VOL. XLVI. SO. 14,414. PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1907. PRICE FIVE CENTS. SEATTLE CLOSED TIGHT US II Mayor and Chief Slam Down the Lid. SALOONMEN FUME AND RAGE Threaten Drastic Retaliation Against Officials. FRAME RIGID SUNDAY LAW Vor the Tlrst Time In Its History, I' ii set Sound Metropolis Becomes I'll rim n PIcHMireseekcrs Flee to the Suburbs for Relief.' SEATTLE. Wash.. Feb. 17. (Special.) Mayor Moore and Chief of Police Wap penstein were served with notice, tonight, by the saloon-keepers of the city that they had Information which they submit ted against theaters, cigar stands, cafes, floral -shops and stores of various descrip tions, showing that the proprietors were violating the statute known as the "Sun day closing law,'' and that if the two of licials diJ not immediately proceed against the latter, the petitioners would prosecute for malfeasance in office. The information against the various dealers was procured shortly after a meeting of more- than 100 of the saloon keepers whose saloons were closed today by an order of Mayor Moore, acting through the Police Department. A com mittee of which YV. G. King, proprietor of the Butler Hotel, was chairman, had waited on the Mayor In the meantime and he had said: "I am merely keeping the promises I made before election, to enforce every law on the city and the state statute books." The Mayor assured the committee that he would act in the case of any viola tion of the law that they presented to him, and they immediately went to work to secure the evidence, which was sub mitted tonight . . -- Saloons to Retaliate. Back of the whole movement, as it is quietly expressed, is the desire of the saloon-keepers to so thoroughly deprive the public of pleasures and even neces sities on Sunday, that a universal demand will go up for a repeal of the state laws prohibiting the conduct of business or amusement places on Sunday. To this end bill Is being framed today seeking a repeal of the law. It will be taken to Olympla tomorrow or the day after. The first close Sunday for saloons in the history of Seattle has been observed to the letter. There has not been a single violation of the law. The order of closing came at S o'clock last night, so that there were many who knew nothing of it until they came down town today. The city streets of a Sunday are not usually well filled, but today they were overcrowded. The closing of the saloons was almost the sole subject of conversa tion. Mayor Moore's attitude by the street crowds was condemned bitterly, while in the churches remarks were at tached to the sermons, the clergymen learning of It just before entering their pulpits, in the majority of cases. Song and prayer service of special character followed, and prayers went up for a strengthening of- the chief executive's hands. Mayor Moore Is "Reacted." Below Tesler Way in the district where the flotsam and Jetsam of human life is found, the saloon Is the only home, Sun day and secular days, that many of them know. Today they were forced to stand on the streets and the picture, in a tense, was pathetic. Here only curses against "the high-hatted Mayor, who could spend his day at the club," were heard. Georgetown and Youngstown, su burban towns, where there are a number of saloons, far out of proportion to their . population, in comparison witli this city, were the spots toward which thousands went today. The Seattle Electric Com pany was obliged to place special cars In service in order to meet this demand, and almost every fellow who returned had a bottle of whisky or several bottles of beer. Reports from these suburban towns are that patrons had to be served on side walks, the barrooms being overcrowded. The result of the out-of-town pilgrimage for the usual Sunday drink was best shown at police headquarters, where up to 10 o'clock tonight 21 had been booked for drunkenness, while 10 had been taken In for disorderly conduct, growing out of drink. Iast Sunday there were but eight arrests for drunkenness In the city. There are 277 saloons in the city, all confined to the business section and the majority below Yesler Way. The propri etors and the cigar-dealers and others who are charged before the Mayor, are practically a unit on the demand for a general closing on Sunday, hoping that a deprivation of the pleasure will arouse a storm of protest that will give an abso lutely liberal law and the blotting out of the blue laws from the statute books. Itcsent Criticism With Swords. BELGRADE. Servla, Feb. 17. Three army officers, who were members of the conspiracy that resulted in the murder of Wing Alexander, In 1!K6. yesterday at tacked two nationalist deputies, Giorge vich and Marinkovlcs, because of their DRUM criticisms of the regicides and the poli tical cuurt. The assault took plaee on the street and the deputies retaliated. Glorgevich received a. dangerous sword wound. PASSENGERS ARE ALL SAFE lighters Reach Stranded Portland and Will I'nload Cargo. XANAIMO. B. G, Feb. 17. Lighters have gone to the stranded steamer Portland which struck Entrance Is land rock, last night and will take off 50 tons of cargo in an effort to raise the bow of the vessel, so that the dam age may be found out and possibly re paired. A strong northwest wind is now blowing1, but the steamer is safe from such, owing to the shelter of the head land, .-mould the wind change to the southeast the vessel will be piled upon the beach and be a total loss. The 15 passengers on board the . Portland are Jivor VV. II. Moor, of Brattle. Who Is Sitting on the I. id at Seattle. all well, and will be taken to Van couver Monday, thence to Seattle. -Following is a list of the passengers: Mrs. E. Billlngsley, Archie MrUren, Dan T. Kennedy, William Ru.wp.M, I.ouls Perro. Louis Dubers, Maria Dubers, F. H. Allen. J. E. Barrak. Mrs. Frank Leroy. Florence Nash, H. Dillman, J. w. Brown, V. Donovan, M. B. Anthony. Salvor Readies Stranded Ship. VICTORIA. B. C, Feb. 17. The steamer Salvor and tug Lome reached the steamer Portland this morning, and this afternoon salvage work was com menced. The steamer's bow and fore peak are badly damaged, and after temporary repairs have been effected she will be floated and towed to Es quimau or Seattle for permanent re pairs. . SCORES WARRIOR WORSHIP Chicago Rabbi Declares It Ha Bad Influence on the Home. CHICAGO, Feb. 17.-Rabbi "Emil M. Hersch, addressing an audience at a mass meeting under the auspices of the Na tional American Women's Suffrage As sociation today, scored the tendency which he declared prevails both in this country and abroad to make a fetish of the sol diers and glorify agents designed for the destruction of human beings. "The military idea." he asserted, "which among the earliest civilized nations caused war gods and warriors to be so absorb ingly worshiped that female children, be cause of the unfitness of the sex for war service, were destroyed at birth, is the reason why today man has not granted and refuses to grant to woman the right to vote on matters of public policy." His conception of the ideal government, he said, was one founded on the home, in which the mother and other women were endowed with the right to vote at the ballot boxes on all questions pertain ing to the government of that home and its children as well as on the larger questions. MEXICAN GOES GUNNING Kills One and Fatally Mound An other Man; Gives Himself Up. ri'EBU). Colo., Feb. 17.-A special to the Chieftain from T-!r.!dad says a double tragedy was enacted this evening when J. Tafeya, a Mexican, shot and mortallv wounded Juan Griege at . Segundo. 16 miles from here, and then rode ten miles to wreak vengeance on another at Sopris six miles west of this city, where he shot and killed an American named Grlvery. The alleged murderer at once gave him self up and was taken" to Trinidad to night, where he was lodged in the Countv Jail. The prisoner refuses to talk further than to say that he was justified In both cases. MUTE EVIDENCE OF CRIME Rody of Unknown Man Discovered With Bullet-Hole in Head. SAN JOSE. Cal.. Feb. 17. Great mystery surrounds the death of a man. whose badly decomposed body was found near here today. There Is every indica tion that a murder has been committed. The skull was crushed, and there is a bullet hole in the top of the head. The clothing was missing and there was no possible mark of identification to be found. There are signs that a terrific struggle took place. The body is that of a man, about 30 years old. SEND GEN. GREELY WEST Commander of Lakes to Be Returned to Vancouver Barracks. OREGONIAN NEWS BURBA t?. Wash ington, Feb. 71. Brigadier-General A. W. Greely. formerly Chief Signal Officer, and now commander of the Department of the Lakes, has requested transfer to Van couver Barracks, and has been assured he will be placed In command of the Department of Columbia In June or July next. It was rumored last Summer that General Greely would be assigned to this command. if tfss x I ' - " I - s 1 " ' TRAGEDY FOLLOWS DIVORCE DECREE Ex-Wife Shot By Van couver Man. BLOWS OUT HIS OWN BRAINS Jealousy Drives Louis Mazo retsky to Awful Crime. WOMAN'S WOUNDS FATAL last Qoaiw-I Results From Her Re fusal to Continue Longer Under Roof of Former Spouse. Leaves Large Family. VANCOUVER. Wash., Feb. 17. (Spe cial.) After shooting his divorced wife four times, inflicting fatal wounds, Louis Mazoretsky, a well-to-do second-hand dealer of Vancouver, this morning at 2 o'clock at the ramily home sent a bullet through his brain, killing himself instantly. The fact that his fami ly had been disrupted, and information he received last night that He had been indicted by the Federal grand jury at Tacoma for having purchased stolen Gov ernment goods from soldiers at Van couver Barracks, combined to inspire Mazoretsky's act. The couple had four children, the eldest being a daughter, Ida. IS years of age, who until recently at tended the Behnke-Walker Business Col lege in Portland. A divorce was granted Mrs. Mazoretsky last week by Judge Mc Credle, of the Superior Court at Van couver. " For several years there had been strife in the Mazoretsky family, Mr. Mazoretsky charging that his wife had been . unduly Intimate with other men. They had re peated quarrels and on more than one occasion the authorities were compelled to Interfere. Not until recently did . they agree upon a divorce, and It was granted to the wife upon the grounds of non support. . An eons-l .division of 'the1 prop erty, which Includes a business block in the heart of the city and valuable lots," was agreed upon. Mazoretsky had declared that his wife was not faithful to him and they would have separated long ago had it not been for the children. He was a lover of his home and when he learned that by the terms of the divorce decree his wife would have the custody of the three younger children Eddie, Harry and Marcus, 12, 3 and & years of age respectively he became despondent. Although they had obtained a legal separation they continued to live together at the family home, but today they had Intended to divide the household effects. Hears of His Indictment. Yesterday Mazoretsky received word that he had been indicted by the grand jury and, realizing that conviction meant a term In the penitentiary, his despond ency gave away to despair. Last night he seemed in better spirits and in com pany with his ex-wife, his daughter Ida, a soldier by the name of Jim Wallace and Joseph Freisleben he came to Portland. The party attended the theater and later went to a dance at -Merrill's Hall. Mr. and Mrs. Mazoretsky and their daughter reached home this morning at about 1:45 o'clock. Ida wpnt upstairs to go to bed, but the elder Mazoretskys, who had been drinking, according to Freisle ben, renewed their quarreling. Mazorets ky pleaded with his wife to remain at HMUKER OF AS 1X1 K.1 ft s - 1 J- - 4 i v EVENTS OF COMING WEEK House and Senate Busy. Appropriation bills are expected to occupy the attention of the House the "coming week, "and on Wednesday the Senate .will vote on the Smoot . resolution. It is expected that there will be night sessions of the House and Senate- this week. .President Roosevelt, will leavs -Washington late in the week 'for a brief visit to his "sons, who are study ing, at ; Harvard University and the ' Groton School in Massachusetts. Kvel.vn Thaw to Take Stand. It Is expected the trial of Harry . Thaw for the murder of Stanford White will be resume this (Mon day) morning. Evelyn Nesblt Thaw probably will go on the witness stand i during the early part of the week to continue the recital of her life story. - James Bryce, the new British Am bassador to America, and Mrs. Bryce are passengers on board the steamer Oceanic, which Is due to reach New York AVednesday or Thursday. Chess experts of Great Britain and the United States will play a series of games by cable on Friday and . Saturday. The annual convention of American Newspaper Publishers' . Association will open in New York City Monday and continue throughout the week. Crisis In French Cabinet. The phase of the French separation taw controversy dealing with the terms of leasing churches, w hich was in fair progress of being solved, has brought about a breach in the French Cabinet and it appears doubtful whether the Ciemenceau Ministry can . survive the coming week. The first elections to Parliament under the new Transvaal elections will be held February 20, and the Boers have great prospects of ob- taining a working majority in the House of Representatives. The new German Reichstag will meet February 19. the home to care for trie cnlldren, but she 'declared that she Intended to leave him in the afternoon and take the chil dren. Without warning Mazoretsky drew a 3S-caliber revolver from his pocket and began shooting at his former wife. 'Four times he fired and four bullets struck Mrs. Mazoretsky, who fell on a sofa In the sitting-room. Then he deliberately placed the revolver behind his right ear and fired, and the last bullet In the pistol passed through his head and lodged In the ceiling. At the first shot Ida ran downstairs. From the stairway she could see her father shooting with the revolver, but her mother was hidden from her sight. Clad only in her night clothes, Ida ran out into the street screaming for help. Stumbles Over a Corpse. ' Policeman I.'C. Cresap was Dut a block distant ana was attracted to the scene of the tragedy by the shots and the screaming of the daughter. He entered the house and stumbled over the dead body of Mazoretsky. At first he thought tlie woman was dead, but he discovered signs of life and had her removed to St. Joseph's Hospital. One bullet, enter ing the back of her neck, had lodged In, her head, another had passed through her cheek, a third had pierced her right arm and the fourth had entered her back and Imbedded itself near the kidneys. At the hospital tonight it was reported that the woman could not live. This afternoon Coroner J. R, Smith held an Inquest and the decision of the Jury was that Mazoretsky came to his death at this own hands. Officer" Cre sap and Ida Mazoretsky were the only witnesses to testify. Four brothers of Mazoretsky were present at the Inquest. They intimated that perhaps Frelsland, who is a bar tender, and who rooms at the Mazo retsky home, despite the protests of the head of the house, so It Is alleged, had a hand In the affair, but the au thorities say that this suspicion is en tirely unfounded. Frelsland had been In the house a short time previous to the quarrel, but when ' the shooting occurred was outside, though within earshot of the scene. The four brothers all live In Port- tConcluded on Page 8.) .tiv-.-a.'-m'-- A PASSEC,tR TRAIN I.VIXti OS ITS SIDE PASSENGER UN HITS BROKEN RAIL Five. Injured By Wreck Near Houlton. THREE CARS LEAVE THE TRACK Smoker Turns on Side and Throws Occupants in Heap. NOBODY IS FATALLY HURT Morning Train J-'rom Astoria in Sinii.-li-Vp on the Northern Pa cific Line About Thirty Miles 'North of Portland. TICE IXJIRED. J. E. G. Povey, president Povey Bros'. Glass Company, 504 Tillamook street; cut over eye end bruisei about hip. E. C. Webber. SIJi, Williams ave nue: bruised back and sroin. Fred Angle, news agent, rooms New Grand Central Hotel, Portland; gash in scalp behind ear and bruised back. H. Hasklne. Oregon City; nose and ankle cut. bruised hip. Ben Sullivan, porter, lives 1 0 Elev enth street north; cut on ankle. t Train No. 21, of the Astoria & Columbia River Railroad, was derailed near Houl ton on its way to Portland at 11:13 yes terday morning. The smoker, chair car and parlor car left the rails and plunged into the ditch. Five persons were Injured, none of them fatally. The passengers were brought on to Portland in the baggage car and were met at Linnton by the wrecker, which had started for the scene under the charge of Superintendent Mt-Guire of the A. & C. as soon . as the news of the accident reached Portland. I. L. H. Hamilton, with stretchers, surgical instruct ,.uts and first-aid remedies, was on , tlw relief train and attenaed to the injured at I.Inn ton. He took the wounded passengers to St. Vincent's' Hospital, with the exception of Mr. Povey, who went to his home. Late last night all were resting easily and Dr. Hamilton expects no serious conse quences. The derailment occurred a mile and a half west of Houlton, In a cut. The track curves at this point and the broken rail was on the inside of the curve. The train was in charge of Conductor Bircher and Engineer Stoner The latter felt the shock of the three rear cars leaving the rails and immediately applied the emergency air brakes. This brought the whole train to a stop within its own length. Smoker Turns on Side. The smoker left the track and bowled along the edge of-the cut, shaving off the edge of the embankment. It then turned squarely on its side and brought up with a crash of splintered glass. All those who were injured were in this car. Those sitting on the right side of the car found themselves thrown heavily against the windows, which were underneath, while passengers ana baggage rained down from the other row of seats upon them. The day coach plowed along close be hind the smoker for 15 yards and then broke loose. It did not turn over, but buried Its , nose in the bank. The parlor car was the least injured but it suffered partial defacement. r. iii- BY THE TRACK. Passengers in this car were only fright tened and none was hurt. It is considered fortunate that the wreck occurred where It did, as had there been a fill at that point the three cars would have toppled over the em bankment. M. P. Marius, stenographer In the Northern Pacific passenger offices, was In the smoker when the crash came. He said the car was well filled and ex pressed surprise afterward that many were not killed. Story of Passenger. "The train was not winning very fast at the time of the derailment," said lie. "Ail at once we began jolting over the ties and we all realized we were off the track. Suddenly the car began to scrape along the bank at the edge of the cut. I then took a firm hold of a seat and began to look out for flying glass. Soon the car turned over on its side and passengers from the other -row of seats dropped on top of us. The car slid a short distance with its win- It. 4 "V- General A. TV. Greely. Who Will Be. Transferred to Command of Van couver Bnrrark. dows in the mud and the trucks still whirling uselessly In the air. We brought up with a nasty jolt and we began digging ourselves out of the wreckage and ' congratulating each other on our narrow escape. "It wa3 a luiky accident, if there Is any such thing, for had the derailment occurred almost anywhere else on the line, tnere would certainly have been a loss of life. The cut prevented the cars from falling down a grade or into the river, which might have been the case had the rail broken at aJiy one of a thousand other points on the line." Woman Saves Her Goldfish. A woman in the chair car was carry ing a glass globe of goldfish when the crash came. . little water slopped over the edge of the bowl, carrying with It one of the goldfish, which wrig gled' helplessly on his back for a mo ment on the floor of the car, but was soon rescued by Its owner. The glass jar and the fish were none the less for the wreck. Trainmen say the accident was one of those things which cannot be success fully guarded against. The train was only five minutes behind Its schedule at the time and was In the hands of an engineer who Is known by the ope rating officials as a very careful loco motive driver. The Hpeed being made was not reckless or unusual. The A. & C. trains make 40 and SO miles an hour on the Northern Pacific track be tween Portland and Goble. The train derailed is said to be the fastest train that runs over that track. No I.uik Ii for Hungry Passengers. A number of passengers on the wrecked train did not catch the bag gage car when it came on to Portland with the passengers and were com pelled to wait at Houlton until 6 and the Northern Pacific train No. 7 came along. During their stay in Houlton, they could not buy even a piece of chewing gum, a condition due to the stringent Sunday law now In force in Columbia County. Hungry (Concluded on Page 12.) CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER Th Wrnthrr. YESTKRDA Y'K Maximum temperature, 31 dfiRrpes. minimum, :t'J. TODAY'S Fair; northerly winds. Foreign. Gigantic nntl-clorlcal demonstration In Kome.. Page 2. tiultan renders satisfaction to German gov- . ernment. Pare 3. Japan considers compromise on pchool ques tion too high a price to pay. Page .'!. National. rnoot. of T'tah. will be sustained by Senate vote. Page 2. Utah Methodist, minister snores Senator K nox for his stand on Smoot question. Page 2. Schmitz party to remain In Washington un til passage of immigration bill. Page 3. Iometlc. Stories of cats of high and low degree, by Has kin. Page 1. No light yet on cause of frightful wreck on Nw York electric railway. Page. 2. Anarchists. Socialists and union labor hold Mover - Hey wood - Pettlbone demonstra tions. Page 5. Figures show Americans are drinking less champagne than usual, page 3. Quarrel among Thaw's attorneys settled and lelmas will continue as chief counsel. Page 3. Pacific Coant. Laws Washington peopl xprrt'pd the 1Vg:s lature to pass are fitting enags at Olym pia. Page 4. Oregon Legislature has a busy week ahead. Page 4. LouIk Mazoretsky fatally wounds wife and commits suicide at Vancouver, Wash., Page 1. For the first time in history Seattle is a closed town. Page 1. Italian murdered on O. R. N. train, thought to be Mafia victim. Page 4. Portland and Vicinity. Passenger train bound from Astoria for Portland wrecked near Houlton and five injured. Page 1. Co-operative .City Club plans to organize with 1000 members. Page S. Dr. Brougher preaches on heredity at White Temple. Page 8. roll Meal pot simmering in Portland. Paga FANGY CUTS ID COMMON TABBIES Felines andTheir Place in World's History. BIG PROFITS IN CAT FARMS Aristocratic Persians Sell for More Than Good Horses. TABBY A GODDESS IN EGYPT I.O.-I Ilor Precise During the Middle Aeps and Whs Burned Willi Witches Her Place In Marl time Law of England. . BV FREDERIC J. HASKIS. WASHINGTON. Feb. 12. (Special Cnr-respondPnce.)-A few -week's ago I hap pened to drop In at the Madison-Square Garden In New York while a cat show was in proRress. As I approached a sroup of ladies who were inspecting a good Ionking. Rood-natured feline. I heard one of them remark: "All rlfrht, I will give J150 for him." The business-like . young lady made a notation in her note book, and I noticed that this was not the first sale she had made. It seemed to me that if cats were selling for as much as good horses nowadays, it was a subject that would bear looking1 Into. The business-like young lady tnU me lots of things about cats that I had not heard before. She said that while cnt raising In America for profit was a com paratively new industry, there are now catteries in New York. Massachusetts. New Jersey, Pennsylvania. Connecticut, Maine, Illinois, District of Columbia. Michigan. .Ohio. Indiana, am California. There Is one establishment in Los An geles which nets its owner fnuflO a year. Cat shows are held annually In New York. Boston. Rochester, Cleveland. Chicago. Detroit and Toronto, with from 2(ij to 3f0 entries otv fine ypecljhns n: each exhibition. k- Kcfuse Offer or SI 000 for Cat. The rarest kinds of cats raised in the United States are the Manx, the Persian, the Siamese, and the Mexican, though plain, everyday tommies and tabbies are raised and shipped by the carload to California and New Guinea, where rats are plentiful and cats few. The price of the best specimens rangcx from $l to $1.10, while kittens of off-color for house pets can be had for loss. Tho owner of one One American rat called King Hum bert refused $1X)0 for him, and a record offer of ten times as much lias been made for a prize winner in Kngland. The aristocrats of the cat world are the Persians, which come from tho cold table-lands of Central Asia, and from tho mountain regions of Turkey. In Turkey they are called Angoras, and in Persia, Persians. The first were brought to the Atlantic seaboard of America by sailors who had touched! at Kastern ports, 'but as a breed they have degenerated on this side of the water. In the center of Turkey one can buy a cat for M cents or $1. which would sell in the United States for from $.10 to $1X). A six-months old kitten from Kngland costs from $S to $;W, and the cost of ita passage is $5 extra. One Cat's Tx-gaoy $40,00-0. The cat fancy in this country was started 30 years ago when Mrs. Locke, of Chfcago, began to Import, breed and sell long-haired cats, using the income for private charities. I.ong-halred cats are divided into classes according to their color, tho most popular of these seeming to be the light silvers and tho blue-eyed whites. The original color of the cat Is aid to have been brown, marked with black and showing a white nose, chin and breast. This seems quite probable, as it is difficult to breed cats without a brownish touch appearing in their color. One of the best cats ever shown at the New York show was a solid orange. The Department of Agriculture recognizes two kinds of cats, long-haired and short haired, the former being the ones im ported from Turkey and Persia, and their descendants, and the latter, or short haired 'ariety. being the domestic, Manx, Siamese, Russian, etc. The richest cat in the world is "Blackie," who lives in Wilkesbarre. Pa., In a tw-o-story. 12-room house all his own. The late Benjamin F. Dilley left his bouFe. and 140.000 to his "two best friends, the cats Blackie and Pinkie." Shortly after wards Pinkie died, and then Blackie cam Into the whole fortune. He has a woman attendant to wait on him all the time, has a fur-lined basket to sleep In, soft couches and chairs scattered about to meet his lazy demands for more rest, and a diet of shrimps. Italian chestnuts, cream and anything else that the taste of a pampered cat might require. He is old now, quite IS, but despite this his dally mail is still large. There are scores of people who write letters giving advice about new foods, new amusements and new recreations for his catship. There are two fortunate eats In Los Angeles who live In a hotel with their mistress and have a special maid to wait upon them. Have Saved Ships to Owner. Cats have not been without distinction in the affairs of nations. More than once Pussy has saved a vessel for Ha owner because, under the marine laws of Eng land, no vessel that has been abandoned 'Concluded on Page 2.)