment but Says He Did Not Attempt to Save Ross. CHILD'S CRY 0P1 GRAVE OF SNYDER M uitler and Strange, Matri monial Life of Hillsboro 3fan Brought Again Into Limelight by Suit of In fant Son. Six-Year-Old Roy Tliipugh' Guardian, Contests Grand father's Will Mrs. Sny der Again Married and Living in Detroit. Through the' courts of Kansas City the -year-old son of the late Carey D. Snyder, of Hillsboro, this state, has raised a feeble cry of protest against he Inheritance of disgrace left him by his father and the disinheritance re sulting from the provisions of his grandfather! will. Though a year has ' elapsed since the decomposed body of (Continued on Page Three.) Georg? A. Steel, state treasurer, de nies most emphatically that he was per suaded by President Ross to place a larger amount' of school funds with the Carey D. Bnvder. the nrofltsate uin nt Title Guarantee Trust company than . Kansas Cltv millionaire w.. fnnnrf WftS ygualljajilec tnere. a anon iim i Hnsatindej-rowtlL jiea r milioWr. before the suspension or wne Dana, in tlmB b.m not iii...nt lh. td, , order to line me. .iisiuuuon acruim I .-nsatlnnal uinn,-t th. rianirernim srreirn nr ine Dreseni I ma n- I . . . . i. i a th. t.nl in V.'"- auence mac naa wh eh he now hnds hlniself through the K0" nVJ fal he bad wiin inn iinnM. iu iipcuiiic wr laiarj . . - . . mo. hi.t that his motive and Intentions m"ny granaratner. cannot be questioned. I aoa of Divorced "Wife. "It Is absolutely untrue said sir. The child Is six years of age at the Steel this morning, "that I was ever ni-esent time, hut wn, ,i..rt.,i K n .1... I K,. u- I? iu a ftp nlhr nfrieiftl.iri.t . ' . - - of the bank, either dli to piace or leave lunus ; in "-- I Snyder. x from whom a divorce was .e- lure of the bank. Mr. Steel says tnat 1" ,rr- -' v" ,.Vii mav be criticised for having used f "'f;" W,V J.5rJf. unt11 .,u'1 Judgment In allowing the deposit " rL,u,k'" vi, . 1- a h 1. A .i 1 " v cr. St. w a 1 Ta B L1IB Will Cll n I H old" Mr" Ross lust few day. prior"' to "oon ' th. birth of th. lnteendUX?o,Odra0w deWn'a'1 P.'rT of "the Vun to Oregon three. Intended to draw aewn a part oi ine ytttrm At . t- nennKit necausn or ine iac. -iiaL 11 nau i irown too large to be carried" in one in- EE..f".i ",a? ,nIat wn? cme stltution without additional security. - - l-wi!!ie v."A-,T; "I do not remember, without consult- K"".- yJ" ':'.' i Ine the records of the office at Salem. VP"" .hl" "lease they were mar-, when 1 made the last deposit with th. " suggestion or tne young hank nnr hnw mneh t niaceri ther arnh-1 man s father sought a retreat in the emient to the failure of the Orearon country near. Hillsboro. The elder Trust company. After that failure I went to Mr. Ross and asked him for a statement of his condition, and he told (Continued on Psge Three.) killed: CARS Two Men Who Look Exactly Alike Are Killed in Iden tically the Same Way at Los Angeles and Are Placed Side by Side in the Morgue. Snyder spent $100,000 in Ms efforts to reaeem tne young man. xoung Hnyder and his wife lived lor a year or more on the Orearon ranch. During that time the Dlace became the rendezvous for some of the most notor ious crooks In the country, and was the . place of recreation for many denlsens of Portland's under-world. " ' Soon after- the robberv of the Forest Grove bank, two years asro. Carey I) Snyder dlsaDDeared. His bndr waar found a year usro. near Hillsbora with m. ' fracture near the bise of the skull. There was evidence' sufficient to causa a coroner's Jury to return a verdict of murder, and it was generally believed that he had been put out of the war be. cause he knew too much concerning the bank robbery. No effort waa ever mad. to apprehend the murderers. - . The elder Snyder, father of Carev T. Snyder, was killed in an automobile an. cident in Kansas City a year ago.; !: . film Bait to Annul win,: ' (I'olted Preaa lyaa Wire.) Los Angeles, Cal, Nov. 9. Two men. both killed by streetcars in Identically the same wav and exactly 12 hours apart and who resemble each other so closely that relatives of one could Iden tify him from the other only by his clothes, were accidentally placed side by aide on slabs In the morgue. H,acli sustainea a iranureu ivun uy rtennine before a swift car. one last night, the other this morning. Both are 46 years old, have a scrubby mustache, gray eyes, gray tinged hair and are E t , ! Oregon is Proud of the Sunday Journal W . . , ..... I ,.1,. n I. np.n..t HAWnanA Tk. Tn...nl ims slave rnv mivr i iuc ... m a .uuiu.i B has all the news all the time and Its Sunday edition Is a record breaker. , ' ' .. WONDERFUL SWEEP OF THE PROHIBITION WAVE Is the nation ' making up Its mind to try prohibition as a remedy for some of th. problems confronting It? ., ... . POET PREPARES HIS TOMB Noted Italian believes prediction of for- tune tejler that he ia soon to leave this , earth. . : , i , - THE VOYAGE OF THE INSANIA A peep into the future which may not be as improbable as It appears at first glance. .. . . SKY PICNICS REQUIRE INGENUITY Balloon housekeepers find many problems confronting them. , A Chance to Cheer Up LAUGH AND GROW FAT The comic supplement of The Sunday Jou'rv nal is a winner, Maud rescues Uncle Happy. Ambitious Teddy and the Bears, Monkeyshines. No Wedding Bells, and many others to make you roar. UNCLE SAM ROBS SQUIRRELS Government plays bad ' boy , tricks to perpetuate theforests. ' - .- . THE LITTLE BROWN EYED WOMAN She mad. a t'nlted States sen ator of a blind man. THE CHURCH OF THE FUTURE -Will the rellgioua service undergo radical changes soon? Phonographs ,may supplant choirs. The will of th. late R. M flnvAer - feet 10 inches in height. One is Peter capitalist, will be contested , In the cir Mciilllnn nf thin rltv whose son ia CUiv court on behalf of his crnnrimn firs assistant engineer on the steamer Stanley, the -year-old son of Carey D. Santa Rosa. His dead double is James Snyder. In papers filed In the case in Harvey, formerly employed on the Ton- the probate court In Kansas City It Is opah A Tidewater railroad. . hinted that the "Influences and . condi- Dr. Tanner, tho same police surgeon tlons'' surrounding Mr. Snyder at th. who cared for the first man, cared for time he exeeuted'the Will were such' as' the second. "My hair stood ud on end." to Justify proceedings to set-it-n.M. ' said Dr. Tanner, "when they brought I What these Influences were :1s not that second man In. I was . almost I stated. : v 1 ready to swear that the first man had It la all the more ironical that' come to life at the morgue, and they upsetting of the father's plans should nun LriuuKm luin iMtk ui nnuw me? up uafv tuuw auuuc inrougn tne indirect ' not knowing when a man Is dead." agency of his son, Cary, always a source or grier to ftira. - He had made all the provisions he felt called on for. on behalf of this member" of th famtIv. T Now it-i. for Gary's 'sake -that the structure Which he so carefully reared a inreaienea.wun over throw. My, Wttaaeat. Both.' In his Will R. ' M: finvrter telt tina to Cary and 1100. to Carr'a son. The curator says that th boy's mother has re marnea since v.uary's death and ; now. living in JJetrolt; that the boy is cared for by his mother's relatives and -that h has no property or estate avail able for his support or maintenance. After - reciting his : Investigation (Sf the episodes In the last years of Mr Snyder's life and of the influence con cerned Im the life and of the will, the curator, says that he made an unsuc. cessful attempt to induce the executor and substantial beneficiaries of The will -to make provision for the support and education, of the grandson. Was An Elopement, 4 - The boy's mother and father eloped and were married January 12, 1S9S. ' ry Snyder , was then 1 years old ari l his bride was 17. She was Kathleen Ida ? Mott and 1 lived in Independent-. They, eloped to Kens City, west before relatives of either could lnf"f- , fere and were married by the Itev. H. H. Comer. The ceremony i r""' formed at the home of t!ie pa-tr .. was witnessed by l-l J. I . : a -In-law of lr. John M. i..u, f..f..-r the girl. .- Csry's f.uii"i sk u York at Ihe time. Mrs. --Snyder, f'-r i':- ! 1 :. son, procured a t;.i ' j-e.ir. fhe v.s j- i:r- t f linrns' and .-i t t . NEWS. NEWS. NEWS That Is what you flnsT In this great paper. Two 2 leased wires and an army of special correspondents In all parts of X the world. . "T THESE ARE BUT A FEW OF THE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD 5 BUY TUB WONDERFFUL SUNDAY JOURNAL. MM J.