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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1912)
TIIE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL PORTLAND. SUNDAY , HORNING, OCTOBER 13, 1S12. iiStMrw': "opposed trusts In Turn Bull Moose Chief De dares "J Did Everything" .-; Meaning Against the Trusts - While President. " :.; ' . (Unitel fim LMad Wln. S' ' Chicago,' Oct. ia.---Dec1arlnjr that ' Uhlle president ha had "dona everything - posHlble against the trusts," and that Wilson, as governor" of tteW Jersey, had j - ote -nothing. Colonel Roosevelt made . a bitter attack on the Democratic can? . flidate here tonight Roosevelt cited hot own.' action . against ' the ' Northern ' Securities company, the Southern Pael : ric, the sugar trust, and the meat trust, nd dwelt on hie victory In the rebate cases. He contrasted the Democratic plan of dealing with trusts with . the Progressive program and lie put-Wilson and Taft tn the same category as advocate of a do-nlthlng policy. Defending the support of George W. Ferkins, Roosevelt said no man could criticise him any more on this account ' than Mr. Wilson could be criticised' for tha support of men Mice Cleveland IL Dodge. .. ,.' .... ; J - Ths Bull Moose .candidate said in part: . : .", 'J - - -'The- ther -dayMi- Wilson - state that, during my administration I ha dona nothing against" the trusts. As tar at bis statements can be made to contain any commitment" whatever to any policy, they commit him to a con? tlnuance of Mr. Taft's policy , as re gards dealing with trusts by the na- ' tlonal government and they especially . Insist on the duty of the states to deal with the trusts. "As he now attacks my own record and at h thus commits himself defin itely to the duty of the slates to deal with the trusts, I shall ask you to com pare my record wtth his record as gov ernor of New Jersey .lie insists that H is the states that' must deal with ' trusts and of all tile states la the United States in. New Jersey the trust - evil has been most rampant - "X SUA STerytblag." . " "rf Wilsfltn tald 1 did nothing with tha trusts while I was president. The answer to that is that I did everything. rd'anrsnitrrflTPirasTiaWTniiBainDttBT an,d the Interstate commerce law wholly ineffective at regards the evil of re bates. The railroads were acting with practically entire disregard ot.the in t.rstate commerce commission and the - supreme court of the United States had '; declared that the anti-trust law did not affect great Industrial concerns en gaged in manufacturing a decision .-' which rendered the antHtust law of -littla or na use. . - "We struck at the two biggest trusts In the country, the Standard Oil and FATEOFPORTER CHARLTON UP TO SUPREMECOURT Confessed Wife Murderer Will Fight Against Being Re turned to Italy for Trial on This Charge. mmmm l' ',-?' " - & ' i ' , 1 j , to hls .epprgy end perslstnoe that tl'aiiton was located and arrested. In 1897 Mrs. Charlton married Ne ville Castle, of San Francisco. After having reduced her husband to poverty, Mrs. Castle went" on, the stage in Jan uary, 1500, making her debut in a play ialld "The Frlncess and tho Butterfly." While with this company she fell In love With Lawrence Griffiths, with whom she lived, but fTbt for long, violent quarrel breaking up thejonion, After Griffith left her, , she cam to New Tork and posed as an artist's model, la the meantime her husband,' Castle, had obtained a. divorce, naming Grif fiths. This was in 1S01. Then she seems to have fallen out of publlo view for eight years. She emerged from oblivion on August 3, 1909, when she walked Into the corridors of the Waldorf Astoria and with' the exclamation, 'Til teach you to go back on me," placed a pistol against tha body of William B. Craig and fired. The bullet struck a fountain pen and was deflected, doing Craig no harm. , Craig did not press the case. . . , PHYSICIAN CHARGED WITH CRIME WHEN . NURSE DIES SUDDENLY (Continued From Paga One.) , stomach. . At first he would not admit that he understood the girl's condition, but later admitted that he did. ' Miss Oarlcts was called to the district attorney's office and told how aha had gone to the office of Dr. Neagle with Miss Bcmler and the latter, had called to treat Miss Bernler. Miss Garlets backed the doctor up in his statement that he had not performed an operation by saying that there had not been time for such an operation while Mist Ber nler was Jn hit . office ... and that . at every other time she had been present When lit was with Miss Bernler. She said that Mist Bernler declared that she had performed tne abortion her- tAtr - --' ., , Veaglc , X.OC&1 Physician. ' Neagle is a registered physician and surgeon, having been licensed In 1903. Ills medical education was received In the Louisville medical college and he declarea ha took postgraduate work at ; other Institutions. Jilt office, liv ing rooms and room where he keeps a few patients are located , at 145 Vi Washington street When he appeared at the district attorney's office tils breath was strong with -liquor and when taken 'to his office to find- the note- he -claimed - .Gittens . signed he drank another glass of liquor. , The note could not ba-found r and he then de clared -it was In the vault In the Cham ber of Commerce ..building. Attorney W, W. Banks will represent .Neagle and Is trying to secure bonds for him. Miss Bernler was IS years old, a graduate of Providence hospital in Se attle, and had been connected with the Oregon Sanatorium and tha Baby Home. At the sanatorium the two girls became friends, A sister, Mrs. William Fradd, la wife of an officer aTForf Stevens. Her mother resides In Wisconsin, but the girl had little to. do with her relatives. Woman is killed . , in auto lunge;. three injured (Continued From Page One.) road, which runs ninety feet below the Llnnton road and had to be Jacked up and shoved off the rails. It was prac tically demolished. ' Per Steldorf, an employe of the Portland Crawfish company, was the first man to reach- Miss Holme. She was breathing, but-unconscious, and he weot to get watery On his return he found her dead. Dr, S. M, Mann, cashier of the Llnnton bank, was summoned, but could render no aid. Deputy Sheriffs Bulger, Morris and Talloy were Immediately sent to the pot to tual;e investigations, and a Rod Cross ambulance was summoned to take the woman to the hespltal. but .Instead took the body to the morgue. A pas tng automobile' took the others who had been in, the , accident to "the McCabs home."'"' .' , The bank at the point where the acci dent occured , is so steep that it was impossible for those who carried the body up to the road to climb It. They had to go by a roundabout route, ' , Body Takes to Bealdenoa. " The victim had lived In Portland since 1S9. She was educated at the Clinton Kelly and Harrison schools. Neither of her parents are living, and for the past 11 years with her sister. Miss Berths Holmes, who is 19 years old,' they have lived with their sister, Mrs. MoCabe. Attorney Brice is a friend of the fam ily and all of them were together in the1 machine frequently. The body was taken to the home lasf night. .:,..v.v..,.;:; "It all happened so suddenly," said Attorney jJ8rlco..j'ibat .wajdida't. know what was wrong until it was all over. We wera, running- along on low gear, and when I saw that the cow was ob structtng the road, and Wat liable to' get loose and block" ; nt ' entirely. 1 1 stopped, then began to back up. 'The bank began to slide with us, slowly at first then the car rose up under us and began sliding. . The ; next thing I knew I was on the ground, with Miss Bertha Brlce near me. picked her up and climbed back to the road and then saw the car at tha bottom of the hill. "It I had run the machine into the cow, as I at first thought of doing, we Would have been all right, for the road it wide enotiRh'at that nolnt. W hud "no thought that the road wae not solid enough to hold us out near the edge." - j Arrested for Stabbing Woman. . j Willie in a drunken pondlttnn TTrldov nighl, Luba Kossarlolch stabbed a Bul garian woman living , at 98 Stanton street, ror which he was arrested last night. The woman reported the assult to the police yesterday afternoon. She was nttthbed twice In the side and once In the shoulder. - - Whin arrested, the man's explanation fdr the act was laid to drink. Escaped Prisoner Caught. Russell H. Harris, an escaped prisoner from the Montana state penitentiary, was arrested last night by the city de tectives. He was caught) while visiting another escaped prisoner, pope terrell, from the same institution. The two men got away laat August. Terrell was not Caught , -S- Russlan-Austrlan Rulert May Meet. CUdU4 Ptm VnmC Wire.---- - -Vienna, Got IS. -(Sunosy) Arrange ments are being made for a conference between ; Emperor Francis Joseph and the cw of Russia, according to a're port current here' this morning.. Though it Is. assumed 'the two rulers Will at tempt to re oh a Russo-Austriaa agree ment the fact that such a meeting it considered necessary "tar regarded as an ominous sign. COOPER WILL STRIVE ' FOR MOTORBOAT RECORD C. V. Cooper in the "Charmalce" will commence' at nine o'clock this morning:, . hit spectacular race against' time and distance n the endeavor to make a new ' world's endurance record for high sped ;; motor boats. Mr. Cooper will start from , the v west side of the old-steel -bridge t"" and attempt" tff Tnke the run - of - tQ9 miles to Astoria and back without stop ping for gasoline, oil or repairs. He " expects to return to Portland this after noon about three o'clock. , 1 An easily attached solid rubber tirtT , to take the place of a punctured one on ' an automobile in an emergency, has -been patented. . , ,k AWAY GOES CATARRH AND: COLD IN THE : HEAD IF YOU USE ELY S CREAM BALM It Clears the Head, Nose and Throat Instantly and fakes You Feel Fine. . No matter hoir bad your catarrh, how much your head tches, or how miserable you arc with a cold in tMJiead. nostrils stopped up, 'hawking, spitting, bad breath, you always get immediate rer Ucf by using Ely's Cream Balm. Don't let your entire system be poi soned by the deadly catarrh germ which,: sooner or later, causes complete decay of bone and .tissue. The continual dropping of the germ Infected discharge , down the throat leads Jo catarrh' of the stomach and bowels . ' ;. V r , Get a 80 cent bottle of Ely's Cream " Balm from your druggist today, and )tow , Will get relief a "few minutes after using It. Your headache and cold ' will-.vanish, and in a short tlma you Willie be completely rid of catarrh, Give it to V the children for cords and croup. It Is N perfectly harmless. ' ' Agents, Owl Drug Co. , . . , .. 1 ;er, whose extradition to Italy de- pends upon the decision of the United States supreme court, ex-' pected soon. I Washington, Oct. 12. The fate of! young Porter Charlton, who murdered: his wife on Lake Como, Italy, In June,; 1910, and who has been held a prisoner j in Hoboken, N. J., for iwo years, will ' be determined within the next few days: Kir li A siinrAma r f IKa TTsaivAjl th tobacco .trusts. ,The government's & wh sessions begin on the case was practically made before the ; 14th end of my administration. I secured a good solution of the railroad problem. I made the biggest men in the land " ylOld obedience to the anti-trust law. ; i wilann'a AaaavA Slink. Ha lit! Kow compare this record with Mr. WHson's Arecordjeas governor of New -' Jersey. Mr. Wil oil's record is a blank. - Ha did-thliW f hlsOWB doctrine asatOftha flutt V of the -statesi with Inexcusable." The- same trusts against " which I did act were incorporated under : the laws of New Jersey and It was per fectly simple' for him to act against ' them, but he never disturbed them. Prior to his main speech at the audi torium, Roosevelt attacked Governor Wilson tonight at a meeting attended almost entirely by foreigners. The colo r nel attacked the Democratic nominee on account of his writings ont he subject of Immigration. . Quotes Ancient History. - Quoting from writings of Governor vvuson in tne Auaniio Montniy, in and in. bis. history Jwrltten about -that .tlme. Jn which he said Governor Wil- son spoke with "comprehensive dislike of all immigrants from European coun tries, saying the enormous Immigration ... which pours Into our country year after - year from Europe, was threatening us." lL fi mr mintfnir ftnVATnn TV (l.nn n a calling Immigrants "unlikely fellows" . and "coarse: crews"; Colonel Roosevelt told of his own attitude toward his "fellow Americans," whom he welcomed " Into this touhtry and who, he said, the r Progressive party wanted to become .'. better citisens. Colonel Roosevelt this afternoon took AIf tHrtn a ttnAunnA g11vwjutvA Tj...... f Illinois for his recent public state - went attacking the colonel and Deneen's lining up on Taft's side. Roosevelt said a- ms statement inat iieneen was At as early a date as possible after the opening of the court the .question ts to. whether? or not Charlton will be turned over to the Italian authorities and sent back to Italy, to be tried there, i will be argued before the court. (Porter Charlton, la the son of Judge Paul Charlton, solicitor of the war de partment and a classmate of President: Taft- and it was through' the "Interven tion of his father and all the powerful , Influences he was able' to summon' which prevented the extradition of young Charlton Immediately after his ' arrest in this country, to which he had fled after murdering his wife, craming her body into a trunk and throwing it into Lake Como. I Biplomatio Complications Involved. I The fight of the Italian authorities; for the extradition of Charlton resulted I In diplomatic complications that threat- 1 ened for a time to. develop seriously. I Secretary Knox had already yielded to ' the demand of the Italian authorities,-! but It was here that the father of the! young wife slayer Intervened and pre- j vented the extradition of his son. Porter Charlton met for the first time Mrs. Mary Scott Castle, the former San Francisco belle, society leader, actress and would-be murderess February 10, i 1910. At thai time Charlton, who was J a rising young bank clerk in New Tork city, was 21 years of age while Mrs. I Castle was about 40. From the moment ,' he met the woman in her luxurious ' apartment in New York city, Charlton was an abject victim of her sophistl-! cated wiles. From then on they were I In each other's eompany constantly, and j finally on March 18, 1910, they went to Wilmington, Del., where they were mar- , rled. Then young Charlton's health be gan to break. The physicians told him ' , . . "" S'F man nominated by those delegates who ' and , hls bride salled for Italy and a were seated by fraud.' C. H. LANE v. " Nominated 1 jT t ' i v f" 'Ji i c ),i v':- ' V ". . : ,v.X( V ' , i , i month later were apparently housed in the Villa Legnal, on the bank of Lake Como. According to all accounts the home of ' the Charltons was the scene of almost perpetual revelry in which Constantino Ispolatoff, a gay Russian, figured prom inently, - ..--....j On Juno 10 some fishermen on Lake Cono discovered a trunk at the bottom of the lake, weighted down by a heavy i Btone. They turned It over to the po- I lice of the village of .Moltraslo, who opened it and found the body of Mrs. Charlton. Messengers were sent to notify the young huslmnd. He was gone. It was then suspected that he too had been murdered, color being lent to this sus picion by the fact that Charlton's coat was discovered in the lake the fol lowing day. Ambassador Leishman vwent in person to Lake Como and had the lake dredged thoroughly. Acting upon the belief that a double murder had been committed the police arrested Constantino Ispolatoff, who was held until it became known that Charlton instead of being destroyed, was on his way to America. Charlton Confesses Crime, On arriving at Hoboken Charlton was promptly made a fjjll confession of his crime. The substance of this confes sion was that his wife was given to such violent fits of temper that it be came unbearable And on the night of the murder he said she berated him in such violent language that he be came dased with anger and Struck her with a mallet which he bad been using in the mending of some furniture. He struck her repeatedly until she was dead, lie then plated her body In the trunk and at midnight dragged It to a smaii pier and threw it into the lake. (Hark streets. 1 Lane,; no doubt, makes the niftiest clothes of any tailor in this city. His reputation has always stood above re proach, and hit new store seems to b the popular tailoring center la Portland. If you haven't been in to see Charlie, 4 It tomorrow. Cnss. X. ans was nominated by aecla : snatlos to saeosed himself as official V''..: ' H. Lane, formerly head designer and cutter of the firm of Lane $ John son, ts ow centralis located in hl nw roma souuieaat enmar nr ni.ih .a i rour days OAUtf. as bo&rdMi Lh llMMW Prlnoess Irene at Oenea and eama to America, Mrs, Oharlten was the daughter of H, H, Hoott of aan Francisco and a sister of Captain Henry Harrison Scott of the United states army, who insisted fjom the first that his sister had been murdered by Churjton, and it was due .- JfLvi ..-....!5C . : , , jmu -haw r mr :titi. v ai v m ThGHMWAY OFHWTiNG HOUSE EuWAnUS W Edwards' Free Automobiles Will Find You a Home; Edwards' Credit Plan will Furnish It No need of walking from one place to another. Edwards' will take you house-hunting in their free auto- " 1 -r 1 mobiles. Look in the For Rent Call up Main 504 or A-2826 and ask for Mr. Morgan, who will ar range to take you to places you want to see. Go to the real estate columns and note what houses you man's office first if you want to and want to see. ; we do not list houses. T- '.' . e m . v .. , , get his list. We do not list houses. GO HOUSE HUNTING M FXEe AUTOMOBILES 3fjD If You Want to Buy a House We Are at Your Service Just the Same 1 wo-Koom Outfit mSi SI 18 Plate Racks For Almost Nothing ALL SOLID OAK A ft Buys a Plate Rack, 36 inches wide tJQQ with" single shelf." '" Buys a Plate Rack, 36 inches wide, HWr exactly like the illustration. They are, finished in golden color. "A OLD TIME EDWARDS' TERMS, $10 DOWN, $2.50 A WEEK An outfit of exceptional merit, intended for apartments where wall beds and installed kitchen furniture obvi-.tethe-neeessity ofto : ; THE DINING-ROOM $65.00 THE UVING-ROOM $53.00 Furnishings include a Solid oak Six-foot Pedestal, Ex- Contains solid oak library table with drawer, a massive Mor- tension Table, handsome Solid oak Buffet ivith French ris chair with loose brown cushions, handsome oak rocker plate mirror, four massive Solid oakpininj? Chairs upholstered in Spanish leatherette and arm chair to match and a genuine Brussels Rug, 9x12 feeVv artistic solid oak bookstand and . a 9ki2-foot Brussels rug' Edwards' Heaters at $4.95 With a front door (not shown in picture), nickel foot rails and fr. screw draft. This is the lowest worice we have ever heard of on a 'ront door style heater. We show f )ver 20 different patterns, and jfourpnees are lower than you ? rr.o . will Tind elsewhere. 7 n.' "-: $1.48 Special Sale Rocker with real leather seat, solid golden oak, large enough for any chUd up to 10 years of age, Sale of Costumers $1.50 A very special, strong, well- finished oak Diece. exactly M it., if 11 i . i . - i-N E.ii nice me uiustrauon. Kegu- lar price $2.50. Houses Bnilt We have five cheap lots and will put you up a nice home for -1975; $198 cash, $20 per month. 75 CENTS New-School-Sets m $3.50 For Two Pieces, $3.50 J Solid 6ak. wciehs 30 r)min(ln. fmlrln. (M.u f W lltl 1 J) W I F I,- -, 11 ''TMTT'lll'IIW,''MWMB'""SJSSSilBMBMSSMSlBlSSSSSSSSS ' f -"rf" j'V.MU fc.r II i Ull BiJ Will buy oneworth $1.50. 1 OOOD PLnr TO TRflnF. T atelWnch to 27. inches'hlgh; large. , - : . : ' oomy chair, for children up to 12 years of ac. 1 a: