tjiiiiviaWaVaiV.'iAriivi:..r.iii,,i1- EVENING EDITIOII EVENING EDITIOI) WEATHER REPORT. Fuir tonight with a. heavy frost Wednes day fair. 70 ADVEItTISERS. Tbe Kant Orrgonlan hf the lnrgHt paid circalatloa of any paper In Oregon, esst of Portland and nearly twice the circulation In I'endleton of other newspaper. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER. CITY OFFICIAL PAPER. VOL. 24. PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1912. NO. 7399 : VjMTO . . j v . 1.492 P MSI SHIES ALL MISSING ARE BELIEVED TO HAVE PERISHED IN SEA Male Passengers Die v As Only Heroes-Can Insist Women and Children of Steer age Have Equal Chance With Wealthy Females Now York, April 10. Tlio lives of 1 iV2 IM-I-MOILH is till" last estimate ot tlio Titanic loss. It iN lielleved Unit nearly all on board tlie Titanic could Imv cliocn saved If thcro hud been cnoujdi itfc boat and life rafts to no commodate the .passengers. But only twenty modern lifeboat were aboard. Tlio stock market was nervous early in tlx) day but recovered fairly well later. According to tho White Star com pany 2358 persons were on board the Titanic. Of these 856 were saved and are on ships and boats now on their way to New York. Vice President Franklin of the White Star line, is stunned by the ca tastrophe. Ho said the Carpathla will arrive in New York Thursday or early Friday. Franklin said the Olympic is be lieved to be scorching the sea near the wreck. The Anchor liner, Call lornm, is believed to also be near the scene. It is believed the Titanic drifted more than thirty miles from the time she struck to the time she sank and possibly some life-boats were lowered early and drifted away before the Cjirpathia arrived. The weather off Nova Scotia was foggy lust night with heavy thunder storms traveling cartward. Some hope is entertained for res cuing a few survivors, who may still be afloat. Wireless operators today are unable to reach the vessels sup posed to be in the vicinity of where the Titanic went down. It is expected that the stories that (Continued on page ten.) IMHlTIiANn PEOPLE WEltK ON TITANIC. New York, April 16. The fate of Pacific coast passengers on the Titanic Is still shrouded in mystery. So far as known the Pacific coast passengers were Hugh R. Hood of Seattle; F. Warren of Portland;. Herman Klaber of Portland; Dr. Wash ington Dodge of San Francisco; Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Hold of Sacramento; John Bartholomew,, of San Francisco; Mrs. Lucy Davis Parish and Mrs. William Shelly, mother and sister ro- Hpf otively of J. H. Hall of Port- land. A number of these probably lost their lives. EX-CONGRESSMAN RALPH COLE DEFENDS TARIFF RECORD MADE BY PRESIDENT TAFT Refore a audience of approximate ly two Ivundred people, Ralph D. Cole, ex-representative from Ohio, last night In the court house defended President William Howard Taft from the criticisms which have been made against his tariff policy. The speak er particularly appealed to the sheep men of which there were quite a number In his audience and that thej ympathlzed with his views was made evident by their hearty applause. He arrived from La Grande last evening and was met at the train by the Round-Up band, which escorted him directly to the court house where, after a short musical program, he was Introduced by Joe Skrable, pres ident of the local Taft duo. "President Taft has accomplished two things in relation to the tariff," he said in beginning his address, "which entitle him to the gratitude of the nation and especially of the peo ple of Oregon. First he made pos sible a scientific prtective tariff and second, he saved from the hand of dcstructln the wool industry of the United States." Tariff Football of Politics, v "Tariff legislation in the past," he HS BELIEVE 111 STAGGERED II MSI DMRJIIE DSNS II (tSlffil II MID SHIP OWNERS SUPPRESS NEWS TO GET INSURANCE Knew Vessel Went Down With Hu man Cargo Many Hours Before Making Announcement New York, April 10. Tlio Wliite Stur officials are being bitterly ceil mired for teeming false reports and comforting the relative and friends by the assurance that all imsscngcrs of tlio Titanic lind been transferred to other vessels and tliut the Titanic was being safely towed into port. No de tailed explanation Is forthcoming. The official admit tliey knew tlio Titanic luwl foundered several hours before .public announcement wu.s made. vice President Franklin of the White Star, when charged by a new York newspaper reporter with respon slbility for withholding the news from the public by muzzling the wireless. stations so the company could se cure reinsurance on the Titanic and its treasures, became angry He said: mats an abso.ute lie. You who make this charge, know you lie. would not admit the Titanic had sunk until I was absolutely sure of "We are doing all we can to learn who was saved and who was lost." Relatives of missing passengers Wt terly denounce the company, charg ing that It deliberately withheld new? of the disaster when it'was reason ably certain that the Titanic had gone down with hundreds of passengers. Mr. Franklin refused to reply when asked why the company had given out ror publication the messages alleged by its officials to have come from the Olympla, assorting that all the Titanic's passengers were safe aboard the Carpatha. Rescue Ships Too I,ate. Charleston Navv Yard. wirAlesn Station, April 16. (Bulletin.) An unsigned Marconlgram which was picked up here and believed to be correct says: "Six hundred and fiftv nprsnns aboard the Carpathla are the only survivors of the Titanic. The others went down with the ship. The other rescue ships failed to find anv more of the Titanic's passengers.' Virginian Too Late. Montreal, April J6 The last hoDe that additional Titanic passengers were saved, was dissipated when Cap tain Campbell of the steamer Virgin Ian reported to Allen Line agents here that the Virginia's rescue trip was fruitless. The message said: "We arrived too late to rescue anyone. Are proceeding . to Liverpool." Pays Tribute t, Heroes. London, April 16 Premier As quith In the house of commons de plored the Titanic disaster. "While sorrowing," bo said, "we must never theless express the deepest admira tion in carrying out of the best sea traditions of saving those least able to save themselves." Astor Relieved Lost. Capo Race, April 16. In a partial list of survivors is the name of Mrs. John Jacob Astor and also her maid. This makes It almost certain that John Jacob Astor was drowned. went on, "has been to a certain de gree a haphazard game of give and take. It has been the football ' or politics since the first organization of the government. The industries of the nation have suffered beyond measure from the periodical agitation of this question. The practice hith erto has been t0 revise all of the schedules at the same session and thus disturb all business relations It ha frequently resulted In grave indus trial paralysis and financial disaster. These manifestations, however, have been confined to democratic revision. "The old policy has been discard ed Through the efforts of President Taft, the tariff board has been cre ated and it is destined to Inaugurate a new system in the making of tariff laws. The republican pliatform of 1908 laid down a rule in accordance with which we sought to revise the tariff. That rule-was this, that the rates of duty Bhould measure the dif ference In the cost of prductlon at home and abroad. It seema like a simple rule and one easily enforced (Continued on page ten.) GREATEST MARINE DISASTER AT A GLANCE The greatest marine disaster in time of peace in the liHtory of the world. Loss or lives and money, uccording to liest obtainable reports follows: Liven, about one thousand five hundred. Cost to build tlio Titanic, ten million dollars. Intimated value or jewels belonging to women passengers, five milioii dollars. Value or buggaue and mail, two million dollars. lss in probable law suits and litigation, five million dollars. CHOXOLOt.Y OF TITANIC'S FIRST AND FATAL VOYAGE. Titanic left South Hampton on maiden trip, April 10th. Just before leaving port it narrowly e:-caped a collision with the liner New York. Proceeded at top speed toward New York, until it struck an iceberg at 10:25 o'clock Sunday night, 450 miles south of Cape Race. The wireless operator sends out "S. O. S." message call's through out Sunday night, pleading for help at once. The steamer Virginia of the Allen line, picks up the call and rushes to aid the disabled vessel. The Carpathla, Olympic. Baltic and Parisian and other vessels rush to the scene, but evidently arrived too late to be of material assistance. A 1 O . 1 T 1 i .. ... . . i ii.u "lu'iuay morning tne The Titanic, according to best information, went down between two and four o'clock Monday morning. All day Monday officials of the White Star line gave out informa tion that all pasengers had been taken off and that the liner wa beine towed to Halifax. " At 8:55 Monday night, by wireless the Carpathia reports that the Titanic had gone down with all on board, except between six hundred and eight hundred passengers, mostly women and children. At nine o'clock Monday night the officials of the White Star line gave out a message, confirming the report of the great disaster HINKLE AND MANN NOT STATEMENT MEN Machine Candidates Not Make Needed Pledge Did An examination of the records at the court house by a representative of the East Oregonian discloses the fact that there are but two statement No. 1 men running for legislative nomi nations from this country. They are S. D. Peterson of Milton and Roland Oliver of this city. Messrs. Mann and Hinkle. machine candidates, have not subscribed to Statement No. 1, despite the fact both of those men have been bidding for votes from the progressive element ot the party. On tho official ballot that has been printed for the primary election state ment No. 1 appears as part of the slogan for Representative Mann. However, Mr. Mann has never taken any pledge to vote for the people's choice for United States senator and is therefore flying under false colors In using the statement slogan after his name. Hinkle does not make use of the statement slogan on the ballot but like Mann he has been appealing for votes on the strength of the dec- claration he Is a statement man. The records at the clerk's office show that Rep. S. D. Peterson who is running for renominatlon, has filed a formal statement No. 1 pledge in which he obligates himself, if elected, to vote for the popular choice for sen ator regardless of his personal pref erences in the matter. Roland Oliv er, the fourth candidate for represen tative, has also taken the regulation statement pledge. BOY HERE ON LONG WALK ACROSS STATES Intent on walking across the conti nent fromRochester, Washington, to Rochester, N. Y., Clyde Paton, 19 years of age, Is here today. He has been en route since April 1 and says he likes the traveling fine. When young Paton left his home near Olympla be was accompanied by a partner but the young fellow gave out at Hood River and had to re turn. Paton will continue the trip On the way he is advertising the Golden Potlatch of Seattle and he wants to do some advertising for the Round-Up. ANTHRACITE AGREEMENT APPARENTLY' IMPOSSIBLE 9' New York. April 16. That there Is no chance of agreement between the anthracite coal miners and operators at today's session of tho joint con ference was announced by George F. Baer, 'chairman of the mine owners' committee. Baer is also president of the Philadelphia and Reading rail road which operates extensively through the anthracite coal regions. It's easier to breathe than be president. was Titanic s wireless equipment GOVERNOR WILSON'S LEAD GROWS IN PA. May Have Full Delegation; Also Wins Michigan Counties - Washington, April 16. (Special.) Late returns from the Pennsylvania presidential preferential nrlmnrv election show that the New Jersey ex- ecume nas seventy-four and possibly all seventy-six delegates to the Bal timore convention, it is conceded on every hand that Governor Wilson will have as many as seventy-four votes by actual definite instructions. The victory is more sweeping than had been anticipated by Governor Wilson's campaign managers, who only claim ed 50 delegates the day before the pri mary. "I am great:y pleased with the re sult in Pennsylvania where Governor Wilson made practically a clean sweep in the primary contest," said Mr. W. F. McCombs, governor Wilson's cam paign manager, who spent the day in Washington conferring with friends. "My information is that every can didate who ran with the name ol Speaker Clark and Governor Harmon (Continued on Page 2 ) PILOT ROCK PLAYS PENDLETON SUNDAY Pendleton fans will have their first opportunity of developing baseball hysterics next Sunday afternoon, for a game has been arranged for that time between Garrett's accumulation of talent and the Pilot Rock Redoubt ables reinforced by one of the local batteries. The game is scheduled as a practice for the Buckarooes but Manager Fred Lieuallen of the P. R. Bunch declares he is coming after a. scalp and with the assistance of a twirler and backstop from Pendleton believes lie w ill get what he is coming for. Pilot Rock, it will be remembered, has some good material and they have been practicing faithfully for some weeks, which, together with the fact that Garrett's men will not have had time to develop any team work, makes it very probable that a close exhibition will be witnessed at Round-Up Park Sunday. Manager Garrett did not arrive this morning as expected but the recruits already arrived and the drifters who hope to cast anchors here for the season are working out, nevertheless, and many of the fans are making dally expeditions to the ground in order to get first hand dope. COLONEL ROOSEVELT WILL NOT MSCl'SS POLITICS Chicago, April 16. Colonel Roose velt arrived here today en route to Nebraska where he will open his cam paign for thtf republican presidential nomination at Hastings. Colonel Roosevelt refused to talk politics while here. RELATIVES FIGHT FOR HOPEFUL INFORMATION Police Reserves Unable to Control Frenzied People Storming Ship Company's Offices New York. April 10. All New York Is stunned today by tlio apiUing loss of life on tlie steamer Titanic. A long iin,. of hysterical men, wo men aim children beseiged the orfice of tlie White Star Line, begging for authentic information. The company official were unable to offer hoi). Nothing will lie definitely known till the urrival here of the Virginian mid Carpathia. the two ocean liners that first reached tlie ill-fated vessel. The police reserves were scarcely able to control the crowds in front of the offices. In the first rush on the New York office of the White Star company, war Vincent Astor, son of Coionel John Jacob Astor, who it is believed per ished in the Titanic disaster. He ar rived with Casa J. Riddle, Colonel Astor's business representative and conferred half an hour with Vice President Franklin. When he came out he was weeping and was assisted to his auto and rushed to his home. Vice President Franklin continues to inssist that all possible information is being published, it is generally believed that the White Star com pany Is using him as a butter between itself and the public and Is giving out only such information as it wish es the public to have. Mrs. Renjamin Guggenheim impor tuned everyone, demanding hysteri cally that something be done. She !d to Mr. Franklin: "For God's sake don't let expense count if there is any chance! "Hire steamboats and rush them to the scene!" At 10 o clock the excitement had reached such a high pitch that addi tional police reserves were called to restrain the crowds' in front of the White Star offices. Survivors' on Carpathia. v New York, April 16. (Bulletin.) Summing up fragmentary advices re ceived here up to 3 p. m: today, the probability is that nearly fifteen hun dred persons lost their lives when the ten million dollare White Star liner Titanic went down yesterday off New Foundland banks. The steamer Carpathia with from six hundred to eight hundred passen gers, is steaming for New York. No clear account of the disaster has been received here. The officials of the White Star line declared today mat the only sur vivors of the Titanic they know of arethose aboard the steamer Car pathia. They say all the Titanic's small boats are seemingly accounted for. They say they do not believe any of the missing were saved, saving only one chance in a thousand that other stamers may have rescued those aboard the ill-fated liner after the women and children were sent away. Vice President Franklin of the White Star line, is hysterical over the Titanic catastrophe. He said: "It Is horrible! Horrible! "We have no further authentic in formation except partial verification from wireless operators aboard the THRIFTY "FRIEND" DREW PAY IN DIRECT That F. K. Welles, self-styled "chil dren's friend,'1 has no scruples about getting all the money possible out of his position even if it be necessary to evade the law to do so Is shown by the facts regarding a travel pay grab that was carried on for four years under the old board of county commissioners. As a result of the graft that was worked, Welles drew down the gentle sum of $800 as travel money when tho law upon the sub ject intended specifically to keep him from so doing. Here is the his tory of the matter and the facts can be verified for the benefit of anyone desiring to investigate the proposi tion. Until four years ago the superin tendent drew a salary of $1200 per annum and during the session of 1907 the sa'ary was increased through a bill presented by Rep. Claude Steen to $1800 a year. At the same session a bill was presented allowing county superintendents $200 per annum trav el pay. Governor Chamberlain, who had an ever watchful eye for salary bills and vetoed many-of them, call ed the Umatilla delegation before and informed three members of D ASTOR AND OTHER MILLIONAIRES ARE UN-ACCOUNTED FOR Their Deaths Would Effect Business Combined Wealth of Passengers, on lllfated Vessel, More Than. Billion Dollars New York, April 16. The combin ed wealth of the first-class itassengers that went down with the Titanic will easily reach ono billion dollars. Tlio fortunes of six male passengers alone aggregate more tlian half a bil lion dollars. If these men met death, vast busi ness enterprises of Uie United states aro sur0 to be affected materially. These six men are: Colonel John Jacob Astor, $150. 000,000. .!. Colonel Wasnington Roebling. $25 -000,000. Isador Strauss, $50,000,000. George B. Widenor, $50,000,000. Benjamin Guggenheim, $95,000,000. J. B. Thayers, $100,000,000. These men are interested in some Of the biggest enterprises in the world. In addition to being one of the world's largest realty holders, Astor is connected with nearly a score of corporations. Guggenheim is the next in finan cial importance. He Is connected with the American Smelting Securi ties company and has large holdings In the smelting trust. Isador Strauss is one of the world's best known merchants. George B. Widener is a traction magnate of Philadelphia and Roebling, with his his father, designed and built the Brooklyn bridge. Thayer is vice president of the Pennsylvania rail road. Carpathia, which is coming here with tne survivors. "We do not know if the Virginian or Parisan rescued any passengers. "We probably wl'.l not hear from the Alympic until she reaches the other side." All reports are to the effect that the male passengers went to their doom like men. They showed no dis tinction; women in the steerage being given the same chance as wealthy women while the men remained on the Titanic to die. Company Official Saved. Cape Race, April 16. In the' list of the Titanic's survivors, caught here by wireless, Bruce Ismay, managing director of the White Star line, was the only prominent man passenger given as positively saved. Salvage Impossible. London, April 16. Captain James Partlon, manager of the White Star company, said there is no hope of salvage of the Titanic because she sunk at so great a depth.- $800 TRAVEL EVASION OF THE LAW that body that he would not stand for two increases for the Umatilla superintendent at the same session. So, at his request and in order to se cure the increased salary for Welles, the delegation changed the travel pay bill so as to specifically exclude the Umatilla superintendent from getting travel pay along with his extra $600 per year stipend. The final bill as passed and approved by the govrnor, read as follows: "The county superintendent shall visit the schools taught in his county at least once every' year and seek to aid. instruct and inspire teachers to employ the best methods in teaching, governing and conducting their schools; and he shall if necessary se cure the proper classification of pu pils, enforcement of course of study, and the care and protection of school property; and he shall make out, quarterly, a statement of the necessary traveling expenses incurred in the dis charge of his duties, which claims shall be audited and paid as other claims against the county; PROVID KD THAT SUCH SUM SHALL NOT (Continued on page ten.)