rfr ZZL , r -yrl:".r.r ,. , , T" - i THE DAILY JOURriAL IS JOURNAL CIRCULATION , YESTERDAY WAS ' TlVOCEHTSlCOPy Sunday Journal 5 cents; or IS cents ' , a -.week,' for Daily nd Sunday Jour. . 5 nal, by carrier, delivered.' . ' . . - . , .. ' ... TJie weather Occasional rain thtfc afternoon; brisk southerly. winds. . YOLi. VIII. NO. 299. PORTLAND, OREGON, THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 17, 1910.-TWENTY PAGES. ' PRICE TWO CENTS. 0 TRAINS aWD WW ITAJIDS riVS . CEXTS OP A! DM u u SI mm Iff! SUFFER IK II ACGfDEKT Dseperate Efforts Being Made at Trojan Company's Plant in San Leandro to Prevent . Spread of Flames. I ROUBLES IN If AND 1 (I'olten Prw Leaned Wlm.l San Leandro, Cal., Feb. 17. With four men missing, 14 known to be serl ously Injured and a score slightly wounded as a result of the terrific ex plosion at the Trojan f'owdcr Works Ht Roberts Landing, hundreds of vol unteers are working- desperately thin afternoon to prevent the fire from (spreading to other magazines which are nearby and are in imminent danger of letting go. , j V . Pan Leandro, Cal., Feb. J 7. With a roar that startled the people of this city and vicinity and a detonation that shook the Surrounding country the Tro jan I'owu-T works or. this city blew up tftroyod by fire Over 100, men and women were, em ployed In the plant Rnd wi re at work when the explosion occurred at 10:45 o'clock. The plant is at Roberts land ing." soinn distance from the heart, of San Lcnndi". Soon after the explosion occurred a score or more of farmers In the vicinity drove their wagons as near to the blaz ing buildings as they dared and began the work1 of rescue.' The Injured were placed- In open wagons and automobiles and hurried to the Alameda county hos pital two and a half miles away. , Soon after the fife had gained head way: a Southern Pacific train "(Jrexfr Into the weet San Lorenzo station Rnd sev eral of the '.njured were placed aboard and rushed to (he county hospital. it Is relieved at Palo Alto that the shock w3 due to an earthquake and the classes at the Stanford university were dismissed. The force of the explosion was so great that hundreds of . persons who were in the vicinity of the mill jaere stunned and It was several rnlnutr be- CI LEAVES .lllff Reflex of Hopkins Affair As cribed to Inter-Departmental Strife Hint That Com mandant Phelps Must Go. United Pnu Lcaaed Win.) Vallejo. Cal., Feb. 17. The hint that an effort may be made to remove Rear today and was afterwards totally de- VAdmlral Thomas Phelps as commandant rem Good Order and Discipline Re quired Abercrombie's Trans fer I. W. W. Matter Not In-volved. (Continued on Page Four.) YUCATAN BUMPS AT ID Seventy Passengers Aboard Skagway to Alaska; Taken Off in Safety Santa Ana Sails to Their Relief. .'United Prcsa Leaaed Wlr. Juneau, Alaska, Feb. 17. The Alaska Steamship company's . liner Yucatan, southbound from Skagway to Seattle, . hit an Iceberg in Icy straits thls-morn-ing. She is beached at Mud bay, 25 miles from Hoonah. No lives were lost. The Santa Ana has sailed in re lief. There were 70 pasnengers aboard, The ship is hadly damaged. , The Yucatan Is a 3525 ton boat, built on the Atlantic coast, and Is an old Ward liner. Sho was brought around the horn to Seattle two year's 'ago and put Into the Alaska service, on which run she has operated regularly. Officials at the loca: offices of the Alaska Steamship company received their first word of the wreck from .the United Press. They had no list of pas sengers. Captain W. P. S. Porter of Kea-ttle. commands the Yucata"ri. 2 BECOME I AT THE DALLES, OR., IN 210 SECONDS , Special Dispatch to Journal. 4 -The Dalles, Or., Feb. 17. Rec-. ords f or quickweddlngceremonles 4 were broken here yesterday aft- ernoon, when Louis A. Sorg, an electrician of White Salnjon, and 4 Miss Laura M. Lee were made 4 husband and wife. ' 4 Mr. Sorg and Miss Lee applied 4 to the connty clerk for a license, and told the clerk they were In a 4 hurry to have the knot tied, as the' lady wanted to catch tbe - 4 westbound train which was due tp leave the depot in 15 'mln- 4 utes. - C Justice of the Peace Douthit 4 chanced to be in the courthouse, , and his' services were -solicited. 4 Within three and one tialf, mln- utes from the time the license had been granted- the marriage ceremony had been', performed 4) and the certificate of marriage filed" with the county clerk. 4 Mr. Sorg .and his brltfe caught the train. . -' .A of the Mare Island navy yard Is believed hero to foreshadow 8r. sensational con flict In naval affairs that will reach to the highest seats In Washington.. Following the removal of Commander C. A. Oarr from his position as head of the engineering department of the yard, it has been' suggested that Secretary Meyer, displeased with the fact that Phelps has given support to the New berry plan of the atlmlnlsi ration of nayal affairs, may endeavor to establish a entirely new regime at'Mare Island.. FTiend of Admiral Phelps point out that he;tand in high favor wjth the -entire tlalifornlit' delegation In Congress. It is, said Fhelps is particularly friendly with Senator Perkins, head of the naval affairs committee In the senate, and some of Phelps' supporters intimate that perhips the admiral, though subject to the regular discipline of the department, may perhaps have more pbfr than some officials at Washington may sup pose. There is no doubt whatever .that anv effort to remove Phelps will, result In a' big row and it Is believed here that his influence In congress would make it possible for his friends to give Secretary Meyer "considerable trouble. Meyer Would Sevene irewberry. The general dissatisfaction and un rest in naval circles has grown out of the conflict which resulted from the action of Secretary Newberry In placing the construction department In a posi tion superior to the engineering depart ment and making a naval constructor" the general manager of the navy vard. This policy was put Into effect through out the organisation. Wh,en Meyer became secretary he de- I elded to revoke the plans of Newberry and lnBtltuto the Meyer plan, which contemplates the establishment of two great coordinate branches and does away with the. ranking of ono depart ment over another. Phelps' Friends Criticise Meyer, friends of Phelps here think Meyer Das ifiade a mistake in accepting fig ures suTTmitted to him by Rear Admiral Cone,, who is at the head of the engi neering department of the navy, and is thus naturally opposed to the Newferry plan, -which placed the construction de partment in - a position of superiority. They point out that the secretary could have obtained a more comprehensive view of the situation If he had also ob tained statements from the chiefs 'of the construction branch. The officers in the construction de partment, here contend .that the New berry plan was put Into effect more successfuly at Mare Island than at any Other nayy yard, and that the best re sults were "obtained from It here. Recent Derelopments. When Secretary Meyer went before the congressional committees at Wash- (Srrlnl Plipntrh to The Journal.) Vancouver, Wash., Feb. 1 7.-r-"Prsr,n- al mistreatment of officers under his command and petty tyranny in the administration of the fort's affairs was the direct and only reason for the re moval of Lleutonant Colonel Abercrom bie from Fort Wright to Fort Lawton." The 4'oregolng Is the mm and sub stance of declarations made today by officers attached to headquarters. De partment of the Columbia, at Vancou ver Barracks. These statements were accompanied by the emphatic declara tion thaf the quartering of civil pris oners in the giiard house at Fort Wright had nothing whatever td do with the removal gt Colonel Abercrom bie,? nor was Genera.) rMau,jjf"rrtnrent' commander, in any measure influenced by that Incident. Constantly Embroiled. The truth seems to be that Colonel Abercromble, ns commanding officer at Fort Wright, wns constantly embroiled I with the other officers at the post und had heaped indignities upon a number of officers with whom he was not in harmony, This condition of affairs had become notorious through out the Department of the Columbia and General Maus, taking cognizance of it, ordered the Inspector general of the department to make an investiga tion of the reports and complaints that had reached department headquar ters. Acting upn the Information fur nished him by the Inspector general. General Maus Issued an order transfer ring Colonel Abercromble to Fort Law ton. General Maus Speaks. When seen today General Maus re luctantly consented to talk about the much discussed order directing Colonel Abercrombie's transfer from the Spo kane to the Seattle post. "The matter was never" more than a molehill," Mid Colonel Maus, "but the Spokane authorities and the. press have made a mountain of It. "The troublo that arose over quar tering Spokane prisoners in the Fort Wright guard house had all been am icably arranged to the entire satisfac tion of the war department, and had no bearing upon the order transferring Colonel Abercromble to Fort Lawton. The removal of a commanding officer from one post to- another is a fre quent action of department command ers, and the widely published report that anything else than good order and efficiency was the motive for Colonel Abercrombie's transfer Is absurd." Hostility to Abercromble. The action of the newspapers and civil authorities of Spokane in condemn ing the department commander for transferring Colonel Abercromble to Fort Lawton has aroused the indigna tion and resentment of a number of of ficers attached to headquarters, depart ment or me. Columbia. ' The feeling is general amone the of- fleers at Vancouver that Colonel Aber- GHT TO Oil PRETTY GIRL WHO WILL . " WED TEDDY JUNIOR Eastern Interests Start War ot Finance for Control of Gas and Electric Lighting Busi ness in the Northwest. With the struggle centering in the Washington cities of Vancouver, North Yakima -and Walla Walla, a fierce war Of finance for supremacy In tho gas and electric lighting business of the northwest, has begun , between H. M. Byllesby Co. of Chicago, 111., and the General Klectrlc company, which recently purchased the Portland Gas company. . Following the purchase of the Olvm- pla Gas power company of -Olrmpla. Wash., Tuesday by the Byllesby in- erests, after a hard fight, the scene of battle has shifted to Vancouver, Wash. And in the meantime both great In- erests have opened negotiations for tho urchase of tte North Yakima and Walla Walla gas plants. Strengthens Control. Within the last six months H. M. Byllesby & Co. have obtained control f the Northwestern Gas company of Everett. Wash., Taeoma Gas company of stoma, Wash., the Olvmpla Gas & Power company of Olymplt, Wash., and the Coos Bay Light K- Power coinpp.ny of Coos Bay, Or. Franchises have been obtained for lighting plants in Chihalis, Wash., and Centralla, Wash. The Gen eral Electric company has control of the Astoria Gas company of Astoria, Or,, and recently acquired the Portland Qaa company. -f . Staying ftt the Hotel' Portland' today are H. M.' Byllesby, president of the 11. M. Byllesby & Co.; C. R. Gooesbeck of San Diego, Cal., vice president nd gen eral manager of the western Interests of the company; F. N. Stearns of Chi cago. 111., one of the heaviest stock- (Contlnued en page Thirteen.) riiioo iiiirr mi r i n mirr im L III w 7:. 0tf I " ' ' j i' y w! V.. i &i ill 1 . Vi ; l i. ') v - - s 'J - v ,. J. i , V V:W. I mm lilllllfif School Board Director Declares Controversy Between Archi tect Jones, McLeod and . Himself Must Be Aired. 4: ,.. 4 44 . "If I am making false state-" ments about Architect Jones and Attorney Beach, why do they not Institute an investigation ta learn the facts?" questioned Alet McLeod last evening. McLeod has filed affidavits charging Jones and tiea;ti with " conversion of shool funds to 0 private use. He added: "I have witnesses to J prove that. what I have said is true. I am willing to stand the niQst rig-' orous Investigation. To show' that something Is wrong, Jones has telephoned me twice tc come back to work for the school board since my dismissal was-seeured." "We must have an Investigation of tha facts alleged In Carpenter McLeod's af fidavits," saW Director J. V. Beach of the school board, this morning. "Archi tect Jones at the present time, I under- stand, is ill. tie should attend tho hear ing. While I dislike the notoriety ati tending such action it yet' neoma to .ma inevitable... It 4a- ,iu nylf, aiia-'M'. ' Jones I am sure will tie" Interested ta seeing the matter adjusted. '' -.,' Mr. Beaoh made tho statement thta ; morning When he learned that Alex Mc- Leod. according to records kept by th clerk of the school board, had recved.. pay out of the school fund for work (Continued on Page Five.)- BLIZZARDS ARE RAGING IN EAST Mrs. M. E. WilliamsLeft Her Wealthy Husband in Butte to Lead Mountain Life on Claim. (Continued on. Page Two.) (Continued on Page Five.) ELOPEMENT OF WIFE MS OF CHINESE CELEBRATION CHINATOWN NEW YEAR New Year's celebration In Chinatown has been marred , by the elopement of Dorothy Kay, vlfej of t,ee Kay, a prom inent commission merchant at 331 Flan ders street. She imitated Hanna Kam Far, wife of Lee Foo, another merchant, in -emptying her: husband's safety de posit vault Dorothy Kay took J600 Be longing to her husband, their marriage certificate, and J240 belonging to a member of the firm. - ' - v. A Chinese affinity is said to be the caue. The woman is a beautiful type of the oriental race.-and is 20 years old. She told her husband Tuesday afternoon she. was going to visit a, friend and sked to wear the Jewelry which was in the safety deposit vault. He gave her the key and the woman emptied the vaiU- She returned to the store and asked him for a ring he had. While in the store sh took 2 40 from the cash drawer of the partner. That was the last seen of her. A custom among thr Chinese closely followed-ia that the wife shall not be seen on the street In company of any one, except her husband. This was where the woman made a mistake. She was s,een with her affinity, and the husband was informed". He immediate ly began an investigation and discov ered he had been deserted.' A visit-to the bank in the Chamber of Commerce building yesterday showed his wife had taken his money awl Jewjelry, A search or Chinatown was started, the news spreading quickly. Coming as ;t doejs at New Year time, the affair has created much gossip. . The. wife re cently charged her huHband With taking her Jewelry. It has. been learned she attempt at that time to have hfim ar rested efshe could" carry out her plans with.heivChirwse affinity. .. Was It? That is the question. "Was It love, or was If beans and bacon and hard-cooked bread? Was It the beat ing of a bleeding heart marking off the time antl tune of love, or was it the cry of the senses oalling for luxury and ease.'- Only Mrs. E. M. Williams; of Butte. Montana can tell. Undoubt edly she will say It was love, now. Once upon a time, as the story books say, there was a happy, happy home away up In the smelter smoke of Butte. In that home Jived M. E. Williams, who was a cattleman of wealth who branded his long horned beef on a hundred hills. In the- home was a young wife, who had much that money could buy, and who seemed to bo without a care. Mr. Williams Flees. Suddenly, about a year ago. the com parative quiet bf Butte society was in terrupted by the news that Mrs. Wil liams had fled, leaving no trace or tractf Anxious friends and parents and relatives, not to'speak of the anxious husband, hupted high and low, but their clues led thorn to nothing and they at last returned disheartened. In the meantime a young woman appeared before the land office In Port land and filed upon a timber claim in the "7-8" district. The place was miles- away rrom a raijroacl, without mall ex cept when the lone settlers tracked through the urlbroken forests to the distant postofflce. Here the wife, for It was Mrs. Williams, believed -she could find solitude and forgetfnlness. But Mrs. Williams had-been reared in the midst of .civilization. She knew not how " to hewVlogs. and rear rude houses for her comfort. The pioneer life soon lost its charm and the shadow of suffering began to .peer at the lonely woman. Second Chapter Begin. Then began the second chapter. A solitary man, settled some miles through the forest, stumbled across the rude pneiter anq "tne aiscouraged woman. "With ffc mountain spirit he helped her butld her a -cabin, and taught her something of the rudtments of the Mtes Klcanor Hut ler Alexander of. New York, who will wed Theodore Koosevelt, Jr., son of e-lresideiit Hoosevelr. Colonel lloosevelt does not seem to have been consulted, and It if doubted whether he will approve, for a eable sent to Africa by Teddy, Jr., was the first intimation of the happy event. Young RooHevelt is working in a cariPt factory in Thompsonville, Conn., learning the business. WAN O.Ai. STUDENTS Party Organization Teachings Are Deplored by Regent From La Grande. NATURALIZED JAP NOT A CITIZEN (Special Dispatch to Tbe Journal. I Oregon Agricultural College, Corval lls. Or.. Feb. 17. In one of the strong est speeches ever made at O. A. C, the Honorable Walter Pierce of La Grande, a regent of the Oregon Agricultural col lege, Inspired the large crowd of stu dents and farmers at the convocation yesterday. Mr. Pierce's address was glfc- en as a special feature of farmer's week. He said in part: "One of the greatest dangers threat ening the youth-of our state comes from the state papers that urge adherence to party organization. I would rather vote for a great Republican statesman like LaFollette or a just and fearless Demo crat like Judge Jndsley than to be ono of the puppets of party organiza tion." ' - t. Mr. Pierce urged that the place for the average young man was back on the farm where he could be independent. Governor Hay Refuses to Ap point H. Ohnick of Seattle . a Notary Public. t ANDiDDLEWEST Traffic Tied Up in Many Sec tionsTexas Orange Crop Damaged to Great Extent N. P. Trains Stalled. ; (t'nlted Preaa Laad Wire. Cincinnati, Ohio, Feb. 17.: Snow to thu deptli of eight lmhes has fallen here today. Th.ls is the heaviest fall of tho , winter. A blizzard Is sweeping Ohio, -Indiana and Kentucky, according to re ports, received here. 9 ARE INJURED WHEN CAR LEAVES RAILS (Continued on Page Five.) United Preaa Leaaed Wtr.J Los Angeles, Feb. 17.' Three persons aro in a serious condition and six others are suffering from minor injuries as a result of' the derailment of a streetcar on the University line last night. The reotoruian failed to shut off the current while rounding a sharp curve at Twenty third street and Eatfella avenue. The coach leaped from the rails, rolled on Itssidfltftnd slid across the street to the curb,' where ft ran. into a palm tree A number of peopfe were in the car. Those who were seriously Injured are! Miss Clara lgoe, a tourist, three ribs tracturea; a, a? Gllhousen, compound fracture of trie right arm, left leg brok-! en; Thomas F. McLaughlin, postof f ise I .it.i. j ,. .....I. . . i Hem, ueey i3.eiBiions on neaa. (Doited Proaa Leaned Wire.) Olympia, Wash., Feb. 17. Governor Hay will refuse to appoint H. Ohnick. Japanese merchant of Seattle, a notary public, even though Ohnick Is a natur alized citizen. The refusal is made on the groupd that Ohnick, being a Mon golian, is not a citizen of the state, though he may be naturalized. This Is based on the decision of the state su preme court, which barred a Japanese' namea lamasmta of Taeoma from prac ticing law. though he had been' granted his citizenship papers, the court ruling that his naturalization was illegal. KAISER HAs fHYfjilpT CASE NOT SERIOUS Berlin, Feb. 17. Emperor William is confined to his bed with an attack of influenra according to an announcement from the palace. The royal physicians state that his condition is not serious and that he will be out -in a fe.w days Meanwhile attendants on the kaiser are keepii.g free from him any informa tion concerning the socialistic disturb ances throughout Germany, that may lena to alarm htm or aggravate his malady. St. Louis, Jrfo., Feb. 17. The heaviest snowfall of the season was recorded to day throughout the southwest. A -bb zard which has raged for 36 hours con tinues with intubated- fury. Traffic has been tied up in many see tions. Reports from Texas and Arkan sas Indicate that intensely col'd weather ( prevails. The entire eastern portion of me Missouri vaney is in me grip or inn storm. s Tho orange crop in Texas is reported to be damaged . to the extent of thou sands of dollars by the sleet that fell in the orange belt last night. . m ' Minneapolis, Minn., Feb. 17. The en ' tire northwest ta in the grip'of u cold wave. Minnesota ami the Dukotax -r blizzard swept and communication is dtf-.'-fieult. Northern Pacific officials art- 1 nounee today that the trains ot their road are stalled in Montana because of -unusually heavy snows and thut none la proceeding toward the Pacific coast. SCHOOLMA'AMS CEASE . AGING JN UMATILLA WHEN ?? YEARS OLD L Burglar Runs When Help Comes. (Salem Bureau of The Journal I Salem, Or.. Feb. 17. Burglars en tered C. N. McArthur's' residence In Salem last night and stole 30 cents. Mc Arthur was at thecluh until about U o'clock. He returned home to find a burglar going through his" dresser. Mc Arthur ran over to the state house, got the night watohroan'and a big revolver and went back, but the burelar hart tied. .. : -; ' ; A small amount -of dunca ivlni n j the dresser was all that was missed. ! C (Spei'lal Ptapatch" to Tbe .Tnurtwl, Pendleton, Or., Feb. 17. That unmarried 'women never advance rn- years after they reach a rer tain 'age was given substantia tion here recently when tbj coun ty teachers' examinations were in progress. The majority of th applicants were women, ami among the number were many who had been in the pelagoi?fral , profession for several years. It is a requirement of tlm Tioard that-all candidates for cer tificates give their og? at th. time of th xajn nation , and these are placed on record,""" In leoklnsf' over IhJs book ll wa( discovered that - several Trf-Hn recent. af,pHcants' for paper Uvt regiMtrrfl . f lv jcirs ago, ond yet tin? flqtires irt f'te ! limn arc identical. Thy 'mijj" women offer no cxpiiiutw. t 4 4 :' ? 4 4 .,- . - ' 4 -