TilC DAILY JOUi: HAL IS VJ0CEHTS l COFY Sunday Journal 5 cents; or 15 cents a week, for Daily and Sunday Jour oal.bycarrier. delivirel ' .- The weather Fair tonight and Sunday. . journal cincuiaio;; YESTERDAY VAS VOL. IX. NO. 1G2. PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 10, 1910. TWO SECTIONS 18 PAGES. PRICE TWO CENTS. K"NnvD " rrn - - . . , . , , i - 1 ' 1 ..,. - . . .ni -IN ,. ..i.,,,- ..., AilDtY V 1 " i . v, i i T-Af QraQA i f n I I : ' ltVV Jlli . , J u -u ITE IS THE OF AH ASSASSIN Situation in Columbus Calls f or ' Bold Declaration by Former , President; Law and Order Upheld, r : PUBLIC SHOULD ABHOR . , DELINQUENT SERVANTS Declares Many Lawless Acts Were Committed During v Car Strike. . ' (United FrcM Uttcd Wire.) Columbus, Ohio, Sept. 10. While Mayor Marshall of Columbus was sit ting on the platform and troops sept to keep order during the , car strike patrolled the crowd, Colonel Jtooser velt today discussed the strike situa tion and denounced the authorities for their failure to suppress lawless ness. ; "." ' - ' ."'v'". . : ' Th vaddresB waa delivered before a monster, crowd' in Goodale, park. ' He 'said-. ',',"; ' ... ... ' ' ' . "Beforo I cam to Ohio I knew the lamentable condition in Columbus, I Lave been asked by letter and personally by members of both.ildea of the con troversy here to speak. I will say frankly that I did not like to come, but 1 like dodging leas, so I came. It has been advertised that 'I would speak on ,,law and order, and ao I shall do o. : I . Shall also discuss Justice. f ; The first requiSit of Justice la that establishment of law and order, : Wot to Shirker .0 . "Woe to the" man,J official or private cltjjsert, who doe's hot realise this. We should . abhor, the conduct of a public servant falling to do his duty In this regard and we must equally condemn ourselves, .the people who are as much responsible as the public servants. If they are content with the mere estab lishment ef law and, order and fall , to team whether justice has been denied, we should use the whole power of the government to right this wrong. I can not say what th facta , here are, but it la certain the broad principles are applicable. Beyond question many acta of lawlessness have been commuted. In cluding bombing and the using of that weapon of the worst, meanest, basest and most cowardly assassins dyna- - mite.- - ' , i "Tho authorities first duty Is to end violence and disorder, to check and pun ish brutality and lawlessness. No ex cuse should be accepted-from any gov- - ernment official, no excuse should be accepted from any private citizen for (Continued on Page Three.) Cruett Willows Makes Remark able Flight; Could Find no Place to Alight. (United Prft Leaned Wire.) ' London, Sept 10.. Two million per- sons today saw Aviator Criiett Willows fly around the Crystal palace, twice circle the St. Paul donYe andtwlce cross the Thames. , Willows covered 15 miles. Not once during, the fllgfit.flUi he cross a spot , that would afford him a safe landing place. He was compelled to circle back to the Crystal palace gar dens to. allithtA DIM MEANEST WEAPON AVIATOR CROSSES THAMES TIE MrWMMMVWwVMwVwVWwWw THE SUNDAY JOURUAL SEE THE MAGAZINE SECTION FOR TOMORROW THE CONFESSIONS OF A DIVORCEE May Yohe, once the wife of Lord Francis Hope, and later married to 'Captain . Bradlee Strong, , tells of rer. romantic icareer which now takes her from an Oregon tent home to the vaudeville stage. THE FLYING MACHINE OF THE FUTUREWaldemar Kaempffert,' in an article that inspires the reader with an ap ; preciation of the tremendous possibilities of aerial navigation, speculates on the flying machine that is to be. 1 HOPS, THE CROP THAT THRIVES IN OREGON Oregon ' : j is the premier hop-producing erilTTmelhousanas of pickers are at work m the fields gath ering in the crop. , This ?tory tells of their work. - i THE PAPER THAT LEADS APPEALTO PEOPLE TO HELP PROTECT PUBLIC HEALTH Dr. C. SJ White Praises Work Done by Press in That, Di rection; Infantile Paralysis Not Spreading. t t ?1 Pr.. Calvin- SlWhlte. it "Th riress,1' s&ld'Br.?aMn S. Whltft'. speaking eloquently at the Presbyterian church' last night, "leads all other ageft cles In ' the promotion or public health. It creates healthy public sentiment and points ' out" the way of " right ' living." ' Dr.-White added that "without 'the' help of.. the. people .disease,' will . sweep the state despite the organized agencies, in cluding the state board of health, under whose auspices the meeting1 was held. Speaking on the "Relation of Pure Wa ter to Public Health," Dr. White named the Willamette river the "sewer of Ore gon." He traced the progress made by the disease from; thej'Bource to ths mouth, wherever the water 'had been need, and drew the coftcltision that, since Oregon is provided with an' abundance of pure mountain water,-It, 18 criminal not to provide all Willamette,-valley towns with It. Typhoid fever, ; said" Dr. White, costs Oregon more than a njllllon dollars a, year. Its ravages and losses,' In fact cannot be computed in' the terma. of money. " t ::, ,. -.. The mothers "Who '"crowded into the meeting last night largely to learn the trutb about the reported epidemic, of in fantile paralysis went away comforted after listening to Dr.: W. T. William son's clear exposition of the disease. Boarlet Pever Mors' Contagious. Anterior polIyeHtls,. eaid.Dr. William son, is not new: disease, neither is it very contagious. The disease has been passing in a kind of wave around" the world. In 1907 it broke out in New York, in much more epidemic form than at any' other time since it was first discovered in 1840. But Bcarlet fever is six times aa contagious and deadly as infantile paralysis. The number of fa talities attending the disorder are com paratively few, and the reason for the popular apprehension ?oncemlng It . is that its treatment is so little understood, especially during the incipient stages. Generally, Bpeaklng, Dr. , ' Williamson concluded, when the child becomes list less and stupid and changes Its habits, when the muscles In one or more parts of the body are sensitive, then It. will be well , to, compel the child to rest body and mind. The family physician will then prescribe treatment. "' The meeting; of last night constituted a strong appeal for intelligent coopera- (Continued on Pag Three.) stateollh.eiininn, At. the- pres- I E OF 3 TAKES ACID AL Oil CITY STREETS Mrs. Daniel IJartruff Found Ly- ; ing in Yard of Clyde Johnson at Salem Suffering Much Agony. WAS SEEKING HUSBAND WHO HAD DESERTED HER Man Is Scion of Well-to-Do - Marion County Family; Girl' Will Probably Die. . (Silein Burets of Tbe Journal.) Ealem, Or., Sept 10. Mrs. Daniel E. Bartruff.' 17 years old, very attractive, and a bride of but three days, attempted to commit Bulcide here last night by taking carbolic acid, after a vain at tempt alone to find her newly wedded husband.; The authorities are today striving to locate the husband, '..who is a scion of a well-to-do family of this county. The young bride Is at the Salem hospital at the point of death, under the care of Dr. O. B. . Miles of this city, who holds small hopes for her recovery. : eoTda'Show Marriage. ' Mrs.-Bartruff Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ahderson, who live on a., farm about five miles east of Salem. Marriage records show that the couple procured a license to wed at the ennntv clerks office last Wednesday and were married toy Rev. B. P. Knight,.a Con gregational minister of .this city. Ac companying the . records was letter signed by the father and mother of tho young girl, giving consent to ftepar. rlage to Bartruff; as being under law fUi age, flHe could not marrv without It. Both signatures appear to be those or aged people and are those of So phia Anderson and Joseph Anderson. Was Seeking Husband, The maiden name of Mrs. Bartruff was Hiima Sophia Anderson. She walked the five miles from her home to the city last night to search" for the man whom she married on Wednesday and who had deserted her so Boon. She sought for Rim at the home of his sister, but, fail ing to find him, took carbolic acid from a bottle Bhff carried. 'She was discovered late last night lying In the yard of Clyde Johnson at Church and Union streats and had probably been there an hour before she was discovered. The bottle, nearly empty; waa found by her side, and a postal card directed to Can Bartruff on which was a message written- by her. telling him she did not blame him for what he had done and saying she was sorry for having taken the course she felt herself .compelled tfr take. At the hospital today she "was unable to speak much because of the condition of her throat, which was severely burned by the acid she had taken. Authorities- endeavored to get from her a clue as to the whereabouts of her husband, whom they hold responsible for the girl's action. IS TAKEN TO TASK Accuses Him of Wilfully Falsi fying Regarding Alleged Sale of Western Lands to the G.N. for $10 an Acre. PnlM Vm Leased Wire.) St. Paul, Minn., Sept 10. James J. Hill today called Francis J. Heney to task , for the address he delivered Wednesday before the delegates to the National conservation congress. He ac cused the former Ban Francisco graft prosecutor of "wilfully falsifying," and declared that he made statements' that cannot be passed "in silent contempt." "Heney made his statements so recit lessly and maliciously that they must be answered,". Hill declared. "He wil fully falsified certain facts. . .. - "His statements regarding tbe land in the west, which he said we secured at $10 an acre, had not a rag of truth to. clothe its nakedness. Neither the Great 'Northern road nor anyone con nected with it received a dollar or an acre from the federal government aa Mr. Heney charged. He used tha coward's favorite weaponInnuendo,: "1 don't know what the publio shall think of man who. on an Important locsa alfltiy&&iUmflslrU-M)t best men ui mo cuuiurj a.r listening,' umiiif these bold and deliberately planned mis statement.".";. .News--. of , them v reaches many persons who. not knowing the truth of the matter, receive, false 1m prt-ssiona and . store up misinformation because of this nian"s determination to ear wnat ha nieasea." t FRANCES J: HENEY Y AMES ll':,0'.'0.o 'sr PRINCIPALS IN BALLINGLR CASL " ' . i '.. . . "' . i ....... i: i . J".; . ". ' . ' . ... .... . . . . ...'.., Principals la the groat tforfSt-coneryaUon-iccu8a(ion ;ml$-up; jwhlch has been agitating Jne.countrj'.for sev eral months past, involving some! of the most prominent men in high official ilaeps.; At the.top.V is Richard-Ballinger, secretary of the interior, and beside him Clifford Pinchot, the "'former chief forester. Below -on the left Is Senator Knute Nelson of Minnesota,1 the chairman of the investigating committee, which is In a deadlock'.' hi the lower'center is'H. R. (Slavis, the dismissed field . agent, and the main witness'against Ballinger. On the ' lower light . Is Frederick Kerby, - the. stenographer of the interior department, who1 testified against Secretary Ballinger. ( v. ? S ? ' " M'GINN'S ATTACK BALLINGER MEN ONASSiBLMS MAY BE UNABLE PLEASES CROWD TO GET QUORUM Tells How Machine Candidates Are Employed by Corpora tions, Which Want Them Elected; Others Speak. Between 400 and Bod people greeted Judge Henry E. McGinn and other anti assembly candidates, at Montayllla .last evening, the meeting being by far the largest and most successful in point of attendance and. enthusiasm ever held in the district. The' capacity of the large new hall was taxed 'to. Its utmost by those who were anxious to express, by their presence at the 'gathering, their championship of the cause of popular rights. ...... Those who came to hear remained to applaud the denunciation of- the men and methods behind - tho so-called as sembly movement. And 'the applause was not of the perfunctory .kind. It ex ploded with an unmistakable spontan eity every , time -mention, was made of Statement Tfo.'l and kindred progres sive laws promulgated for, the purpose of Insuring to the people a sure means of expressing the, popular will. And there was no lack of appreciation of the musical numbers provided by Mrs. Fred Olson and Frank Hennessv before the speakers claimed the undivided at- tention of the audience. . Judge Makes Pledge. County Judge Cleeton, first addressed the meeting and spoke at .some length on the importance to the people of the county of the office he now holds, and of the necessity of a careful and busl. nessllke administration of the county's affairs. He outlined his own policies (Continued on Page Three.)! GOVERNOR BENSON IS -MUCH IMPROVED AND RETIRES TO MILL VALLEY (Speclil Dispatch to Tbe Journal.) Ban Franclsoo. Sept 10. Jov ' ernor Benson's condition Is much Improved,.. bo much so that ,yes- terday he left the Hotel Ale I -aw e'er, wheie tif'Tla'6rCPm"e"To'take- special treatment, and returned to ' his temporary residence in Mill Valley, Marlon county. The' hotel people say that he is look ing better' than at any time since he came .down here. ;r:oo'"'. ii'if f.: ... w ? i If Bolters Rjefuse to Obey Nel son's Order, Others May Frame Report Which May Be Signed by. Sen. Flint. (United Preas .Leased Wire.) Minneapolis, Minn., Sept. 10. The de cision, of the antl-Balllnger members of the congressional investigating commit, tee to Ignore Chairman Nelson's order to meet lii Chicago, next week.- if car ried out, .will leave the. pro-Ballinger members of the committee In no better shape than their opponents. Without the bolters they will be un able to muster a quorum.. It Is believed here that the Ballingerites will adopt a report at their Chicago meeting whlcn later will be- signed by Senator Flint of California. . , .. . In. this event they will have a ma jority of the committee, rendering their report a majority report The Chicago findings, it Is believed, will be published Immediately after adoption. , ; Before adjourning to meet In Wash ington December 3, the antl-Balllniter-ites reiterated formally their claim that the meetings they have held in Min neapolis are legal, and that they consti tute a committee under the congres sional authorising . resolution providing the committee. They elected Represen tative Graham temporary chairman of their committee. ALLEGED MURDERER r ESCAPES BLOODHOUNDS ' (United PrtM teaietf Wire.) Belllngham, Wash., Sept. lO.-'-In spite of the hot pursuit of a pack of blood hounds and a posse of sheriffs deputies, George 'Reid, .charged with the murder of his' iO-year-old wife at Claytnirn, B. C.laat Tuesday,' is believed to have escaped to Seatt.le. Several people who know the fugitive declare that he was seen to board a train Seattle rJound at 7 o'clock last night. The bloodhounds' trail ended at the Northern Pacific tracks. J " ' ; ' -. Pittsburg, Pa., Sept. 10 -According to an apparenuy welt authenticated report, Mrs. My Roberts Rheinhart, famous authoress of Fittsburg, is In danger of going, blind.; , Mrs. Rhinehart and her husband, Dr, S. M. Rheinhart, have booked passage for Europe, where vthey will, stay, . y ar. ,.I.,.,,T)....,..-. LIVESTOCK SHOW Steady Travel to Fair Grounds in 'Spite of BalnTCrowds. Get Last Glimpse of; Fine Ani mals; Exhibitors Pleased. Inclement kies did not abate popular Interest in the-livestock exhibit this morning, for in spite of the fine rain that drizzled through the" clouds, at ir regular Intervals there, was a steady travel from the city to the" Country club grounds. The public seemed to be eager to get a last, glimpse at the beautiful animals that, have been quartered all week at the exposition. Some 300 head of, handsome horses, headed by A. C. Ruby's great string of 67 grand prize winners, ...excited the most Interest as they cavorted around in their morning exercise unllmbering for .the: final parade of equlnes .before the grandstand. The office of the" secretary was a busy Dlace as the near en nf mturio hlbitors presented thefnselves for ;thelr premium enecKs. All lingered to say a few words in aDnreeiatlnn of tha ment they had received at the hands of the fair manaKenient.- The stables -and pens wets, all bustle (Continued on Page Three.) RoosinUm .Sfafemenf Wo. I Theodore Roosevelt has declared himself a firm believer in the principle of StatemerTt 1 the' principle which the assembly leaders in Oregon are. seeking. to overthrow. v ' " Following is a portion of an Associated Press dispatch sent from Milwaukee, Wis.? last Wednesday and published the same day in the Evening Telegram: ' ' r. ' . . ".'It has been stated to rhe since my arrival here,' wid Colon tl Roosevelt today, 'thatlih spite of Senator La Kollette's having car ried the primaries in fair and open contest; an effort. will be mad to beat him inthe; legislature. I do not for one:nioment believe this, becaii se ; any f.ch ( cnri rlnrt wonH be. f ""t" mrr -j"rtw f view, an butrage.that would be a deliberate violation of gooil f.iith. ..'.' 'When in Oregon the Democratic candidate for cnat()r, Jo . ernor .Chamberlain, carried the primariea and it was proposed tint the Republican legislature should turn him duwn, I htron! ait i publicly 'took the position that such an act would be one (,f b! faith by the legislature toward the people v an J, I,., take ll:c positiOT'ia"pgard'l6SenatorXa"Fullctte''' NATIONAL SHE' NOW THREATENED N GREAT BRTTAIH All Parts of England in Tur moil Over Labor Troubles; 50,000 Boilermakers Are in Revolt. EFFORTS TO SETTLE ; STRIKE UNAVAILING Cotton Mills, Railroads and Coal Mine Employes Now Threaten to Quit.. ', (United Presa Leaned Wire.) , London, Sept 10. England today Is face to face with the 'danger of a na tional industrial strike. The repudiation by the boiler : mak ers' union today of the efforts of their leaders.to settle the strike between tha boiler . maker and the Ship Building Employers' association means a pro longed lockout, affecting 80,000 men More than 100,000 others will be idle If the strike is not soon settled. - The cotton mills of Lancastershlre are threatened with further . trouble - with . their union employes, while at Cardiff 12,000 coal miners are restless. ' ' Employes of the Great Northern rail road are reported to be . planning to make demands- for better wages and hours; ; These demands,1 it is said, will be presented. wlth)n the next two weeks. Unionist , leader -are operily defying their employers. The situation Is rap- Idly becoming critical and a crisis Is feared within the next two weeks unless the strikes now In progress are' speedily settled. , ..." Mrs. H. C. Dietrick-Throws Herself in Front of Switch Engine. " (United Ptms tvaatd Wlra.) "' Seattle, Sept. 10. Mrs. H. C. Dletrick. a young married woman of Portland, at. tempted to commit suicide In a most spectacular manner hern early today as a wlndup of a three days" "visit" In Seattle. The woman told ' hospital at taches today that she ran away from her home at Portland last Tuesday, leaving her husband and two children. Last night she purchased a quantity of bichloride of mercury and swallowed it, then tried to throw herself In front of a switching engine, but was prevented by Thomas Ray, who had been attracted to the woman by her peculiar behavior. At the hospital today It was reported Mrs. Dletrick will probably die. "Oh, don't tell my husband," she whis pered. "If I ever get well I will go back to him and never do this again." , .: The Portland city, directory, does, not give the name of 11. C. Dletrick. THREE PINNED UNDER . AUTO TILL AID COMES (ITnlted Pres Leaaed Wipe t Santa Clara. Cel., Sept. 10. Thrre members of the family of II. Seeley Honlgsberg of San Francisco and three . ' persons who were their guests are suf fering today from-serlous injuries re ceived when the automobile In whii'h. v they were touring the-Santa Clara val ley overturned near this city. . Three of the Injured were pinned be- neath the car, ' where they were com , pelled to lie until aid could arrive ffo'nY" Santa Clara. They were brought ,to hospital' here. All will recover. PORTLAND WOMAN ATTEMPTS SUICIDE t1