THE aiOKNrXG OKEGOMA5. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1910. SO RACK IN IS PATHS OF PEACE Soldiers Gone From Streets, but Portugal Is Still Under Martial Law. IRISH MONKS CAN STAY Provisional tloTfrnment Trying to Curry Favor With England by Move Compulsory Military Service xt Step. LISBON. Oct. 11. Although the rlty remains under martial law, pending a reorganization of the administration the soldiers have been gradually with drawn from the streets. Hardly any were to be aeen today. The people have resumed their occupation and tran qullltr prevails. Several churches were reopened this morning. Guards have been supplied to those establishments of the religious orders that are still occupied and are flying foreign flags to prevent possible at tacks. The Papal Nuncio. Monsignor Tontl. has hoisted the Austrian flag over his residence at Clntra, but there was no sign today of hostile demon stratlons. Irish Clergy Exempt. The government has announced that the Irish Dominican fathers and nuns. who have conducted a school here for many years, will be exempted from the order of expulsion. This step doubtless Is due to the desire of the Republicans to koeu on good terms with Great Britain. It is said that Foreign Minister I- rhado has requested Great Britain to pram Immediate recognition to the new regime, ostensibly so that it win oe in a position to communicate its tun programme to the aritisn government. Casualty List Not Large. The casualty list from the recent fiKhting falls below the most moderate estimates. The official estimate gives the number killed as between 100 and ISO. Unofficial estimates place the number still lower. One of the plans attributed to the or- sranizers of the revolution was to bring off the coup d'etat on October 6, when King Manuel was visiting the Premier In the northermost province of the kingdom. It was arranged that the train bearing the King should continue through the frontier and the soldiers there would prevent the King from re entering Portugal. Ministers Were to Be Taken. Imcc in cnoccTC LUiW III I UIILUIU IS INCALCULABLE Ion of Rear Admiral Robley D. Evans in an interview given out -y the old fighter from his New Tork hotel. He is visiting New Tork for the flrst time since his recovery from the illness which, compelled him to stand on crutcb.es at Carnegie Hall a year ago while delivering- a lecture. "I think we must have iriction with the Japanese sooner or later," said the admiral, "but it will be over the ques tion of dollars and cents, in other words, about the trade of the Pacific The population that borders upon the Pacific is greater tnan that living upon any other body of water. The trade, of the Pacific will be the great trade of the future. The Japanese undoubtedly will be ambitious to control It. "We have no merchant marine now. but one of these days the American people are not going to be satisfied with this state of things. Then if any country does not agree to a peace able division of trade, there will be trouble. But the sooner we put a fleet M,,;e11F".mCh.",ik,7fIl, nt,ln? Being Placed in Trenches. rx?iter it will le for tin. Tor sooner or I later friction is bound to come.' Governor Eberhart Says Les son Has Been Given to Minnesota. RELIEF- BEING PROVIDED HOLES GIVE CONCEi Searching Parties Make Ghastly Finds Refngees Have Exciting Experiences In Woods. ARIZONA CONVENTION HAS NOT COT UNDERWAY. Naming of Committees Monopolizes Interest of Those Who Will Draft Laws. PHOENIX. Arizona. Oct. 11. Two brief sessions of the constitutional con vention permitted little to be done to day beyond the developing of a dif ference of opinion among the delegates relative to the degree of elasticity with which to endow the rules which shall govern procedure. The rules committee debated the question all day and meantime the in terest of the delegates centered upon me personnel of the committees which will shape the main features of the constitution. The members of these committees will be named tomorrow. Those which niononollzed the interest or trie delegates aro thejeglslation com mlttee. which will have charire of all proposals, which will have charge of all initiative and referendum, and the com mlttee on executive Impeachment, which win shape the constitutional provision aeaung with the recall. Second only to these In lmoortance Is ine committee on matters for separate submission. This committee will have. charge of the state-wide prohibition matter. Delegates who favor a Drohibitlon ar ticle In the constitution made an effort to procure the appointment of a com mlttee on liquor traffic today, but did not succeed. An effort also was made to increase the membershlD of the 1u dietary committee by the addition of 13 or 14 lawyers who arc delegates. This was opposed by members who want to keep all lawyers off the committees. It will soon be shown whether the anti- lawyer arguments make any Impression. frank da bousa. a Phoenix newspaper man. was chosen today as assistant clerk of the convention. INTERESTS ARE DENOUNCED In the meantime? the ministers who had assembled In a body at the station to see the King off. were to be sur rounded and arrested after the depar ture of the train. The republic was then to be proclaimed. The provisional government has taken possession of the houses of sev eral religious bodies. No opposition was met. The contents were Inven toried and the houses scaled. It has been decided to Issue a decree enforcing compulsory military service. Braalllo Teiles has declined the port folio of finance and the duties of this post have been temporarily undertaken by Foreign Minister Machudo. Event- illy Jose Relvas probably will be ap pointed to this office. MONKS FLOCK TO FRONTIER Spanish Government Will Seek to Prevent Invasion. MADRID, Oct. 11. Spanish monks tnd nuns who have fled from Lisbon ire arriving at Vigo. Badajoz and other points on the frontier. At'Bada- Jox, on the order of a bishop, the nuns are secreted at the Carmelite convent. Owing to pending legislation af fecting the religious orders, the influx of refugees Is embarrassing to the Spanish Government. Premier Canalejas said today that the government was moved to pity to receive the exiles, but that a perma nent invasion could not be tolerated. Arizona Democrat Speaks for Initia tive and Referendum. SANTA FE. N. M., Oct. 11. The adop tion of the majority report of the com mittee on rules and a speech by Dele gate H. B. Ferguson, Democrat, of Ber nalllolo County, denouncing corporate Interests, were the principal features of the afternoon session of the consti tutional convention in session here to day. Mr. Ferguson introduced a minority report of the committee on rules, signed by the Democratic members of the com mittee. This report failed of adoption. air. Ferguson tnen charged that cor porate Interests were at work in the convention and made a speech in favor of the initiative and referendum. Challenged on his statement regarding corporate Interests being represented at Santa Fe, Mr. Ferguson finally with drew the charge. YOUNG ARTIST JAILED WILLIAM K.UNZK, WHO STOLE PAINTING, SENT TO PRISON. FILMS GO TO TUM WATER i Efforts of Women to Have. Sentence Suspended In Vain, and Judge Gives Him Two Years. Oljuipla Mayor Bars Fight Pictures, Which Seek. Suburb. OlVMPIA. Wash.. Oct. 11. (Special.) Mayor Mitchell Harris, of Olympia, says the Johnson-Jeffries pictures can not be shown In Olympia Friday night, as scheduled, but the promoters are now trying to show them at Tumwater. which is easily reached by streetcar from Olympia. Mayor Harris was waited upon today by a delegation asserting that it repre sented the Olympia Ministerial Associa tion and the Olympia School Board. The delegation demanded that be refuse to let the pictures be shown. Mayor Har ris, who is a candidate to succeed him self as Mayor at the Fall election, late In the afternoon decided to put the ban on them. This set the showmen to work and they say the Mayor of Tumwater, an Olympia suburb, will hnve no such qualms con cerning the morals of Tumwater. TRAIN JUMPER IS INSANE Bank Is Uncertain About Validity of His $600 Travelers' Checks. ROSHBCRG, Or.. Oct 11. (Special.) William Booth, the young man who at tempted to jump from a fast moving Southern Pacific passenger train near Leland late Sunday night, and who was later taken in custody by the Glendale officers and brought to. Roseburg. was adjuda-ed Insane by the County Physi cian today. Although he carried over J600 In travel ers checks, payaoie at nrsi national Bank, of Great Falls. Montana, all tele grams sent to that city have been lg nored. other than a reply from the cashier of the bank, who said that he might have funds there, but be did not know. Local officers say they Intend to investigate the caM thoroughly that the money may be returned to his parents In the event they can be located. EVANS SEES JAP TRADE WAR United Stales Will Clash for Com- mcrclal Supremacy. NEW YORK. Oct. 11. That clash of some kind between japan ana roe United States is inevitable, is tlis opln- SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 11. (Special.) William Kunze, who first attracted public attention some months ago by stealing the Millet picture from the Golden Gate Park gallery, appeared In Judge George Cabannts' department of the Superior Court today and In spite of the pleading of women and the sugges tions of Assistant District Attorney Layne, was sentenced to serve two years In state prison. The women assured the judge of their Deuer mat Kunze s notation or his pa role, consisting of stealing saws, was due to hunger, and promised that If tbe court would let the probationer go once more they would see to it that he never would suffer hunger again. Judge Cabannis declared that to do such a thing might have a very bad effect on the thirty other probationers, givlnsj them the Idea that they might be jet off easily. He then turned to Kunze and asked him bow he got to San Fran cisco from Oakland to steal the tools. The culprit admitted that be bad ridden on the car to the ferry and crossed. "That shows you had at least 10 cents." said the Judge. Did you bare any more?" The prisoner admitted that he had 1 11.80. "I think that disposes of the h tin ire r theory." remarked the ludjre. and pro ceeded to deliver his Judgment BOAT MAKES 33.44 KNOTS Oil-Burning Torpedo Destroyer Drayton. Given Trial. ROCKLAND, Me., Oct 11. The fast est time made today in the standardiza tion trial of the oil-burning torpedo- boat destroyer Drayton, in her official acceptance trials, was at tbe rate of 33.44 knots an hour. This was half a knot less than her sister ship. Paulding. On the other band. It exceeds the record of the de stroyers Poe. Terry and Perkins, also of the oil-burning class. B EM ID J I, Minn.. Oct. 11. "Minnesota has had a ghastly lesson." said Governor Kberhart here today. "The loss of life simply appals, while as a lesson In fi nance the property loss and the destruc tion wrought In our forests will stand as convincing argument when the Legis lature meets next January. The loss sustained In the present disaster Is more than enough to have in sured proper fire protection to the en tire state of Minnesota for the next fifteen years." Governor Eberhart arrived here on a special train and brought with him two cars of provisions and 28 additional mem bers of Company K. of the State Militia. who will help in keeping order and dis tributing supplies. This train Is speed ing northward where help Is needed. governor Eberhart said he had can celled all his political engagements and would stay in the fire region for at least a week. Refugees are flocking into BemldJI and the armory and opera nouse have been turned over to them. More than 100 are already housed there and more are coming. Searching parties left Baudette again for the woods, .some of them to be gone several days. The bodies are being taken Into Bau dette In farm wagons and Dlaced In wooden boxes snd buried in one lone trench. Each family la placed In a square box and a wooden Identifica tion board placed at the bead of ths grave. A homesteader, nearly starved and Imost exhausted, was brought In by a party from a distance or six miles. The man was badly burned and was al most naked and unable to talk. He had been lying in the mud of a dried up creek since Friday. The ferry-boat Lobster capsized at her dock last night. Five refugee wo men and four men had a severe struggle xor lire, nut all were saved. At various points in the forest fire zone between Warroad. Minn., and Rainy River, reports to fire rangers in dicate that 139 bodies have been lo cated. Of these 90 have been recovered but only 0 Identified. While flrea can be seen away to the east and south east, their progress is not dangerous to human life. Fire rangers complain that the heat prevented their proceeding far into tba masses of charred trees and underbrush. The air in the devastated district Is still smoky and no further attempt will maoe to locate bodies until further reinforcements and relief are obtained today. Five nurses, a doctor. SO cots and thousands of loaves of bread and thousands of pounds of meat have been sent to Rainy River from Winnipeg. oeverai jtapia Kiver homesteaders got into root cellars and saved their lives. The Sorenson family of nine re mained In the center of their clear ing and escaped. Swan Olson, wife and three children, escaped In a root house as did the family of Theodore Stebak ken. Lars Olson and Mrs. Olson are safe. Paul Morko. a Beaudette musician. went out to look for a homestead and stopped at the Hanson place, leaving there on the morning the fire began. He has not been heard from since. rour men from Davenuort Iowa, nnl looking for land had been urged to return to town as they were unfamiliar with the woods and the smoke was growing dense. They felt safe, how ever, until too late. They ran as far as they could. One of them dropped from exhaustion and perished. The others entered a small pool. One es caped with severe burns on his face. Robert Mclnnls. of Wanter Tfnart River, and his son. John, with a hired man and a German neighbor, were 12 hours In the water. The burned area Is at least 36 miles wide and many of the settlers are new to the country. Much of this land was thrown open to homestead entry this Summer and many of the settlers have gone In far beyond the roads where they had only a path to reach their place. It may be months before they ire discovered, and some of them mav never oe louna. Snow Isolates Crater Lake. MEDFORD. Or.. Oct. 11. (Special.) The first spow Is falling on the mountains around Crater Lake and the tourist sea son for 1910 Is closed. The Crater Lake Company Is dismantling its camps and everthlng is being placed in readiness for the Winter. In a week or two it will be impossible for tlie ordinary traveler to reach the lake. There have been more tourists at the lake this year than ever before. The number of visitors has run up dose to 9000, 1000 ARE DEAD OK MISSING Forest Supervisor Makes Iteport to Washington on Fire. WASHINGTON, Oct. 1 1. Forester Graves today received the following leiegrapnic report rrom Supervisor Marshall, of the forest service, at Cass Lake, concerning the forest fire situa tion in Minnesota: "Reports today give 1000 burned and missing. The area burned is estimated to be 2500 square miles. Fire still burning." ANOTHER SETTLEMENT BURNS Clementon Destroyed Blaze Nan Near International Falls. BRAINERD, Minn.. Oct. 11. Clemen ton, a small settlement 10 miles east of Baudette, off tbe railroad. Is burned. Fires are working east along both sides of the Rainy River towards Interna tional Falls. SOUTHERN CITIES GROWING Rapid Increase Noted In Bureau Returns. Census WASHINGTON, Oct. 11. Foulation statistics enumerated in the 13th cen sus were made public today by the Census Bureau for the following cities: Louisvile, Ky., 223,928, an increase of 19,197, or 9.4 per cent over 204,731 in 1900. Lexington. Ky., "35,000, an Increase of 8730, or 33.1 per cent over 26,369 in 1900. Charlotte, N. C, 34,014. an Increase of 15.923, or S8.0 per cent over 8091 in 1900. Shrevepnrt, La., 28,015, an increase of 12,002, or 75 per cent. Roanoke. Virgiana, 34.874. an Increase of 813.379. or 62.1 rer cent over 21,495 in 1900. Tampa. Florida. 38.524. an increase of 22.65, or 143.2 per cent over 15.835 In 1900. Avahai Sholom to Observe Day. Tom Kippur, the day of atonement, will be observed in Congregation Abav- If y jrf OUR NEW I 1q 'iv I FUR FASHION BOOK FOR GENUINE ALASKA. SEALSKINS Entire Cor. Fourth and Morrison Your Charge Account Solicited. LARGEST AND LEADING FURRIERS IN THE WEST P9W Popular Furs Are Becoming Scarce Every day.it becomes more apparent that before real "Winter weather sets in and we are sure to have it the supply of furs now most in demand, such Mink, Ermine, Black Lynx, Russian Pony and Genuine Alaska Sealskin, will be exhausted. Take Russian Pony, for instance: All the fine skins imported this season will be used up, when they will not be obtainable later. There is not a furrier today delivering Black Lynx Sets or Pony Coats at the prices we are offering our customers. Therefore, every day you delay from now on in the selection of your furs will be to your disadvantage. Genuine Black Lynx Sets FURS TO ORDER FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY As a Horse Show special we of fer for one day only the beautiful Black Lynx Shawl and JQ.50 large Muff. Special at $00 SET Tn rmr order department, in which we are taxed to an unusual degree, we are still able to take care of all orders placed with us in a reasonable Long Russian Pony Coats All are manufactured on the premises in the regular Silverfield manner. All beautifully lined with brocaded silk and satin linings. As a Horse Show special for AVednes- dQ T A day we offer our 52-in. coats, only pDa-.-3U length of time, and in our usual capable manner. Remodeling and Repairing at lowest prices. We can convince you. Let us make your old furs like new. Store Closed Thursday Arrange Your Shopping for Wednesday. It Will Pay You jMJIh if! Special Sale of Evening Wraps AN OPPORTUNE BARGAIN Values to $40 at $16.50 Undoubtedly the rarest bargain ever offered. Do not miss this; it is exceptional. Every one of the highest class, beautiful pastel shades of blue, old rose, champagne and gray. Cloth Dresses A specially selected lot of high-grade Cloth Dresses of fine French Serges and Broadcloths. Smart" tailored styles and effectively braid ed designs. A charminpr va riety to select from. REGU LAR $20.00 VALUES, WEDNESDAY SPECIAL, $11.95 MILLINERY Ye have grouped specially for Wednesday the greatest collection of Trimmed Hats ever offered at this Drice. You would not hesitate to pay $10 for them in the regular way. The styles and colorings are ot tne new- oeftnhe Wl. EXTRAORDINARY VALUE. SJUlAi, WEDNESDAY . L HO $5.00 al Sholom Synagogue. Park and Clay streets, by the Kol Nldre service, beginning- at 7 o'clock tonight, and by all-day services tomorrow, beginning at 1 A. M. Rabbi R- Abrahamson will officiate. I &4 Diamonds.Watches, & Jewelry and Silverware g FOR THE ASKING We carry a large and fine assortment of Diamonds and Jewelry, which we will give to any honest person on credit and you wear the goods while paying for them. We give a written guarantee with every article sold. We sell our goods cheaper on credit than others do for cash. STANDARD JEWELRY STORE 1413 THIRD STREET, NEAR ALDER TELEPHONE DIRECTORY THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH COMPANY an nounce that the Portland Telephone Directory (including Multnomah, Clackamas, Clark and Marion County subscribers) will be printed in Portland. Next issue closes OCTOBER 15TH. Requests for adver tising space or change of listing should reach us on or before that date. The Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Company Beck Building, Seventh and Oak Streets. FALL SCHEDULE EFFECXrVSI SEPTEMBER 15, 1810. Grand Trunk Pacific Steamships PBIMCH RtPEHT" AND - PRLVCEJ GEORGE " LEAVE SKATTLB THURSDAYS AJVD SUNDAYS AT SrfM P. M. Arrive Victoria Sunday and Thursdsys at.. .....Tifto P. M. Arrive Vancouver Mondays and Fridays at 7H0 A. M. Arrive Prince Rupert Wednesdays and Sundays at Ili30 A. SI. Conneetinc; at "Prince Hnpert" with S. 8. "Prince Albert" (or Stenart and lneen Charlotte Islands. Rates north of Vancouver include meals and berth. For tickets and reservations apply to local railway ticket scents or J. H. RURGIS, General Anrent, First Avenue and Yealer Way, Seattle, Wash.