Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, August 02, 1911, Image 1

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    PORTLAND. OREGON, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 2, 1911. CE FIVE CENTS.
VOL. LI NO. 15.814. I 1
ELLIS TO FIGHT
UPTON SINCLAIR IS
FREE LIST BILL IS
MEXICAN STRIKE
BOURNE FOR TOGA
EX-REPRESEXTATIVE TO BE
APRIL- CANDIDATE.
WORKHOUSEINMATE
AlTHOIt A YD SINGLE TAX COL-
FED: HOT RESCUED
PASSED II SENATE
IS ANTI-FOREIGN
LITTLE ONE CRIES FOR WATER
AS HOUSE BURNS.
O-W SENTENCED BY JCDGE.
iniTnmirn nmn in lam v v: val ii nin in nrnnmirn
tniUMtU'MAN 111 BY BABE'S THIRST 13 HtlVIUVtU
rnnnii nnnmii inn
rnu v arn hm b
Placards Warn Ameri
cans to Leave.
7500 ARE IDLE AT EL 0R0
Dynamite Bombs Are Found
Hidden in Mines.
TROOPS OVERAWE MINERS
Discovery Tlial Rewards Ita-re Been
Offered for 3Iurder of Superin
tendent and Assistant K
utt In Lockout.
EL ORO, Xulca. Aug. L Ths trlks
nd lockout here. Involving 7500 work
men, ha been discovered to conceal an
Important movement to drive il for
eigner, particularly Aiwrtuii. from
tola section.
The camp la quiet today, attar tha
conflict of yesterday. In which troop
fired Into a mob of trlklnj miners,
killing nine and wounding 11 persona
Four hundred federal soldiers ar
rived her today to relnforca tha 100
troop from Toluca, and It 1 believed
they will be able to preserv order and
protect property.
Men Jeer at ffcrtdtcra.
Tha striking miners are congregated
about the street In saltan croups, but
apparently are awed by the- presence
of tha troops and are contenting them
selves with haranguing and Jeering tha
soldier. In all 7S0 mm are Idle.
Tha discovery that bribe had been
offered for tha killing of the mln
superintendent and his two assistants
caused tha management of El Oro mln
to declare a practical lockout today
and ajik tha federal government to
make a full Investigation of the mo
TTve of tha strikers.
Wage Demand I Incident.
The demand of the strikers for
Ms her wages 1 Incidental and that
their real motive U antagonistic to
foreign era. tha movement being directed
Id particular against AmerVans. Pos
ter distributed through-.t tha
town order foreigner to leave the
camp and daelara that tha Maclean
miners proposa to run tha mln thera
elve. Several dynamite bombs hava been
found In tha mines.
The flret group of miners to declar
strike were at Laa Esperansaa mine
and they were quickly followed by EI
Oil and Des Estrellas workmen. Th
smelter ar continuing; orratlona. the
surface men refusing to Join In tha
sink.
OmCEJIOLDERS WAGING W.VK
Mutinous. Knplojri at J us res Now
Control Mcuatlon.
JUAREZ. Mes Aug. 1. Tha situation
I quiet In this city tonight, with tha
rebellious element of Insurreeto customs
employes master of the situation, so
far as their position In th government
servlc Is concerned.
The significant development from
the ezrltlng eir-erlenrea of the day is
tnat former Federal employes ar
going to be permitted to hold official
postuon under th present government,
and that such appointments will be
resisted by an appeal to arms. If necessary-
Th mutinous employes of the
Custom-llouae. numbering ?. who this
morning defied the Federal government
by preventing the former Federal em
ploye from taking up their work, ar
rented th Federal postmaster and
stamp collector and compelled them to
leave th city, and Inspired tha resig
nation of the collector, ar tonight In
stalled In their respective positions
with th approval of th Juares people.
. Th authorities at Mexico City have
been communicated with, and advised
to let matters remain as they are. No
reply ha yet been received.
PANAMA CHIEF THREATENS
(York me a Told to Support President
or Lose Jobs.
PANAMA. Aug. L Th political lt
uatlon her grows mor complicated.
Th friends of President Arsemena's
administration openly assert that ail
government employe who do not favor
his re-election win b replaced by thos
who do.
This unprecedented campaign on be
half of tha National executive was be
gun yesterday with tha lasuanc of a
decree replacing Ramon F. Acovedo.
(cretary of government and chief of
tha cabinet, with Fellodoro Patlnlo,
who has been the secretary of public
Instruction.
IDAHO TO EXCHANGE LAND
Compact Forest Will Replace Scat
tered School Section a.
WASHINGTON. Aug. 1. Idaho and
ths Ivpertment of Agriculture hav
rMrhed a tentative agreement. by
which th stst will rcelv about
tOO 014 acres of land In a compact body
n plar of It scattered school sec
tions now embraced within th bounds
0t National forest.
Th forest servlc ha been negotiat
ing on behalf of th Government and
state. It Is said, has pledsed Itself
, air' th lands a tt forest.
ng
Bine law They Go to Jail and
' Get Baths, According; to Rule.
WILMINGTON". Del- Aug. t Speclal.)
-I iiliui Sinclair ant his 1ft associate of
tha single tag colony, at Arden. wil
..nr. 11 hours earn In the Kewcaatl
County workhouse. Th sentence began
at t o'clock tonight.
They will, therefor, equal th valor
rf leorre Brown, t ha philosophical an
arrhlt. who. In revenge, had. them ar
rested yesterday for violating tha Sun
day blue law.
' Th nnlonlata weT taken tO th DliSO
atfer they pleaded guilty when arraigned
before Magistrate Robertson. 1 ney n
fined M and cost each, with tha excep
tion of Fred Stelnllne. th 1c cream
merchant, who was directed to pay a
fin of S3 and costs. They all refused to
pay their fines.
All of tha party were gtven a oam
upon arrival at th Jail, this being a
prison rule.
SALMON ASCENDING RIVER
Astoria Fishermen Make Big Haul
In lower Harbor.
isrnpTi rtr Aiis-. 1. SDcial.
Salmon ar malting meir way up m
river ana gooa caicnes wr
about Altoona and Brookfleld aa well
a further down stream in th past 14
hours. AS in water is nuw
rapidly, th bulk of th glllnet fishing
m i V. h. on the nlrht tides.
A few fishermen drifting In the lower
harbor are still trying aay nsoina uu
h .nil hut .ho tit the onlv thing they
accomplish Is to drlva th fish to the
north side or tn river so mi m
traps get them.
t .-mi Mnt one. half tons Of
salmon were taken yesterday by ths
seining crew or in cuiumui. r.i.t
Parker Association at the Sand Island
.. I v rnu rAm Seventeen tons were
caught. In one haul, and It took thre
and a half hours to tana it.
MOUNTAIN AUTOS CURBED
More. Than Mil In & Minutes Barred
on Mount Rainier Road.
TifDMA. Aug. 1. Determined to
inn sneedlnr on tha Mount Ranler
road. Edward S. Hall, superintendent.
today Issued order whereby a recora
of the movement of every automobile
and motorcycl ntrlng tb National
Park will b kept. Machines found
exceeding ths speed limit marked on
sign boards will ba ejected from th
nark and another permit to enter will
b obtained only from th Secretary
of th Interior.
Tbirty-nve minutes haa been deslg
v,mtmA aa the minimum In which a
machine may travel th H miles from
th west bounaary xo wmmi
cn.in.'a .nt a similar limit has been
placed on th llv-mll stretch from
th Springs to Nlsqually Glacier.
VETERAN HORSEMAN DIES
Sam Casto, Well Known A ton; Pa
cific Coast, Pauses at Salem.
8 A.LKM. Or, Aug. L (Ppeelal Sara
Castn. veteran horse trainer and known
to horsemen along th entire Pacific
Coast, died today, aged 47. Heart failure
and Bright' dlsesse with complications
of other maladies, caused his death.
For many year he bad been handling
horses at the stat fair grounds, and
not a horseman who has visited this
plac on th North Pacific fair circuit
but knew him. Th funeral will be held
tomorrow afternoon at St. Joseph's Cath
olic Church. Burial will be in th Catho
lic cemetery.
DEATH ENDS LONG ILLNESS
Mrs. Jacob Severson, of Centralla,
Not Well for 95 Year.
CENTR ALIA. TV ash-. Aug. 1. (pe-
i f I.. ..tff.rlnr for IS rear
from an Ineurabl Illness Mrs. Jacb
. r JtU In a hna.
if rtrnon, di rnu .n .
Hal tn thl city yesterday.
Mrs. Feverson had made her noma In
.ntraiia for manr vesrs-and was well
Cer
known throughout in coumy. nr
body waa sent to Eaattla for burial to
night. FERRY CAPSIZES, 7 DROWN
SeTenty-Flve Pasaengera Thrown
Into Water on St. Lawrence.
MA3SENA. Aug. t Seven passenger
were drowned today In th Bt. Lawrence
River when tha ferry steamer Syru
struck a aoal eight miles below this
city, capelxlng ari hurling IU 75 paa
aengera Into th water.
Four bodies hav been recovered.
Sand Shortage Charged.
EI wood Wiles has filed suit In th
Circuit Court against R- A. Hum and
th Star Sand Company for an account
ing wsth tli firm named. He had been
purchasing ssnd and gravel rfom th
company for a long time, and In eaen
load, he says, there are supposed to ba
two and one-third cubic yards. A a
matter of fact, b alleges, ther were
but two cubic yards In a load. At tha
end of th year. Instead of paying th
full amount, h deducted th difference
and waa sued by Hum, who sought to
collect.
Vanduyn Child Is Bnrlc-I.
Tha funeral of Frank Merwln. infant
on of Mr. and Mr. Frnk Vanduyn.
who died July 19. was conducted at th
family residence. 7S7 Lovejoy street,
at 10 o'clock Monday morning. Rev.
Mr. Bergen, of Illinois, offldstlng.
Burial waa made tn Rtvervlew Cemetery,
Refusing to Pay Fine for Vlolatl
Measure First Beaten,
Then Amended.
PROVISION AIMED AT CANADA
Meats, Flour, Cereals Free
. Under Reciprocity.
COALITION . STANDS FIRM
Democrats Will Open Entire Tariff
Iiraue, If Taft Signs Measure or
Approves Wool Schedule
Now Pending.
WASHINGTON. Aug. 1. Th Demo
cratic tariff programme was moved np
closer to President Taft today, when
th Senate, by another remarkable
coalition of Democrats and Republican
Insurgents, passed a farmers' free list
bill, after voting down th original
House measure so closely that on mora
Democ ratio Senator would hav
changed the result and left the entire
revision jquarely before th President
tonight.
"The unholy alliance, as th combi
nation of the Republican wing and th
Democratlo party ha been called,
wept aside a host of amendments,
voted down by a tie vote the original
House measure, and then carried, by a
surprising concentration of strength, a
measure differing from th House bill
only in comparatively unimportant par
ticulars. Underwood Is Confident.
Now th bill goes back to th House
and Democratlo Leader Underwood, of
that body, tonight confidently asserted
that It would be finally agreed to In
conference between the two houses and
sent to President Tsft.
It 1 not certain that the House will
insist on a conference, for many promi
nent Democratlo Representatives, be
lieving that the bill ha not been ma
terially changed, are urging that th
House adopt the Senate bill without
controversy and rush the first of th
tariff measure up to the President.
T think the bill will go to Presi
dent Taft," said Underwood. "I am not
sure it will ba sent to conference: I
certainly see nothing to prevent tha
two house from reaching an agree
ment upon Its final form."
Bailey Opposed to Last.
Had Senator Bailey, of Texas, voted
with his Democratic associates, or bad
Governor' Smith, of Georgia, Senator
elect from that state, been on hand and
voted with his party, the free list bill
would hav passed th Senate un
changed and could hav been in th
hands of President Taft tonight.
Bailey announced last night that he
hoped the privilege of casting tha de
ciding vot would fall to him on order
to how hi opposition. Smith has In
slated all along that he would not leave
Conelud.d on pae 2.
e
WILL HELP SOME!
t " '
Jndge Stephen A. Lowell Also to
Run and Dan J. MalaTkey
, May Seek Place.
' It became known yesterday that W.
R. Ellis, of Pendleton, ex-Representa-tlv
from th Second .Congressional
District and for many years prominent
In politic in Eastern Oregon, will ba a
candidate for the Republican nomina
tion for United States Senator in th
primaries next April to succeed Senator
Bourne. After an extended service In
Congress from this state, Mr. Ellis was
defeated for re-election laat year by
A. W. Lafferty, of thla city.
Thl insure at least two contestant
against Bourne for the Republican Sen
atorial nomination. Judge Stephen A,
Lowell, of Pendleton. Ellis' home town,
mora than a year ago announced that
he would aspire to aucceed Bourne in
the 1911 election. Judge Lowell'
friend Insist that the entrance of Ellis
in the race 1 calculated more to em
barrass Lowell's candidacy than It is
encouraged by the prospect of success.
Dan J. Malarkey, State Senator from
Multnomah County,' haa been freely
discussed as a probable rival of Bourne,
but ha has refrained from declaring
himself. It is also known that Grant
B. Dlmlck, ex-County Judge of Clacka
mas County and unsuccessful candidate
for tha Republican Gubernatorial nom
ination laet year. Is desirou of getting
into the Senatorial fight.
The contest for the Democratlo nom
ination for United States Senator ap
parently lie between J. M. Gearin. ex
United States Senator, of thl city, and
Milton A. Miller, of Lebanon, State
Senator from Linn County.
SETTLERS WILL BE AIDED
Development Company to Make De
posits on Lands Sold.
SALEM. Or.. Aug. L (Special.)
Arrangements were made by tha
Desert Land Board so that the Cen
tra.! Oregon Development Company
will place deposit for an tne iana sum
as against the land old for which
there I no water.
According to an estimate by the
hoard, annroilmately 13.000 acre have
been sold wh.ch cannot be covered by
water with the present facilities. For
thl land, deposits will be made from
minAv .rrmine from lands sold. This
money will be disbursed under direc
tion of the board lor tne Denem oi
the settlers holding land which Is not
covered by water.
UNDERTAKERS IN SESSION
Funeral Directors Motor Through
Fruit Belt Near Salem.
SALEM. Or, Aug. 1. (Special.
Many delegates attended the first day'a
session of the annual meeting of the
Oregon Stato Funeral Directors Asso
ciation her today. The address of wel
come waa delivered by A. F. Hofer. sec
retary of the Board of Trade, and the
response was by W. T. Macey, of Mo
Mlnnvllle. Following the reports of officers.
Rev. R. N. Avlson apoke on the "Rela
tion of the Minister to the Undertaker."
and Charles L. McNary on "The Under
taker as Been by the Layman." In the
afternoon the visitors were taken on
an automobile ride through the fruit
belt.
Feasting on Chicken,
He Still Faces Death.
NEWS HE LIVES SAYES MOTHER
Rising Water in Mine May Yet
Beat Would-Be Rescuers.
CAPTIVE W EARTH 3 DAYS
Fourth Drill Hole Finally Penetrates
Roof of Prison and Joseph Clary
Jokes With Neighbors Above)
Him as They Lower Food.
JOPLIN, Mo, Aug. L Entombed 78
feet below the surface of the earth.
facing possible death from the rapidly
rising water in the mine drift, Joseph
Clary, the young miner caught by a
cave-in at the White Oak mine here
Sunday, tonight feasted on fried
chicken and Joked with friends who are
waiting at the surface for his rescue.
The fourth drillhole put down In an
attempt to reach his prison penetrated
the roof of limestone late this after
noon. "Hello," Maurice Grafton called down
the hole when the drill bits had been
removed.
"I'm Hungry," Says Captive.
"Hello; I'm hungry," came the clear
but faint reply.
Then Thomas Clary, father of the
entombed miner, hurried to his home,
where tha vounar man's mother was
prostrated from grief, and told her that
the young man was still alive. Tne
n.wir the doctors say. saved her life.
From his home, the father, one of
the oldest prospectors in thl district,
hurried back to the mine, carrying
milk and stimulants, which were low
ered by a piece of rope.
After drinking these, young Clary
seemed much stronger and remained
near the drill hole talking with those
at the top.
"T nAVAn t worried any. though It
has been a long while," he said, "for
I knew that you were arter me. im
water has risen fast and it is about
waist deep in some places now I
don't believe it will get mucn mgner,
for this la dry ground.
Workers Are Encouraged. '
The ground where the mine Is sit
uated Is known as "dry ground," and
It has never been necessary to use a
pump to keep the water out of the
drifts while work wa going on. Thl
fact lend encouragement to those who
are working to lnk a rescue shaft to
the drift.
If. however, the shaft 1 not down
to the drift within two or three days,
it may be too late to bring the young
man out alive.
After the entombed man had eaten
(Concluded on pa 2.)
Mother Passe9 4 Children to Father
on Roof, Then Follows Them.
Orchards Village Destroyed.
VANCOUVER, Wash., Aug. 1. (Spe
cial.) The desires for a drink of water
on the part of a little daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Mobley, at Orchards,
early today, probably saved the parents
and four children form being burned
to death in a fire that destroyed vir
tually the entire village and caused
damage of nearly 125,000, only partly
insured.
At 3 o'clock in the morning the lit
tle girl woke her mother by crying
for a drink, and as Mrs. Mobley arose
to get it she heard a roaring that she
thought at first waa that of the inter
urban car. Becoming alarmed, how
ever, she called her husband, who
Jumped out of bed Just as flames burst
through the half opened door, cutting
off escape from that direction .
Awakening the other three children,
Mr. Mobley climbed out through a win
dow to the top of a nearby shed. Mrs.
Mobley remained behind and passed out
the children, one at a time, to her hus
band on the roof. As Mrs. Mobley and
the last little girl were leaving the
bedroom a gust of flame singed their
hair and faces.
The alarm was given by ringing the
church bell and the entire population
of the village was soon fighting the
fire, which quickly burned to the ground
Mr. Mobley's general merchandise store,
inflicting a loss of $15,000. with about
17500 insurance. Flames then spread
to the store of Mrs. E. Stalnaker, who
saved hardly anything. Her loss was
about J3.000, with partial Insurance.
The two-story Oddfellows' hall across
the road was Ignited when a spark fell
on the roof and burned down. A bar
bershop owned by .Rudolph "Wechner
also burned.
A bucket brigade was formed and
every well In the place was pumped
dry, but without avail.
COAST RATESTO ADVANCE
Railroads Will Abandon Effort to
Meet Water Competition.
CHICAGO, Aug. 1. (Special.) As a
result of the widespread cut in com
modity rates to points In the Far "West
ordered recently by the Interstate
Commerce Commission, railroads
throughout the country are now plan
ning to increase rates on freight to .Pa
cific Coast cities.
Action on the plan, it is expected,
will be taken at a meeting to be held
in Chicago August 7 of the traffic and
executive officers of all the transcon
tinental lines at headquarters of the
Transcontinental Freight Bureau. This
step will mean an abandonment, for
the present, of the attempt to meet
water competition on the Pacific slope.
so far as class rate business is con
cerned, and. If carried out, will add in a
substantial degree to revenues of the
mallcarrlers.
Class rates were not involved in the
inter-mountain cases.
0LC0TT FAVORS PUBLICITY
Tempest In Desert Land Board
Caused by Open Discusion.
SALEM, Or, Aug. 1. (Special.)
Secretary 01cotthas stepped over tha
traces following the difficulties In the
Desert Land Board meeting yesterday,
and today declared himself openly for
public board meetings In the future.
"What is the business of the state is
the business of the public" he said.
"Occasionally, of a necessity, there are
times when it will be necessary for the
benefit of the state to hold short ex
ecutive sessions.
"But I firmly believe in abolishing
the old idea of having 'star-chamber
board meetings, and Governor West is
of the same mind, as I have conferred
with him on the subject.
"I Intend to cast my vote for open
and above board meetings, where the
public will have an opportunity to
know what occurs."
SLEUTHS TRAP SPEEDERS
Medford Mayor Engages Detectives
to Time Autolsts.
MEDFORD, Or, Aug. 1. (Special.)
Detectives known only to the Mayor
of Medford are after "Joyriders" who
persist in exceeding the speed limit
here at night. Many arrests are made
every morning. The speed detective,
dressed in civilian clothes, saunters
along the street with a stop watch in
his hand and takes the numbers of
cars that violate the ordinance. In the
morning the autolsts are summoned
before the Mayor but no detective Is
In sight. The men pay their fine and
depart in Ignorance of the means by
which they were detected.
This system has been adopted as the
only way in which results can be ob
tained. PRINCESS WEDS ATHLETE
Beatrice Campbell, of Honolulu, Is
Bride of ex-Stanford Player.
BAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 1. Miss Beat
rice Campbell, sister of Princess Kawa
nagoa and stepdaughter of Colonel Sam
Parker, a minister during the Royal
Hawaiian dynasty, was married in St
Mary's CaSiejlral today to George
Beckley, a young Hawaiian capitalist
of Honolulu and a former gridiron star
at Stanford University.
After a tour of Southern California,
the couple will sail for their home in
Honglulur
Use of Hose Evenings
Again Permitted.
WATER BOARD REVOKES BAN
Supply Now 63,000,000 Gal
lons, Danger Thought Over. .
WASTE WARNED AGAINST,
Monnt Tabor Contractors Scored fos
Denying Right to City to Cse
Reservoir C. K. Henry
Would Probe Pipe Delay,
RESIDENTS ARE APPEAL.KD TO
NOT TO WASTE CITY'S WATER.
"I aslc the press to say to the
people of Portland that. In removing
the restrictions on evening sprinkling,
the Water Board must look to good
citizenship throughout the cltly and
the members of this Board must and.
I think, have a right to aak tha
hearty co-operation of everyone In .
using great care not to waste any of
the supply," said Theodora B. Wil
cox. "It will be only by the moat
careful use of water that this ar
. rangement can be continued, for,
should the supply weaken, ths
Board must again order the sus
pension of evening Irrigation'
Sprinkling of lawns between 5 and I
P. M., as well as between 6 and 8 A. M
will be permitted, at least temporarily,
the Water Board yesterday having or
dered the restriction removed in tha
evening.
How long this will continue depends
on the care the people of the city use
in irrigating, according to the declara
tions of Theodore B. Wilcox, speaking
for the Mayor and members, after he
had moved to this effect and the board
had voted unanimously.
Superintendent Dodge, asked by Mr.
Wilcox how the reservoir supply stood,
said that, at 8 o'clock In the morning
there were 63.000.000 gallons on hand, this
being within 3,000,000 gallons of the nor
mal storage capacity.
Danger Now Over.
"Then I move that the restrictions ba
removed from evening sprinkling," . said
Mr. Wilcox. "We shut off the privilege
only when a grave danger threatened.
I do not now believe we are facing any
such danger, and I believe that we
should let the people have the benefit
of the service. No one need tell me
what Inconveniences are being suffered
throughout the city. I have experienced
them myself. I have a lawn upon which
I spend J3000 a year. It. is burning up
because I have to pour water on it early
in the morning, oivly to have it boiled by
the sun; I have expensive greens there,
cooked. I cite this merely to ehow that
the members of this board have stood
their share of this water shortage."
Mayor Rushlight said be believed it
proper to remove the restriction on even
ing irrigation hours, as he felt perfectly
safe with the reservoirs showing a total
storage of 63,000,000 gallons. J. C. Alns
worth. W. B. Mackay and F. W. Winn,
the other members, declarea likewise.'
Order May Be Rescinded.
"It will have to be understood," said
Mr. Wilcox, "that this board may have
to shut off the sprinkling privilege again
In the evening. It certainly will if the
people do not use great care In Irrigating
their lawns. Should the weather warm
up and the supply run low, the privilege
must, of course, be cut off again. It is ,
the only means of protecting life and!
property."
The order of the board was a wise
one, commented aiayor nusmigm. n
was the only thing to do, and was done
only for the protection of the best in
terests of all .the citizens of this city.
Now that the supply is nearly normal,
I think it very proper to let the people
use, the water, but I certainly hope and
I believe that they will use great care
and not waste a bit of it. I want to
thank the people for their general ob
servation of the board's order."
Maguire Off in Huff.
Prior to Mr. Wilcox's motion and sub
sequent action by the Loard, Councilman
Maguire, who was found using water out
of hours Sunday morning by a police
man and defied the patrolman to arrest
him, told the Mayor and members of
the board that he proposed to use water
whenever he could get It.
"I can't get water in the hours pres
cribed by the board, from 5 to 8 In the
morning," said Councilman Maguire.
"Therefore, I think I have a perfect
right to use it when I can get It. I
servo notice on you right now that I
will do so."
"You don't have to serve notice on
us," heatedly replied Mr. Wilcox, who
evidently Intended to explain his inten
tion of moving to renew the evening
sprinkling hours. Mr. Maguire, how
ever, left the room in a huff and did
not know of the ruling that was made
later.
. Henry Wants Inquiry.
' E. L. Mills and C. K. Henry were
others who virtually defied the board's
ruling against evening sprinkling. Mr.
(Concluded on Page o, -
A.