IV- 1 e EVENING EDITION EVENING EDITIOI! WEATHER REPORT. ' .' ' Fair, warmer tonight; Sunday fair. . TO ADVERTISEKS. The East Oregonlan hat the largest paid circulation of an 7 paper la Oregon, cut of Portland and Dearly twice tbe circulation la Pendleton of any atkar newspaper. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER. CITY OFFICIAL PAPER. VOL. 24. PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY, APRIL 0, 1912. E CHASE EACH T. R. Keeps On Heals Secretary Wilson, Taft Exhorter of Galesburg, Ills, April 6. Address ing a crowd at the depot, Governor Wilson attacked the method of se lecting candidates In vogue In most of the states, as "boss rule." C'l in hIiis1 Each Other. Chicago, April 6. With three speci al trains carrying presidential nomi nation candidates touring Illinois; with a score of minor spell binders boosting their various presdentlal fa vorites and a dozen gubernatorial as pirants touring the state, Illinois Is working up today a state of Intense political excitement. The' three trains are those of Col onel Roosevelt, Governor Woodrow Wilson of Xew Jersey, and Secretary James Wilson, of the agricultural de partment, who Is booming President Taft. Secretary Wilson's train Is running a half an hour ahead of Colonel Roosevelt's special. The secretary In speaking at Pontlac, Clinton and De nature In behalf of President Taft, had Just time to leave as Colonel Roosevelt's train pulled into the sta tions, giving Colonel Roosevelt a chance to tell his side of the story. tlovernor- Wilson spoke today' at Galesburg. Mollne, Sterling and De Kalb. He will deliver his big ad dress at Chicago tonight. Colonel Roosevelt spoke today at Rockford, Freeport, Dixon. LaSalle, and Bloomington. Tonight he will conduct the banner meeting of the day at Springfield. Senator Townsend of Michigan, will conclude the campaign for President Taft In Chicago tonight. The Interests of Champ Clark In the fight for the democatlc nomina tlon for president are being upheld by Senator Stone, of Missouri, ex Governor David R. Francis of Maine and George Fred Williams of Massa chusetts. Supporters of Senator La Follette nre working quietly throughout the state today. Colonel Roosevelt arlved In Chi cago at 8 o'clock this morning, re maining here half an hour. BRITISH STRIKE ORDERED ENDED London, April 6. Operations at the mines will be resume! Monday with complete forces, according to an an nouncement made tonight by offi cials of the Miners Federation. The miners Federation today offi cially declared the coal miners' strike off and ordered the men back to work. Clash In Federation. London. April 6. A clash within the ranks of the Miners Federation is imminent today. Many members are threatening to secede from the organ isation If the officials persist In call ing off the strike. Despite the at titude of the men, the leaders are unanimously In favor of returning to work and there la practically no chance that they will reclnd their or der for the miners to return to the mines . , The clash today came at a secret meeting of the organization. Dele gates were present from Scotland, Wales and England. A majority of the representatives are reported to be opposed to calling the strike off and the leaders are Just as determined to call it off. No agreement was reach ed. It was reported that one-third of the miners have returned to work. Guide's Slayer Buys Freedom. Skowhegan, Me. An agreement, by Dr. Charles D. Brooks of Rutherford, N. J., to pay $1950 to the widow and child of Harold Hlght, a guide whom he shot and killed in mistake for a deer on a hunting trip In the Maine woods .last fall, and to meet the court costs, $93, led to the quashing of the criminal case against him In the su prome court here. A good thing about summer is your appreciating it when the mercury is flirting with the zero mark. v. Talent In the kitchen and a balance In the bank should form a combina tion for generating domestic bliss. PRES1D NIL CAMPAIGNERS OTHER IN ILLINOIS LA FOLLETTE IS . HEARD BY 15, Says Roosevelt Is a Good Teacher But Is Not Construtive Lincoln, Neb., April 6 Traveling two hundred miles and making twen ty-two speeches before fifteen thous and persons, is the remarkable rec ord that Senator La Follette is cred ited with today, after his first twenty-four hours of campaigning in Ne braska. Beginning at Plattsmouth early yesterday, Senator La Follette Jour neyed through the farming section between that city and Lincoln, being heartily greeted at each stop. He closed the day at a meeting at th'e auditorium here, and the section around Omaha Is his objective point today. Monday and Tuesday will be passed In Western Nebraska and Senator La Follette and his party departs for the Pacific coast Wednesday evening. During all his speeches of his first day's trip. Senator La Follette laid stress on his demand for tariff reduc tion, direct legislation, the recall, the Initiative and referendum and trust control. In the course of his speech here Senator La Follette said: "Roosevelt does great good as a teacher, merely political and civil, but la hot a constructive statesman." -Senator La Follette predicted h will carry Oregon, California, Ne braska and Utah. OBJECT TO EAST COURT ST. PAYING The Improvement of east Court street from the Byers mill race to the city limits with macadam seems In a fair way to be held up through the proceedure provided by the or dinances, a remonstrance against the proposed Improvement having been filed today with the city recorder. It has not yet been determined whether or not the signers represent eighty per cent of the property affected but the fact that the Byers Milling com pany and the O-W. R. & N. company are among the signers maKes It cer tain that a great portion of the pro perty is represented, the railroad com pany holding the right of way along the street in question and the mill ing company owning a large tract In the far east end of the city abutting on the street. The remonstrance was circulated by . W. McComas, repre senting the Byers Interests. WILL NOT ATTEMPT TO KEEP CANDIDATE OUT Sacramento, April 6. Secretary McCabe. at the govrnor's office to day, f'.atly denies a published report that the state administration would attempt to block the placing of a' La Follette ticket on the presidential pri mary ballot, even though technicali ties might be discovered to allow such opposition to be made. Secre tary of State Jordan announced that the verification of a deputy who was improperly appointed would not be considered a vital defect in the La Follette petition. Arrest of Haywood Expected Soon. Passaic, N. J., April 6. The police authorities here today refused to confirm or deny reports that a 'war rant has been issued for the arrest of W. D. Haywood, tne labor leader who Is prominent in the textile strikes of the east. The report of Haywood's Intended arrest follows the rioting at Garfiold, near here. Haywood Is ex pected to soon leave for Grays Harbor,' Washington, and Tacoma to. take charge of the lumber strike there. BATTERIES FOR TODAY'S COAST LEAGUE GAMES. At Ixs Angeles. Portland, Henderson Howley. Lot Angeles, Levereni Boles. At Oakland. San Francisco, Toner and and and Berry. Oakland, Parkins and Mltze. At Sacramento. Sacramento, Arellanes and Cheek. Vernon, Raleigh and Brown. ... DEAN OF CHICAGO UNIVERSITY MUST PAY $2,500 TO CO-ED FOR ATTACK ON CHARACTER Chicago, Hi., April 6 Dean Ma rion Talbot of the Chicago University, must pay Miss Eshster Mercy $2500 damages. This was the amount a Jury today awarded the plaintiff in her suit for $100,000 damages brought against Dean Talbot on charges that she attacked her moral character. Miss Mercy, a co-ed of the univer sity, was expelled by Dean Talbot. ABE RUEF INVOLVES PROMINENT PEOPLE Gives Out Partial Statement Regarding Frisco Graft San Francisco, April 6 Angry be cause of a recent editorial in a San Francisco morning newspaper, in which he was described as a human hyena .and a "surly, cunning, cyni cal rogue," Abraham .Ruef, once the powerful political rogue of San Fran cisco, published in the San Francisco Bulletin, a partial statement of his connection with graft in San Fran cisco He mentioned Patrick Calhoun, of the United Railroads, William F. Herrln of the Southern Pacific, and others as being anxious for blm not to give the Inside history of his life He says he will tell all when the Indictments against him are dismiss ed, as they will be soon, if the ad vice of the prosecutor Is acted on. Rucf says he .will give a full his tory of the conferences with Calhoun and others of San Francisco, regard ing the corrupt use of money. APPENDICITIS IS NOT XKW. Egyptians Knew of So-Called Mod crn Disease 7,0(10 Years .gt. Chicago. Dr. Carl H. von Klein, after twenty years' study and t,n owj. lay, of $60,00.0. has translated - the "Papyrus-Ebers" as Egyptian medi cal work 7,000 years old. The papyrus was revealed in 1872 by George Ebers, who with the aid of Ludwlg Stern and some Egyptol ogists, published the fact that Hop- pocraies, tne Greek, who had been known as the "Father of Medicine," no longer possessed that title. Hip pocrates died in 357 B. C. "The Egyptian physicians were the most learned In all the world," said Dr. von Klein last night. "The in cantations In the papyrus are beauti ful. They cover all diseases." Even appendicitis, which we considered a new disease a few years ago, is de scribed." LA FOLLETTE MEETING NEXT SATURDAY TO SPEAK FROM STEPS OF CITY HALL Senator La Follette Is to arrive In Pendleton on train No. 17 next Saturday afternoon and will speak here In front of the city hall at 2 o'clock In the aftternoon of that day. Word to this effect was re ceived here today by James Johns from Thomas McCusker of Port land, Oregon, manager for La Follette. Whether or not It will be possible to have a Pendleton address by Mrs. La Follette upon the subject of equal suffrage, has not yet been learned. It is understood, howevei. ttiat the senator and wife will be here all of Saturday afternoon and the early night, so such an ad dress may be possible. JUDGE LOWELL'S CAMPAIGN FOR REPUBLICAN SENATORIAL NOMINATION COST HIM $1,020 It cost Judge Stephen A. Lowell of this city Just $1020.20 to get his name before the people and upon the primary ballot as a candidate for the republican nomination for United States senator and this amount In cludes all' of his expenses from" Oc tober 1. 1910, which was the date upon which he made his first tenta tive announcement of intention. Yes terday he transmitted the itemized expense account of his campaign to the secretary of the senate of the United States In conformance with the state and federal laws which re quire that such statements be filed not less than ten nor more than fif teen days before the date of the pri mary election. , Judge Lowell's statement shows $369.95 spent for postage, $230.60 for stationery and printing, $297.20 for clerical and miscellaneous expenses, and $122.45 for the circulating of his petitions, making the total as given above. By the state law he was per' mltted to expend fifteen per cent of what hla first year's salaj-y would be Is elected and the per cent amounts to $1125. His expenses are thus more than $100 under the amount allowed. Lowell vs. Selling. , Judge Lowell 'puts the same con struction upon the law as does Attor ney General Crawford which is to the effect that all money spent in fur therlng a man's chances for office The Jury ruled that' she assailed Mis Mercy's character when in dismiss ing her, she said: "Go! I consider you nr better than a woman of.. the streets." Several hundred university stu dents and co-eds gathered In the cor ridors and cheered when the verdict was returned. Miss Mercy said she is entirely sat isfied as she sought vindication rather than financial gain. JAPAN EXPLAINS DEAL IN MEXICO Admits Fishing Rights Granted Japanese Companies Are Washington, April 6 The Japan ese embassy here today Issued what purports to be a full explanation of Japan's activities in Mexico. The claim is made that the Japanese gov ernment has no negotiations wltr Mexico for the, establishment of a large settlement about Magdalena Bay. The statement says the Toyo Taiha KaUha and Oriental Steamship com pany obtained fishing rights on the west coa.t of Mexico, later transfer ring them to the oriental Whaling company of Japan. It is claimed the fishing district ex tends from Tapio to Oaxaca state and has no geographical connection with Magdalena Bay. The statement says fishing rights run for a term of ten years only and have no political significance but are only purely an Industrial enterprise by a Japanese concern. It says it is not a privilege excep tionally granted to Japanese subjects, as similar rights have been granted to citizens and subjects of the United States, England and Italy. 2 Texas Iwcllsts Killed. Beaumont, Tex,, April 6. W. A. Knight and W. C. Whitney, leading citizens of Beaumont, are both dead as a result of a pistol duel following a quarrel over their work. Killed Man, Fined a Cent. vMontgomery, Ala. For killing Robert- Wilson, Robert Glass was fined one cent by a Jury after a trial that lasted all day. Glass was Indicted for murder In the first degree and has been In Jail several months. The The Jury held he. was guilty of man slaughter in the second degree. About three months ago A. Lee Long, a negro, of Ope'ika was given nirfty days in Jail for killing a white man. He was charged with murder In the first degree. whether or not it be spent after the formal announcement of candiducy should be included In the expense ac count placed on file. This interpre tation of the- law. it will be remem bered, was given by the attorney gen eral in response to an injuiry from Jay Bowerman asking if the money spent by Ben Selling in sending out letters to each voter prior to his pos Itivo declaration of his candidacy con stituted a violation of the corrupt practices act. Judge Lowell, there fore. Including all of his expenditures during the past eighteen months made for the purpose of promoting his candidacy. The section of the federal law which applies to these expenditures Is as fol lows: "No candidate for representative in congress or for senator of the Unit ed States shall give, contribute, ex pend, use or promise or cause to b given, contributed, expended, used or promised, m procuring his nomina tion and election, any sum, in the RreKaie, in excess of the amount wnich he may lawfully eive. eon tribute, expend use or promise under tne laws of the state In which he re sides." This section contains pro vlslo clauses relating to states which have no such laws. Here In Oregon the amount which a candidate for the nomination for senator may spend is firteen per cent of the first year's sal ary of the office. ST. fAl BASIN IS DOOMED Til dtVASTl BY MISSISSIPPI Government Engineers Admit Inability to Control Raging Flood Waters FARMERS AND FAMILIES Twenty Thousand People Are Already Thousands of Others Will Be Before Waters Will Have Passed. Memphis, Tenn., April 6. All hope of caving the St. Francis levee and the St. 1-Yaiicis basin lias been abandoned by government engineers and of ficials. A dozen weak Foots were reported simultaneously and it appears certain that the dykes will soon go out. Tills means that thousands of acre of tillable soil in Tennessee and Mississippi lli )e inundated. It is feared that the break of the 000,000 railroad bridge, here. The crest here !efore Sunday and with the bursting of tlie levee it is not believed the structure will stand the terrifflc pressure that will be put' on it. i Practically the entire eastern part of Arkansas is covered by a back wa ter flood. Thousands of refugees are arriving from the lowlying districts and are being temporarily quartered in public buildings and private homes. The situation In the surrounding country is growng worse daily. It is conservatively estimated that 20,000 persons are homeless. Louisiana and Mississippi farmers are gathering the families and live stock, and are hurrying to higher ground. The farmers In the threat ened districts were warned today to leave at once. Suffering Is Intense. Memphis, Tenn., April 6. The flood area of the Mississippi river is wid ened and lengthened today. It is es timated that more . than 150 square miles of tillable soil are inundated. Suffering in the flooded district Is Intense and is becoming more acute hourly. One hundred workers who were marooned on the lower end of the government levee when It collapsed, l.uve been rescued. Another Break Ke)orted. St. Louis, Mo , April 6. The break in the levee below Hickman, Mo., Is 360 feet wide and no attempt is be ing made to stop the gap, according to an official report received here from the weather bureau at Cairo, Illinois. The river had fallen three Inches at Hickman and one foot at the break. Mark Harper, a railroad engineer arrived here today from the floodej district. He said: "The conditions are terrible at Columbus, Ky. Persons perched on the tops of houses and in trees, were floated away by flood waters. "The common danger among . the flood victims is the fear that some relative has disappeared and, they re fuse to leave the threatened territory till assured their loved ones are safe "As I was leaving Columbus, I saw a snake, a rabbit and a chicken, all floating down the river on one log. "I could not run my engine fast, because of the danger of the water extinguishing the fire under the boil er. Cairo Still in Danger. Cairo, April 6. With the Mississ ippi river at the fifty-four foot stage and still showing a tendency to rise, nearly every able bodied resident in Cairo is today at work strengthening the dykes about the threatened city. TEACHERS HOLDING INSTITUTE AT ECHO A local teachers' Institute in which the teachers of districts 6, 6. 8, 14, 28, 50 and 61 are in attendance is be ing held today at Echo and a num ber of schoolmen from other parts of the county are also present for the occasion. The following is the pro gram of the day: 10 a, m. Opening exercises: sing ing; How to Use the Course of Study, W. W. Wiley; The Use of Pictures in Language Work, Blanche E. Small; Music; How to Secure Better Writing, B. T. Touel; noon intermission, 1:00 p. m.; singing; Thoroughness in Arithmetic, Joel Davis; music; Civil Government, L W. Keeler; Indian Club Swinging. J. L Thompson; ad dress, State Supt. L. R. Alderman. Evening. 8 p. m. Music; addres, Supt. J. S. Landers; address. State Supt. L. R. Alderman. Miss Gladys Scroggs is conducting the singing, and Mr Ottlmer A. Can non has charge of the instrumental music. FLEEING TO THE HILLS Homeless and Crest of High St. Francis ieveo will destroy the $5, of the flood is not expected to reach The high water stage today la two, tenths of a foot higher than yester-? day but the ' levees are still holding-.-The supply of fresh meat Is ex hausted here. City oficlals lrnmedl-; ately established a commissary de-t partment, and are distributing food, prepared at restaurants to private homes. -. , ' 100.000 Acres Under Water. Hickman, Ky., April 6". More than; one hundred thousand acres of cotton land worth $100 an acre is sub-;; merged between Hickman and Tip-j tonville, Tenn., as the result oft the'' breaking of the government levees six miles below here late yesterday.) .. The damage is conservatively esti--mated at J 1,000,000. The gap In the levee la five hundred feet wide. The number of homeless people In! this vicinity is estimated at eight thous-i and. More than three thousand are. sheltered in tents furnished by the: government. ; j Dorena, Mo., lying directly across--' the river from here, is practically de population. Only eleven persons re-; main at Craig's Landing, Mo.S Launches are busily, engaged in tak-; ing persons but the flooded districts.; WOULD SHORTEN SEASON ON DUCKS If efforts being made by sportsmen about Hermlston and Uklah meet with success, the open season for ducks here In Umatilla county will be short ened by three months. Deputy Game Warden E. P. Averill has just receiv ed petitions from these two towns asking that he use his influence to se cure a law making the open season from Sept. 1 to Jan. 1 Instead of from Sept. 1 to April 1 as now. for the reason that after the first of the year the food becomes scarce and the ducks grow poor, and for the further reason that the shooting seriously in terferes with their brooding. The petitions were both signed by a largo number of sports .-nen which fact will probably have considerable bearing upon the lawmakers. Deputy' Averill stated today that prior to re- jceipt of the petition he had made the recommendation desired to the fish and game commission but he consid ers that his recommendation will be come much more effective now. backed up as it is by the hunters. SUFFRAGISTS QUIZ GOVEHXOH S DOUBLE 'Twasirt Wilson After All, Hut Wo men Thought So Till the Pittburg er Explained. Pittsburgh. While pondering over matters pertaining to his position as president of the Manufacturers' Light and Heat Company in the Fort Pitt Hotel, where he lives, John E. Gill was confronted by a delegation of wo men. "Governor, what do you think of us " shouted the spokesman. "Are you with us or against us? What is your opinion of our movement to get our rights?" "I don't believe I understand you," GUI murmured. "You ask me as Governor' of something or other. Oh! I see," Gill concluded and a grin spread over his face. "I'm not Gov ernor Wilson." The resemblance between Gill and Governor Woodrow Wilson is so strik ing that the Plttsburgher has been mistaken for the Jerseyite on several occasions. They met for the first time last Friday and Governor Wilson expressed amazement that another looked so nearly like him. J. T. Hinkle, one of the four repub lican candidates for representative, spent hut nisjht in, the city.