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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 1908)
THE PRICE OF ALL EDITIONS OF THE DAILY JOURNAL IS. 2C A COPY ON THE STREETS AND AT THE OFFICE 7P Be Sure to Have Your Want Ads In Tomor row's Journal. , The; weather rFalr tonight' and Sunday; northeasterly winds. , -.A--:. it JOURNAL CIRCULATION YESTERDAY WAS 31,079 VOL. VII. NO 237. PORTLAND, OREGON, i SATURDAY ' EVENING, 'k DECEMBER 5, : 1908. -TWO SECTIONSTWENTY, PAGES. PRICE TWO CENTS. oh Tttni'm inrw tasm.. nvg exma. MSB SMS e PEOPLE OREGON'S EXECUTIVE OFFICIALLY RECEIVED AND FJJLTON DOWNED 5 1 By John E. Lathrop.- 1 (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) ' , Washington, D. C, Dec. 5. -"I am glad to meet you, Governor Chamberlain and senator to be. I would . have preferred to see a Republican elected senator, but I am for the people ruling and want you to be senator." , In these words President Roosevelt settled all doubts as to his attitude otwards the Oregon senatorial contest. He addressed the governor in the foregoing words in his executive offices this morning when Governor Chamber lain, Miss Carrie . Lee Chamberlain and J. N. Teal called to keep aii appointment previously made through Honor able John Barrett. Turning to Miss Chamberlain, the president said : "I am delighted to meet you, Miss Chamberlain. Your father has hit me a few licks from time to time, but he is a mighty good fellow." The room was. crowded at the time, Senators Lodge, "Carter, Warren, Cummins and others being near. The president spoke in loud tones, apparently desirous to have his views known to all. " The significance of his statements is enhanced by the', fact, that the whole Oregon situation had been laid before him and he was advised of the minutest details of the affair, and his utterance comes as a culmination of Fulton's efforts to get the president to side with him in the matter. EULTOX HAS MET WITH UTTER FAILURE President Roosevelt's greeting to Oov ernor Chamberlain gives fullest confir mation to the reports from Washing ton J that Senator Fulton haa' met jrith utter- failure In hie attempts to Induce the administration to acquiesce in the plans to overturn the people's will In Oregon at the coming session of the leg islature. . Equally signal was Fulton's failure to persuade President-elect Taft to "stand in" with the program whereby State ment 1 members of the legislature were to be persuaded to abjure their pledge and to vote for a Republican for Unit ed States senator. When Fulton called upon Taft at Hot Springs with the ob ject of getting li' i to give Indorse ment to this schema. Taft refused flatly to give it the slightest encouragement. na according to many eastern papers HY III TO ATTEND lilEEIC Roosevelt, Taft,Hill and Car negie to Attend National Conservation Conference. (United I&m Leased Wire.) WashlngtonWtec 6. Andrew Carne ,gle, James J. Hill. President-Roosevelt, President-elect Taft and about half the' frovernors of the states will take part a the conservation congress which opens here next Tuesday. The presi dent and Taft will speak Tuesday after . noon. ' , Members of the national conservation commission will be present and will re pert on the work which has been carried out under their supervision during the summer and fall. This work has re sulted in the first thorough Inventory of the nation's natural resources which the federal government has ever made. ' On thra inventory wll be based the re port wTiloh President Roosevelt has re quested the commission to make to him not later than January 1 PENDLETON COUNCIL KEF USES LICENSES ' fSiwclnl plipatrh to The Joarnal.) Pendleton, Or., Dec. 5, There are four near beer saloons less in Pendleton to day than yesterday. The city, council has refused licenses to four of the IS ' applicants for permits to conduct soft drink Joints In the city, granting to 11 others the rights desired. HOT ABSOLVED FROM From the C.) Star. Senator Fulton "of Oregon is quoted thus in an interview: "I sbal) take no tart in thsna torlal contest I believe, however, that there is-little probability- of a Democrat succeeding to mv seat In the senate. If the members of the legislature who were elected under Statement No. 1, which Is conceded to be unconstitutional,' stick to their pledges, Governor Chamberlain will be elected, but If they do not a Re publican will b chosen." Men are not absolved from their: pledge, because ssomebody ? holds they were made tinder terms not constitutional, -- That r contention must be . formally established. What sort of legislation might be expected from legislators wht had violated their pledges for party ad vantage. , : . , declared emphatically that the Oregon legislators should keep tnelr pledges to the people. Fulton, as a last hope, then turned to Frank Hitchcock, who Is to be post master general In Taft's cabinet Hitchcock Is said to have listened fa vorably at tirst to the Oregon senator's representations, and it was quickly pro claimed that he would lend his aid to the anti-Statement campaign. Twenty four hours later came denial and it was evident that If Hitchcock had ever contemplated such a course he was com pelled to abandon it presumably upon Imperative Instructions from Taft or Roosevelt - Today's " dispatch leaves no possible doubt that President Roosevelt regards It as the duty of the Oregon legislature to elect George E. Chamberlain United States senator. It- Indicates also the complete collapse of the efforts of Sen ator Fulton to induce .either the present or the Incoming national administration to sanction his campaign for the over throw of Statement No. 1. OREGON IS Gill 1000JEW CARS Harriman Adds to Boiling Stock of 0. K. & N. at Ex pense of $1,000,000. One thousand new box cars, represent-n-n- expenditure of something over $1,000,000, have Just been assigned to the Oregon Railroad & Navigation com pany, according to advices received yes terday by J. P. O'Rrlnn irnn.nil ager of the Harriman lines in Oregon, These cars In nrfrlfttnn aaa freight cars which were a part of the new equipment for 1908 assigned to the O. R. & N. a month ago will make a total of 1900 new freight cars for ... n" coming year and represent an expenditure of about $3,000,000 for Oregon line equipment this season. In a line with the Harriman policy of making all new freight cars of great carrying capacity, the new boxcars will be of 60,000 pounds capacity each, whlcn is double, the carrying capacity of the old cars In general use on the line. The new cars have a combined carrying ca pacity of 47,600 tons and if strung out in a line would be about 15 miles long. The cars are being manufactured In St. Louis and delivery will begin about January 1. When Mr. O'Brien made his requisi tion for 1908. the new cars were on the lint, but ' were not ail allowed in the original Item. The notice received yes terday, however, will give the O: R. N. all the freight cars that it is be lieved will be required during the com ing year, A system is in vogue on the Harriman lines whereby when one line of the big system Is short of cars the surplus that may exist on another line Is hurried over to the busy part of the system. In that way most of the cars are In Ore gon during the wheat movement, say, and in California during the fruit move ment. This enables the operating de partment to keep what la technically known aa "car efficiency" up to a high standard.;' TAFT SUPPORTS NIIIG con Pittsburg, Pa.,- Dee B.A message from President-elect William ll. Taft, promising the Mining t congress his neartyeooperatton In its work, was read before that body today. - It was re ceived with great, enthusiasm.- Taft said in Spart: -: , "The public conscience, Is awakening to both loss of life and waste of ma terial in all industries. We must see-to It that the movement is guided wisely and carried 'forward to success. s SET OTHERS State That Now Leads in Fight for Good Govern ment Cannot Afford to Nullify Direct Primary Law, Says California Man J. O. Davis. "Oregon is looked upon in Califor nia and throughout the country as the most advanced commonwealth in the matter of good government in the United States. It is regarded as the pioneer of good . laws. It is pointed to as leading the fight being made everywhere to get rid of the machine, the boss and consequent corruption. If the legislature at Salem next January repudiates its own law, breaks its own voluntary pledges and dishonors, and disre gards the expressed direction and desire of the people of the state, it will be nothing less than a national calamity." J. O. Davis, representative In the leg islature of California from Holllster, San Benito county, and national lee-, turer of the Modern Woodmen of Am erica,, thus states his views on the pol itical situation in this state. Mr. Davis wss a Portland visitor today and at the Hotel Oregon discussed political conditions in California and in Oregon at some length. , Mr. Davis is a tall and' earnest look ing man with a square Jaw and a record of unflinching opposition to the cor cupt control of the Southern Pacific machine tn California. This record shows him to be honest and working for- the betterment of political condi tions lit his state. He is one of the vloe-presidents of the Direct Primary league of California which has been In strumental in paving the way for a direct primary, law in California, to the passage of which the legislature of January next is pledged. Mr. Davis '.s (Continued on Page Three.) T Northern Pacific and North Bank to Make That Point a Terminal. ' tSixelai Dtmwtdi to The Journal ! . Vancouver, Wash., Dec. 6. On De cember 11 U is planned by the Northern Pacific and North Bank- roads to begin to operate through freight trains into Vancouver from the north and east It will be the first time in" the history of the city that it has been In reality on the railway, map- 'ef the country -my far as freight traffic is concerned. According, to the present plans, all freight trains will make this city their destination and .they wilt be made up here. Switch engines will operate' be tween' here and Portland. On the Ka lam a branch all trains will be turned over -to the North Bank operating de partment at the Vancouver lard. . Ell m UrHlit I a , , I j.v ill If. M 1 f V 1 If I 4& TRANS VANCOUVER 1ST CREATE SCENE COGHLAN OF .w- M.A, J. Two of Finch's Attorneys Invade Premises Presum ably in Search of Evidence aiid Are Summarily Or dered Out. Charles F. Lord and W. W. Holcomb. attorneys for James Finch, the slayer of Ralph Fisher, attempted to forco an entrance Into the offices of the mur dered attorney yesterday afternoon, for what purpose Is not known. They wero ordered out of the office Bishop, a nephew of Mrs. after some violent words by Roy T. Fisher, an:l had been passed, oBeyed. What the two men wanted In the of fice is a matter of conjecture as they would make no explanation other than that they represented the defense. They went to the Mohawk building late in the afternoon and going to the third floor went down tne nan to Fisher's office. Trying the door and finding it open the two men walked into tne rooms, pausing uncertainly at the apparently unexpected sight of Mr. Bishop. Bishop asked the men What they wanted and was told' that thav repre sented the defense In the Finch case. They talked In a confused manner and were evidently at a loss to explain the purpose of their visit. They were In formed that the office was In the charge of the district attorney and that an order would have to be secured from that official before they could remain The two men still tarried and were invited to leave by Bishop, to which invitation they entered vigorous and more or less Incoherent objection, argu ing that they considered themselves to have been Insulted by the request to withdraw. Bishop insisted on his iri vitation, however, and gently but firm ly escorted both of them ' to the door, which he closed and locked. Why the two men wanted to inspect Fisher's office is a mystery. Othpr than tne statement that they represent ed the defense neither IvOrd nor Hol comb would make any explanation. Whether they desired simply to view the location of the furniture, or wanted to examine the desk or had other de signs is not known. Their visit, how ever. Is not viewed with complacency ry tne rnenas or tne murdered law yer. Neither Mr. Lord nor Mr. Helcomh could be found this morning to explain the incident. FRENCH NAVY m A SCAHDAi Admiral Germinet Removed From Command of Med- iterranean Fleet. (Cnltfd Preai Lea tod Wire.) Paris. Dec. 5. Because he stated In an Interview that the ammunition of the French Mediterranean fleet was poor in .quality and insufficient in quantity, the council of ministers today removed Admiral Germinet from command of the fleet The action of the ministers has caused public indignation. Further, it is re garded here by foreign attaches as a willful closing of eyes to the defects In the equipment of the French navy. For the last half vear there have been ru mors of official Investigation following the series of explosions on war vessels, in navy yards and on training ships. Nothing, however, has occurred to move the ministry to action. There Is a list of" several hundred deaths from warship and yard accidents known to be directly attributable to de fects In machlnerv or explosives. War ships have been blown up, submarines have sunk and shells have exploded ac cidentally In government yards. The statement of Admiral Germinet came as no surprise to those who crit ically watch French naval development. They are more surprised at the sum mary action of the ministry In endeav oring to suppress reference to the actual conditions. . l Don't Appreciate "If the dealer will take the trouble to show the quality of the J goods and mention that they are Oregon-made it is a very rare case when the purchaser will decline to take the home-made article," said Charles ML Gun n, manager of the Columbia Steel company. J "The whole Pacific coast is very loyal to its own industries, judg 0 ing from our experience. The opportunities for new factories here in- Crease from year to year as our population and productivity increase, but we who arc in the midst of this development don't sufficiently . appreciate it. ; Why; if was only the other day a captain of industry, J so styled; from"' New yprk, who was visiting-our state, said; This is my first visit to the Pacific northwest, but I assure yon it will nojt be my last. I am coming again and will interest myself in some-line x . here for the openings for legitimate manufacturing enterprises are rinbounded--rTher are a g-reat nintiber of ."artisans in the east who read about your timber and agricultural resources, btit not being hewers of wo.od or'.tillers of the soil they hesitate about coming - , west without knowing that they can find employment in their own, line. The people of .Oregon ought to tell them all the things they J" do, not part only.'" ,.v - . . -v 44V44444444 HEART DISEASE CLAIMS OFFICER (Unites Preu Leased Wire.) New York. Dec. 6. Hear Admiral Joseph B. Coghlan, retired, died sud denly of hesrt dlspase at his home In New Rnchelle, N, Y- todav. Admiral Coghlan was born at Frank fort. Kv. December 8. 1R44. Hn w4 graduated from the United. States naval KEARAR6t flu lu '4pjr: . 4. "Admiral Coghlan and academy in. 1863 and served in the civil war as an ensign. In 1S68 he received his promotion as lieutenant commander and was attached to the training ship Portsmouth. From 1871 to 1873 he was In the hydrographlc office at Washing ton and after a year's sick leave was placed in command of the.Saugus for a year. He next served in succession .on the Colorado, the Mcmongahela and the training ship Independence. In 1882 he was made commander and, after a year on the Adams was assigned to the Mare Island navy yard, where he remained from 188 to 1888. After commanding the Mohican for two years he was made Inspector-of ordnance at the League Island navy 'yard and left that' post in 1894 to become lighthouse inspector of jthe Eighth district. With the rank of captain he. commanded the Richmond in 1 897 and then was trans ferred to the Raleigh. Mr- TJfc : MA6Q0FJ FOR WAR SECRETARY At End of 1909, According to Program, He Will Succeed Wright Will Meanwhile Make Tour in Philip- pines to Study Affairs. (United Prma Leaned Wire.) Washington. Dec. 6. That Charles E. Magoon. provisional governor of Cuba, will be made secretary of war at the end of next year, according to the present program, the Vntted Press Is in a position to state. It Is planned for Secretary Wrlcht to remain at the head of the department until that time. Governor Magoon Is a close personal friend of President-elect Taft His work In Cuba was pleasing to Taft, who, when there as pacificator, had op portunities to observe Magoon's meth ods. After his term as governor of the Island -expires and Cuba is turned over to the new government, on January 23, Magoon will make an inspection trip to the Philippines, remaining in the orient six months. He will then return home and be made secretary of war. GOES DOWN I Cruiser Yankee After Being Hauled Off Beef Springs a Leak Her Ports Blow Out May Be Raided If the Weather Is Fair. (Cufted Preas Leaaed Wlr.) Bedford. Mass,. Dec. 5. The cruiser Yankee, which was pulled from the Hen and Chicken reef yesterday, sank In deep water this morning off Pen- 444M Our Development f ) 44444444w44ww HOCH DER " FAME IS DEAD the Ilaftleship Kearsarge. He was with the Asiatic fleet during the Spanish war and participated in the oame or manna Day on May i, issa. For conspicuous and eminent conduct In that engagement he was advanced six numbers. At the close of the hostilities he was made commandant of the.Puget sound navy yard and later was, made captain of the New York naw yard. In 1903 he waa- elected- to the rank of rear admiral and m.ide second In com mand of the Nortn Atlantic fleet for two years. From 1904' to 1907 he was commandant of the New York navy yard. Coghlan earned more than national fame when he composed and recited at a banquet the dating ball a, the title of which, was "Hocii Der .Kaiser;' and. the refrain of which , rang, "'Me tlnd Gott." His last 'Important publlo "appearance was when he served aa grand -marshal of the great Taft parade In New York Just before the last election. President-elect Taft Relieves it la Impossible for any man tn be success ful as secretary of war who does not know personally the conditions in the Philippines. Magoon was born in Minnesota. De cember 6, J8S1. He studied and was ed mitted to the bar in Nebraska in 1882 and for a time was judge advocate of the Nebraska national guard. From 1899 to 1904 he occupied the past of lnw officer of the bureau of insular affairs of the war department. From 1904 to 1305 he was general counsel' for the Isthmian canal commission. On April 1 of that year he was made a member of the commission and a month later was appointed governor of the canal xoTie. After that, for a yrar, he was American minister to Panama, and since uctooer ix, io. tie has been pro visional governor of Cuba. DEEP WATER ikese Island. The. 110 workmen aboard of .her are reported saved. The Yankee was floated yesterday and weathered a heavy gale last night. She was being brought here under tow. when the hold suddenly filled and she sank rapidly. It had been expected that slight re pairs could be made to the Yankee here ana" that she could then go to Nw York navy yard under her own steam for an overhauling.. The Yankee, which' grounded in 40 feet of water, ha been raised success fully by John Arbuckle Sc. Co. by means of compressed air after' the wrecking company had spent a large sum en deavoring to float her. After getting under way one of the air ports blew out and the compartment filled with water and the vessel sank. Seventy-five wreckers were taken off the Yankee by tugs. Engineer Wither spoon and six men remained aboard and clambered into the forward rigging, from which they were taken in safety. The Yankee now lies on an even keel, with her -masts, funnels' and bridge -rigging abova- water. - She ean probably - be saved, uniess heavy seas cause .trouble for the wreckers.. -. ; . . ' - Taft to TIk to Tarheels. "'' tr7nlt Piwas Lmk4 Wlr '. " Xew -York. Dec. . -Preskient-eteet William H. Taft will address ths mem bers of the North Carolina society her exi jaonaay nignu . . i E IN FOG AT SEATTLE Two Motormen and a Pas senger Fatally Injured Tassengcrs Thrown in Heaps and 30 to 40 In j ured Signals Faulty. Seattle, Wash., Dec. 8. -While run ning at a high rate of speed through the dense fog shortly before 8 o'clock this morning, two University street cars, both heavily loaded, collided head on . I : . . 1. . . . , tt. .. ... - . t cam jk9 avenue tuiu agar sirei, fatally injuring aX least three, serious ly Injuring a dozen and bruising or maiming between 30 and 40 of the pas sengers. u Both the motormen of the two crs. Gus Olson and Charles Belling, were fatally injured, as was John Elandel of Ballard. Elandel is 61 years old. Both legs were broken, his left hand was crushed and he was injured inter nally. The collision is thought to be due to a mistake on the block signals, as the two cars met about the center of one of the block sections. - It was on a straight stretch of track on a slight grade, and as both cars were running ' at a fast clip the impact when-, they came together was terrific. The front vestibules of both cars were telescoped like egg shells, and every window was broken., Several of the seats were torn from .their fastenings and the helnless load f humanity wag pitched forward In ths aisle and over the seats. Both of the injured motormen were pinned In the wreckage of the .vestibules and had to be chopped out. It is net believed that a passenger on th incoming car, which carried a ca pacity load, escaped so.ne sort of in jury. 8everal women fainted, and a 1 rrur mn v war tinniv .u r ttir f luina glass.' ; , It was two hours before the line was . open again for traffic. The outbound car had 76 passengers, mostly laborers bound for the exposition grounds. The Inbound car had 120 passengers. Otis Olson, one oft the motormen. crushed about the head and hips, died this afternoon at the-Minor , hospital. - ATlElfiff 1V0RST TP com Buildings Continue to Drop Into the Arkansas and Crest Not Yet Due. Pine Bluff. Ark.. Dec. 6. A store and a handsome residence near the bend of the Arkansas -river fell into the water early today and other buildings are threatened by the flood, which shows no signs of receding. The river has risen today to a point the highest It has yet reached. The crest of tne flood is' expected tonight - but - heavy rains may bring greater havoc. Hope of sav ing the courthouse haa been abandoned. : TROUBLES PAST Beceivership Lifted, Receiv ers Reporting Excel lent Conditions. . Pittsburg, Pa, Dec. I. The receiver ship for the vast properties of the Weetlnghouse Electric company was lifted this afternoon. The receivers pe titioned the court to be relieved, saying the affairs of the corporation were In excellent shape. , - Sunday Morning JOURNAL Ths most entertaining Sunday newspaper In tli northwest. To morrow's issue will present: Extra rasaloa Par, for ' women, dealing with local stores and the latest Importations "to fill ths de mands for new styles. . Varwzla Section, of twelve pages with four-color comic srtlon. ffhort stories and special article, illus trated by th beat artists., Ths only western tnagsxine -section---devoting two full pa(es to the children, porting pages. Three llluiratf) rages with correspondence from all he - Important . sporting 'nter. Football, autolng. boxing, tfjntiN. Jtaws etloas, ' supplied . t.y t' Teased wires. United I'ren t, j Hearst Syndicate, Insuring a rn.i that li not dull ml I in!fii Ppoolal cable servlre and Inc., -jar-ahle.seMhwest new by J.i,ii.,ti v reapnnrlence. The Snndy M'irwnir. J.vm .l l the paper for ll Irfitrj- - -, wholesome- anl n-y. CARS COL I ID ' ov