Full Leased Wire Dispatches Today's News Printed Today - '1 - 1 - I- i 1 ? 0 .a i THIRTY-SEVENTH YEAR SALEM, OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1914 TirTrT7 rpiirrk nr'XTrrCJ ON TRAINS AND NEWS "' " V AO STANDS FIVE CENTS WASHED ONE BY ONE FROM WRECKED SHIP WENTY . San Francisco, Nov. 24. teen survivors aboard, the revenue cutter McCulloch docked here shortly before noon today, after an all-night light witn tne sea oft JJuxburv reef, where the steam schooner Hanalei was hammered to pieces with a loss of more man zv lives. As she steamed throueh loch was met by the revenue quarantine boat Argonaut, nurses. After takine these ed straight to pier ID, where ten ambulances were waiting to rush the more seriously injured and shocked survivors 10 nospitais in me city. , A great throng waited on the quay, and could be re strained with difficulty from rushing aboard the McCul loch after the gangplank was let down. Tear-stained wo men and children, asking for relatives and friends, storm ed the McCulloch's officers as they forced their way down the gangplank to clear a way for the long line of litter bearers carrying wreck victims to the ambulances. As soon as the ambulances had departed, the crowds were allowed on board to view the dead. Men and women wept when they passed from one body to another and peered into the still faces in the hope that they could iden tify friends and relatives who had been counted among the lost. But few of the living victims of the Hanalei wreck were suffering from anything worse than shock. But when the Golden Gate and Argonaut met the McCulloch with their crews of doctors and nurses, the survivors pre sented a pitiful sight. Everything that could be done for them by the McCulloch officials had been done, but the effects of their terrible battle with the sea were still viv idly apparent. Most of the survivors on the McCulloch were hysterical from their awful experience. Stories of Survivors. cod vessel in such a way as to aid. Fi- Avronling to tln McCulloch officials I irnHy Captain Nelson, of the Golden there were BS persons on board the I Out,- lifosnving station, ubundoned the Hhii:iIki, nnil tin. number lo.it in ft ill n effort alter tint wireless man on the muter or conjecture. It is not oven i Known nil yet now ninny were taken I 1 rom tne wrprk in safety ilore ore stories tuM by two of the. survivors: I was on the after-deck," suid J. I. Mason, "which is the holiest part of the ship, when she began to local, up. The waves, pounding likt. tliundei against her sides, threatened her com piete destruction every minute. On, I particularly lug ,wnve cut a big por tion of the deck limiy. and left me clinging to a door in tin- witter some distance from the boat. -Another wnvi wrestetl this poor support from my luivds, and, nearly unconscious from c -le i-ml the awful torture of the thing, 1 grubbed at a portion of a stateroom that was floating by. I remained on this until the .McCulloch pi, keil me up two hours Inter." Saw Them No More. Ahs, . Goldi'iuger, of .-lii Fr:uicieo, said: "When (he boat began to break up I climbed to the lop of the pilot house with it crowd of eight or ten persons. This rel'i.ge, weal cued by the battering of the n liters, was cut clean nwuv bv u big wave. 1 don't Uno,v what 'hup. pencil to the others who were with mo. 1 tu-M-r saw n single one of them aft 01 ward. "When 1 wns flung from th:- Up nt the pilot house into the water 1 thought I was gone sure, lint a big log floated by, mid 1 grubbed ho'd of it nod el uti to it until the M, I'ulloch picked liio up, "'I he i tempts made by the poor creatures to keep a hold oil that slip pery pil.'t liuiife, with the waves bout lug In their faces, was awful, Hume loid the most terrible expressions of horror on their fries when they went down niter trying in vain t.i reach something tlmt would keep them llllollt," liuiidrcdii Stand Helpless, Kun Francisco, Nov, 21, From 2H to HO lives have been lust In the wreck of the steam 1.11001101' llnnulel o'i lux bury reet, outside (he Golden tl-ite, no. ivrding to teletilioae ndviees received here at S o'clock this morning front HSH At that hour, about -0 persons hnd reached the shore on pieces of wreck - age. tine by one they struggled through the sntf nut, I shortly alter dawn, when the terrific pounding ol'', t ,... ..,.1 ... '. 1. the wmcii broke up the oid crnl't and she went to pieces, It wns believed prolmble that nt least :I0 hit I perished of the 8" who were nbonrd the Hann lei ns passengers nnd crew. Wireless Men BUyed. Ml night long the lifesnving crews from the viclniti fought to snve ttiox nn the wrecked ship. Lines from a huge mnrtnr rushed by tuitoniobile from Hnn Frnnrlseii were shot again and ngaln, but not one landed on the doom- LOSE LIVES With fifteen dead and thir the Golden Gate, the McCul cutter Golden Gate and the loaded with doctors and aboard, the relief shiD steam lliinnloi Im.l ticked out: "Good live. The Hanalei is break- ling UP. " All alone the bench lifesavers nnd 'hundreds if persons from Holinus 'scoured the ahi.ro r.ll night scanning 'the waves for tin- sign of a head or an iarm which would tell that another piece of houicn jetsam was fighting for .land and life through the breakers. Hv sunup nearly a (-core of the Harm- lei's passengers and crew had reached shore on rafts and spurs, Homo of then .were too far gone to be revived and ; tiled on the shore when their bodies Micro pulled out of the waves. Others I were det d when their bodies touchou j the bench, ! Ho grout wns the expanse of the beai h over which the victims of the I w reck and their dead bodies were drift ling nsliid-e that at 8 o'clock it was itn Ipcs.dMe to give definite figures of the ' number lost All Efforts railed. I Wh-n the liunulci parted at 4:10 o'clock this morning, Hut wreck broke (Continued on I'ngo Five.) SITUATION IN ASIA . . SATISFIES BRITISH I.omiIoii, Nov, CI. Willi Ihe import lint Asiatic. Turkish town of Hunan rail, sixty -idles north of the head of the l'l-Mian gulf, already occupied bv a llritish force and the sultan's garri sons of both Hassurah ami Hiigdad, some Ur.il miles to the northward, ro. treating tin the Tigris, the situation in that ipiartor of the Ottoman empire wtis regarded highly satisfactory tuda; from the allies' standpoint, ' Hntsnrnli, It was stated, was occupied last Stitiinltiy. It was said Unit It was prol vtrd by the Krilish river gun-ho-its's en nn i hi and no difficulty was iiutiolontcd in holding it. During t'-e several days' resistance they made, the Turks were reported to have lot henvily, lenving many oi their wounded in the Unions' hands. 1 . . CO BACK TO ' WORK IN STEEL MILLS 1 ' ,,,,, , Nov, -,.Tw0 ,,! . ,, Wllru ,,,,. ,, , , . meat enrlv lust work at the Houlh Chlcngo plnul of the h 1 . 1 ill u 1 r . 11 1 im-ii .1, Illinois ft eel company tndny when the tail -and structural mills were re opened. Arthur II. Young, superinten. dent of liilm- nt the mills, was author ity lor lite statement that the mills would be running to capacity In a few weeks. T.i convince youiself thnt you are lust 1 little better than your neighbor, that Is easy. Met German Vessels and Had Warm Fight, One Probably , Heard at Coos Bay Portland, Ore., Nov. 24 After weeks of silence the mystery surrounding the activities of the Canudian navy, con sisting of the gunboat Kainbow, has come to toe surface. According to in formation, received here today from sources fluid to be reliuble, she mot the Herman cruiBers I.eipsic and Nurnborg on tho high sens ami escaped "by the skin of her teeth," and after a large number of her crew had bei-u wounded, only through the reinforcement of the French cruiser Montca'm. Tho Rainbow, according to the story, met with the Lcipsic and Nurnberg and put up a stiff battle although the odds wero much against her. Hho was getting tho worst of it when the French cruiser ilontcnlm appeared on the scene, and the Germans, after fir ing a few shots, steumed away in the race or tho enemy's superior anna mcnt. Bo effective was the German fire thnt the Rainbow was completely dis abled, tho Montcalm being compelled fn ...II. lini In. n iUn 1 ' i. .. .1 i n .! ll.l 111:1 JII.VI IIIU VUUUUIUIL UUYUI base at Esquimau. She i9 said to be in drydock thefc now undergoing extensive repairs while tho mujority of her crew, wound ed in the engagement, are in tbo hos Vital. Due to the strict censorship which prevails in Canada, the story of the battle was never made public and only leaked out thrcugh nn unguarded state ment of an Englishman acquainted with tne tacts. Innsmich ns the cannonading h'rard off Coos Bay several weeks ago has nover been satisfactorily explained, it is believed highly probable that those who heard the booming of guns wore not mistaken and that it was the en gngement between the Kainbow and the two Oerninn ships. El Governor Would Make "Fear ful Example," Would Like to Hang Them in Park Phoenix, Ariz., Nov. 24. December It' will bo the most gruesome day Arizona's history unless Governor Goo. W. 1'. Hunt relents 111 his determination to kill 11 men together ns a terrible object lesson to the voters who defeat ed ut tho recent election his measure to abolish capital punishment. The governor remained adamant to day and turned a deaf ear to hundreds 11.' petitions nnd doniniuls from churches, civic organizations nnd citizens. The 1 1 men who will go to their death December 111 nre murderers whom the governor reprieved that thoy might have the chance for life the proposed abolition held. Six nre Americans and five are Mexicans. 'Jjiey are impris j oned nt the Florence penitentiary, where three other murderers ulso await the dentil that will come siijii after tin new year. " 1 stand where 1 did when 1 decided upon this sti'p," Governor Hunt said today. "The people huve said that they want this thing, nnd 1 think I shall see that they hnve. their wish. If the infliction of the deulli penalty Is meant to be on object lesson, let us make It ns thorough us possible. 1 fa vor n public execution for the II men; it would be better ti. hold the death cnitilvul In n ptilili- square where all the people the women and children could see every detail. "And when these men are sent into darkness together, I hope every man and woman who voted to kill them will realize that he has helped to talte a hiiiuati life. I hope every one will feel n personal guilt. If Arizona is to be held up to'the eves of the world in such an iwlul light, it Is her people who Un responsible. ' ' IF SIEGEL PAYS UP HE WILL GO FREE Gciien'o, X, Y., Nov. St. Substantial restitution to 1.1,000 F.nst Hide depos itors in the private bunk operated bv the defunct Siegel Mutes corporation will snve Honey Hiegel, convicted here yesterday of grand larceny, from serv lug 1 sentence of 10 mouths in jail. This wns the interpretnlina place. 1 flny upon tin- sentence Imposed by lust ice 1 lark or the state supreme court. It was predicted thnt Chicago irn-tiiis would raise a hunt- sum to Pav the bunks depositors and some of the concern s creditors. Hiegel broke down as lie stood before .lust ice I lurk tn be sentenced, lie prom ised to make complete restitution. "I shall go to Chicago immediately," he said, "aud begin again at the but 1 torn, 1 expect to moke good, too." RUSSIANS urn DECISIVE VICTORY THE VISTULA Declare Kaiser's Forces Un der General Yon Hindcn burg Were Repulsed ARMY WAS CUt IN TWO ALL ARE IN RETREAT Also Claim to be Beating the Turks Germans Deny Russian Story lit THE GERMAN STOET Berlin, via The Hague, Nov. 21. The war -office continued to insist today that the situa tion in tho eastern field of war .was favorable to the Germans. It was admitted that the cear's army in Hussion Poland had recoived reinforcements and this, it was said, was delaying the end but every confidence wns expressed of a final Gorman victory, "Certain strategic, move ments," it was explained, were necessary. Vienna dispatches were quot ed to the effect that the bnttle between the Austro-Gerinan troops and the Hussions along the line from C'zenstochowo to Cracow continued without a decisive result in sight. As Russians Tell It Fotrogrnd, Nov, 24. Not only a vic tory but a decisive ono wns reported horo today betwoen tho Vistula nnd Warthe rivers by the Hussinns over the German invaders under General Von llindenburg. Tho kaiser's forces wore declared to have been repulsed everywhere and one aueouiit was tnut they wero cut in two, one uoily retreating to the northwest nd the other to tho southwnrd. Two German regiments wero Baid to have been captured bodilv. It wns also again reported thnt Cra cow, which the KussjHiis were suid to oo bombarding, was in flames. All News Favorable. Petrusvad, Nov. 24. "Favorable news front the front, between tho Vls tula and tho Wurtho rivers, where tho Germans had retreated," was officially announced here today. Other Recounts wero to the effect that the (ioniums, who had progressed as inr as i.ouz on tneir march cast wnnl into Kussia, hnd fallen bnck to Sadok, 2.'i miles west of tho former town, nn important retirement short a time, That n renewed German bombard ment of tho port of Idiom was in progress wns admitted. "They have made a special target," said the of ficiul statement, "of tho most rmmilous an. 1 open parts of the town. A great niinihor 01 peaceable Inlinliitiints, a mn jority or whom wero women and chii ilren, have fallen victims to Geiiunii barbarism." Of tho campaign against tho Turks, It was announced: "Russian advance pnrlles continue, to repulse the enemy. Hevernl cnlsnons of an ammunition train hnve been enp tu red south of Knrakllisse and Alasc jgetd. Kiigiigeineiils ngninst the k'.irds, who hnve been reinforced bv Turkish regulars, hnvo been favorable to us. "The Turks have been defeated i tho region of the Khnnnesur Heigh nnd the Dilmnn nnd Kntntir Hills, th Russians capturing part, of their artillery." SHE RILLED HER HUSBAND ueno, i-iev., nov, iieio in con nection with the dentil of her husband Rudolph Jensen, whose body wns found in a field Ktindny with a bullet wound In tho licnd, Mrs, Anna Jensen con fessed early today that she killed her husband bei-misn she thought he Intend ed to desert her, according to Ulierlff Hurke, A doctor testified nt the Inquest over Jensen's body Hint Mrs. Jensen wub of unsound mind. Tonight and Wednesday prob ably rain north west portion; southerly winds. - I "nri nr Ti I me w earner 'NO MINISlWft Saw Jhqu io ) His Army In Possession, and He Is Expecte'd to Arrive There by Thursday Washington, Nov. 24. Provisional President Carranza of Mexico was ex pected to establish his headquarters at vera v.ruz either tomorrow or Thurs- Jay, according to dispatches received here today. Advices received here indicate that General Villa's entry into Mexico City win not be opposed, various ambas sadors who have expressed anxiety con cerning the safety of foreigners there have been told that no opposition to villa was anticipated and that Villa had ordered the summary execution of any soldier caught looting. It was under stood that if General Villa finally gains control in Mexico England will attempt to reopen tne Benton case. Two Battleships There. Vera Cruz, Mex Nov. 21. The bat tleships Texas and Minnesota, anchored oitsido the harbor, wero the only Biirns of American authority remaining here lotiay. ueneral Aguilar, commanding 9000 Carranzistns, wns in complete charge of the city. General Carranza was expected to establish his headquar ters in Vera Cruz either tomorrow or Thiirsdav. General Aguilnr said ho intended to continue General Funston's plan of gov ernment. All saloons, ho said, will re main clnied until a stable government is cstnuiisncii. OFFICIALS IN PORTLAND. Portland, Oro., Nov. U. Newcomb Carlton, president of tho Western Union Ix-legruph company, 11 ml a party of New lorn niul Sim j-rancisco olttcials of the snme company, are 111 Portland 011 a tour of inspection. Managers from the larger cities in Oregon met President Carlton here and discussed the present and future requirements of tho Western Umou 111 tne stute. HAL Appeal From Mexico City Causes Him to Change Plans and Start at Once El Puso, Texas, Nov. 24. Military and civil authorities of Mexico City appealed toduy to General Villa to hur ry there nnd take charge of the cupi till, according to ndviees received here. This plea caused Villa to change his plans, ill! immediately started cnvulr) forces to Mexico City overland from (jueretnro. Villa announced he nlso probably would leave at onco for the capitul. The work of repairing the railroad to Mexico City continued to duy and Villa's infantrymen will be moved to the capital as soon as this work is completed. All telegraph lines connecting Gnnd alnjura with the outside wurld were down today and it wns impossible to learn the outcome of the buttle there. General Uliineo, military Commander of Mexico City, wired General Gutier rez that he ami his army would sup port the officers iiumed by the Agnus Caliet.tes peace convention. It was also retiortcd that General lllanco had arrested (ieaeials Hay, Obregun niul Villnrenl, Ctirranzistii comniiinilers, Isidro Fabela, Cnrraiizn's foreign min ister, denied the report, saying (Ion erul Obregon wns freo nnd was load ing a large force ngnlust Villa. Generul Muclovlo llerreru, who re cently repiidinted General Villa, has i 11 vn il iil Honoriij going to the assist once of General Hill ut Xaco. GERMAN DESTROYER IS FORCED TO INTERN I.O'idon, Nov. 24. The Oernmu de stroyer disabled Midday night III col lision with the Inmish ' steniiisalp Anglo-Dime off 1'iilsterbo, hweden, wns niul -istood here today to have been in terned in rlwcdish wntors. The dnmiiged vessel would have sunk had it not been benched immediately, so Ihe two other German torpedo craft who went td its r ue towed It Inshore ut once, hicept for the chief engi neer, who was so bsdly Injured In the collision thnt .ie ilicu on board tho Anglo-Dune, the wrecked torpedo boat's crew wns saved. It was expected that the crew of the German submarine l'-IH, which wns rammed by a llritish petrolling vesmd a flng of truce. so badly damaged that It sank a few minutes after all but one of those on bonrd hnd been rescued, would shortly be lnniled at some (Scottish port null sent to a prison camp, It is all right to dream of the great things you nre going to do, but don't forgot to wake up in time to begin work, S TUATION IS SERIOUS FOR GERMAN ARMY IN RUSSIAN POLAND By Ed L. Keen. London, Nov. 24. Grandduke Nicholas' Slav forces held the advantage today in Russian Poland. General Hindenburg and his German followers were at least tem porarily on the defensive. A Russian retreat against the . Teutonic left wing had compelled a re-formation of the kaiser's front. . . ! '4. To accomplish the necessary re-disposition of his troops, Von Hindenburg had been forced to retire some what. In doing so, it was stated unofficially at Petro grad that he had suffered heavily. The Russians were understood here, to outnumber the Germans two to one, but it was said the Germans excelled the Russians from the standpoint of mobility. They were using great trains of automobiles to trans port men and supplies. The cars were fitted with flanged wheels to fit the railroad tracks where there were any; in other places broad, heavy wheels adapted to easy going over poorly-kept highways or the open fields, were sub stituted. Conditions were believed here to be more favorable to the Germans than when they first advanced into Russian Poland. Then the country was a vast marsh, in which their big guns and heavy transport wagons were con stantly bogging down and in some cases having to be abandoned. Now the ground was trozen hard and their massive equipment rumbled easily over it. Russian cavalry was constantly harassing the Teu tonic flanks. General Von Hindenburg was believed here to face a serious situation.. British military experts did not in dorse the view that he had suffered a defeat, but they did hold the opinion that he was in danger of one, and defeat, in his situation, they argued, would be not only defeat but overwhelming disaster. . ' WHERE FAMINE EEIQN3 London, Nov. 21. Pathetic. stories of the sufferings of Hell ijt giiim's famine victims worn ijt telegraphed to the Belgian relief jt commission hero today by tho l New York Christian Horuld's ijt representative In Hottcrdain. "At Antwerp," he said, tell- lug of what ho himself suw on a visit to the stricken region ( to aid in the distribution of sup- )e piles " 1 00 scantily clad women stood in the snow awaiting food. "At Mnlines hunger was so ncutn that old men nnd women He ijt clawed our hands ravenously ns ijt wo pussed out rations to them, t )jt compelling us to use antiseptics it to guard against infection." Ht BRITISH CAMEL CORPS WHIPPED IN EGYPT Carlo, Kgypt, Nov. 2-1. Reports were received hero today of a fight at some point unnamed between a detachment of tho llritish ritmcl corps and hostile cavalry. The llritish furco was said to have hilled 2tl of the enemy, while losing only one of t It i r own nntivo officers uioi 12 men killed nnd three wounded, but were fiutilly forced to retire to escape being enveloped, the Minninme- In net being much superior to them iiu niericiilly. A not her camel corps detachment un der Captniii Cluipc, on patrol duty In the neighborhood id llireelunss lilt ill, was said to have been uttucluid Novem ber 20 by u hostile party, ulso mounted on cninels, who nppifinciioii tnem minor off the north Hcntch const Monday wns BUD ANDERSON AGAIN. I'liitlaiid, Ore., Nov. 21. llud Amler I son, tin- Vnacoiiver welterweight, nnd j foimiirlv contender for tho lllht welullt ' ..i ;.'... ..t.i.. ........I 1...1...1 il. ..i l.n I, hi. signed in tides to box c'riink Hin'rloim of the murder charge declared that the nt Wallacn, Idaho, Christmas dnv, over I iiccttsiitlons f "thud degree metnoil the Kl-roiind route, nod llobb.v Kvaus, ugainst the police mused them to no- ut Wallace, Idaho, ( hristinns day, overiipilt, ing, Anderson ituiV tnkn on Hninniy 1 " ' GiimI or Krenchy Vnlo at Tncoinn about Deeeinber 12, l'enr of being reformed keeps ninny n man In the bachelor clnss, A QHA8TLY MURDER. Minneapolis, Nov. 21. With a wire bound tightly around the torso and head and wltii both arms and legs miss ing, the body of Mrs. Peter Coleman, the young woman station agent at Man chester, Minn., for tho Minneapolis 4 Ht. I.nilis rnilrnnd, wns found today In the ruins of the station, which burned Monday night. The corpse wns badly charred. BRITISH REPULSED AT AFRICAN TOWN I,ondnn, Nov 21. The name of the "important German railway terminus" In Kust Africa whero the war office admitted the llritish suffered defoata November 2 and 4 wns still withheld today. It was not so stated, but it wa gcno.nlly assumed secrecy wns observed because a further attack was Intonded. A bnttiilioii and a linlf, It was stated, was originally sent from llritish Hast Africa to talio the station. The expe dition was repulsed by the Germans, waited fur reinforcements, received them on November 4, resumed tho at tack, three regiments strong. After they had actually entered the ttiwn they wero ngnin driven bnck following fiercn street fighting nt the bayonet's point. Deeming the position's capture hopulos by this time, with the fnrea nt tholr command, they rc-eniiinrked and re turned to their base to organize a fresh nnd more formidable expedition. Hritish losses were placed at T'lH, of whom Ml wero Knglishineu and 01 wero natives. THE "THIRD DEGREE" . CAUSED ACQUITTAL Titoinn, Wuidi., Nov. 21 -Aequlttcd Hun-lay of the charge of killing Harry Montgomery, a gn ry, William Davis, the III vear ohl Meiittln negro, is again in nif here today, this time chargod with the burglary he is nlleged to have cnaiiiiitted when he shot the storekeeper in t'ao bitter's place of business Hcp teinber !2S. , Davis went tot Henttle Inimedintoly after bis acipiittnl, where ho was ar rested lut" yesterday on a fugitive war rant. Additional evldenen, which ws not introduced In the murder trial, will lie iiresented nuiiinst the negro. News papermen to whom Dnvls told his story after confessing will be put on the stand to corroborate the police, as mem I tint's nf the ory that nonunion wins 1 pQURED CRUDE OIIi IN TUB MAIL BOXES l.ns Angeles, Oil., Nov. 21. A score of detectives were detailed today to search for four men who were reported to have poured crude oil into a hun dred mnil boxes on streets cornere here. Postal officials, the police stud, admitted that a large cpinntity of mail was badly tlnn-aged. The object of the men's reported action was a mystery to tho police and the postoffice nuttior Itlcs. , Ignorance Is the stepmother of argu ment. - ,