THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY, MAY 9. 1913. COLONEL WANTS HO MAGAZINE EDITOR "WHO SAYS MORGAN'S LAST DESIRE WAS TO BE OF SERVICE TO HIS COUNTRY. e Salem W oolen iviiiis company s ene TH BUI! nmi ii Going Out of Business Sale Shows What -Real ' Clothing Bargains Are Canal Controversy Included Among Issues to Be Set tled by Arbitration. v PEACE CONFEREES CALL Promise Once Made Should Be Kept, Is Roosevelt's Statement With. Reference to Hay-Paonce-fote Convention. fePO bat XT V "Vf . si T Vi at. dcre Roosevelt would have the United States end Great Britain "aarree in ad vance" to arbitrate any question which . - aV.M Cm. Va 4aM tn. International conference who are rrantrlnr the oentenarr celebration of " peace among- English apeaJcln people in addressing them as their host today at luncneon at ni noma on oboix-o Newspaper men were not admitted a . a.. .(M.laa. kut a nmmorV flf Ilia IU liltS lUllUVJUll) tvuw sat Vuuu'aa - remarks, "approved by Mr. Roosevelt." wu maae puDuc 1 . w w MM V AIA specifically mention the Panama canal dispute, members of the foreign dele gation said he unmistakably referred to it In sneaking of the question as one which should be settled by arbitration ir settlement couia noi oe reacnea negotiation. Pnln.al AXmltfl RrMT. "I am not myself one that readily maks a promise, out once (. ....... 1.4 K a Vn " h was OllOt by H. F. Ferris, secretary of the Brit ish delegation, as saying on n a v parent reference to the Hay-Paunce fote treaty, which was signed In Col on I Roosevelt's administration. "Speaklngr of the extent to which he would accept arbitration methods In In ternatlonal- disputes,- reaa m euro niary. Air. nooseveii saiu mai w " i .,.,-H nt a h.r.tin in th pvtu.H9 . i . . eyes of his friend. Mr. Carnegie (who sat at his rigntj. as mere wort: cor ; i ...kl wklpfi nnfti r tain conditions he never would consent to suDmit to aroitxanon; dui am wu. assure him of this that so far as the British empire and the American re public were concerned, he was prepared to agree in advance to the settlement by mutual agreement, by arbitration or dues friction. Wir between these two countries was. and must be. Ineonceiva- ti. "Mr. Roosevelt gave first the toast to the King and emperor of the Brltlsn empire, ana tnen tne toast or rwco, with justice ana rigmeousnenB. twe.n the nations and within the bor ders of each nation' a toast most heartily drunk by all present" guests in a khaki riding suit and ipurrM boots. by vas ROAD MAY BE ELECTRIFIED New Motive Power to Cut Pfmn Ex penses on Idaho Railway. BOISE. Idaho. May 8. (Special.) That section of the Oregon Short Line which traverses Southern Idaho, east and west from Montpeller on the east to Huntington on the west, may be rlwctrifled in order "to cut down the expense of operation and to handle more advantageously the rapidly in rreaslng traffic. Bids have been called for from the large electric power companies operat ing In the Southern Idaho field by the Short Line for th furnishing of elec trical power to that portion of the sys tem it is proposed to electrify. The Great Shoshone Light & Power Com pany and the Southern Idaho Light & Power Company, both big holding com panies in this state; have submitted bids, and other companies. Including the Tellurlde. which has power plants in the southeastern part of the state, will, It is understood, offer bids. QUINLAN PLEADS ALIBI ' Man Indicted With Haywood Denies He Made Incendiary Speech. PATERSOX. X. J-. May S. Patrick CJuinlan. the Industrial Worker of the World. leader, indicted with William D. Haywood and three others for in citing striking silk mill workers to ; riot, testilied. in his own defense today. He said he was not at the strikers' meeting the morning ha Is alleged to have exhorted the strikers not to let others take their places in the mills except over their dead bodies. Adolph Lesslg, another leader In dicted with Qulnlan, corroborated Qulnlan. He said a man in the au dience made the remark attributed to Qulnlan. Lesalga wife gave practical, ly the same testimony. As a result of exhortations by Eliza beth Gurley Flynn, the strikers who surged about the courthouse yesterday remained away today. FEDERAL AID IS OPPOSED Knglir-h Promoters Promise Railway to Fairbanks by June 1. WASHINGTON. May i. Opposition to Government aid for Alaskan railroads was expressed today to the Senate ter ritories committee by O. I Dickinson, manager for Close Bros, and other Eng lish debenture holders of an existing route from Skagway to the Interior. He declared that the companies in which his principals wore interested would open a water and railroad route to Fairbanks on June 1. A Government line, he said, would send them Into bankruptcy. Under cross-examination, Mr. Dick inson declared he was not prompted to his attitude by the fact that Close Bros, were partners with the Guggenheim-Morgan syndicate In the Copper River Railroad. T. R. WILL HELP SULZER Colonel Promises to Speak in Cam paign for Primaries. A LB AX Y. N. Y-fllay -Governor Sulaer said today he bad received let ters from Colonel Roosevelt saying that he would place himself at the com mand of the Governors' committee, which is to arrange the state-wide campaign to create sentiment In favor of the Governor's direct primary bill. The committee expects to arrange a series of speaking engagements for Colonel Roosevelt. The Legislature will be ordered by Governor Sulzer to meet in extraordin ary session on June 1 to consider direct primary and other legislation, and not on June IS. aa announced yesterday. nor- . . I 'x "x ' m 'Jar 1 COLO.Vini GEORGE HARVEY. mORGAN 15 PRAISED Colonel Harvey Pictures Fin ancier as Patriot. DESIRE WAS TO DO GOOD Comment on Effect of Testimony Be. fore Pujo Committee Revelation of Aspiration to Merit Fellow-Men's)' Approval. (Continued From First Page.) Morgan, 'those lines from Scott that you quoted when that man' I can hear now that emphasis on those two words when that man bad left the room.' " I did, of course, and began to re peat: Breathes there a man with soul so dead Who never to himself bath said "I hesitated for a moment, and the succeeding words came from the big arm chair with odd distinctness This is my own. my native land. "Then quietly Mr. Morgan asked If 1 could recall the remaining lines and quoted imperfectly: 1 Whoee heart has n.'eer within him bura'd. As home bis footsteps ha hath turn'd Krom wanderlnir on a foralsa etranar Ii such, there breath, go, mark him well. Message Sent to Wilson. "Half a minute, gentlemen. Is a long time, but for fully that period I should say Mr. Morgan sat perfectly stilL Then, unconsciously, beating tiros on the arm of his chair as he used to do in church, he repeated as if sollloquiz ng: Who never to himself hath said. This is my own, my native land. "And rising with, difficulty from his chair, for he was then quite feeble, he said, with the emphasis that only quie tude can give: "When you see Mr. Wilson, tell him for me that If there should ever come a time when he thinks any influence or resources that I have can be used for the country, they are wholly at hie disposal.' Barring the usual leave-taking, those were the last words I heard from the lips of Mr. Morgan. They were the words of a true patriot, of a great, a very great, American, spoken from the depths of a passionately loyal heart. Surely I .can do no better than to leave them with you to remember. to-cherish and to feel so longas you all shall live In this our native land." Pnjo Ordeal Severe. Referring to Mr. Morgan's testimony before the Pujo committee, at Wash ington. Colonel Harvey said: "Although mentally as strong as ever, physically ha was sadly broken when summoned to Washington. At his age and his condition It was the severest ordeal of his life, but It was for the best, as he himself came to realise. I hated to go, he said to me with characteristic simplicity the day before ha sailed away. "I hated to go, but 1 am glad I went. I think It did some good. "It was a comprenensive utterance n his usual few words a revelation. too. of hta innermost thoughts and as pirations. I bad spoken of the favora. bio lmDression that had been created by his testimony and he had evinced the keenest aDDreclatlon. "Tea' he said. I am convinced tnat what von say is true. I think they know me better now. I hope so.' "No sensitive man. no human man and Mr. Morgan was most sensitive and most human could have failed to be touched by the multitude of friendly expressions which had come to him from all sections of the country." APAN PRESENTS PROTEST (Continued From First Pace.) the Ambassador's forthcoming commu ntcatlon. Bryaa May Sacgest Delay. The field of speculation, however, is not broad, the recognized probabilities being a contention by the Japanese gov. ernment that the California legislation would violate the spirit if not the let ter of the treaty between the United States and Japan, in that it withdraws from Japanese' in California privileges of land holding- and leasing necessary to the transaction of their business, and a general proposition to negotiate a new treaty of trade and commerce. Secretary Bryan may meet these proposltibns with a suggestion hat their consideration be deferred until the California law has been signed and the United States courts have passed on its constitutionality. U WATER-USER. ASKS LAW PER . MITTI5TG ASSIGNMENTS. Governor has agreed to withhold his ignature from the bill at least until the return to Washington of Secretary Bryan. He has until May 13 to aot on the measure. It is not known whether the views of the Washington Govern ment will be transmitted tomorrow or after Secretary Bryan returns here on Monday on his trip to Now York, where he goes tomorrow night to address the banquet to the commission arranging for the celebration of the treaty of Ghent. Neither at the State Department nor at the Japanese Embassy can any statement be had aa to the nature of Montana Irrigation Project Airs Its Difficulties Before Secre tary Lane. WASHINGTON, May 8. Co-operation between the Government's engineer and a water-users' committee was re quested of Secretary Lane, of the In terior Department by representatives of the water-users in the Huntley, Mont., reclamation project. The occa sion was a continued session of the conference on reclamation projects. F. J. Cox, representing the water users' association on the Huntley proj ect, complained strenuously against the plan In force last year of turning water on for a week and then off for a week by a predetermined rotation system. He asked that the entrymen bo permitted to assign their land to anyone, so that bigger farms might be procured, and asked for a return to each settler of his homestead rights, so that he might abandon the project. if desirable, to take up Government land. II. N. Sivage, supervising engineer, stationed at Great Falls, Mont., told the secretary that he had determined on a four-day period of rotation instead of seven for the coming season. Some system of rotation, he declared, was necessary, because of the capacity of the canals .and of the danger of water bogging the land by avoidable seepage. NATURALIZATION IS ASKED Joseph Man From Japan Desires to Become an American. ENTERPRISE, OrTMay 8. (Special.) A Japaneae has applied for naturali zation in Wallowa County, L Sam Inoo, of Joseph, being the applicant. County Clerk Bllyeu sent the papers to John Speed Smith, chief examiner at Seattle in the Federal naturalization bureau, who replied that while it appeared im probable Inoo would be admitted to cit izenship he could not pass on the mat ter finally. The documents have been forwarded to Washington, where the case will be determined. Inoo was born in Yawatahama, Japan, October 15, 1890. He came to Seattle from Yokohama, July 14, 1906. YAKIMA STARTS BOOSTERS Club Organized on Order of Port land's Royal Rosartans. NORTH YAKIMaT Wash.. May 8. (Special.) A booster organization, modeled after the Royal Rosarians, the Tillikums and the Enakops . to repre sent North Yakima In regalia at festi vals in other cities of the Northwest and to take charge of local carnivals. was organized Wednesday night. The Bachelors' Club, the social or ganization of young men, formed the nucleus of the new organization. Its first publlo appearance will be with a band at the closing game with Boise Sunday before the North Yakima team goes on its first road trip. ALLEGED SWINDLER JELD Man Wanted by Portland Police Is Caught at Rosebnrg. ROSEBURG. Or.. May 8. (Special.) Eugene Smith is in jail here charged with forging the names of railroad men to orders with which he victimized merchants. He has a wach bearing numbers cor responding with a circular sent out by Cbief of Police Slover of Portland. Eugene Smith, arrested in RoseburgJ It's a new experience for clothing buyers to find a sale like this to have the opportunity of choosing from1 the 3000 suits of the quality made by Schloss Bros. all this season's goods and be able to Save One-Fourth on Any Suit or Raincoat $11.75 Buys Any $15 Fancy Suit Now $18.00 Suits Priced. . .$13.75 $20.00 Suits Priced. . .$15.00 $22.50 Suits Priced. ...$16.75 $25.00 Suits Priced. . .$18.75 $30.00 Suits Priced. . .S22.50 $35.00 Suits Priced. . .$26.75 $40 Suits Are Now Selling at Only $30 Look for the Salem Woolen Milts Co. Label in the suit you choose read the former price for yourself then figure up your savings. Remember this, too our regular prices were low indeed they gave values that made this store famous now the same label that meant good values and good service before stands for tremendous values. . Buy Good Clothes Here Tomorrow Extra Salesmen Assure Prompt Service OUR GUARANTEE Your money back if any suit bought at this sale does not prove sat isfactory just the same as though you paid regular price. Phedey&CaTender Successors to Salem Woolen Mills Clothing Co. it III Miii ll'iii' WIS is wanted in Portland to answer to a charge of obtaining goods under false pretenses. With a letter which he Is alleged to have written and which pur ported 'to be an introduction of him as a fellow-trainman on the Southern Pa. clfic by C. Fields, an engineer, be is said to have obtained a valuable watch from the A. & C Feidenheimer Com pany, Jewelers, on the promise to pay from bis wages. The watch was found In his possession at Roseburg, and in structions were wired to John Moloney, night detective captain, to hold Smith and retain possession of the watch. Douglas County Ranch Sold. COTTAGE GROVE. Or, May 8. (Special.) The 900-acre ranch belong ing to George McCord and located one mile from Isadora station, in Douglas County, was sold this week by T. J. Ryan, a Portland man. The entire tract is fenced with woven wire and 13 an ideal piece of land for stock- raising. a L1W 2SS i.L.i.i-ssiiiii iMiaj III t'llillrM Dainty Cookies A treat for the children and good for them, too, are easy to make crisp, more delicious, more digestible- when leavened with Rumford. It imparts to all cakes andcookiesthatdelicacyof texture and flavor sought for by all good cooks. THE WHOLESOME BAKING POWDER The Best of the Hlgh-Grade Baking Powders No Alma Staples Glasses Are the Best THAT CAX BB MADE ANYWHERE If your head aches, if your eves hurt. If they feel strained after reading or sewing, if you are troubled about seeing well, if you get dizzy when Wdlng In car, if your glasses do not seem to fit, better come to me. I can give you relief. I give right fit. with right mounting, at the right price, all right. Lenses Sphero in your own frame .....$1.00 Lenses Sphero In Alum. frame $1.50 Lenses Sphero in gold-filled frame $3.o0 Lenses Sphero tcurved) In G. F. Eye Glass Mtg $a.00 Kryptok Lenses $8.00 to $15.00 STAPLES, The Jeweler 192 First Street Near Slorrlaoa, Portland, Oregon. $3.00 a Year for a Safe Deposit Box The most convenient location in the City, in the heart of the shopping district and opposite the Post Office. SECURITY SAFE DEPOSIT COMPANY Fifth and Morrison Streets. Great Northern Railway Summer Excursions to the East Tickets on sale daily, May 28th to September 30th. Going limit fifteen days from date of sale. Refarrn limit October 31st; stopovers allowed in each direction. Atlantic Cfty and return, $111.30 J Detroit and return $ 83.50 St. Louis and return 70.G0 Pittsburg and return. ... 91. BO Boston and return 110.00 Montreal and return.... 105.00 Baltimore and Washington and return. .$107.50 New York and Philadelphia and return..........-.. 108.50 Chicago arid Milwaukee and return 72.50 Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo and return.... 55.00 Toronto, Buffalo and Niagara Falls and return 92.00 St. Paul, Minneapolis, Dnluth, "Winnipeg, Omaha, Council Bluffs, Kansaa City and St. Joe and return 60.00 Go East on the ORIENTAL LIMITED; leaves Portland daily 7:00 P. M. Through Standard and Tourist Sleepers to Chicago in 72 hours. Return samo way or any other direct route if desired, without extra charge. Tickets and Sleeping Car Reservations at City Ticket Office, 122 Third St, or at Depot, 11th & Hoyt Pl JL Dickson, City Passenger and Ticket Agent. Telephones Marshall S071. A 2283. Visit GLACIER NATIONAL PARK this Summer. Season June 15th to September 15th. Ask for Booklet. Hotel Multnomah GREAT SUCCESS THE 1913 FOLLIES REVUE aiasasasaiaasSBBas 1 Arcadian Garden Crowded Dinner and Supper Return Engagement, DIANA BONNAR OPERA COMPANY DIANA BONNAR, Soprano ANSGAR STARK, Tenor ARTHUR JOHNSON, Pianist Entertainment During Our Merchants' 50c Lunch For Table Reservations Phone Marshall 4080 or A 7802 H. C. BOWERS, Manager GAINER THIGPEN, Asst. Mgr. 1