ft X VOL.. L.III U. iu,uw. ; , . . T i " . COMMITTEE OF TO MEET Representative Body to Organize. CITY'S WELFARE IS PURPOSE Commercial Club Rendezvous of Citizens. BUSINESS IS IMPORTANT In View of Adoption of Commission Charter, Men and Women of Various Walks cf Life Are Called Into Conference. Committee of. One Hundred. A. H. Averlll Truman L. A da ma w. B. Aver Phil S. Bates D. John H. Boyd Kdward Bralthwalte Kugene Brooklnga T. H. Burchard N. U. Carpenter James Caaalda F. W. Chausse Dr. K. A. J. mckmwi -. D. Mehaffle Mrl. Jhon Manning WIIHim A. Marshall Andy Maton A. U Mills H. WMltche!l Dr. A. A. MorrUon H. H. Newhail Mrs. A. C. Newtll Kd Newbegln Carl Cauirield F. A. Mtchy Mrs. Henry Waldo Coe Father O'Hara . C. Colt Rev. Richard Olson v. Cooper (ieorge M. Cornwall Elliott R. Corhatt t;orge Dllwortb F. S. Doernbecner Frank Dooly Drake C. O'Reilly John F. O'Shea X. P. Palmer L. T. Peery R. R. Perkins Johnston Porter Rev. L. R. Dyott R. W. Kajrmona Airs. Frederick Eggert Rev. Wm. F. Reagor Kdward Ehrman Frank C. Blags Ftar. w. G. Eliot A. Feliienhelmer W. H. Fitzgerald Ma F'.elschntr Dr. William T. Foster "Mrs. J. Anurew Foul- houx Mrt,. H. Ge W. B. Clafka R. t GlUan J. S. Hamilton P.. A. Harris qf. W. B. Hlnson Mrs. S. Hlrsch Rilward C. Holman V.-ter Hume F. W. Tsherwood M'ss Mary France , Isom K. J. Jaerer G. F. Johnson A. A. Kadderlr Kamuel C. Kerr W. M. Kllllngsworth Arthur W. Lawrence Per. J. A- Lees I. L. Levin ss K. V. T.lttlefleld F.varett Lagan .;eorge F. Robertson A. Rosensteln Mrs. Chas. E. Runyon Fred H. Rothchlld Charles S. Ruesell Frank Pchlegel Ben Felllng Mm Rose Celling Roger B. Slnnott Dr. Andrew C. Smith McCants Stewart fcd J. Stack Mrs. H. R. Talbott J. N. Teal E. I- Thompson Father Thompson Mrs. Mlllls R. Trum bull TV. O. VanPchnyver W. D. Wheelwright Mrs. Ralph W. Wilbur T. B..WlIcox Dr. J. R. WLaon Rabbi Wise Charles F. Wright Miss Emma Wold F. 8. Wood. Rav. Benjamin Toung 1 list of 100 men and women, rep re. tenting every phase of commercial, professional, business, religious, philan thropic and Industrial life of Portland, to serve as a committee of 100. was announced last night. This committee will hold Its first meeting: In the Commercial Club to night It has been called together to discuss the affairs of the City of Port land and the welfare of the cltlrens. In view of the adoption of the com mission charter In last Saturdays elec tion. The committee of 100 was se lected by a committee of 15, chosen at a meeting of 50 representative men at the Commercial Club Tuesday. No plan of action has been outlined for the committee of 100 to follow. It u ill select its own chairman, and what its course of procedure will be will de pend upon the members of the com mittee themselves. Procedure Not Outlined. Whether the committee will proceed to investigate the qualifications of can didates, whether recommendations to the voters as to candidates for Mayor. Auditor and Commissioners win be made, whether further efforts will be made to bring new candidates Into the field, will be determined by the com mittee. In fact it will be necessary for the committee itself to perfect Its own or ganisation, to outline how broad or how narrow Its scope shall be, and to deter mine how It shall proceed if Its mem bers decide that It In any way can as sist the voters of Portland in select ing from the great number of candi dates men and women capable of suc cessfully Installing and conducting the commission form of government in the City of Portland. Barring Interference from the courts, the election at which the Mayor and four Commissioners, as well as an Au ditor, will be chosen to take over the city" affairs under" the commission rlan. will be held June I. It will there fore be seen that he time for action Is short. Hence the call, which was sent out last night, for a meeting to be held In the Commercial Club at 8 o'clock tonight. Request To Appear Made. A. M. Churchill, who acted as secre tary of the meeting of a committee of la citisens. In the Commercial Club at noon, requests that all whose names are published herewith be present to night, whether they receive their offi cial letter or not. as it was late when the letters were posted and some may fail to reach their destination. The letter which was sent out to the 100 citizens named was as follows: "Yesterday (Tuesday) noon about CO representative men of Portland gath ered at the Commercial Club to dis cuss the present dangerous crisis In the city's affairs. Ways and means must be found at once for concentrating the vote of good citizenship in Portland upon worthy men as candidates for Mayor and Commissioners. Thousands of voters are looking anxiously for some sort of guidance, soma knowledge which shall help them to choose wisely out of the present chaos, and they must receive this from men whose motives can never be questioned. Hours are precious. Some one must do something, and do it quickly. "After deliberation a committee of TONIGHT (Concluded on Face 2.) ; i HEAVY IMMIGRANT TRAFFIC IS COMING iTF!R.MV STEAMSHIP FIRM HEAD OPPOSES TOLLS. Herr Heineken Sees Great Influx to raclflc Coast When Panama Canal Is Opened. BERLIN, May 7. The exemption or American vessels from the payment oi tolls for passing through the Panama Canal Is unjust and places German shipping at a disadvantage, according to Philip Heineken. managing director of the North German Lloyd, who writes In the Tageblatt today. He expresses confidence, however, that German shipping Interests are suf ficiently powerful and enterprising to maintain competition even under these circumsances. Herr Heineken hopes, under President Wilson's regime, the measure of dis crimination will be revoked. He fore sees a big immigrant traffic to the Pa cific Coast of both the United States and Canada, and In a more limited way also to the states of South America, thus bringing to an end the inundation of the Northeastern, states. CUPID SCURRIES FOR HELP Portland Bride AValta at Court Steps Until Witness Is Found. VANCOUVER. Wash, May 7. (Spe cial.) J. P. Sickler and Mrs. E. A. Sanders, of Portland, came here today with the happy thought of being mar ried, but when they appeared at the office of the County Auditor, they had no witness. Mr. Sickler did hot know of any one la Vancouver he. knew, but took a trip around the city and found that he was acquainted with B. S. Woodruff, having known him in Walla Walla years ago. With Mr. Woodruff, he reappeared at the Auditor's office and the license was secured. The bride-to-be waited on the steps of the Court house while the witness was found. Other marriage licenses were issued today to: J. I Taylor and Flora Ballon. A. W. Harvey and Mary M. Sester, Jamea Holman and Sadie Ryan, all of Portland; Mike P. Ochs. of Sherwood, and Miss Georgia Jurgens. of Tualatan, Or. ILLINOIS WOMEN VICTORS Equal Suffrage for Statutory Offices Granted In Senate. SPRINGFIELD, III, May 7. The Illinois Senate passed today the Magill woman suffraare bilL which gives women the right to vote on all stat utory offices. R.n.tm -Tmil member of the "white slave" commission, spoke in favor ot the bill, saying that, while he had op posed votes for women In the past, the revelations made to tne commission naa rnixinr.il him that men were not giv ing women the protection they needed. When the Senate adjournment was taken women descended on the law makers who had supported their mramire and overwhelmed them with expressions of gratitude. The nassaa-e of the bill by the ben- ate will be reported to the House to morrow. It Is doubtful whether the measure reaches a rollcall in the House at the present session. GOVERNOR JMAKES DENIAL Johnson Brands Alleged Anti-Wilson Remark as False. SACRAMENTO, ' May 7. Governor Johnson requested ot the public press tonight the privilege of making an un equivocal denial of a dispatch published In an Eastern newspaper and widely commented on, in effect that at a con ference of progressive State Senators, relative to the proposed anti-alien land law, he had made the remark: "To hell with Wilson. Let's put him in a hole." There Is not a word of truth In it." the Governor said tonight. "At no time, or under any circum stances during the antl-allen discussion was there anything but the most pleas ant relations between the representa tives of the state government, and there was not even so much as a harsh word spoken on either side." JAIL BREAK PREVENTED Sheriff Ksch Searches ex-Convict and Finds Two Saws. SAIJCM. Or.. May 7. (Special.) Ex tra precautions taken by Sheriff Esch tonight by searching Frank ' Redfleld. who has several aliases, prevented a Jail break here, for there was found upon his person two saws manufac tured from clock springs, which he undoubtedly had concealed in the seams of his clothes when arrested. Redfleld is .being held for burglary and Is a bad man. having served two terms In the penitentiary of this state and one in the Colorado penitentiary. With the two saws an escape would have been easy and It Is believed Red field had planned to make the jail break tonight. WORLD'S CATTLE STUDIED Meat Price Occupies International Institute of Agriculture. ROME, May 7. The general assem bly of the International Institute of Ag. riculture, occupied Its time today with the consideration of tho increase In the price of meats. It was decided to col lect statistics of cattle throughout tho world for the purpose of studying the causes of the increase in cost and de vising a means to combat It. A table will be rrepared showing the eonsumption of meats in different countries. . , PnnTT.AXD.- OREGON. THURSDAY. 3IAY 8, 1913. PRICE FIVE CENTS. TARIFF BILL HALTS ON EVE OF PASSING Parliamentary Action Postpones Vote. GALLERY IS DISAPPOINTED Noteworthy Assemblage There to Witness Final Scenes. MAJORITY SHOWS TRIUMPH Republican Leader's Demand for Reading of Enrolled Bill Puts Off Climax for Which Stag Has Been Prepared. WASHINGTON. May 7. After all of the fireworks preparatory to the pas sage of the Underwood bill In the House had been set off. a Republican parliamentary maneuver blocked pro gress by the Deraocratlo majority and the House waa forced to adjourn until tomorrow with the bill still pending. When the valedletorv speeches on the bill had been delivered and crowded floor and galleries were prepared for the final action. Republican Leader Mann replied to Majority Leader Un derwood's opposition to a roll call on the Republican amendment proposing a tariff commission by declaring he would demand the reading of the "en rolled bills." It was Impossible for the enrolling clerk to complete the enroll ment of th bill before tomorrow af ternoon and amid the dissatisfied mut- terlncR o f th members who had waited ins: in the expectation of a final vote. Representative Under wood moved that the House adjourn until 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon when the vote on the bill will be taken. Income Tax Feature Amended. In the closing hours of the session vav and means committee amend. mjt the income tax section of the bill so as to exempt from Its provisions the citizens or Porto kico ana tne Philippines. Party leaders primed for the final nniit,-sl thrust of the tariff debate hurled their defiance across the cham ber on belated amendments, with al ternating currents of applause reverb erating through the chamber, the packed galleries frequently joining in the demonstration. While the House was in the commit tee of the whole,- Representative Gor don of Tennessee, chairman of the committee, turned the gavel over to Speaker Clark. Majority" Leader Un derwood then placed the bill before the House and moved Its passage. Debate on this motion was beistg hastened as (Concluded oa Pa 2.) r : I TOTJa QUALIFICATIONS, PLEASE. ' j j : -j- t ' expedience rfjy ' INDEX OF TODAY'S KEYS The Weethe. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 6! degreesi-mlnlmum, SO degrees. TODAY'S Unsettled weather with probable showers: winds mostly westerly. Foreign. Pacific Coast to see big Immigrant traffic when canal opens, says German steam ship man. Page 1. National. New treaty suggested as solution of Japan ese problem. Page 6. Appointment of John Purroy Mitchell to Web's place saves break with O'Gorman. Page 2. Wilson orders that r.0,000 fourth-clasa post masters must undergo competitive test. Page 1. Parliamentary point prevents final vote on tariff bill la House. Page 1. . liomestic. Jaek Johnson heara scathing attack as trial opens. Page 3. 8tork stops hearing of telephone case at Seattle. Page 4. Doctors say lifa has been sustained In spa- arata tissues long after- boty Js dead. Page 1. Los Angeles vice Inquiry approachinr close. Page 8, War aeroplanes destined to Mexican rebels smuggled across border. Page 2. Mellen accused of "wildcat rrethodi" In connection with New Haven road. Page 5. Progressive Republicans to hold conference. Page 6. Monkey trained as burglar robs fashionable residences of Jewels. Page 1. Strike of California power employes menaces Industries in 30 counties. Page 4. Mcrriam divorce scandal hushed suddenly. Page 6. Sports. Coast League results San Francisco 9, Los Angeles 2: Portland 5, Sacramento 3; Oakland 11, Venice S. Page 0. Northwestern League results Portland 2. Seattle 5; Victoria 2, Tacoma 1; Van couver 5, Spokane 0. Page 8. Oregon loses. ." to 1, to University of Wash ington. Page 8. Naps and Red Sox have fight in clubhouse. Is report. Page 0. Pacific Northwest. Plan out to make Spokan,e "model license" city. Page 7. . Students of Etate University nominate leaders. Page 7. Commercial and Marine. Wool buyers operating in Eastern Oregon and Washington. Page 19. Wheat strengthened at Chicago by export sales. Page 10. Outburst of buying sends stock prices soar ing In Wall street. Page JO. Merger of Hamburg-American and Wels ford lines promises .more Pacific trade. Page 18. Portland and Vicinity. Rose Festival Association says fund Is 20. 000 short. Page 13. Reed College conference on conservation of human life opens tomorrow. Page IS. Jewish Philanthropic Society tells of year's work. Page 11. H. R. Albee, candidate for Mayor, Issues platform. Page 12. Weather report, data and forecast. Page 14. Fight on charter to be made In courts next week. Page 12. Seventy-five additional- candidates expected to enter Commisslonership race. Page 18. "Committee of 100" to meet tonight at the Commercial Club. Page 1. DEAD LAW REPEAL MARKED McArthur's Check: Shows "38 Seer tlons of Lord's Tjbws Gone. SALEM, Or.. May 7. (Special.) Six hundred and thirty-eight sections of Lord's Oregon Laws were repealed by the recent Legislature, according to check made by Speaker MCArtnur. While a number of them were repealed hv acts nassed taking their place, the most of them represent dead matter in the code. This breaks all records in the re- neailnar of dead laws. Speaker Mc- Arthur prepared many of these bills and had them Introduced by members. The repealing of these sections Is re garded as one of the most important features of the session. COMPETITION OPEN 50,000 OFFICES Wilson Revokes Order Made by Taft. POSTMASTERS ARE AFFECTED Only Those Receiving Less Than $180 a Year Exempt. EXTENSION IN PROSPECT Burleson Says It Is Intended That Second and Third Class Shall Bo Placed in Civil Service Within Coming Year. WASHINGTON, May 7. All fourth class postmastershlps except those pay Intr less than 1180 a year were thrown open to competition by an executive order issued today by President Wilson. These positions are retained In the clas slfied section, but about 50,000 Incum bents who were "covered In" into the classified service by executive orders of previous Administrations, will have to meet all-comers In competitive ex aminations In order to hold their posi tions with civil service protection. Further Extension Intended. In a statement making this order public, Postmaster-General Burleson announced, that it was the purpose of President Wilson and himself to ex tend the classified service to include Presidential postmasters of the second and third classes, probably within a year. This may require legislation by Congress, he said. His plan, which will be laid before the President soon, will provide for a qualification test for incumbents and applications, "In keeping with the Im portance of the office." Taft's Order Changed. Under President Taft's order of Oc tober 15, 1912, fourth-class postmasters were divided into, two classes, "class A,'' those drawing more than 500, ana "class B." those drawing less than 500. Competitive examinations were pre scribed for future applications for class A appointments, while the class B positions were to be filled on returns on postoffice inspectors. Today s order leaves only the offices paying S1S0 or less to be filled on Inspectors' reports. Rules and regulations to govern the administration of the new order will be worked out and announced by the Civil Service Commission as soon as possible. Merit System Widened. In his statement, the Postmaster- General said: "I feel that President Taft's order of (Concluded on Page 2.) GEMS STOLEN BY TRAINED MONKEY MYSTERY OF CHICAGO . BCR GIARICS IS SOLVED. Aristocratic Evanston in Terror Over j Peculiar Footprints on Its Window Sills. CHICAGO, May 7, (Special.) Resi dents of aristocratic Evanston are be ing terrified by operations of some un known criminal, who uses a trained monkey in robbing houses. The mon key Is able to enter a window open only a few Inches and has been taught to gather up and pass out to his master glittering objects from dressers and tables. At a residence recently robbed, the occupants were unable to explain pe culiar footprints on windowsills, always accompanied by heavy marks of a man's shoes outside. Early this morn ing Mrs. H. B. Wheelock. wife of an architect, heard the monkey drop a tray full of Jewelry, as the master be came impatient and pulled the cord too harshly. She awoke in time to turn on an emergency light and saw the mon key being dragged through the win dow and her jewelry scattered over the floor and wlndowslll. Numerous other instances have been reported of robberies that could not be explained because no doors or windows were found open, and the police assert they were the work of a trained monkey. KLICKITAT FRUIT SAVED Cold Weather and Heavy Frosts Fail to Hurt Buds. GOLDENDALE, Wash.. May 7. (Special.) A warm wave struck the Klickitat Valley, and fruit blossoms are coming out with -a rush. Little damage was done to fruit by the cold weather and heavy frosts In April. Grain crops have made a satisfactory growth and frequent heavy Spring rains have filled the ground with mois ture enough to take the wheat over until harvest. A party of city officials and engi neers found ten feet of snow at the Intake of the Goidendale water system in the Simcoe Mountains yesterday. There is more snow on the summit of the Simcoe range than has ever been known at this time of the year. MARRIED MEN PREFERRED New Jersey Canon Provides Better Pay for Mia-.sters AVItli Wives. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, May 7. At today's session of the annual conven tion of the Protestant Episcopal Dio cese of New Jersey, a canon was adopted that provided that married ministers in new parishes should xe celve an annual salary of flZOO and unmarried ones $1000 a- year. It Is said the action of the New Jer sey diocese will become an issue throughout the church, which will have for its aim "higher prices." SALEM ORGANIZES FRIDAY Commercial Club to Include Farm ers and Business Men. SALEM, Or., May 7. (Special.) An nouncement was made tonight by a number of business men that there will be a meeting at the Board of Trade rooms Friday night to form a Commer cial Club. The club will be broad enough to include farmers and fruitgrowers in the adjacent country, as well us busi ness men of the city and will be in dependent of the Board of Trade and Illlhee Club. Invitations are being scat tered broadcast and a monster meeting is expected. VON KLEIN GETS DELAY Portland Woman in Chicago Court When Case Is Put Over. CHICAGO. May 7. (Special.) Con tinuance was taken today In Judge George Kersten's court In the habeas corpus proceedings instituted by Ed mund E. C. von Klein, of Minneapolis, alleged matrimonial swindler, against whom several women have made charges that he robbed them of their jewelry. The hearing was postponed until May 15. Von Klein is at liberty on J15.060 bond. Miss Ethel Newcomb. of Port land, Or., who caused Von Klein's ar rest at the Blackstone Hotel, was in court. BANKS TO PRECEDE TOWNS Locations in South Dakota Dcsig nated by Quarter Sections. PIERRE. S. D., May 7. Instead of going to established towns, several banks in the nprthwestern part of the state will be started on the proposed line of a railroad, and will wait for the railroad and towns to come to them, according to plans made known here today. The locations of the banks are desig nated on quarter sections. NOTED EXPLORER IS DEAD Xindemann, Who . Helped Find Greeley, Man With Busy Career. NEW YORK. May 7. William F. C. Nlndemann, one of the two survivors of the Commander De Long's party in the Jeanette expedition into North Polar regions 14 years ago, died at his home at Hollis, L. I., today. He was born in Germany in 1850 and became an explorer at the age of 21. LIFE SUSTAINED T Vitality Shown After Body Is Dead. PHYSICIANS CITE INSTANCES Some Cells Declared to Retain Vigor for Years. SUSPENSION IS POSSIBLE Only Proper Medium, Say Speaker: at National Congress, Is Needed. Progressive Growth Also Declared Possible. WASHINGTON, May 7. Sustained Ufa in parts of the human tissue after the organism has died, like the snake's tail, which the schoolboy believed does not die until after the sun has set, was the theme discussed today at the closing session of the Congress of American Physicians and Surroons. The meetlns of the Congress ended tonight with a reception. According to the papers read by em inent authorities, life in cells taken from a living animal organism has been sustained under certain conditions for more than four years after the animul from which they were taken ceased to exist. Tho speakers declared that it ultimately would be clearly demon strated that llfo In severed cells could be sustained for as long a period as the organism would live under normal conditions. Cellular Life Maintained. This .view was taken by Dr. Ross G. Harrison of Yale University, who spoke on the life of tissues outside the or ganism from the cmbryolugical stand point. He was the first speaker on the gen eral topic "On the Development of Tis sues in Vitro." He was followed by Drs. Montrose T. Burrows, of Cornell University Medical College, and Rob ert A. Lambert, of Columbia Univer sity. All maintained that life could bo maintained in several cells and that there could be regular growth in the actual cell divisions and not merely degenerative movement. It also waa declared that life could be- suspended and made active again through the application of a proper medium. Lan tern slides illustrated the addresses ot all the speakers. Civil Surgeons Useful In War. Component organisations of the con gress continued their sessions today. These meetings probably will come to an end tomorrow. At the session of the American Surgical Section, Surgeon General C. F. Stokes, of the United States Navy, told how the surgeon in civil life best could serve his country In time of war. He said that with a slight amount of additional study these surgeons could be of Inestimable serv ice and could fit themselves for the strenuous duties of an army or navy surgeon. Papers on practically all the ills that human flesh Is heir to were under dis cussion at the several meetings. SENATE HAS NOMINATIONS President Chooses Seven Postmas ters for Oregon Towns. OKEGONI AN NEWS BUREAU, Wash ington. May 7. president Wilson today sent to the Senate the nominations ot the follwlng Oregon postmasters: iwmvn wise. Astoria: E. E. Bragg. La Grande; C. W. Erown. Canyon City; A. H. Strider. Sumpter; Ira C. Meiirnns. Falls CMtv: II. Y. Kilpatrick. Lebanon. and 1L E. Mahoney. Oakland. The President also nominated Jwcn ar,l Stanbush to be register of tho Nortn Yakima ,and office. Before mokino- this nomination the PreshUnt sent for Senator Jones and ascertained that Stanbush would not be objection able to him. NEW COMET IS SIGHTED Sohuinausse, of Nice, Cables to Havre of Discovery. CAMBRIDGE. Mass., May 7. The discovery of a xcmet by Schumausse, of Nice, is announced in a cablegram received at Harvard College obser vatory from Kiel. , Its position on May 6. .6082 Green wich mean titr.e, was right ascension,. 20 hours 54 minutes and 44 seconds; declination; plus 9 decrees 52 minutes. The comet was visible in a smalt telescope -and was moving northeast. BOY OF 10 SAVES TRAIN Warning of Burning Trestle Given After Hun of Half a Mile. WESTON. W. Va.. May 7. After a run of half a mile, Robert Brlnkley. aged 10. flagged a Baltimore & Ohio passenger train In the mountains near here today and saved the train fiom crashing through a burning trestle. The underpinning of the structure had burned away when the boy discovered the fire. The train, with 150 pas-sc-igjrs, was halted near the trestle and a skeleton support was erected. SEPARATE ISSUES