ATHE SATURDAY -ISSUE OF THE JOURNAL IS AN EIGHTEEN PAGE PAPER, AND tHE bNLV PAPER PRINTED IN THE VgNITED STATES CARRYING FOUR CQLOH r Be Sure to Havc:vi;r;-:c :;. YourWant Ads In Tomorrow's Journal Th WeatherFair and warmar , 4 tonight; Sunday fair; , - JOURNAL CIRCULATION TESTEKDAY .'. WAS ' '"' 29,450 VOL. VI. NO. 302. ; PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 22. 1808. TWO, SECTIONS 18 PAGES. PRICE TWO CENTS. iiiSlFhi? ' ; ; ,. ; r- : fifiuir fvfbv PiiABfiF BIG STICK JAIL FOR in ii in i l iiiiiii ijii n j ATM HADE By PROSECUTOR 11 .1 Reply Is Made in Straightforward Manner and Contains Reference to Letters and Documents Which Senator Claims Sus- tain His Assertions Pays Respects to! Others Who Have Assailed Him u hi Mm Chairman of Interstate Com merce Commission May Be Ousted for Accusing Pres ident of Haying Political Game. OFFENDING MAGNATES THE PEOPLE'S CHOICE The United Press obtained permission from Senator Fulton Alleges Roosevelt Wants In' Governor Hughes Says Fines Imposed Upon Monopolies Are Not Just Guilty In dividuals Should Be Made to Suffer. to summarize his reply to Francis J. Heney's charges that the senator is corrupt. The full text of Fulton's reply is not released "until tomorrow morning, when it will be published in The Sunday Morning Journal. The reply is a lengthy but clear document of about 9,000 words. vestigation of Railroad Wage Reduction to Win Votes No Authority to Mix in Controversy. (United Preae Leaeed Wire.) Washington, Feb. 22. Character izlng Francis Heney, special counsel for the government in the Oregon land fraud cases, and the men asso : elated with him as a "desperate gang his name and reputation, senator Charles W. Fulton of Oregon has prepared , a sterling reply to the charges that have been made against him by Heney. What Fulton says in his statement, which he refuses today to divulge" In full will un questionably create a stir in the Pa cific coast states. The reply Is made in a straight forward manner, connecting letters and other documents which Fulton claims sustain and prove his asser tions. He minces no words but strikes straight . from the shoulder. After paying his respects with equal Impartiality to Heney, J. S. Smith, Brownell and Governor Chamber lain, the reply will say thai, during his 20 years of public service Heney Is the first person to bring charges against his integrity. Senator Fulton says that Heney's charges don't claim that he profited personally by alleged wrongdoings. but that he was merely orerzealous in behalf of friends. He lays Henev's anlmositv to the factMhat h F.,ltnn nrmnaarf th I (Halted Pres. Leawd Wire.) fnrm-r'. ..!.,, Washington, Feb. 22 A general """"-"shaking up in the interstate com- prosecutor ana mat tieney is now merce comraUslon lnvoiving the possi Beeaing revenge. Dle retirement of Chairman Martin A. Senator Fulton males specific denial Knapp, is likely to grow out of the un f aU of Heney's charges and give sympathetic attitude of member of f:.U;H"2,,tiIe!-Jy ,x1LH.Iffa: the commission-toward the proposition the vote , of Legislator Smith. Fulton I advanced In President Roosevelt's letter says that he did not send out answers fo the commission calling for an Inquiry rt.1 to itibIih (inn Arlvn ana war in " the prosecutor, an answer that- would The president has been informed that, completely vindicate him according to speaking of the president's letter. Chair man Knapp said to a friend "that it Is his way of thinking with the people of Oregon and of the United ..States at large. x Fulton was painstaking In connect ing his arguments In such a manner ns to place in sequence the happening of 10 or more years. He says that he de sired to go over the ground thoroughly and leave no loophole through which Heney might escape. He. denounced Heney as a man who is everlastingly seeding cheap notoriety and who make the rashest of run on hearsay a temDts to bolster ud his cause with a bluff. The writer goes Into the history of the land fraud cases only so far as they bear on the direct remarks of Heney on that particular subject He declares that he had not the slightest thing to rear from Heney and he would ladly face him In any court of justice the controversy should be carried that far. The article is a scathing denunciation of Heney and Is pretty much In the merely a political document." The president did not comment upon the alleged remark by the head of the commerce commission, nor was any thing forthcoming at the white house regarding the charge voiced in many other quarters that the president's let ter represents political play to the la boring classes and that only. 1a m Kara rha y r m vi laalnn waes Lr"tLSUilmr?i,.?ler21,y amased upon receipt of the president s r,, t.r,,i22r.2teiat: Wring thm t0 un t. (Continued on Page Two.) I PLANT ROSES wage question. They could not find shred of authority in law giving them isoiction even to investigate. This being true, they are frank to say that the commission does not Intend to In vestigate; that no hearings upon the subject will be held; that nothing to d done People Insist Upon Fure Ad ministration but De tractors of Public Men Should Have Contempt Visited Upon Them. Memory of Washington Revived in Befitting Manner by School and Civic Authorities Thousands of Rose Plants for Park. Perfect weather and a program In which there waa not a hitch combined to make Portland's mld-wlnter rose slanting event a great success this afternoon. Several thousand school children were out in honor of the holiday and took part in the ceremonies of rose planting, while the mayor, city and state officials and the representatives of tire Rose Festival association took part in the procession ana in me exer cises held in the plaza. Five thousand and more rose bushes were planted by the city gardeners and these will be in profuse bloom by next June, when th festival will be held. Taking part in the parade and lend ing color and interest to It were the "Third Infantry of the Oregon national guard and Battery A of the field ar tillery. The parade left the Armory at 2 o'clock this afternoon, ' and passed through some of the more Important business streets to the park blocks where Dr. Emmet Drake presented the 6,000 bushes to the city and where they were accepted formally by Mayor iane. far superintendent Montelth planted the first bush In the long trench and the others were rapidly covered up by the gardeners. Interesting Parade. The roire bushes were carried In the parade in decorated warons. while Labout 50 decorated automobiles carried tne public orriclals and representatives Of the Festival association. Encouraged by the addresses of those who spoke in the public scrfcols last Thursday the school children turned out for the event In large numbers and the parade of the children, each boy and girl carrying a rose bush, was one of the prettiest events of the day. The order of the parade was as follows: Platoon of Dollce Colonel C R. Mr. DoneU and aids. Third Regiment band. inira inraniry, u. w. tit. Battery A. field arrillnrv. Ct M n Captain H. U. Welch commanding " Mayor and city council in automobllea Park board In automobiles. Rose Festival officers in automobiles. f oruand Kose society. (Continued oft Page Two.) HI II PAY GEMS Court of Appeals Hules in Favor of Madame Nemidoff, the Actress, in Suit for $24,000 Against Anna Gould and Her Former Husband. (United Pre- Leased Wire.) Paris, Feb. 23. The court of appeal has upheld the decision , of the lower court, which decided that, Anna Gould, divorced wife of Count Bonl da Castel lan and the count must , pay Mm. Nemldoff. an actress, $24,000 for pearls which Ytnnl innlr frnm her on nrnmlii of purchasing them. It is , charged that instead of pre senting them to his wife the count pawned them for $11,000. Mme. Anna Gould swore at the hearing of the suit that she never did see the pearls, al though the count had told Mme; Neml doff that he wanted his wife to wear them on tne occasion of King Carlos' visit to Paris' some time ago. Gould must pay the costs of the' suit. BLAME ROAD FOR DEATHOTHOYES During Hlness Editor De clared That Santa Fe Was Responsible. (Special Dlapatrh to The Journil.) Lpsj Angeles, Feb. 22 Afer suffering for days from a severe attack of la grippe, for which he blamed the Santa Fe railroad, Crosby S. Noyes, editor of the Washington Star, died, here last night. A few days before his death Mr. Noyes wrote a letter to a friend at Washington in which he blamed the railroad ' for the Illness which later caused his death. In the letter ho said: "Through the Injuries to health and comfort received by our party by the Incompetency and gross neglect of the Santa Fe railroad on our trip from Chicago to southern California, we have all suffered from a collapue I am a victim' of an aggravated case of grip, with extreme weakness. "We left Chicago on the 29th, which it will be remembered waa some days before the blizsard swept across the west, partly closing travel and giving aome excuse for bad service. As soon as we pulled out I discovered that there was no heat In our compartments, while at the same time the temperature waa down around sero. I Immediately applied to the conductors, but thev failed to take notice of my appeal. Later, when I sent my card to the chief conductor, asking him to see If something could not be done, he treated the request with Contemptuous Indif ference. The conditions remained the same clear across the continent. "It was stated that the car Guiana, in which we were placed, was a dilapi dated old car borrowed from another road and that the Santa Fe had npt given the slightest attention to Us re pairs. We were obliged to wrap our selves in an tne bedclothes, blankets, SlUows, in fact everything that could e availed of, to prevent freexlng, and were bundled, up all the way, not for hours but for days, like so 'many mum mies, but all this did not preserve us irum num. The letter waa dictated by Mr. Noyes from his sick bed. It Is probable that legal action will be taken against the railway company by relatives of the dead editor. PORTLAND MAN IS HANDBALL CHAMPION " (United Prees teased Wire.) Stanford University. Cut, Feb 22. W. H. Masters of Portland, Oregon, this mernhig defeated A. I. Jones of San Jose, California, In the champion ship handball series of Stanford Uni versity -.,.'.. . .,. (Uolted Press Leased Wire.) New York. Feb. 22. Governor Hughes of New York, delivering a Washington Birthday address before the Union League club today, urged a settled gov ernmental policy as the only means of restoring confidence In the commercial world. He said the federal state laws should be as definite as It is possible to make them, and that thev should be ap plied with becoming precision to prac tices sought to be reached. "The enforcement of Just laws has no terrors for those engaged In legitimate business," continued Governor Hughes He declared that it has been found in advisable to attempt to get a precise definition of fraud, but he added that it Is possible and advisable to be more ex plicit. nuusn individuals. "The way to get rid of abuses is to attack them directly," he said. "I be lieve that the most efficacious means Is definition, proscription and adequate punishment of the offenders. Fines im posed upon corporations, particularly UDon those with monopolistic powers. are lust from no DOlnt of view. Punish ment Is most salutary when visited upon guilty individuals. Few men can be hired to go to jail, and if the of fenses which the public recognises to be of a grave character are punished by imprisonment the law will most likely be obeyed." Hughes declared that while the public Insists on a pure administration, de served contempt must be visited upon those who profit by indiscriminate de traction of men in public life. He said that the public service is far more wholesome than many people think." "Interests, Sands Off." "SDeclal interests must keeD their hands off of the city, state and federal governments," he declared. "The com mon welfare must be the supreme law of the land. The lobbies that have been maintained In legislative balls have been the causes of mistrust of govern ment, and furnish the most serious pre text lor assaults on our institutions. There is a slowing down of the wheels of Industry, and enterprise -waits im patiently amid the uncertainty of hesi tation. It is absolutely essential that we should have a tonlo of wholesome confidence. Inspired by the visions of the forces of right and Just apprecia tion oi our material ana moral strength." yj0! if! ;' " X FILE ON LAND; GET GOLD BRICK Locators Pay Fee in Vain At tempt to Secure Portion of Oregon Grant. (Doited Press Leased Wire.) Belllngham, Wash., Feb. 22. As a re sult of an Investigation that has been made by Commissioner R. A. Balllnger of the general land ofice of the gov ernment at the request of a citizen of Whatcom 'county It Is announced that me individual wno has been collecting a fee of $75 for locatina- the Southern Pacific and Oregon & Call- iornia railway lana grant la slmnlv m. posing on Innocent and unsuspecting persons and that it will be impossible for such persons so filina- on th lnjirt. io secure i.iem. Advertisements nave been sent out unaer tne name or k. f. Rolfe, accord ing to the statements made by the com missioner mat congressman Tawney, after a conference with the commission er of the general land office. Informed his son that persons so filing could un doubtedly secure the lands. The state ments contained In these advertisements are declared to be false. TEKAS RAILWAYS TO IGNORE LAW Attorneys Decide to Fight Eight-Hour Shift Ordered for Telegraphers. (United Press Leased Wire.) Dallas, Tex. ,Feb. 22. Acting under the advice of their- attorneys who have deliberated behind closed doors for a week the railroads of Texas have agreed to Ignore and defy the new state eight hour law upon the matter of the em ployment of telegraph operators. They declare they will pay no attention to the ruling of the attorney-general that the law must oe- observed. " The operators have determined to car ry the case Into court against the rail roads. An joperator at Granger has complained to the state's attorney and a fight In court over the new law is to be precipitated. DOLORES MINE GOES TO MEXICAN OWNERS (Cnited Press Leased Wire.) El Paso, Texas. Feb. 22. By a decls I6n rendered by the supreme court of Mexico, the title to the famous Dolores mine, over which there has been much litigation, is awarded to the heirs of the old-time Mexican owners, and the claim of Escobar and Ross is .declared void. This will mean I the loss of many thousands of dollars to Ameri cans, as the Dolores mine has changed ownership a number of times on the Escobar -and Boss title, J. H. Hutch inson, former manager for Charles M. Schwab, buying It last. PLOT TO KILL KING MANUEL Secret Police Officers Dis cover Scheme to Murder New King of Portugal. (United press Leaied Wire.) have seised several papers disclosing another regicide plot in process of incu bation. The conspiracy is attributed to the so-called "black cross society" a revolut onary body Including members 0frracy.an hlh of f iSlals 6erS Complete extermination of the dvnas- FISH ABANDONS II f A IGHT Former President of Illinois Central Returns Proxies to Friends. (United Press Leaied -Wire.) New York, Feb. 22 Stuyvesant Fish has abandoned the fight' he has been making against E. H. Harrlman for control of the Illinois Central railroad, according to an announcement made today. The former president of the road, realising that Judge Ball's reennt in cision spells defeat for him, has noti fied the stockholders that the proxies held by himself and assistants will be returned to them at their pleasure. Those who have been figuring on tha amount of money spent by Fish in his fight say. that he must have dropped at least I BOO. 000. and that Harrlman spent a similar sum. - TRIES TO SAVE MONEY . . Missouri Pacific Throws 2,000 Men Out of Employ ment by Closing Shops. (United Preu Leaeed Wire.) St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 22. Following Its policy of retrenchment, the Missouri Pacific Iron Mountain system closed three of its shops today, throwing near ly 2,000 men out of employment The shops will remain closed until March 2. CALKINS SYNDICATE ENTERS SACRAMENTO (United Preae Leased Wire.) San Francisco, Feb. 22. The Sacra mento Morning Union, one of the oldest newspapers in California, has been pur chased by the Calkins newspaper syndicate. NO H RICE 1 on iraooii ,i. '.'V- ;! , ': Northwestern Railroad Pas sengers Object to Being Hit by Old Shoes. (United Press Leases Wire.) Chicago. Feb. 22. No more rice op other missiles for the gay bridegroom and blushing bride who . go on their honeymoon over tha Chicago & North western railroad, If tha officials of that corporation hava their way., The first step toward stopping this time-honored practice was taken when the officials of the road Issued an order prohibiting the throwing of rice, old shoes, tin cans or anything else at bridal parties while they are boarding trams, une or the road's officials said that it Ofen haDDened that nasaena-era not Interested In the demonstration have complained of getting ears full of rice or of being hit hv : a e-nnrf-aixed shoe Intended for tha bridegroom. The Sunday Journal for the I t firannn Ponnla t HERE ARE SOME OF THE FEATURES WHICH YOU CANNOT AF FORD TO MISS ' v; TIME IS MONEY Million dollars is what a minute la worth. Colossal sums quickly paid for tha guarantee of speed ' -' ROSEBURG. THE BEAUTIFUL-Prqsperotis paopls of Southern Oregon plan make their city second la tha state. - . NEWS FROM EVERYWHERE Two leased wires, special correspond ents in America-and abroad, assure Sunday Journal readers all the- : KING OF DIAMONDSPrlnce of adventures in controversy. Kevela- J, REAL MOTHER GOOSE- She lived in Charlastown and had it littls goslings to encourage her muse. TRAGIC STORY OF PEASANT WOMAN Held up to scorn of World as ogresa for three) years before proven Innocent of murder: - - JOlJ JOKERS' .JOKELETS We Jones, -C. B. Qulncy and George V. Su y Jonrnal! UM,r t0 tb nJrmont of reading (he FUNNY FELLOWS' is a scream. The children want It so do you! THE M08T GRACEFUL ART- The rballet, as It should b. J again growing la favor and may be revived throughout the world. DEPARTMENTS FOR WOMEN The women who have char of tls portion of this great- newspaper know ali about ths very luteal and fashions.,. ,. . -OWS" FROLICS Tha Sunday Journal eomio supplement .'Tha children want It so do you'- s , ! ' - THE SUNDAY JOURNAL ' I1