THE . DKEGQXIAX, ...BKIXDAT-, JULY . 8 1912. ABBTVAL OF PROMINENT EASTERN CLUB WOMEN AT UOTON DEPOT YESTERDAY AND SOME PROMINENT FIGURES. HUERTA III TRIUMPH ENTERS CHIHUAHUA TJ"CT T f TTT T a After the convention and before XI Fsl si jJ -DAJLl-rf. returning home, don't fail to visit Mount Rainier NATIONAL PARK The crowning glory of the Pacific Northwest with its vast expanse of glaciers, ice fields and snow-capped crags, giant trees and magnificent water falls. Switzerland itself offers nothing grander and more in spiring than Mount Rainier National Park. To make your trip complete after a tour in the Park travel East over the "MILWAUKEE" The most direct and scenically interesting line between TACOMA, "SEATTLE AND CHICAGO ' TWO THROUGH TRAINS DAILY "The Olympian" and "The Columbian" -3 I Government Forces Formally 1 Take Possession, -After Absence of Months. BRIGADES HASTEN NORTH t&rr. --- . " ,j$t f - i fiTl U2. ' ' : - .1 :.C;JvA " ' 'T?: Movement to Intercept Scattering Rebels Begun Many Slines Will Be Reopened and Business Will Be Resumed. AT GENERAL HUERTA'S HEAD1 QUARTERS, Chihuahua, Mex., July 7. Triumphantly General Victoriano Huerta, commander-in-chief of the government forces in Northern Mexico, at 10 o'clock today rode into the City of Chihuahua, Just four months under Tebel control. General Telle and General Rabago, In command of two brigades of cavalry, had entered the city a short time be fore, but were immediately dispatched northwest toward Casas Grandes to head off the fleeing rebel army. To the number of foreign flags raised many days ago by foreign resi dents who feared that a season of loot would follow the rebel retreat and evacuation, were added hundreds of Mexican banners, giving the city a holiday aspect. The entry of Huerta's army reduced the high nervous tension under which foreign residents had lived ever since rebel reverses in this section began. The coming of Huerta means the ret storation of railroad communication with Torreon, though it simultaneously cuts off the city on the north from Juares and the American border. This city had been mulcted of supplies -and business had long been at a standstill. Many mines will be reopened. Gener al Huerta has been engaged just two months in rebuilding 195 miles of Trail way destroyed by the rebels, as they retreated from Torreon. ORGANIZED WARFARE IS OVER Orozco Admits He Hopes Only to Fight as Guerilla. AT GENERAL. OROZCO'S HEAD QUARTERS. Sauz. Mex, July 7. Still sullen and morose, but none the less determined to laugh in defiance of the constituted government. General Orox co lolled In his bed today, giving final orders for the inauguration of the guerilla warfare which he purposes to wage "until Madero Is forced to re sign." Though urged to go to Juarex, 180 miles north of here, for a council of war, the defeated commander-in-chief had made no definite announcement today regarding his itinerary. Those members of his staff closest to him professed to believe that he would send to Juarex the com .jnandeered P.riva.te. catkin, which .he -ha Mden away from three battlefields, -a-travel -Wttfc hi metton horseback1 over . the government. J-oad to Casas Grandes.- 175 miles due "northwest One reason for this belief was the sensitiveness of the General, who made no effort today to conceal his chagrin at the rebel defeat at Bachimba three days ago. Contrary to the advice of his most competent officers, he or dered the. fight, believing there was a chance to win. Failure was expected by nine-tenths of his officers because ammunition was short. Orozco admitted today that he had finished with organized warfare,' and from now on would fight after the manner of guerillas. Sonora will be the first state to feel the effect of the new campaign, but It is the ambition of Orozco to extend the field of operations soon to states near Mexico City. MTJTIXY BREWING AT JUAREZ Soldiers Object to Going Again to Front Without Respite. JUAREZ; Mexico, July 7. Serious dls order prevailed tonight in Juarez among the 2500 troops mobilized here. Talk of a probable mutiny was heard fre quently in the streets. -Some of the soldiers, who have been In the lntertor for months, objected to being sent at once to Casas Grandes without a respite of at least several days here. Colonel Pascual Orozco. Sr.. In com mand here, says they will be forced to leave tomorrow. All gambling houses and saloons were closed at C o'clock as a precau tion. Many of the troops became in toxicated earlier, however, and con tinued to quarrel in the streets. Nearly 1000 troops arrived today. over the Mexican Central from Sauz. General Pascual Orozco, Jr.. it was said at rebel headquarters here, was expected late tonight or. early1 tomorrow. ' Rebels Arrest American as Spy. JUAREZ. " Mexico, July 7. Morris Buttner. an American immigration of ficer, was arrested here today accused of being a Maderlsta spy. He was re leased after Luther Edwards, the Amer ican Consul,, had conferred with Colonel Pascual Orozco.- Sr... in charge of the garrison. Buttner's business in Juarez had to do with checking Chinese im migration into the United States. I GRANGE APPROVES BRIDGE Members to Support Legislative 1 Candidates Who Favor !' . i VANCOUVER. Wash.. July 7. (SPS S' cial.) The farmers and Grangers in many places in the state are heartily : in favor of an appropriation for the I proposed Pacific Highway Bridge across 1 the Columbia River, between Vancouver I and Portland. Especially in Clark and ! Cowlitz Counties do the farmers realize : that such a bridge will give them bet ter facilities to reach Portland as a ; market for their produce. The Washington State Grange has ap- proved the. movement for a bridge and - the nrembers are pledged to 'support those candidates for the Legislature wfto are in favor of an appropriation. The resolution reads: "Resolved, that Washington Grange. No. 82. now in ses- sion. approves and indorses the Pacific Highway Columbia River Bridge and request the Clark County representa tives to work for the same in the Leg " Islaiure. "And further, that we oppose any candidate who opposes the Pacific Highway Bridge." When many thousands of persons and several hundred automobiles were com. pel led to wait several hours to cross the river, owing to the Inability of the ferry to accommodate the. enormous crowd. July 4. it showed decisively that a bridge between Vancouver and Port land has become a necessity s- W) mil -) CLUB WOMEN HERE Eastern Suffragists to Help in I Oregon Campaign. WEST LAUDED BY YANKEES Visitors Say Pacific Coast to Lead Atlantic in Equal Rights Contest. Special Train Arrives From San Francisco Convention. (Continued From Firat Page.) would win at the polls here next No vember. Ashlrad Meeting Saeeesa.' ' The meeting Saturday night at Ash land, where a Chautauqua is in prog ress, was a great success, say the vis ltora. . It wa well attended by men ho spoke In favor of "votes for women, and expressed tnemseives sanguine of the success of the issue-In Oregon. Miss Mary Garrett Hay, president of the New York Federation, was delight ed with the reception Eastern woman have received throughout the West. This Is the largest reception com mittee that has ever boarded a train, and escorted us Into any city, and X think your Western women are the. most cordial I have ever met," sne said. Miss Hay, who Spoke on federation and its attitude towards suffrage at the mass meeting In the afternoon, has been the organizer for the suffrage association for the last 16 years. I have campaigned In almost every state in the Union," said she. "Wjjai especially pleases me Is the number at men along the route who snowed soca an approving interest in the movement All along the line they asked ma ques tions -and expressed Wishes for our suc- Above. Front' Row IM to" Right), Hn. tt W. Coe, Portland; Mrs. Drnmmond and Son, New York t Jin. II. C. Wr rlZ WZ? Jer. Her Niece, After Sarah A. ..'i Who I. Almo-t Hidden, Come. Mr WiUi-n, Tod Helmuth Mr.. Mcttnold. Mnu W. Grant Brown and Madame von Klenner, All of New York, at the Extreme End Is Mr.. A. L. niiXl Portla-i-Below. at Right. Three State Present, of the Woman . Olnb., Mr. S.rah A El 0 V j '. h hi llni-Tr H.v. of New York Below, at I,eft, Madame von Klenner. inn. ' ...... , . -' . .. . . t. ft-. I Vs.ratlnn. mem'm 1 rru Club and inairman oi t " Pnatdeat of the New York Woa be conceded as mucn brain as the male?" ' Mrs. John Frances Yawger, corre sponding secretary of the New York State Federation, expressed the view that the country could hope for no ad vancement In the fight for better con ditions surrounding, the child labor problem and the housing question un til women had the right to express their opinion at the ballotbox, East Not Ready for Ballot. Mrs. D. T. S. Denison, ex-president of the General Federation of Women's CInba, said: "New York with its Im mense foreign population and Its In creasing number of ignorant Immi grants, woold not benefit by the suc cess of equal suffrage. In Oregon and the "West It Is different Here no such difficulties are encountered, for ,ypur TVMivl nr. eanable of expressing an eess. which. I feel sufe- werenpteisdjriuttenurent opinion "on matters of "vital spoken out of politeness. -Belief Based en Jn.tlce. "My belief In suffrage for woman is based on standpoint of Justice sis right, not from expedlencey or a deaine to accomplish some certain or particu lar result from the ballot. Women who have been reared in the same environ ment as men. who nave had tna samci schooling, should be as capable as men of expressing their opinions on me sub ject of government of home, town, itsta and country as on any otner matter. Mrs. William Tod Helrautti, president of the Pioneer woman s Association and ex-president of the New Jjora Sorosls, who celebrated her 74th btptb- d.v on the trip, said she made bar maiden speech from a railway platUramj at Ashland. - I ' believe in the ballot for man anff woman. she said. ine Dauoi v a good thing for women as well aa men. Women are the same in tne mormor . thev are at night, which is raored than you can say for a number i men. We are more qualiriea to oeaj with many social questions than ane men, for men ao noi taae to noiscx problems that involve the welfare of women. But May Follow West. Mrs. William Grant Brown. pmE- dent of the New York City Federa tion, believes the East will follow toe West In granting equal rights to women. "It is said that the East das not want equal suffrage. You will not find two In every hundred women who are opposed to the movement. . A4e declared emphatically. We .are looking to tne west to blaze another trial for us, and itt Is through your Western Ideas tna we shall obtain our rights in tne Juast. All we are working for is equality and Justice. we are not asking more than our rights. ; In New York we are unable even to get the suffrage question bteqore the people What is the reason? Sim ply because the politicians and the bosses are opposed to us through rear of our honesty, and 'our morality, "fhsy know that if we have a voice In. the affairs of our state organized vice will lose Its grip." Clnb No Place for Politics. The hospitable democracy of ' the West received praise from Mrs. ISoir- ard C. Warren, president of the New Jersey State Federation. Mrs. Wjsrrflnv though an ardent believer in equal franchise; did not believe in mailing suffrage an issue In woman's clujbs. 'They are for civic ' benefit." she said. "Their aim is to improve aociaJ conditions, such as the housing; prob lem, and child and sweatshop labor. and I believe that In New Yorjc at all events the introduction of suffrage, as leading feature, of womens cuibs would mean the less of many of our most prominent club women who are opposed to It. i - With your western women a is au- ferent. They look on life In a broader way than we of the East. It is to the West that we pin our hope fop suc cess. Do not mistaae my point in con nection with the clubs and suffrage. am for equal suffrage and itlways have been, even before such wojrds as suffragist and 'suffragette wexe in vented, but I think that as then- Is an organization formed to look after it that organization should be aJbowad to do the work. We can belong to both If we like." . v ' Bl.rk Women Favored nff)-nf. When' asked for her views, ctn the question. Miss Florence Guernsey gen eral federation secretary and president of the Eclectic Clnb of New "York, said: "I would give. the ballot to. very woman, white or black. One .bears much talk about the danger of giving a vote to the Ignorant, negro, woman, but one never bears any mention of the fact that the black- man has a vote. If a white woman Is no more Itonorant than a white man, or possibly I ehould say Is as clever, a fact conceded by all, whether suffragists or anti-suffcragjsts. way men snouio a negro woman, not Imnortance.1 Mlse Mary Wood, chairman of the New York legislative, committee and a lecturer In the Washington College of Law, was one of the leaders of the San Francisco conference. Her paper there was voted the most forceful ever presented on the betterment of working conditions. She is vice-chairman of the committee on the industrial and social conditions. She Is a stren uous believer In equal pay for equal work for women, but Is not favorably disposed to the minimum wage law agitation. Mrs. F. Eggert, the Oregon state delegate to . the convention, . returned ahead of the other delegates from Oregon in order to welcome the visitors on their arrival. She said that the at tendance was the largest at any con vention with the exception of that held at Boston. Suffrage Sentiment Grows. "Oregon women were delighted to see th.e growing sentiment in favor of the suffrage movement, while the vote which" 'side-tracked' the' question at the eonvehnon1did not- expresm'd" was' not. meant to. .express the opinion of the convention," she said, "It was mere ly to show that, as the main point pf ha wnman'a clubs Is the ouestion of the amelioration of social, economic f See the chariot races today. Country and civic conditions, the question of Club track, 2:30 P. M. suffrage had not a proper claim to be made one of the main planks In th. nlatform." Mrs. Eggert complimented the speak ers at San Francisco. In spite of the strenuous contest between the .ast and the West for the presidency there was not. declared Mrs. Eggert, tne slightest bitterness. - "The contests between the candi dates were friendly and the women were'ori tfie very best of terms all the wav throuKh." "All the visitors were entertained right royally all through their stay." Echo Man Dies of Typhoid Fever. ECHO, Xr., July 7. (Special.) Fri day evening at 5:00 o'clock Henry Rhode, a young farmer living five miles east of Echo, died of typhoid fe ver. He was '27 years of age, unmar ried and lived with' his parants.'The in terment will take place tomorrow at the German cemetery at Myrick Station. Feel Equal to Any Task ' When digestion is good;' nerves are steady, and brain works clear. Give yourself a fair show to earn and ach eve. If coffee and tea are found to interfere, stop and use SOAKED IN COFFEE Until Too Stiff to Bend Over. rosTUM It aids digestion; steadies the nerves; and clears the brain. Read letter to right '..- i .- , For quick, convenient service, try "When I drank coffee I often had sick headaches, nervousness and bil iousness much of the time; but about two years ago I went to visit a friend and got in the habit of drinking Postum. "I have never touched coffee since and the result has been that I am now entirely well of all my stomach and nervous trouble. (Tea contains caf feine, the same drug found in coffee.) "My mother was Just the same way. We ail drink Postum now, and have not had any -coffee in the -house for two years and we all are well. "A neighbor of mine, a great coffee drinker, was troubled with pains in her side for years and was an invalid. She was not able to do her work and oould not even mend clothes or do anythlngr at all where she would have to bend forward. If she tried to do a little hard work she would get such pains that she would have to lie down for . the rest of the day. "I persuaded her at last to stop drinking coffee and try Postum, and she did so, and she has used Postum ever since; the result has been that she can do her work, can sit for a whole 'day and mend and can sew on the ma chine and she never feels the least bit of pain In her side. In fact, she has got well and it shows coffee was the cause of the whole trouble. "I could also tell you about several other neighbors who have been bene fited by quitting coffee and using Postum in its place." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. - Look In pkgs. for the famous little book, "The Road to Wellville." INSTANT POSTUM Regular Postum loo size . makes 25 cups; 25c -size makes 50 eups. , ; This is regular Postum in concentrated form nothing added. - - Made ,in the cup no boiling ready to serve instantly. Postum made right is now served at most Hotels, Restau-! rants,' Lunch Rooms, Soda Fountains, etc. ... ,. Instant Postum is put up in air-tight tins and Sold. by Grocers INSTANT POSTUM Kansass Postum.. 1 06erealj k - Instant Postum 30c tin makes 45 to 50 cups; 50c tin makes 90 to 100 cups. "There's a Reason" for Postum - ' ' ' ". w - V !- Postum Cereal Company, Limited, Battle Creek, Michigan For further information and descriptive llteratare call on or address E. K. GARRISOX. District Frelsht and Passenger Aeit. J. o. THOMAB. Passenger and Ticket Aarent, Rail. ''The KW Steel Trail" Exchange Bnlldlns, Third and Stark Streets, H 100 Safety 4 Interest Your salary won't last for ever. Start now to pro vide for the day it stops Hartman-Thompson Bank lumbermens National Bank . A progressive commercial bank with a sav ings department under Government super vision, paying 4 per cent interest. AVrito or ask for savings booklet. 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