Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Or.) 1903-1931 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1908)
NEWS OF THE WEEK In n Condensed Form for Our Busy Readers. HAPPENINGS OF TWO CONTINEOTS A Hosumo of tho Lot Important but Nut Leaa Interesting Event of tho Pait Wank. Mrt Prank J Gould I suing for divorce. Cetitrnllfl. Wash, was swept ly a llltlruut flic Desperate Pi m 1 1 1 1 k wutiiitir lit twecii factious In Perils, Mexican reM have captured t lie town of Vlfse. 'I'll government has MHI lltrr Bryan expresses (infect confidence that rtc will he the Democratic muni Ht9 fur president. Cleveland was buried in Prlnenmi cemetery with simple ceremonies ami mi mlltury display There Mill Itr I .tail American mn ll ahote in the canal uiir to keep aritr on flection day. A Portland fruit peddler wm fined ) for slaying Urn long in one place to sell hi last Im of rhernc Jamr S Sherman. Ucpublirsn nominee for vlce-wridnt, i rapidly recovering, ami villi xm lie able ! travel American authorities 1I0 not expect any ofieit double v. lih VenrucU Tk-ey expect l iM,t '' Catro srvere ly alone. Harvard leeat Yale in tbe great in Itfeolleiiiate IkmI race Secretary Taft. who i a graduate of Vale. wit Htel the race, anil wa orely dis astjHdtited. A collision IwtvxcrH a freight anil a olicu train in St. Paul injtircil eight ifMim. A Chicago profeor ha fallen heir In an immente fortune, tnoitly in Idaho mine. Henry accused Huef of plotting Mi death, and Huef promptly called lleney a liar. A I'rmllcton man who i afraid to irnl the hank halt 13.000 in postal money order. Thr Venezuelan envoy to the United State I awaiting order to )eac ibi country. SIhhiiIiih and looting continue in k Teheran, the capital of Persia, cam I ing a reign of terror A French paseugcr teanier was wrecked on the Spanish coast and about inn person periihed. A Seattle man wa killed liy a cake if kr falling down an elevator hort and ktrikmK him on the head Flour and other provisions arc get ting o high priced in Chicago that many are scarcely aide to huy enough to eat. A well-orieanlfrd ring lia been ill covered in Southern California en trailed in smuggling Chinee coolie aero the Mexican iMirder. The youngest mn of the late Charles Crocker, the San Fraucitcn millionaire, ha undergone hi second operation for cancer of the tnmach. A ItHstian paper predict that when reinforcement arrive for lh I'erthu revolutionist, the hah' army will Im defeated and the Koverniuent over thrown Thee Hlvers, Quebec, lunl a million dollar flic. The vv rapping wpcr trust hat pleaded KUiUy, and each ineinlwr was fined. ILiHlit iiertont died and corri were ruMraird from the heat in Chicago. A second son Ita been horn In King Alfonso and Quern Victoria, of Spain. 1 1 i claimed many cure have been effected in a leper colony in l-oulsiau.i. The brllicry case against Tircy I Ford, of San Francisco, ha been dropped, Hyde and Schneider were convicted of laud frnndi, and llrusou ami Dlmoiul acipiitled. Two men jumped from a tpcrdiiiR an toimiliilc in Cnllforiiia, ihinkiuK it wa 1 be)ond control, llolh were badly in jurcd. Thoina W. Im-iwioii, of Ilniton, pro. pot? to raise one million dollars for a Democratic ouupaiKU fund to clrct Onvcruur loliiiKin, of Mlnnciotn. prcii ilenl, and w. J.' llrynu, vice-president. M11I11I lliilld linn riMirliod tlio Mornrrnn CJipltuI iimi proclniinvd hlumvlf niltnn, Wiitnnn milTriiciat In liondou hold tlm ;roiitiBt (li'iiHiiiHtriitlini over neon tlicro. Tuft miyii ho would llko to rnio n "iod kuiiio u( lumuliiilll u kuiiio tot blood," V, .1, Hrynii unji Hint "tlio nntl In jiiiietion jiliink of tlio Itvpiiblicnn plnt fiirm, ii llnully ndopU'd, i 11 trunimr out friiiid." A ciilllnlon of oloctrln enr tlireo nillo from rortland on tlio Mount Scott lino budlv Injured irix pcrioim, dUliUy lu lu rod many more" 11 ml wrecked two mo tor enrtf. CLOSE CALL FOH TAFT. UronklitK of Plilon Hod on Enlna Nnarly Wrockf Train, OciiiiIioii, O., June -.'I -Secretary Tnft had n uiirniw cic.ipc touixht from bcliiK involved in a icrimii wreck on the I'cniiiylvnnla l'lyer, which wn carryiiiK him eait Prompt action of the towrrmaii in .1 lunnl tlatiini a third of a mile cnit of Cotlioctou, mid of the eUKineer of the llycr, alouc averted what mii(ht have been n dreadful accident. A the train wj pccilliiK nloiiK at Ilia rate of &o mile an hour, the plv lon rod on the left tide of the loco motive broke abort off Alinoit in atmttly the cylinder of the riiuine was cracked by the unuiaiiaueable rod. Secretary Tnft and National Coin uiiltccuiau KelliiHH entered the dm luu car and at down to dinner after Hie accident occurred without ihoiiKUt of anytliiiiK kerious in connection with the Mopping and delay of the train The Secretary made tin rnuimriit on thr incident when in formrd of it. The enuinecr of the locomoiive explained that It wa merely ood luck that averted a bad accident. "If the plitnn roil, after It broke, had none under the train." km Id he, "we wotifd have K'olie into llie ditch. a we were runniiiK SO mile an hour, ami the derailment would have been a rrioiit matter fortunately the broken rod lauded lx or rllit luclie ounldc of the left rail. That taved ti." TUflUINES RUN WILD. Strange. Accident Wrnck Caadnro Power Huuto, l'oillaud, June 3 All accident to the machinery at the Caadrr power plant of the I'orlland Railway. Light & Power Company early ycttrrday uorniiiK cniiied the complete wreck ing of the tatioM, entailiiiK a In of lltu.tH I"I)iiik piece of hot metal and burniiiK inulation et fire to the ImiMiiitf. deitroyiiiK iullammable part of the ilructure Two operator who were on duty at the lime had a mirac uhHi ecapc from iuitaut death The three bi water wheel "ran away," one after the other, the Ken rrator to which they were coupled llyiiiK in piece and wreckage front each machine in turn disabled the next water wheel Huge parts of the momter dvnamo were hurled through the brick watl to the nation and throtiKh the iron rrxif AIiIioiikIi the two oiieratnr on duty were rittht in thr midtt of the tlyiita: wreckage, they ocaped without u cratch. JAPAN WEAKENS. Would. End Chlnete Uoycott bf Re mlltlnf; Indemnity. San I'rancico, lunc 23 Sochita Aano, protidcut of the Toyo Kiacu Kalilu Slcainahip Company, reputed to be the second wealthiest man in Japan, rankini; next to llaron Shi Inuawa, ha arrived here en route to New York on a financial mission Speaking of the boycott awalmt Japanese Koods in China, Mr Aano aid that Japanese trade had suffered severely became of the boycott re sulting from the Tatsu Maru affair, but he did nut expect it to continue much huiKcr. The Chinese were feeling it rellex influence, ami he tliniiRht that finan cial consideration would soon out weigh tcnllinciit.il reasons A different version is brought by Thoina I-' Millard, the author, who wa a fellow-paiienger of Mr Asa no on the steamship Mongolia. Accord ing to Mr MilUrd, the Iwycott i hurling Japanese trade o ktverely thai the Kftverntnent, through the merchant of the empire, called the Cliiner merchant in japan together in order to make a proposal to end the iHtycott by remitting the indents inly exacted in the Tatsu Maru inci dent Ouried In Ancient Stale. Honolulu, Juno its The funeral to day of Prince David Kawauauakoa, who died recently in San b'ranitco. and whose body wa brought here on the steanifthip Manchuria, wa one of the 11101 imputing royal funeral ever bold in Hawaii The ceremony wa in accordance with the ancient Ha waiian usage in the case of chief. The First regiment of the National Guard of Hawaii, a detachment of the Twentieth infantry from Fort Shaflcr and marine and nallor from the battleships Maine, Alabama and St. I. mil, now in the harbor, marched in the funeral procession. Discover Big Graft. New York, June 83. After having investigated for four month the nc count and method of the office of the president of the borough of the llronx, ComiuUsloucr of Accounts Mitchell and (1 (Higher submitted .1 report which stated that "the evidence ban convinced u that the entire llroux department has for the past ix year hern administered primarily hi the political Interests of President l.ouis P llalTcn, and that to this arc ascribnlile most of the deficiencies, irregularities and departures from tlio l.i vv discovered by us Sovonteen Condemned. St. Petersburg, June 23 A man and woman have been condemned to death at Warsaw on Hie charge of being implicated In a recent attempt to kill General Skallon, governor general of Waraw, Seventeen death sentences wcr announced today from other tovvni and cities in Russia, , NEWS ITEMS FROM WASHINGTON, D. C. WANT8 PO8TAL SAVINGS DANK8 Orop.ofi Man Putt S2G.000 In Postal Money Orders, Wellington, June 87 -The largest hunch of money order ever presented In llie pnstoflicc deoarlnieiit for re demption wa received today from Mr Hcilly, of Pendleton, Or Two hundred and fifty order for f Kill each were sent in by Hcilly. wich the stale uiriit thai he bad purchased the or dir in May, IliiiT. fearing to place hi money in bank The order, be ing mure than a year old, cannot be cashed, and thr department i re pielcd to replace them with a treas ury warrant for fVfi.ooo. This will be done Thr potmalcr-gencral will cite tin case a a splendid argument in favr of the eilabliahmtnl of postal saving bank Such luk would not only havr paid the lnleret on Ihi large dVlHil, but would have aved Mr. lUilly ITS in fee which lie paid for money order TAROET ORDERS SEALED. Atlantic Fleet to Practlcn Under Un usual Condition. Wakhingloti, June 7 Thi vear' target practice of the ship of the Atlantic Heel at Magdalen my, be ginning about Novemb-r I. will be attended with imiuual condition l-'ch ship is to have sealed iiutruc lion. to b opened after the estab hthmrnt of the range. 1 hi will add to the severity of the firing and will impart an amount of anxiety wtnrli will be appreciated a having M advantage llrforc the regular target practice begin each ship will kteam pal the target and fire a limited number of hot in order that the pointer mav gri practice in shooting, but not until then will the ship's crew know at what angle the elwill pa the target or at what peed A each ship frequently ha a certain amount of ammunition left over which i not tired on i he regular run for various reason, the decision ha been reached that thi ammunition will be utilised to carry out special target practice with two or three battleships firing against a moving target towed by another battleship Waiting for Passports. Washington, June a? Mr Voloc, the Vcitciurlau charge, ha not yet been advised by hi government of the withdrawal of Mr Steeper, the American charge at Caracas Conse quently be will not apply for his pa Mirt. unless he is ordered to do so, and he doc not expect such an order Charge Sleeper has not yet reported hi departure to the state department, lit last ciblegraut from Caracas re lating to the plague situation Acting Secretary Adee Is to confer with Secretary Hoot and Assistant Secretary llacon. and will then prob ably make public the Inst diplomatic correspondence relating to the Veil ciuelau troubles. World Honors Cleveland, Washington. June Iln every part of Ine world where there i a United Stales llag floating trilmte was )clcrday uiid to the memory of Grover Cleveland. Several foreign government aevorded special honors for thr occasion American emltas tc legation and consular agencies bore 1 he Star and Slrinc at half mast, army ami navy officer, wher ever located wore a badge of mourn ing, and baiilehip, cruiser ami vet eN of our navy of every type ren dered appropriate recognition of the death of the former commander-in-chief of the army and navy. Final Orders for Fleet. AVaihingtnn, June S7 Final tailing order have Iwen given Admiral Sper ry. commander-in-chief of the Atlan tic Heel, which it 10 leave San Fran cico on it long journev around the world, on July 7. The lleet is due at Manila late in the fall, ami will stop at a number of place en route. The itinerary of the return trip by way of the Sue canal has not been finally made up, nor ha any- decision been reached a to whether the ships shall come to New York or to Hampton ItoatM on their return to the United Slates. No Trouble at Panama, Washington, Juno 2.1 Honnrlna mlvleo linvo been received bv tlio n I miiilstrntion regarding condition In Pnimmn. Despatches have roiuo from t'hu'f Ihigincer (loothnl. CnmniNtionar Ubirkbiirn nnd Ooncrnl Counsel Fiogdr, at the Utliiuinn cntial coinmlfilon. Unit en ting tlio Improbability of trouble, at tliu coming elections. Indetpomlenco Dell Tolls. Philadelphia, June J7. In memory of ox-President Cleveland the bell in the tower of historic Independence hall was tolled yesterday afternoon during the hour the funeral services were held at Princeton. Will Not Call In Bonds. Washington, June 85 Secretary Cortclyou stated today that he had no intention of taking any immediate action whatever ns to the 3 per cent Spanish war bonds of 1008-1018. SWING THE WA8TE. Paper Maknrt Looking forlCbeaper Materials. Wntlilngton, Juno 23. Tim Amrrlnnn nation lia tlio reputation for wasting almost as much of it resource a it ui, J'neta nru often advanced to show tlint tliero Is much truth In such n stntrinent. A practical papcrinnker ro con 11 ealled attention to a few of tli sourer of enormous wastn ndirn speaking of ttio number of rnalerlli In America's refine Leap willed are. worth whllu considering ns premising sulatl tutes for wood pulp. Tlio Nortliwrat annually produces- a million and a half ton of flax stilk which aro not now used for anything. Tint amount of wastn remain after tlie twinernnkrr tnko nil the want, ll inflkcs circllont ppir. The farmer in Oik Month burn or plow under 13,U0Q.r)0M ton if cot tun stalk every yrar Taut which i plowed under I "not wholly out, inr it eririrhi-i the soil to some x lnt, but not so with that which ginis up In mokr. Plvn hundred thmtMnd tons t lhr have I wn adhering to eottosi seed every ynr. It haw !! fwl to farm stoek aloag with thr, d, nrxl hut donu the tM-k ho spxHl. Cattle and skes-p do not llkx tbo flbr, and the isee I ,ake is letter without it. A machine has Wn Invented, which, it I claimed, will h nrnte the lint from the eei, PMr makrr think they ean use it. Noltody know how many millloa Ion of cornstalk go to waste; but in iptnllty they are ahead of cotton stilks, and it is Itelleved enn be made Ib'.j pa per, although it hns not yet been done on a commercial Male. Thousands of neje of wild hemp grow in the southwestern part of the country, particularly ulong the Colorado river. It only use now is to snelWr arkrabbll and coyotes, but it has 'idendM fiber, and tests on a small eeale show that excellent iMper ean lie made from it. Papermaking from straw is a well established industry. llj.'M'ind er lite thousands of tons of ctraw lxwrd. The straw which goes t wnste in Western fields would bring fortune if mailn into paper. List of fibrous or woody plant suit able for paper are without limit, but only a few ma be had in ipiantlty suf ficiently largo to be worth considering. The time ha not yet eorno whn it ! absolutely necessary that substitute for pulp wood bo found, but it is 00 til ing. Tim forests aro still able to fur nish material for paper, but tLry can not continue to do so for a great u.anv year to come, at the present rate o'f cutting nnd gronth. Makers of papr anticipate a scarcity of pulp wood, asd it I this which prompts the active search now going on for substitutes. SAVES MUCH LAND. Interior .Department Expects to Re cover $1,000,000 Worth. Washington, June 23 lit a state ment issued todjy in regard to the and conspiracy cases which resu'ted yesterday in the conviction of Fred crick A Hyde and Joost 11 Schneider and the acquittal of lohn A Benson and Henry P Diinoud, Assistant At torney General A II Pugh declares that while the trial of these four men has cost the government $ is atH), the beneficial results to the land depart ment in the future aslministrat.on of public land taws arc beyond calcula tion The net results, he says, will be the restoration to the government of more than 100,000 acres of public lauds, valued at $1,000,000. Break With Venezuela. Washington, June 85 Seuor 'e-lof-Goincoa. the Veuexuelan charge d'affaires in Washington, was a caller at the slate department today, and Interviewed Acting Secretary Adee. but the latter declined to Mate what the nature of the interview wa Mr Sleeper, the American charge at Car acas, is coming home, by direction of the stale department, and it is ad mitted that thi means the practical cessation of diplomatic relations with Vcncsucla. Will Protect Missionaries. Washington. June 34. William V Doty, American consul at Tabriz, has telcgnphcd the state department that the missionaries at Urumiah arc anx ious to have him come to the latter place. Mr. Dotv has been d-rected to consult with the officials of the American legation at Constantinople regarding the mailer, and If he can lie of any particular service to the tuissionarie. there will be no objec tion to lil going. Heavy Crops at Toppenlsb, Toppenish. A ride through the Parker bottom, Snringdalc and ZUIah fruit belt yesterday found the fruit grower in excellent spirits, with a littT prnn ,.viirrtril Tlie nnliis tin made inroad on the peaches where Spraying nan not neeii careiuny ni tended to. The apple and pear crops will be enormous. Tost Oil for Navy. Washington, June US. Oil burning furnaces arc to be Installed on the ten torpedo boat destroyers author ized bv the last naval appropriation bill This will be the first test of oil burning boilers in the army and navy- FIRE 8WEEPS MICHIGAN. Villages Are Destroyed and Hundreds Made Homeless. Detroit, June 22 Fires In North crn Michigan forests, fanned to great proportions by the gales of the last two days, have destroyed at least three villages, rendered hundreds homeless, swept over thousands of acres of timber land and caused dam age estimated at about $800,000 The heaviest loss has been sus tained in Prcsque Isle and Cheboy gan counties, although Lelanau, Charlevoix and Otsego have also suf fered. In many towns today lamps were lighted, as the sun was obscured by the heavy smoke. The village of Case, in Prcsque Isle county, was destroyed today. A spe cial train conveyed the homeless vil lagers to Onoaway, where they were sheltered tonight l.egande, a little town in Cheboy gan county, was also abandoned to the flames tonight. Many women and children were taken in wagons to In dian Kivcr. While a big fire at Wolverine today was being fought, a forest fire threat ened another section of the village. While the Wolverine department was engaged, a call for aid was received from Kondeau, three miles north. The firemen could not leave WoK venne. and Kondeau was at the mercy of the flames A hotel, several stores and houses and the Michigan Central station were burned In I.elanau county a great fire raged near Fouche. All night the glow of the Are could be seen at Traverse City, lit miles away. Several farm building were destroyed, and Fan nett's big lumber yard was wiped out Much valuable timber was burned. MONEY FOR PROHIBITION. Parly Raising Largest Campaign Fund In Us History. Chicago, June 38. The largest cam paign fund in the history of the Pro hibition party is what Charles R. Jones, chairman of the national com mittee, expects to get, and the contri butions so far indicate he is not ex pecting witlwut hope. Already more than $33,000 has been donated to "the cause," which is more than twice the largest amount ever received so early in a presidential campaign. With its unusual campaign fund, Mr Jones is willing to predict the party will cut a wider swath than it has mowed before Several have been mentioned by the Prohibition leaders as possible nominees for president. Fred F. Wheeler, a real estate dealer of Loi Angeles, Cat., who has con tributed liberally to the cause of tern ?crancc. wa the first suggested. Dr. . II Cranfill, a Uaptist minister of )allas, Tex, who was a candidate for vice-president in 1892, has also been mentioned. Alfred Manierre, an attorney of New York, and Dr. W. B. Pelmore, editor of the St Louis Christian Ad vocate, arc said to be willing to as sume the honor. SHARP NOTE FOR JAPAN' Hayes Conveys Message From Presi dent on Coolie. Exclusion. San Francisco, June 28. In a speech before the Asiatic Exclusion League of San Jose, Congressman E. A Haves delivered today what he declared to be a personal message from the president of the United States to the people of the Pacific Coast. "Two or three days after the ad journment of congress," said Mr. Hayes, "I went to the president and asked him how I should explain the absence of exclusion legislation, which I told him my constituents expected. He replied: "'I am still trying diplomacy. I am sending to Japan the sharpest cor respondence that any nation has ever received; but tell your constituents that, if I cannot get what I want by diplomacy. I will get it by exclusion legislation.'" Mr. Hayes did not state whether the presence of the licet in the Pa cific was in any way connected with the , 'esident's note to Japan. Testimony by the Mile. Helena, Mont, June 22. The -tl days' argument in the case of Fred J. Hliss against the Anaconda Copper Mining Company, known as the "smoke case, wa concluded today before Federal Judge W. II. Hunt. This is said to be the longest argu ment in the history of legal contro versies. The case was started May 3, 11)05. During the trial 20,000 pages of typewritten testimony were taken. This amounted to 0,300.000 words. Placed line to line the testimony would be ?ll miles long. The briefs consist of 3,000 pages. Menellk Names Successor. Addis Abcba, Abyssinia, June 22. The question of the ascension to the throne of Abyssinia, which has been quiescent for over a year, has been revived by an official statement from King Menelik designating his grand son, I.lg Yasu, the 12-year-old son of his daughter, Waizaru Shoa Rogga, and Has Michael as heir to the throne. RACE WAR RAGING Nine Negroes Lynched In Sabine County, Texas. REVENGE FOR DEATH OF WHITES Two Others Hurried Away for Safety Both Sides Armed and Ex pecting More Trouble. Houston, Tex., Juno 23. Nine ne groes met death last night at the bands of a mob In the vicinity of Hemphill, U Sabine count. Today bath races se cured arms and the tension Is sueb to night that a raee clash appears Immi nent. The lnehlng fallowed the killing of two white men by negroes. Two weeks ago Hugh Dean and several ether white men visited a negro ebureh and sehoolbouse, where a daneo was In progress, presumably In quest of liquor, it being the custom of some of tliu negroes to sell whisky during tbo progress of such affairs. During tb evening Dean was killed and six ne groes were bold for the killing. At the preliminary examination evi dence tending to show that tbo plot wa planned at the dance to kill Dean wa produced. Saturday last Aaron Johnsen, a prominent farmer, was a saswinated while seated at the dining; table with bis wife and child, the bul let being fired through a window. For this crime Perry Price, a negro, was arrested, and, It is stated, confessed, implicating Itobcrt Wright, a relative of one of the negroes held for Dean 'a murder. Price declared be was offered 5 to kill Johnson. Then followed the forming of a mob last night, tbo overpowering of tb-s Jailer at Hemphill, and the lynching of the six negroes held for the murder of Dean. Five were banged to the same tree, wbilo another attempted to escape and was shot to death. "Later In the night William McCoy, another negro, was shot and killed while standing at the gate of the John son borne, and this morning the bodies of two more negroes were found In tbo creek bottom. Wright, the negro who confessed to the killing of Johnson, and tbe man Implicated were taken to Beau mont for safekeeping under guard of the military company of St. Augustine. Sabine county is situated in the most remote part of the eastern section of tbe state, with sparse railroad and tele phone facilities. DYINQ FROM HEAT. Eight Dead In Chicago In One Day Police Kill Unmuzzled Dogs. Chicago, June 23. Tbe hottest day of tbe year, with the mercury standing at tl degrees, brought death and suf fering to Chicago. Eight deaths wero reported to tbe coroner's office, and beat prostrations were numerous. la addition, a mad-dog scare spread through the efty, and the chief of po lice ordered his men to shoot all un muzzled dog. A similar order issued at Morton's Park, n suburb, resulted in tbe killing of 40 dogs in a few hours. The death list today follows: Frank Cass, 35, overeome whUe worV Ing in his garden at LaGrange, a suburb. Samuel Douglas, 25, a ntgro, mado disay by bent nnd fell off a yacht into Jackson Park lagoon, drowning befora aid eould reach him. John Golden, drowned in Desplalnes river while seeking relief from heat. William Dettllng, 65 years o'd, negro, erased by the heat and committed sui cide bv 'drinking Paris preen. William Hobson, SS yeirs old, dropped dead of heart failure superin duced by heat. Baby Gunther, two weeks old, died at county hospital of heat prostration. Sarah Oskmus, 0 years old, died at Presbyterian hospital, after beat pros tration. Theodore Jr. Gets a Job. Kstello K. Ely, 13 days old, died at county hospital of heat prostration. New York, Juno 23. The Tribune to morrow will say; Theodore Booievelt, Jr., a Harvnrd junior, will have bts first expsrioneo of work this summer, mid will get that experience ns an em ploye In the United Steel Corporation. John O. Greenway, who was in tho Bough Bldor regiment in tho Spanish war, and for whom tho presldcut holds n heartv friendship, i superintendent of tin Vi'estern Mesaba department of tho Steel Corporation's oro property, Taft's Brother Coming to Coast. St. Taul, Juno 23 Henry W, Taft, brother of William II. Taft, secretary of war and nominee for president, ac companied by Mrs. Taft, Miss Louisa Taft and William II. Taft, Jr., left to night for Yellowstone Park, Portland, and Seattle. IJ8SUWWWS-;