f S EVENING EDITION EVENING EDITION Calling cartls, wel ding stationery, com mercial stationery iin1 Job printing to orW at the East Oregonlcrt. WEATHER REPORT, Fair tonight an to- morrow. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER CITY OFFICIAL PAPER. NO. 7084 VOL. 23. PENDLETON, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1910. D.C. E T Heppner Poultry Raiser Car ries Off High Honors in Chicken Show. NEW BREEDER WON . PLYMOUTH ROCK PRIZE Work of Scoring Bird and Awarding Prize Continuing Rapidly Lint of Awards Made to Dulo Judge Glm lln PralKes Columbian Rock as Rest Ever Seen. D. C. Gurdane of Heppner, Is the proudest man at the big poultry show in the armory building on Court street. His exhibit cf Barred Ply mouth Rocks carried off high honors In their class and the president of the association will Journey back to Hepp ner with the beautiful silver cup giv en by the First National bank of this city tucked under his arm. The victory Is valued all the more highly because of the fact that It was won in the warmest kind of compe tition. P. O. Elliott of this city was runner up In nearly every Instance, though M. H. Rice of Milton was a strong contender. New Brooders Win. The biggest surprise of the show thus far was the winning of first cockerel In the Bluff Plymouth Rock class by W. I. Gadwa of Pendleton. Oadwa la an employe of the Hamley Harness company, resides In North Pendleton and this Is the first show at which he ever exhibited a bird. He has tlio Maples strain aa bred by B. F. Williams of Milton. Mra. O. W. Coutts of this city, with second pullet in the Buff Plymouth Rock class also furnished a surprise. Her bird mado a score of 92 1-4, only one-fourth of a point behind - first place. Wllllnms Wins Cups. Though the pen scores have not yet been announced for the Buff Ply mouth Rocks It looks as though B. F. Williams of Milton with the Maples strain had not only won the cup given by the Hanscom Jewelry store of this city for the best pen of Plymouth Rocks other than barred, but also the Pacific coaat cup given by the Am erican. Buff Plymouth Rock club for the best exhibit of Buff Rocks. Tho work of scoring the birds Is progressing rapidly but owing to the large number of exhibits It will be two days more before the final awards are made. The ribbons arc being put up as fast as the different varieties are scored. The following Is the announcement of the winners to date: Barred Plynionth Rocks. P. O. Elliott, Pendleton, Ore., first pullet, second cockerel and second pen. D. C. Ourdane. Heppner, Ore., First cock, first cockerel, first pen, second hen, second pullet, third hen, third pullet and third pen. M. H. Rico, Milton, Ore., third cockerel. Bnff Plymontli Rocks. W. I. Oadwa, Pendleton, Ore., first cockerel. B. F. Williams, Milton, Ore., third cockerel, first and third hen, first and third pullet Wlndle Brothers, Lents, Ore. Sec ond cock, second cockerel, third cock, second hen. Mrs. O. W. Coutts, Pendleton, Ore., second pullet Columbian Plymonth Rocks. Earl A. Williams, Milton, Ore., first second and third cock; first second and third cockerel; first, second and (Osaand ) EOFEO S 1 MARSH BURGLARIZED LAST EVENING The home of Ed Marsh on Bush treet waa the latest one to be ran sacked by burglars and, besides mourning the loss of several articles of wearing apparel and some Jewelry, Mrs. Marsh is not yet recovered from a severe fright she received. Mr. and Mrs. Marsh have been stay ing at the Sturgis home while Mrs. Sturgls is absent in Portland, and yesterday morning when she return ed to her home she found the blinds which she had drawn tho night be fore all up. She becamo suspicious but found nothing dlstrubed. How ever last evening about 5 o'clock she went homo again and found the cur tains had all been drawn again. She entered the house and found a lamp Which had Just been blown out alt ting in the middle of the floor. Look ing In one ot the closets she noticed a suspicious looking bulge behind one I TALKS OF Washington, D. C, Dec. 14. The brief In the Cunningham Alaska coal lands case which brought on the Bal llnger Investigation has been com pleted by Glfford Pinchot and will soon be submitted to tho president. Pinchot arrived here today to attend a session of the National Conserva tion association. Pinchot "declared the majority report of the Balllnger committee supported policies that Ilalllnger opposed and Justified Pln chot's Ideas. He said the report ex cited no Interest as It was known from tho beginning what the tenor of tho report would be. He said they did the easy thing by deciding for a man high In office and cited Lorlmer while In Washington as an example. He said Interest now centers on what action congress will take regarding same. Pinchot said Balllnger "Is the most dangerous man conservationists ever knew." He said: '"The people long ago decided that Judge Madison and the minority of the committee were right. Time, effort and money have been spent In the investigation and as yet no final result has been ob tained." IS UNITED STATES PREPARED FOR WAR? DICKINSON'S REPORT CACSES CONTROVERSY Administration Wishes to Conceal Fact s to Nation's Condition With Respects to Preparedness for War Washington, D. C., Dec. 14. Secre tary of War Dickinson today sent the answer of the war department to tho house of representatives In re sponse to the resolution of Congress man McLachlan of California, asking about the country's preparedness for war. An effort was made to smoth er the report. The speaker sending word to Dickinson that it would be held secret. The secretary thereupon refused to give any public statement. It is understood the administration deems t unwise to publish the weak nesses of the national defense. Representative McLachlan an nounced he would demand a publica tion of the report. Speaker Cannon turned to Asher Hinds, the house par liamentarian. Hinds remarked that the doument was marked confiden tial, therefore the house could not openly receive it and demand publi cation. The report was then left in Hind's hands. TWO MORE ARRESTS FOR MURDER OF BARNIURT FAMILY Kansas City. Dec. 14. Samuel Rait. ey, formerly employed on the Barn- linn iarm ana a woman claiming to bo his wife were arrested todnv n suspects In the Olathe mnriW m in which Mrs. Barnhart, her son and two rarm hands were beaten to death. The pair were arrested on a RtntA. ment by John Feagles, arrested sus pect, wno said uauey and the vic tims had quarreled. Barnhart'a hat, his blood stained overalls and n uk of money' were found In Bailer's nos. session. He could not account for them. SAN FRANCISCO POLICE FACING A SHAKE TJP San Francisco, Calif., Dec. 14. B eauso the police have failed to check crime, a shakeup Affecting more than (00 policemen Is Impending, accord ing to Chief of Police Seymour. Sey mour says there Is no more crime than previously but he wants less. of her dresses, and becoming fright. ened, rushed out of the house to seek assistance. As it happened none of her neighbors were at home at thaf hour and it was some little time be- iore sne encountered James Dunham on the street That gentleman, armed with n . volver led the way back to the house, dui tne Duige in the closet had dis appeared and a careful nonrrh fallow to reveal any lurking burglar. How ever, tney xouna that all of the bu reau drawers had been rifled and several articles of Jewelry taken. Al so Mr. Marsh discovered that his overcoat was missing from Its ac customed hook. This is only one of numerous bur glaries that have occured or been at tempted in the past few days and residents can not be too careful In guarding their possessions. W CARNEGIE HIS -A PEACE PLAN Gives Ten Millions for Fur therance ot International Peace, DECLARES WAR IS RELIC OP BARBARISM .StocI Magnate ami Library Builder Would Have World Do Away With Bloodshed Says Path to Peaco Lies in Adoption of President Taft's Suggestion. Washington, D. C, Dec. 14. An drew Carnegie today'donated ten mil lion dollars In five per cent bonds to the New Peace Foundation and the income derived will be used to effect international peace. President Taft Is made the honorary president and Senator Root active president. The foundation will make a perpetual dis position annually of half a million for the purposes pf peace. Should the aim finally, prove successful the fund will then be devoted to the abolition of the "next most degrading evil of evils." "Indeed," Carnegie said, "though we no longer eat our fellow men we sack cities and kill their Inhabitants. We still kill each other In war like bar barians. Only the wild beasts are ex cusable for doing this In the twentieth century of Christian era, for the crime of war I j; Inherent since it decides not In favor of right but always in favor of the strong. The nation is criminal that refuses arbitration and drives Its adversary to war. I believe the easiest path to peace lies In the adopting of President Taft's platform but before the peace arbitration society March 22, 1910. HOUSE IS SPENDING SIX MILLION AN HOUR Washington, D. C, Dec. 14. The house of representatives Is spending $100,000 every minute was the state ment made by mathematicians here today, it Is calculated that during the first ' seven working days of the present session the house appropriated J191.000.000 which is the total of the rivers and harbors, Indians and pen sion bills. The house has been In ses sion 31 and one-half hours and av erage appropriations of six millions an hour. j ( MHS. SCHENCK WILL TRY TO WORK INSANITY DODGE Wheeling, W. Va. Oec. 14. An af fidavit declaring her great grand mother, grand mother, father and two sisters were victims of Insanity was filed today with a motion for a con tinuance by tho attorneys for Mrs. Laura Schenck. whosetrlal for the alleged attempted potsontng of her husband, a millionaire, was scheduled for today. This indicates her plea will be insanity when the case Is called. CALIFORNIA RAILROADS KILLED 308 PEOPLE IN YEAR San Francisco, Dec. 14. The rail roads of California killed SOS persons and Injured 2176 durinir ending June SOth, according to the annual report of the state railroad commission made public today. Five less were killed during the fiscal year 1908-09 but four hundred more were maimed. CONSERVATIVES GAIN ONE BY RETURNS TODAY London. England, Dec. 14 Re turns from scattered constituencies this evening showed a gain of one seat for the conservatives. The standing now Is: Conservatives, 251: llberals-laborltes, 268; nationalists, 62, O'Brlenltcs, 8. FEDERALS SAY THEY DEFEATED REBELS Mexico City, Mexico, Dec. 14. Dispatches made public by war de partment today say that seventy reb els were killed and 160 wounded, while fourteen federal troops were Kiuea and fifty wounded, as a result of the two days battle near Oimrrnrn Three hundred Insurgents opposed ouo government troops under General Navarro. The rebels were driven from the trenches thrice before they retired and government troops rectp tured Guerrero. Without so much as turning a hair William Jennings Bryan declares that the Colonel can still do much good If he will "get behind some good re former." Baltimore News. COL. ROOSEVELT "GOMES BACK- In After Banquet Speech Says He Believes What He Pre viously Believed. GOVERNOR-ELECT WAS NOTICEABLE BY ABSENCE Ex-President Is Radical But Desires to See a Radical Program Carried Out by CoiiscrvativcsRiglits of Man Must Be Paramount n a Republic Corporations Must Ho Controlled. New Haven, Conn., Dec. 14. Col onel Theodore Roosevelt, as the guest of the chamber of commerce at its annual banquet last night, made his first public address since the re cent elections. He was cordially greeted by a gathering of 600 men rep resentative of the business and com mercial interests and the professions of the state. The banquet had more than ordi nary significance through the pres ence of the guest, who recently was In controversy with Judge Simeon E. Baldwin, governor-elect, who had been Invited to attend. Judge Baldwin was not present and the place was assigned to him at the guests' table bore mute evidence of his absence. After the toasts had" teen drunk, Colonel Roosevelt said he was gL?i to say in New Haven "precisely what he had said to many former gather ings in the west." - Colonel Roosevelt said that during the last half of the last century, people had concerned themselves with the accumulation of material well be ing, and that its distribution would take care of Itself. But the people had come to see, he added, that they must concern themselves with an equal distribution of wealth. "UoJ'cs like this chamber of com merce." said the colonel, "have been Industriously taught to regard me as a kind of modified anarchist. As a matter of fact, I think that if you will read what I have said, and not what certain representatives of the press have said, you will see that I have tried to preach only the doctrines on which the republic was founded. I am a radical but I am a radical who earnestly desires to see a radical pro grm carried out by conservatives. I wish to see great industrial reforms carried out, not by the men who will profit by them, but by men who lose by them; by Just such men as you are around me. I believe most em phatically in the progress which shall be sane." Regulate Corporations. Colonel Roosevelt said he wished to see the hand of the state and the nation placed on the great corpora tions to regulate them. "The rights of man must be para mount in a republic such as ours." he added. The colonel urged the passing of legislation to .benefit labor? it was his criticism of former Judge Baldwin's attitude toward such legislation which led to their controversy. In explaining his Idea of the "square deal" Colonel Roosevelt said: "I do not want the prise In the race to go to the man who Is not fast enough to win. I want them to start even." Equal opportunity, he said, repre sented the Idea upon which the re public was founded. "I care for the fact," he continued, "and not the least for the form. You hear a good deal of national rights and of states rights. I'm for both." He explained this by saying that he was for national rights where they would best serve the welfare of the people and for states rights where their exercise was most beneficial. Colonel Roosevelt said corporations should be treated with an exact meas ure of Justice. TWENTY-TOD WERE KILLED III MINE Blueflelds, W. Va., Dec. 14. Twenty-two miners were killed and twenty-three entombed at the Green Mine at Tacoma, Virginia, according to a report this afternoon. There was a terrific explosion and the men are reported killed outright in the lower levels. Rescue parties are being rushed to the scene. The reports on the number of dead are not confirm ed. Bristol, Tenn., Dec. 14. It is re ported this afternoon that 26 entomb ed miners are dead. Five bodies have been recovered. Judge B. B. Richards and wife of Athena came In on the Spokane train yesterday evening and are In the city today. IAN F RIVALS THE JUNGLE London, Dec. 14. An article on liv ing conditions in Germany which out- j docs the sickening details of even ! "The Jungle," ' printed today in the ', December number of a magazine. The ' writer, a woman, devotes special at tentlon to the peculiar German lnsti- ; tution known as Freibank, a sort of , market for the poor. There only the ! near-destitute are allowed to pur-! chase because only meat from dis-' eased animals is sold. It is made ' edible by certain processes of sterili zation, more or less effective. The ; conditions are rapidly becoming worse, she says. ' i STEAMER COLUMBIA MAY NOT BE WORTH SALVAGE Victoria, Dec. 14. It is undeter mined yet whether an effort, will be made to salvage the wrecked steam er Olympla from Blight Reef. The Alaskan steamship company, which owns the vessel, received a cable from Captain Daniels at Valdiz stating that one, two and three holds are filled with water and the vessel Is fast on the rocks, exposed to the breakers and winds. It will probably go to pieces unless work is begun soon. INTERURBAN WRECK INJURES SIXTEEN HEAVY FOG CAUSES COLLISION NEAR TACOMA .Many Passengers Hurt Slightly Butj None Will Die Five Have Already. Loft Hospital,. Wreck Was Disas trous to Company, ' , Tacoma, Dec. 14. According to physicians at the Fannie Paddock hospital, Mrs. S. W. Stimson, who was believed fatally injured In last night's headon collision between two inter urban electrics between Seattle and Tacoma, will recover. Five of the 18 Injured were taken to the hospit al but left for their homes today. The collision was due to a dense fog. Those hurt were mostly bruised and a few cut by glass. Sixteen people were seriously injur ed In a wreck near Sumner on the line of the Puget Sound Electric rail way, when a southbound passenger leaving Seattle and a north bound local crashed together In a headon collision about 13 miles north of Ta coma in the dense fog at about 9 o'clock tonight. The southbound train was the interurban .limited leaving Seattle at 8 p. m. and the north bound local left Tacoma at the same hour. No other explanation of the accident Is given out at this time than the presence of a heavy fog which hung over the scene and pre vented the men in control from see-1 lng the approach of the train from the opposite direction. The property loss to the railroad company Is re ported as disastrous. UNCLE SAM AND CANADA AGREE ABOUT SEALING Victoria, Dec. 14. Dispatches to-, date from Ottawa announce that an agreement between Canada and Unit-, ed States for the cessation of pelagric sealing Is almost completed. The ne- j gotiations have been under way since 1906. The dispatch says: "Aa an in ducement to Canadians to relinquish! pelagic sealing it is understood the. United States government will rec-1 ognlze Canadian equity In the seal herds of Pribyloff islands and seal-1 lng will be carried on under ade-' quate restrictive regulations." j Hack from Iowa. George Roberts and wife have re-. turned from trip through the middle western states. They were gone about ' a month, most of which time was spent In Iowa where they visited with., relatives. 1 vSpeclal Correspondence.) Hermiston, Ore., Dec. 14. Her miston was the scene of an explosion accident Just at the noon hour today which came near to proving fatal to two of the prominent residents but which fortunately resulted only in a number of painful injuries. The ex plosion occured In the rear of the grocery store of the Hermiston Pro duce and Supply company and the two men Injured were Thomas A. Campbell, senior member of the com pany, and Charles Benson who was employed at the store at the time. The two men were at work on an acetylene tank which supplied light for the establishment. The tank was HERMISTON MERCHANT HURT Bt ACETYLENE EXPLOSION LOETTS SMITH R Participant in Sensational Trial Was Local Stenogra pher in Years Gone By. QUIZZED ON TRLVli AS TO PENDLETON RECORD I Woman Who. Alleges Dr. Burke, Af finity Artist, Tried to Murder He at Santa Rosa, Was Typist in Local Law Office Prominent Attorney Remembers Her. Luetta Smith, one of the partici pants in a sensational trial now on at Santa, Rosa, California, formerly liv ed in Pendleton, according to testi mony given by her upon the witness stand. Miss Smith is the prosecuting witness in a case (against Dr. Willard P. Burke, the head of a sanitarium where prevail peculiar and uncon ventional Ideas as to morality and love. Dr. Burke is charged with hav ing tried to kill the Smith woman and her child through the gentle pro cess of dynamiting, a tent in which they were living. In testifying against Burke upon the witness stand Miss Smith went into details with reference to the cult preached by Burke and with which she took up. It is a sort of a free love Institution and the following are some of the teachings: "The recording angel issues no hiarrlage certificates. "Affinity one for another Is too big" to be cowed by opinion or cramped by custom." "You and I are the absolute aban don of love If we would allow It so." "The unit Is not the family but the individual." "Religion is a device for shutting out life." "Passion born of affinity Is di vine." Worked In Pendleton, The following paragraph relating to the life of Miss Smith in this city is from the San Francisco Call's re port of the trial. "At the expiration of that time she said she went to live at Pendleton, Ore., and having at a previous time studied stenography and typewriting, became a public stenographer, work ing for the greater part in the law of fices of that town." "Did not the wife of one of the lawyers for whom you worked make some trouble as to the relations exist ing between you and her husband?" "No such thing ever happened?" she replied emphatically. Her health failing in Pendleton she said she went to a hospital in Portland and there decided that she would take up the calling of a nurse. She said she stud led for a time and then became en gaged as a general nurse in Portland and later in Oakland. Raley Remembers Her. According to Colonel J. H. Raley, a stenographer by the name of Lu Etta Smith was employed in the offices of L. B. Reeder about the year 1896 but he had not thought of her as being the same woman as the one connect ed In the sensational case. However, he declares that the insinuation of the attorney for the defense that she was connected with some scandal while In this city was not founded on any truth, as she left here with a clean record. EXPLOSION KJLLS TWO AT RAVENSDALE, WASH Ravensdale, Wash.. Dec. 14. Two miners were killed and two fatally Injured In an explosion In the mines here yesterday. The dead are Ivan. Gale, and L. Maurlsh. The dying ar John Ash and Andrew Johnson. Four other men are rescued. The mine Is the property of the northwestern Im provement company. located In a store Imil out warning explosion t .' the city Hi' 1 rlej out sit ; tured arm minus s v siderably n'. the bones arm wer ' has b'en resting as ed. When t noise van cave In the reai f oe S. Suddenly and with whatever, there was an t could be heard all over 1 Mr. Campbell was car ;' ring from a badly fra fr uit' Mr. Benson emerged ! teeth and bruised con ut the body. Both of : tho cldor man's right Token, but the fracture lured and the patient la sily ns could be expect- explosion occured, the loud that people cam 1 nil directions to ascer- and soon quite a crowd ted In front of the store. running r tain the had congi J 2 '1 r J