VOL. I.I 1 1. NO. 16,422. PORTLAND, OREGON. MONDAY. JULY 14, 1913. ! 12 KILLED AND 2 IT "Horse Play" by Boys Causes Wreck. 0 COLLISION ( INTERURBAN TRAINS CRASH Accident Occurs at City Limits of Los Angeles. 10 OF INJURED MAY DIE Touths, in Jest, Pull Whistle "Full Speed Ahead" Is Answered ' by Mot or man Newspaper Photographers Are Mobbed. LOS ANGELES. July 13. To "horse play" by youths "who played with the train whistle is attributed the loss of about 12 lives and the Injuring? of some 200 persons near here tonight. Two Pa cific Electric trains collided, telescop ing two cars and wrecking; another at Vineyard station in the city limits. Three trains loaded with excursion ists from the beaches at Venice had stopped at a curve where a switch is turned. The farthest train began mov ing: forward while the foremost trains remained at a standstill. Signal la Misinterpreted. Carrol Bartholomae, the conductor of the last car on the center train Jumped to the track with his light to "flag" down the approaching: car. Some youths on his train, say some passeng ers who escaped ' death, pulled the whistle In Jest. This it was explained by railroad men was misinterpreted by the tnotorman of the moving: train as the signal to come ahead. With a crash of breaking: glass, split ting: timbers, men's groans and wom en's screams, the motor car of the last train plunged into the rear of the cen ter train. The youths who had played with the whistle were crushed In the debris. .... ...... The two colliding: cars were nearly telescoped. The second car of the sta tionary train was almost demolished. Trains Ran Close Together. ' The motorman of the moving: train, hearing: the whistle, had given full speed. The curves evidently had pre vented his seeing the standing cars of the next train. The third train was not affected. The three trains were said to have been running at three minute intervals. Most of the killed were cut into pieces. Their identification was slow. Special trains rushed the Injured to Los Angeles hospitals and the dead to morgues here. Automobiles were also pressed Into Bervice for the removal of the dead and Injured. The cries of the wounded could be heard above the din of the crowd, which became frantic and - which mobbed the newspaper photographers who tried to take. pictures of the wreck. All the cars were filled to capacity with Sunday pleasure seekers' return ing from the beach. Rescuers Are Kept Busy. Passengers on the rear car filled the streets and stood in the aisle when the crash came. Those who stood were crusnea against each other In the far end of the car. Lights went out. Ar thur Mill, a sailor from the torpedo- Doai faui Jones, carried out eight ooaies, including a woman, gripping an Infant's body in her arms. Mother and child were dead. Mrs. W. B. Stewart, or ixs Angeles, dragged out the pros trate body of her husband, who had been stunned. Few of the Christian Endeavor dele gates were on the train. The headquar ters of the Toronto delegation of 125 announced late tonight that none of the Canadian visitors were in the wreck. Practically all killed and in jured were residents of Los Angeles and suburbs. The list of injured. Including those receiving minor hurts, will total more than 200. Many are fatally injured. FIGHTING HEAVY IN CHINA Kiu Kiang Center or Hostilities and Civil War Is Possible. LONDON. July 13. Heavy fighting is reported all around Kiu Kiang, prov ince of Klang-Sl on the Tang Tse Ktang, says a Pekin dispatch to the Dally Telegraph. The fighting is the result of the occupation of the city by northern troops. The outcome has not yet been learned, but should success attend the Kiang Sl troops, who number 9000, civil war, according to the dispatch, will be In evitable. AVIATOR TO ATTACK SHIP Mexican Airman Invents Machine to Carry 12 Bombs. NOGALES. Ariz., July 13. Didler Mas son has Invented an apparatus to carry 12 bombs on each flight, together with a sighting system for dropping bombs from his aeroplane. The French aviator declares that within a few days he will attempt again to sins: me Federal gunboats lying in Guaymas harbor, f RAILROAD SOON TO LOSE ITS IDENTITY WESTERN" PACIFIC UNDER RIO GRANDE'S CONTROL. Single Management for Gould Lines West of Missouri River Is Purpose of Change. SAN FRANCISCO. July 13. The Western Pacific Railroad, the Gould outlet to the Pacific Coast, is to lose its Identity as a managerial unit and pass under control of the Denver & Rio Grande, thus establishing, through the Missouri Pacific, one management for Gould roads west of the Mississippi River, according to announcement made here today. Correspondence given out at the of fices of the Western Pacific shows that E. T. Jeffery. president of the road, re tires, becoming chairman of the board of directors, and C. H. Schlacks. vice president, who has been in immediate control, resigns from his position and also from the directorate of the Den ver & Rio Grande. B. F. Bush, presi dent of the latter road, la to become president of the Western Pacific, and it is reported that he will have charge of all the Western Gould lines. Probably E. L. Brown. vlce-preBldent and general manager of the Denver & Rio Grande, will be moved from Den vtr to San Francisco to run the West ern Pacific. Mr. Schlacks In his letter of resigna tion to the Rio Grande board of di rectors gives as his reason the change in operative management. HEIRESS NOW COMPOSER Mrs. Anita Baldwin McLaughrey Is Writing Music for Plays. LOS ANGELES, July 13. (Special.) Richard Tully has commissioned Mrs. Anita Baldwin McLaughrey to write the Incidental music for his new play and this has brought to light the story that Mrs. McLaughrey is seeking solace In the study of muslo from her marital troubles, which have Just cul minated In an Interlocutory decree of divorce awarded the heiress of the Baldwin millions. She has written a number of vocal and Instrumental selections which have received the laudations of Mrs. A. E. McDowell, wife of the late composer. Much of Mrs. McLaughrey's time next year will be spent abroad studying under European masters, although the facilities for musical, composition, at her new home form a distinctive fea ture. " JOINTCHURCH HELD IN OPEN Different Sects of White Salmon and Hood River Worship in Union. . WHITE SALMON, Wash.; July 13. Instead of the regular church services today an open air meeting was held on the A. H. Jewett lawn, the White Salmon Congregational Church enter taining the First Unitarian Church of Hood River. Rev. J. G. Tate, pastor of the White Salmon Church, preached In the morn ing on "The World's Christian Citi zenship Conference," which he attend ed. A basket lunch was served to about 300 persons and at the after noon session, the Rev. Mr. McDonald, pastor of the Unitarian Church, spoke on "The Liberal Faith." Music was furnished by the com bined choirs of both churches. BRYAN'S PAY TOO SMALL Secretary Says He Is Compelled to Lecture to Augment Income. , HENDERSONVILLE N. C, July 13. While returning here today. Secretary Bryan declared he was compelled to deliver Chautauqua addresses to sup plement his" Government salary, which he declared was not sufficient to meet his expenses. "As this is my first Chautauqua lec ture since becoming a member of the cabinet." said Secretary Bryan," "it may not be out of place to say that I find it necessary to lecture in order to supplement the salary which I re ceive from the Government. As I have lectured for 13 years this method of adding to my income Is the most nat ural one to which to turn and I regard it as extremely legitimate." MAZAMAS AT GREEN POINT: Hikers" Eat Lunch of Crawfish and Ice-Cream in Open. For their weekly recreation "stunt" yesterday the Mazamas hiked from Green Point, near Oregon City, to a point on Abernathy Creek, about five miles southeast of Oregon City. Here some advance members had already caught crawfish, which were cooked bv an expert and served with the noon luncn. ice cream also was on the bill of fare. After three hours in the countrv the hikers" returned to Oregon City, ' tnence to .Portland by steamer. There were 57 in the party, which was led by A. S. and E. F. Peterson. 60 CHILDREN CARED FOR Twenty-four Boys and 3 6 Girls at Receiving Home. On June 10 all the county Judges in the State of Oregon were notified not to commit children to the Boys' and Girls' Aid Society until July 10, on ac count of an epidemic of measles at the receiving home. The quarantine is now raised, the children having all re covered. There are now 24 boys and 36 girls at the receiving home, a total of 60. 'S PLAN FOR PEACE CRITICISED Fears for Monroe Doc trine Expressed EFFECT IS EMBARRASSING Mexican Situation Furnishes Illustration in Point. NEEDED POWER IS LOST Pact Would Prevent United States . From Protecting Own Citizens in Time of Danger Europe Not Without Guile. WASHINGTON, July 13. (Special.) That Secretary Bryan's much herald ed ' .ice proposals" are as "Utopian as the Secretary's battleships of peace" is the opinion of many members of Congress who have begun to look Intp the scheme. It is the belief of these Congressmen that Bryan's plan will weaken the Monroe Doctrine and prove embarrassing to the United States. With the announcement by Mr. Bryan that he has forwarded the full text of his peace proposals to all civilized na tions, Including those which have and those which have not approved the general idea of the proposed conven tion, Congressmen interested In State Department affairs and particularly in matters pertaining to the Mexican sit uation, see the possibility of great em barrassment to this Government should the treaty be adopted. Effect Is Extensive. The embarrassment, they say, would not be limited to the Mexican situation, but to this country's dealings with Cen tral and South American countries un der the Monroe Doctrine. It Is point ed out that, in substance, the contract ing nations agree, that all questions in dispute between them, of whatever oharacter and nature, shall, when diplo matic efforts fall, be submitted for in vestigation and report by an impartial international commission; and the con tracting parties 'agree not to declare war or to begin hostilities until such Investigation is made and a report sub mitted." Seeking examples of how the pro posed treaty would work, those who have studied It have assumed that the United States would bind Itself to the treaty together with Mexico or, any oth er of the turbulent nations of Latin America. Cltlserns Lose Protection. 1 Under the terms of the agreement It is suggested that the United States, for at least one year, would be estopped (Concluded on Page 6.) BRYAN ...................... ..T1 iissseassss . t THE SILLY SEASON IS NOW IN FULL SWING. ' 1 .neAtHlN" If r VlE t ZjW 1 r "! YSS7- osy tASAWyCr sJI.kWa i : ' V GTHY(rSO''S- I raw i - V . . f?- vow vxv? XvAvA J te ) - U. AtSyOiEro. I I il K6l I III v 7 -rgsr-i-s? nr i; i- 11 ! - I INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. TESTERDArS Maximum temperature, 69 degrees; minimum, 51.5 degrees. TODArs Fair and warmer ; northwesterly Forefgrn. No sign of peace shown in Balkans. Page S. National. Bryan's peace plan thought to interfere seriously with Mtmroe Zoctrlne. Page 1. oenator worics would attollsn traffic In all liquor eexcept beer. Page 2. House angered by trick of senate In dispos ing of MulhalL Page 6. Domestic. Katherlne Korea engaged to marry New York broker. Page 8. Weste.-n Pacific to co under control of Rio r' ........ n . Many killed and injured in train collision near Los Angeles. Page Trainmen's strike vote ratified; action post poned pending conference with 'Wilson. Page S. Faclfio Northwest. Women demand place on police force and Earl McAlty. Portland youth, shot by officer near Oregon City. Psge 7. Searchers despair of finding couple lost on mountain. Page 1. Mother, in strange city,, goes unaided to scene of son's tragic death. Page 1. Sport. Pacific Coast League results: Portland 2-0. Venice 0-6; Sacramento 7-3, San Fran cisco 4-1; Oakland 1-3, Ix Angeles O-l. Paso batf Northwestern League results: Taeoma 7, Portland 0; Seattle 6-17, Victoria 2-16. Page 8. New Torfc Giants hold center of baseball stao. Plje 8. Vamoose being fitted with new engines. presumably for Potlatch races, page 8. Portland and Vicinity. Rose City Park Methodists may get Grace Churcii. Page 12. Harms suspicious of anonymous gifts of 110 weekly. Page 12. Commercial Club plans to entertain three members of Cabinet. Page 12. Irvlngton Club to keep open house during tennis tournament. Page 6. Columbia district may furnish more material for Panama Canal. Page 0. Firemen hold big picnic at Estacada. Weather report, data and forecast. Page 9. Progressive Business Men's Club frolics on beach. Pace 3. Coast states warned to fix minimum wage niuiig. fage.ia John Mason t Humps in "As a Man Thinks." Page 6. Work to be resumed at Oregon packing plant. Page 1. GRANT'S LICENSE UNUSED U. S., Jr., and Mrs. Will Answer Queries With Smiles. SAN DIEGO. Cal., July 13. Although U. S. Grant, Jr., took out a license a fortnight ago to marry Mrs. America Workman Will, of Los Angeles, the wedding has not yet taken place. When questioned on the subject today Grant and Mrs.: Will, smilingly declared that the ceremony would be performed "very soon." ' ' Neither was willing to be more talkative. Justice George Peterbaugh has been chosen to officiated KING FERDINAND, IS ILL Bulgarian Ruler Suffers From Fail ure to Visit Carlsbad. VIENNA. July 13. (Special.) The rport that-Kinat Ferdinand had been assassinated is not true, but It is now said that he is ill at the palace. The Bulgarian Minister at Vienna says that he is suffering from acute rheumatism with feverish symptoms. His Illness is said to have been caused by the fact that he was unable to go to Carlsbad this year to take the cure, as has been his usual custom. E AT PLANT City Officials Again, To Assume Charge. MAYOR SAYS TROUBLE ENDED Pickets Limited and Oratory Permitted at Distance. STRIKERS' PLACES FILLED Albee to Take fp Work Where He Left Off When Governor Took Band Minimum Wage of $1 a Day Now Established. Work will be resumed this morning at the plant of the Oregon Packing Company, where a. strike of women employes has been in progress for the past few weeks. On permission of Mayor Albee a. few of the strikers will be allowed to picket In front of the company's prop erty at East Eighth and Belmont streets, but disinterested nersons will be nrevented from cone-re Era tine- about the cannery. Those who want to make speeches on this or any other subject win not oe allowed on the streets about tne place, but may orate from a nearbv vacant lot to their hearts' content- so long as they use no profane or indecent language. This is the Mayor's decision Albee Thinks Trouble Over. Now that Governor West has with drawn from the scene. Portland author ities will take up the strike situation where they left off last Friday before the Governor made his spectacular in pearance. Mayor Albee discussed the situation at length yesterday and ex pressed confidence that there would be no future difficulty. The Mayor Is partleularlv iniim that persons not . interested in Vi strike co-operate with the authorities in maintaining order, and urges citizens to refrain from gathering on the streets ana listening to speecheTs. on account of the apparent satiafan. tory adjustment of all the diffimim. that grew out of the recent strike, the number of policemen on duty, at the cannery win be reduced this morning. The Mayor is confident that a Mt.c.iiv settlement will be reached and that threatened unpleasantness will be averted. Mayor to Rename . Efforts. "Governor West having withdrawn from the city and havlns- issued a tr- merit in which he said that the local authorities should handle the strike situation. I will now take nn thl ih Ject where It stood last Friday morning (Concluded on Pace 2.) WORK TO RESUM PACKING . 1 i 1 MOTHER DRAWN TO SCENE OF TRAGEDY UNSEEN POWER DIRECTS MRS MYGATT'S STEPS. Missouri Woman Visiting Taeoma in Effort to Solve Mystery of Son's Leap to Death, TACOMA, Wash. July 13. (Soeclal.1 Directed by some mysterious power to the spot where her son. E. B. My gatt, on June 20, leaped from Lincoln Bridge, Mrs. C. P. Mygatt. of Indepen dence, Mo. accompanied bv W. H. Mv- gatt, her other son, today went straight from the dennt to th, of the tragedy, and announced to the joung man that they were on the spot wnere his brother died. Mrs. Mygatt had no guide and only knew Edward Mygatt met his death by leaping from Lincoln Bridsr. Sh did not know the location of the bridge and asked no questions, but found the exact spot. Mrs. Mygatt and her son are here to Investigate the mvsterv that ah ed Edward "Mygatt's death. Letters iouna Dy the police indicated Ruth Frances Allen once was the sweetheart of Mygatt, but at the time of the trageay, she said her affections be longed to her own husband, who was somewhere In New York. Mygatt's letters to his mother men tioned a child, and intimated he was married to the Allen woman. "Tomorrow I am going to learn all x can rrom. authorities." said Mrs. My gatt, "and if necessarv will remain several weeks. Then I shall rr tn Portland and try to find the woman wno cans herself Mrs. Ruth Frances Allen." WARM WEATHER EXPECTED General Forecast for Country In dudes Thunder Showers. . WASHINGTON, July 13. Warm and generally fair weather except for lo cal thunder showers is promised by the Weather Bureau for the coming week. "A disturbance now over the north ern Rocky Mountain region," says the weekly bulletin, "will develop east ward and will be attended by local thunderstorms that will occur Monday over tne northern plains states. Anoth er disturbance should appear over the extreme northwest about the end of the week, bringing with it local show ers In that section. "Warm weather will continue over the Southwest and over the southern districts west of the Rocky Mountains. while over the plains states and the great central valleys higher tempera tures may be expected during the early part of the week, followed by some moderation after the middle of the week, and by another rise over the northwest by the end of the week. MRS. WILKES GIVES LITTLE Few at Bar Harbor Spend Less Than Hetty Green's Daughter. BAR HARBOR, Me., July 13. (Spe cial.) Mrs. H. As tor Wilkes, daughter of Mrs. Hetty Green, the richest woman in the world, with her husband is spending the Summer at Bar Harbor and there are few Summer sojourners who are spending less money. Mr. and Mrs. Wilkes occupy two rooms with bath at the Newport, a moderate-priced hotel, where they live quietly. They own no string of automobiles or prl vate yachts, but usually walk. Mrs. Wilkes, like her mother, cares nothing about the latest style in dress, She wears gowns the women of mod erate means, would not. This apart- mei.w s not overly popular with the bellboys and hotel attaches because there are no fat tips. One boy who an swers calls confessed he had received 30 cents in all. Few guests in the ho tel have the courage to follow this precedent. FORESTER GRAVES CITY Official Here to Select Homestead Sites Within Reserves. Henry S. Graves. Chief Forester of the United States, is in Portland. With this city as his headquarters, he will investigate the extent of agricultural lands within the forest reserves with a view to putting the Government's new policy in regard to these lands In oper ation. Under this policy, the Govern ment proposes to select fertile tracts, either timbered or from which the tim ber has been cut. list them separately from the general forest reserves and open them to homestead from time to time. Chief Forester Graves expects to set tle-definitely in the next few weeks what recommendations will be made concerning lands in the Siuslaw dis trict, the Deschutes region and the Cowlitz River country of Washington. BOTTLES. MAYSTART FIRES Forester Believes Glass Concentrates Sun's Rays, Igniting Leaves. CENTRALIA. Wash., July 13. (Spe cial.) There is no Joke about the story that beer and whisky bottles, carelessly thrown to the ground in timbered areas, are apt to cause forest fires, ac cording to the opinion of E. W. Ferris, state fire warden, who was In Cen tralla yesterday. Mr. Ferris said that all fire wardens had been instructed to bury all bottles they saw, in order that they may not act as a concentrating medium for the sun's rays and start fires In dry leaves and moss. "I have had many reports of fires that undoubtedly started in this man ner," said Mr. Ferris, "and I do not doubt in the least' the opinion that there is danger from this source. It sounds odd, but undoubtedly It is true." EXHAUSTED PARTY OF RESCUERS WAIT Hope of FindingSmiths Alive, Abandoned SNOW FIELD NOT EXPLORED Searchers Unable to Reach Spot on Mountain. TRACKS FOUND ON SLOPE Storm Delays Work and Stops Des cent or Those Followlnsr Trail. All in Search Crew Suffer Se ver Hardships in Wilds. NORTH FORK LOGGING CAMP, Wash., July 13. (Staff Correspon dence.) Giving up all hope of recov ering, for at least four or five days, the bodies of Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Smith, of Portland, who were lost in a blls zard on Mount St. Helens last Sunday, 28 mountaineers returned here late to day. They were completely exhaused from hardships and exposure encoun tered in the week they have been searching the snow fields. Only four men, all of Portland, remain at the desolate base of the dark mountain. These are well provisioned and quar tered in a cabin, and will wait until the storms on the mountain have abat ed before they resume search for the bodies. Tracks of Couple Pound. Settlers of tho North Fork of Lewis River and mountaineers and trappers of the Mount St. Helens country, who have been scouring the snowflelds for a week, have narrowed the search down to one particular place on the mountain which cannot be reached until the weather is good and the snow has melted. A wait of several days may be necessary. The tracks of the missing couple were found near the top of the moun tain on Friday, and were followed to a point where they went down a steep slope with a rock formation on one side and a snow field on the other. It Is believed the couple went down over this slope and perished. Because of the storms on the mountain it has not been possible for the searchers to make their way down this slope. They had planned to use ropes and axes in a descent this morning, but the storms 1 drove them away. Rumor of Traces Denied. Reports were circulated early this morning that the Smiths had been traced down Into the timber of the Toutle canyon and Goat Marsh on the west slope of Mount St. Helens. This report is dented by the members of the party who have returned. They declared that footprints were found in a place near a trail leading into Tou tle canyon, but that they were the prints of searchers made some trme before. It is the settled opinion of all the searchers who have scanned the hUl since last Monday morning that Mr. and Mrs. Smith went but a short dis tance from where they separated from Miss Verdi Monroe and Mr. Carroll. who accompanied them on the trip up Mount St. Helens. Searchers Suffer Hardships. The most extreme of-hardships have been suffered all week by the search ing parties. Men from the North Fork logging camp, including Manager Pat- ton, have worked until they are com pletely exhausted. For nights they slept out in the woods in the rain without bedding. The same expe- . riences were- had by the Portland party which went to the scene In automo biles Friday. Saturday night they slept in the woods in the rain with no blankets and some of them with only thin clothing. They suffered ex- . posures of this kind frequently. There was also a scarcity of food and many of the party were unable to work hard for want of food. The entire surround ing country was combed for food and other supplies. The settlers in the country about the mountain made a wonderful showing in attempting to find some trace of the lost pair. From the time the word of their disappearance was spread through the valley until this morning, when it was apparent that they could do no more, they were continually on the move, despite the hardships. P. P. Patton, of this camp, practically closed down one of his mills and dispatched the loggers to the mountain to search. At one time there were fully 50 men at work on the mountain. Storms Hamper Searchers. The searching was greatly handi capped by the terrific storms which raged on the mountain daily. There has not been a day since the couple Sisl appeared that the mountain has not been enshrouded in a storm. On sev eral occasions the heavy wind and the snow and sleet drove the searchers down to the timber at the foot of the mountain. According to the story told by Miss Verdi Monroe and Mr. Carroll, they went up the mountain with the Smiths last Sunday morning. They started to limb one mile to the right of Butte Camp and were soon In the snow fields. As they got nearly to the top of the mountain the storm broke around them and a terrific wind storm set in. When they started out there was no prospect of a storm. When sleet began to fall Concluded on Pace 2. J