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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1908)
TTie '-.DAJLV; JOURNAL Sells tor 2 CenW aVCbpy ( and TwJcc aa Many Copico of It Arc Sold Daily as of Any Other Dally Paper Daily. Journal Want 5 A'ds Bring the : . , Best Kesults. - Real Estate For Sale? ADVERTISE IX THE JOURNAL . .- : " ' r ' ' '. The weather Rain tonight 'and Tuesday ; easterly, winds. 1 i I I 1 1 V , W . TlvV yV-T r'. If I I A. XS. W V A A A . , II JOURNAL-CIRCULATION , YESTERDAY 'WAS 31,500 VOL. VII. NO. 250. j r PORTLAND, OREGON, 'MONDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 21, . 1908. SIXTEEN PAGES. PRICE TWO CENTS. iftJStfhvi U7Z - ;f. . , ., . ;- L- : - . ... i 1 . ' ' - ' ..f i". ' i ... . ii . , , '', , i . , . " ' PAYS BIG CHOSEN TO' WITHDRAWN ' I fS " lj AS PARENTS TOOMIT ROYALTY If FINCH FROii RACE Jttifek DRE1 SUICIDE; PajTie of Ways and Means Committee Eeminds Wit ness of Gary's Remarks Regarding Great North ern Bonus. (United PreM Leawd Wlr.l Washington, , Dec. 21, Becausa An drew Carnegie had been qutd In 'a re rent magazine article assaying that the tariff on steel was not necessary, the steel magnate was invited to testify to day before the house committee on ways and means In the tariff hearing. When Carnegie appeared thi morning he was apparently willing" tell, everything possible. He testified under oath. Chairman Sereno E. Payne of the ways and means committee, first ex plained to Carnegie that the magaxlne article had prompted the committee to Invite him to testtfy. The steel king nodded assent and then plunged into his story. Confirms Statement. " He said that Gary and representatives of the steel corporation had already tes tified to the same effect and o ha con side red hln statement in the magaslno article confirmed. He declared that he did' not believe it would be necessary to go Into .details to Justify the, state ment. ; ' "There are," said b, "mora- ways of figuring the cost, of production, than there are- ways of JcITling a cat. One thing is certain, however, a ton of Steel now can be made cheaper in America than In foreign' countries. The steel corporation pays 20 cents a ton. royalty on its ore." - Payne Interrupted -.Carnegie at this point and reminded him that Gary had said the steel corporation paid the Great Northern company- 86 cents -a1 ton roy alty. Carnegie replied: - 'TThe corporation ha not smelted the iron from the Great Northern ores. They have the right to cancel their contract in 10 years. It is speculation in ore. Cost of Production. "My point Is that the cost of produc tion, la cheaper here than abroad, that no tariff is needed and that It is Impos sible for foreigners to compete seriously with home manufacturers. "Gary Is a very able man. He knows the steel business. Ha comes here and tells you how his great concern does not need the tariff but that others do. His consideration and sympathy for his competitors or those who should be his competitors is something sublime. It reminds me of the story of the monkey getting the cat to pull -the . chestnuts out of the fire.'- Payne quoted; the report' of the Penn sylvania Steel company as saying that the ost of making some rails was 128.50 a ton. Carnegia replied: "I say that if he made rails at 126.50 he sold them in Canada at a loss. The tnek of that company could not be shove par. The Pennsylvania company, wnicn owns inn pinni. nuuiu buuh gci n new management." - Referring tt Gary's ability. Camegis declared that If he had followed the ad vice of- his friends, who urged him to retain control of the. steel corporation when stock was f 8 or 28 a share, as he could easily have done, he would have asked Gary to remain, and, following custom, he would have made Gary his "heife's W Scotch term," said he, "which might be used. In, describing Gary, file's a pawky chlel. Carnegie then explained the intricacies of the cost of production of steel. HOIDUPSW ' ASTORIA CAFE One Watches Customers While the Other Rifles Till; Both Escape. Witness Kissinger Says He Saw no Evidences of Struggle.-in -the -Window of Lawyer Fisher's Office at Time of Shooting. "" The Jury. . W. S.. Abbett, tin shop. 425 Sellwood street, B. E. Howes, agent for road machinery, 408 College street. John W. Davis, streetcar man, 148 Sumner street. ,W. E. Charlton, dairyman, Sauvies' island. 8. I. Ogden, farmer, St. Johns. Robert Service, blacksmith, Rocky Point. Charles J. Bush, laundry driver, 74 Clark street Charles H. Thompson, steam ship agent, 128 .Third. M. 1j. Lank, cigar dealer, 689 Jefferson street' F.'W. Hanna, grocer, 221 First street'' , J' v.' "' X - i'j W. H. Musser, retired, 4T4 Tamhlll street , Albert Sunderland, retired 1000 Melinda avenue. , (Speclil DlHtch to The Joornsl.) - Astoria. Or., Dec 21. At an early hour this morning ; two masked and heavily armed men entered the Horse Shoe restaurant on Astor street and held up the place. There were about a dosen customers In the restaurant. The first of the robbers held a revol ver In each hand and these he turned on the man back of the' counter. While one watched the crowd' the other opened the till and swept Its con tents, about 160, Into his pockets. - Both escaped. Thus far there Is no Clue to their Identity. -. CANADA'S POOR LV ; BETTER SITUATION ; ; L- - " . '- tCnited Pr" Lessed Wlre. --' Ottawa, Ont.. Dec 21.-Although the Industrial depression last summer kept many laborers out of work and caused much wnt, thore will not be so much suffering among the poorer classes if Canada this winter as thwe was last Such Is the interesting report f con ditions in tha larger cities received here today.' - .'' . .v ' - The reason for this- unexpected state of affairs I the fart 'that the new Im migration restrictions, have kept ut of Canada many foreigners and It Was lsrgely among the penniless iid friend less new arrivals that most distress was 1 ormerlv found. Work being thus bet tor'dlstributedi the laboring rlasses will not face the hardship this winter which has been thc,r portion for many pre ceding years. - , The Jury. . W. S. Abbett, tin shop, 425 Sellwood street, 4 B. E. Howes, agent for road 4 machinery, 408 College street. 4 John W. Davis, streetcar man, 148 Sumner street. ' With the acceptance of two jurors this morning, the jury for the trial of James A. Finch for the murder of Ralph B. Fisher on -the afternoon of November 28, was completed. This aft ernoon Arthur C. Spencer, special prose cutor for the state, made the opening statement to the jury, in which he as serted, that Finch is guilty of a pre meditated murder, and mat the defend ant made threats against the life. of the slain bar association prosecutor long before the latter was killed. ' It became known this morning that the much heralded testimony lof C. M. Kissinger, one of the two men said to have witnessed a struggle In Fisher's office between Finch and Fisher, will not bear out the affidavit made by C H. Plggott, who attempted to set forth what Kissinger will say. In a statement made this morning. Kissinger says that he and B. S. Watts were standing on Morrison street just before the shooting and that he saw Finch go' toward the entrance of ths Mohawk building. He is not well ac quainted with Finch, but knew who he was, and pointed him out to his com panion, saying: "There goes the law yer that this man Fisher has dis barred." Soon after that he saw a man standing with his back to the window in Fisher's office, but could hot tell who it was. He heard some shots fired, but saw no struggle whatever, and did not see the shooting. The failure of Kissinger's testimony to Denies Emphatically Story Published in Interest of JcArthur's Candidacy for the Speakership Caucus Situation. Contlnued on Page Two.) (Special Dltpatcb to The Journal. Eugene, Or..- Dec. 21. L. E. Bean, the leading opponent of C. N. McArthur In toe race lor speaaer or me noun 01 representatives, denies most empnatic ally that he has withdrawn from the race. "There is absolutely nothing to the story whatever," he said. "I haven't withdrawn and have no Intention of do ing so. I am still in the race for the speakership and I intend to stay in until It is finally determined." In regard to that portion of the. Ore gonlan article stating that Beaif had agreed in return for the support of Statement No. 1 members of the Mult nomah delegation to give them cht.tr mensblps of one third of the house committees, Afr. Bean said: - "That is an absolute lie. I have nev er .promised anything in the way of chalrmenshlps or anything of any kind whatever. I im in favor of a caucus of not less than 40 members and In my judgment it- will be secured. I am working in the interests of the, caucus and fully expect It will be organised. I expect that, every Republican in ths house will go Into the caucus." ' ' . .., , ...... . . !. E. Bean of Lane county is not out of the race for the speakership. He contends, in the foregoing telegram Trom Jiugene, inai ne is in tne contest and is there to the finish. Ndt only that but his friends in Portland con tend that there Is absolutely no change in tne speakership contest, that the sit nation is exactly the same as It was las week and that there Is no danger of any Immediate change unless It Is through securing added strength for uean. This morning the Oregonlan published an article on the speakership contest In which It -said that Bean had given up the fight, that he had been unable to secure a caucus of the Renubllran members and that because of this fact he had determined to step out of the contest. As a matter of fact, the atorr Is without foundation, and, in the opin ion or memoers or me Multnomah del egation and politicians e-enerallv. was written solely to further the Interests of the . McArthur candidacy. Which from the first has been championed by that publication. McArthur is recognised as tlie Oregonlan's candidate for speaker and the article is looked upon aa a story written ,to benefit the candidate at the expense of Bean and without a foundation of fact upon which to rest. It Is a fact that the speakership bat tle is a complicated one and it is a fact that the call for the caucus has not been signed by 40 members, thus making it effective. It is also a fact, however, that McArthur is also a party to this caucus call and that the failure to secure a caucus Is as much to his disad vantage as It Is to the cause of Bean. As the situation stands McArthur has some 10 votes upon which he could de pend should he go Into caucus today. Bean is credited with about an equal (Continued on Page Three.) HIIL-HARRIIMN BATTLE ON Purchase of Colorado and Southern Strengthens Hill's Position to Open Fighting PointWill Strirc to Wrest South's Oriental Business. ANN IS MOTHER CALLS f OR VENGEANCE. "Oh, I wish rhaf I were lawver. that-1 miahr lay fh I s. case; beore rnc juries. Tfien I would call: ubon hiqhj heaven ro tannovvervjeanee upon th "re rr i "Die deed n VfJ. WILLIAM ZAYMJ. Mrs. Peter , C. Hains, mother of the Hains brothers, calls the son now on trial a martyr, who was only do ing his duty In protecting hlg crazed brother. . 'V HA1N5' MOTHER'S STATEMENT. .'WhenTer became insane, after hU v wi res conffesSton arid rhe a enet-al pur him infoThornro nf3 hands weknew Thai- hewouU bejauhjoi unto rhe dearh. li I 'vail h i rr- - Mr.ryr.aindidm proud of-hirn. 1 . TOLD ROBERTS HE'D KILL HIM Star Witness Describes T. Jenkins' Share in An- nis Murder. TRAGIC ENDING OF MISALLIANCE White Wife of Chinese Pois ons Children and Dies Un- fUnlte Press Vaumti WJrs San Francisco, Deo. 21. Railroad men believe the acquisition of - the Colorado A Southern railroad by James J. Hill will precipitate a bitter war for foremost place, in the railroad world. By his purchase Hill has se cured his long wanted railway outlet to the gulf and has brought the total of his mileage close to that of Harrl man. ... .. Hill is now . recognized as the only man who can1 menace the position of Harrlman. The men who have been watching his recent manipulations be lieve he is. planning an aggressive cam paign with the ultimate object of set curing for his lines the volume of trade between the orient and the southern states. ' . Hill now controls the Great North ern, the Northern Pacific the Burling ton , and the Colorado A Southern, with a total trackage of 23,98 miles. Har rlman's roads are the Union Pacific, the Southern Pacific, the Illinois Cen tral, the Baltimore St Ohio, the Erie and the Georgia Central, with a trackage of 28,297 miles. Railroad men say the discrepancy in mileage Is counterbalanced In favor of HHl by the rich country through which his " lines pass. In addition to this, the greater -part of Hill's lines are laid through country that is yet to be exploited. REID TOO 1CH OF A NABOB S:k::y:,Xi : : v.. Barbaric Splendor of Establishment- of American Am bassador in London Offends Republican Sim- - . ; plicitj'-rEumor.That Eeid 3Tnst Go. . London, I)ec.- 21.---Ruraors are revived today that Ambassador Whitelaw' Reld will lose his place when the next ad ministration steps into power and the statement is made in -diplomatic ch-cles that the 'American statesman has dis pleased Presidentelect Taft as well as President ' Roosevelt "through the ex travaganub with which he -has main, tained his. station at ilia ennrt nf fit. Jiames , . , ; Reld, it is understood, would be e.uite willing to keep his post, but the home authorities are reported to have made up their minds to recall him and replace him with some diplomat who will live In a style simpler and more becoming the trajltlons ot the United States. -. None of the attaches at the American embassi would discuss the rumor or mane any comment on the situation t nay. . . . , ' (Cnlted Press Leased Wire.) Flushing. U I.. Dec. II. Assistant District Attorney Darrin. at the resump tion of the trial of Thornton Jenkins I-la ttia .i.nif1 infnttv with hi hrother. Captain Peter C. Hains, of murdering William Annis, announced toaay ttiat ne would remain In office after the expira tion of his term on January 1, to finish the present case. . The first witness called at the begin ning ot the hearing was Charles II. Roberts, a member of the Bayside Yacht club, where the shooting took place. Kooerts was an eye -witness. He sata tne uerendant jammed a revolver Into his face, saying: "Keep off. keep off, or I'll kill you." Roberts then related how Annis was taken from the water, desperately wounded. Roberts said that after the shooting he said to Captain Hains: "The army ought to be proud of you. Tou are a fine specimen of an army officer." ' Then to the defendant he testified that he said: "Don't try to explain anything to me. Tou are Just as guilty as your brother. You prevented ne from stopping mur der." The. witness said the defendant then asked. "What could. I -do?- He was my brother." The witness declared that he crltl- cisea Mains lor snooting in the ores ence of women and; children and that the defendant said: "I'm lust as ' sorry for this as any one could be. I have been trying to v iimu irom aoing mis a long line It could not be helDed." Assistant District Attorney Darrin In a statement made today declared that Mrs. -Claudia Hains would not be a witness In the trial of Thornton Jenkins Hams. S NO "UNWRITTEN : LAW" GOES WITH JUSTICE CRANE (United press Leased Wln. Flushing, U - I., Dec. 21. Two unlooked-for situations which confront counsel for Thornton Jenkins Hains at the beginning of the secrd week of the trial of. the alleged conspirator In the murder of William E. Annis-by Captain Peter C. Hains Jr. may result In a com- Flete reversal of the plans for the de ense. . In the first place. Justice K. C Crane, who haa been responsible - for many unique methods for the. expedition- of the trial, has said with finality that there Is to be no airing of the un written law nor featuring of "dementia Americana" In ;thli' t.ial. i Secondly. In dismissing the Jurors Saturday until Monday morning he li clared hts belief that the It men who hold, the -life of the prisoner in their bands should be permitted to go about they business unrestricted by the sur yillwBce of a deputy or court officer. der Engine Wheels. (United PreM Leased Wire ) Piano, 111.. Dec. 21. Driven desperate over what had bepnme revolting to her as an unnatural alliance. Mrs. Georgia 8. Ah Wong, the American wife of a i ninaman. todny poisoned her rour chil dren with wood - alcohol and then com mitted suicide by throwing herself un der a fast Burlington Dassenaer train Before she murdered her children she wtote a psthetlc note In which she said she had decided to kill herself and her little ones. "Ivlfe is so horrible that I cannot go on." she said. "I Intend to prevent any one maKing my oaugnter Dear the same kind of a life I have led." Mrs. Ah Wong tried to carrv out her purpose thoroughly. After administer ing the deadly draught to her little ones, she stabbed the smaller, her babv glrl. evidently wishing to be sure that she would not revive. The eldest of the children was 12 years old. All will probably die. The woman, whose life was wrecked by her marriage to a Chinaman. Is said to be the daughter of a wealthy Chlea goan. She wedded her Mongolian lover over 13 years ago and has been practic ally ostracised ever since. icSIyITre just averted Candle Flame Snuffed Half an inch rrom Oil Soaked Paper. San Franc! s5o. Dec. 21. After an ex hairstlve examination of the building of i KosfBimis, an incorporated shoe company, containing thousands of dol lars' worth of stock. Fire Marshal Towe announced today that ha had evidence to show that an attempt at one of tha most riagrant incendiary crimes In his experience had been made after the store closed last Saturday night. J. J. Glppert,-; special i patrolman, discovered that the store had been en tered early yesterday. He notified po lice headquarters and detectives went to the building. The officers found a pile of Inflammable materials soaked in kerosene In a -cloakroom. Trails of straw, soaked 'in oil, ran to piles' of paper and straw in different ports of the building. - In the center of the main pile - was a lighted ' candle - on a box, which 'atj the time1 of discovery was burned' to within half an-Inch of , the oil soakled paper on which It rested. . The Felice declare that they have not enough evidence to make arrests as yet, bfit that '.several men are under suspicion. , V.-- -;'-. - i Child of Warren Edwin Bro kaw, Economic "Theorist, Dead and Two 111 Im proper Food While 111 From Want. (United Press Ltued Wlrs.t Pasadena, Cal., Dec. 21. One child is dead of starvation and ptomaine pois oning, physicians are fighting for the life of a second and a third is critically ill here in . the' scantily furnished, cot tage of Warren Edwin Brokaw, once ed itor of the 8ingle Tax Courier at St. I .mil. an Intimate associate of Henry George and secretary of the Single Tax conference in 18H3 at unicago. Brockaw admitted today that while he and his wife have busied themselves writing books and treatises on the "FUlanced Ind Tenure" the children have gone hungry. Leonard, 8 years old, who died, had not tasted food for three davs before hts death, and for three weeks had been given little nourishment. Brokaw's two daughters,' sra In a nrecarimis condition. Vaughn, 12 years old. is near death today, and the condition of Inei, 10 years old, ls.crit- ie . . . . Admitting their terrible plight, Bro kaw made the following statement: f "XV arnt down to the last dregs of poTerty- In an attempt to work our the ory or tne Daiancea una lenura. no have had little food. Had we had food last week our -children would be alive now. I was unable to leave my wife alone with the children, so tnat l coma seek employment. She Is deaf and can not care . for the children. We have lived for tho past three years on an Income of $300 a year and have paid out of that Income $100 Interest on mortgages. Other expenses have cut our fund for food supplies down $125 a year. Several days ago we ate some figs we picked from a tree in the yard. The children were all taken 111 and my wife also became sick, but I felt no 111 effects. All had intestinal trouble." The Broka w-children were reared In a little world all their own. Their yard was enclosed with a high board fence and they were not allowed to attend the public schools, their parents giving them their education. Brokaw declared today that he had tried to raise Bis children "pure." He said 'he did not believe childhood had sex: that he . dressed hts children ail alike, in boy's clothes, and taught them to use, the neuter gender word "it ' -in conversation when referring to each other. Mrs. Brokaw was formerly Miss Es tella Backman. leader of the Women's Single Tax propagamda In the east. Officers of the Emergency league, which has taken charge of the Brokaw ease, reported today that there was lit- little chance ror tne recovery ot eitner of the little girls. Both are suffering from ptomaine poisoning rendered more serious by .the starved condition of the patients. MemBers of the Salvation Army to day said that on Thanksgiving day they took a basket nf food to the Brokaws. whose destitute condition had been brought to their sttentlon. Brokaw re fused to accept the basket until all meat, butter, eggs, milk and food or that character had been eliminated, de claring it was against his principals to give his children such food or partake of it himself. Brokaw today admitted his peculiari ties In the'matter of food and said his children were accustomed, to fasting from three to five days at various times SPOKANE JiXn WILL GO AFTER GORDON . (Special THapatch to Tha Journal.) Spokane, Wash.. Dec. 21. In case the State Bar association fails to Irv M. J. Gordon, the Spokane County Bar asso ciation will. This Is the substance of a statement made by President I B. Nash. Gordon was a member of the lo ,al bar for eight years. The Investiga tion by the local association would be to oetcrmlne whether he acted wlthtn the limits ftf rnnJ nUl.an.kl. . , i mnion i me legal profession Chris Bons, Arrested for Sa loon Holdup, Attempts to Brain Himself Against the Bars of His' City Jail Cell. Chris Bons, one of tho three saloon ing. tried to take his life In the city jail this morning. Twice Bons persistently butted his head against the iron bars of his -tell. The trusties In'the adjoining cells yelled for assistance, and the officers took Bons out before he had injured himself, except for a few bruises. Once outside his cell Bons was seized with a fit and ucted as if suffering from -severe cramps. City Physician Zelgler declared ha was malingering, however. Bons was removed to the county jail-at noon, it being thought best to separate him from his two companions for a time. . - - Asks for a Baaor. . Harry Bensonanother of the saloon robbers - caught In the room at East Water and Hawthorne avenue with a watch taken from-one of the customers of A. M. Hvatt'a saloon on fTIth .lrl when., it was held . up -Saturday night, tried In . vain today to get possession of a rasor. He told Jailer Branch that n was very . anxious to shave before he faced, the- grand Jury, but his request was refused. . -: : ... , The attempt at suicide leads the of ficers to believe that Bons. Johnson and Benson have become convinced that they now. face long terms In the peni tentiary, and are willing to do anything to escape that punishment. Vanderhoof, the tramp who rode front Hood River on tha train held up at Clarnle. yesterday tried - to identify Johnson, the leader of the trio, as one of the men who stole a ride on the train in his company.. He said Johnson wst-t not quite broad enough,' across tho shoulders -to be the man. Otherwise the identification is complete. In Trouble Before. Bona, the . young man who tried ' to end his life, was arrested two years ago for a. statutory offence, but , es caped punishment. He is a lank -appearing ' individual, but while In the throes of' his fit this morning devel oped - unexpected strength, and whUa. lying on a bench In the police station, gave Sergeant Kelnlin. a much larger man, all he wanted to do in a atruggl. Peter LJulectlch. who was held nt and robbed at Third and Mill streets last' Sunday, yesterday Identified Ben son and Johnson as the men who. held him up. - ' ..- .. BIGGYlilGIIT HAVE DIED BY ACCIDENT (United Press teased Wire. -v ' Ran Francisco, Dec, 21. The coro ner's Jury today visited the waterfront to view the police launch Patrol, from which Chief of Police William J. Biargy was lost overboard on the night of No vember SO. ' It is believed the iury will bring In a verdict of accidental drown ing in view of the demonstration marl by boatmen that the launch rolls easily and that ivwas possible for. a man to- fall over the side. It Is believed the Jury wilt, take into consideration the possibility that Btggy struck his head on a, ringbolt imbedded In the afterdeck as, he leu, ana was made unconscious. r-.- ,' -. , - CRIES OF WOMAN IN V BURNING JAIL IGN0B EI) ' ' (Special Dispatch to'Tba Joarnal.V ' '.' Avereii. irv. 1. 1 ............. in me cnj jatt n "vn, ,.,. .v. . last night by a fire that started In. tne women s waru, yrcouirmuj nvm stubs of cigarettes. 1 - ; - As the woman was noisy whenplacel In the cell, the nignt jancr psm im attention to her cries for help until he , . . . ... , . t 1. th. rioop 1 ft the ward was opened, the Interior we found to be wrapped In flames. ,Tbe Dedding was emirwij- wimumc vnire nc tup ddccc iiituiit ununtf vivi, vi in. rnLtj'-'iriiiivui iiwmwh j From the Newark (X. J.) News. ' The politicians in Oregon and all over the country are indulging in a world of pettifogging: as to the situation. We are told that Demo- J crats entered the Republican primaries; that the political views ol e the state have changed in the six pionths since Chamberlain was nominated; that the legislators are justified in viewing the results of T November 3 as absolving them from their pledges of last summer,.- 4 Legal precedents are being looked up "and cited to show that the nomination of a senator at primaries is unconstitutional, and there- fore void. The entire resources of , the Qregon machine, backed by machines everywhere else, are engaged in, an effort to secure a Re- publican senator from Oregon. ".r. Of course the contentious' abcrve cited are without foundation. T If Democrats did vote "in the Republican prirnaries tliey did not do : X so in sufficient numbers to determine the result, Oregon has not changed -its political views in years. That she voted for Taft in no ' X sense indicates that shethinks less- of Chamberlain. As to the Irsal aspects of the' cae, the primaries did not elect a senator, they simply nominated a candidate for the consideration of - the JegUhi- J tiire. Beyond all this and utterly impregnable io assault is the tmi- vefsally admitted fact jhat George E. Chamberlain is the choice r,f the people who are to be represented, in the senate of 'the Unj'tiej 2 States. , It is equally true that a majority of the legislature i -.T- ; emnly pledged to support him. lie rn be defeated, theref.ire, y t. J. means that reflect honor upon the. legislature or vindicate Krjf.M ;. a, .can governmeAjt. ; . ." ' , . ' vtrMHUHMTMTTMHrMMtHMtHUtHli t (Continued on Page Three.) ... : - -: ,