fx VOL. LIII. XO- 1G,527. PORTLAND. ORECJON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1913. PRICE FIVE CENTS. ''" V Y C A R R A N Z A A N D HALE GONFERAT NOGALES Rebel Leader Receives Wilson's Proposition. DEFINITE PLEDGES EXACTED Local Feeling Is That History Is Being Made. ALL CEREMONY IS WAIVED Definite Terms of United States Government Said to Have Been Presented but All Are Si lent as to Details. MEXICO CITY, Nov. 12. John Llnd, pergonal representative of president "Wilson, left the Mexican capital to nleht for Vera C'rnz. Mr. I.lnd has been here since November 7 In confer ence with the American charge d'af faires, Nelson O'Shaugbnessy, ethers, cn the Mexican situation. VERA CltCZ, Mm., Nov. 12. The personal effects of Mr. Llnd 'were re moved tonight from ills hotel, where lie linn rcsldetl during; hla stay In Vera Cror, to the American Consulate. NOGAI.ES, Sonora, Nov. 13. Cross In? a narrow little street from the tri.ited States Into Mexico, 'William Bay ard Hale, personal representative of President Wilson, met the constitution alist chief. General Venustiano Carran za, and his Cabinet, and presented to them a definite proposal from the American Government. What that proposal was the American diplomatic agent declined to say. -The Mexican revolutionary leaders also 'vere silent, but to those who have been anxiously awaiting1 the develop ment of the American policy with re mru to Mexico it was fraught with ) ossibilitles for the destinies of the v, ar-worn republic and her relations tilth her Northern neighbor. Definite Pledges Required. All that could be learned regarding the proposal of the American President was that it was In writing and that it required certain things, including pledges from the Constitutionalists, in case the United States lifted the em bargo on the exportation of arms. Among the guarantees demanded were said to be restoration of general order in a reasonable time, safety of Americans and other foreigners and the ultimate establishment of bona fide representative government. Hale Meet Carranza Cabinet. Into a little room of the tiny custom house, where General Carranza has es tablished his "ad interim" capital, the American emissary was ushered to meet thu chiefs of the rebellion against Iluerta. Carranza and his entire Cab lnet were there and with them Hale conferred, exchanged views and im pressiens and consulted from noon until the shadows grew long and enveloped the twin towns of Nogales, U. S. A., and Nogales, Itepublica de Mexico. Both towns unanimously decided that the conference was the most portent ous event in their history. Their peo pits frankly believed that, in fact, it was making history and that on its outcome depended fate not merely vie tory or defeat for a single political party of Mexico, but possibly peace or war for two countries, and probably the salvation or destruction of a na tion. Ceremony Is Lacking;. The conference was held amid the simplest surroundings. There were no uniforms, no ceremony. Hale, accom panied by American Consul Frederick Slmpich, entered the custom-house and was ushered into the tiny room. There they found straight-back chairs lining the walls. The only decoration was a gilded coat of arms of the Re public of Mexico. This hung over the place reserved for General Carranza. Hale, dressed in traveling tweeds, was surrounded by Mexicans in somber black and grays. Tgnacio Bonlllas, an American university alumnus and Car ranza's minister of fomento and com munications, was the official Inter preter. for the American representative and General Carranza. Bonillas took President Wilson's proposition from Hale, and in Spanish presented it to the rebel chieftain. News Eagerly Awaited. During the hours the men were in conference throngs of anxious Mexi cans paced the patio of the custom house. Across the boundary on the American sJde of the street dividing the two towns there were several hun dred American refugees from Mexico who eagerly awaited news from the conference chamber, believing that the safety of their possessions left in Mex ico when they took the President's ad vice to get out of the country depended upon the outcome. No word as to what President Wilson had proposed to Oar ranza through Hale, or what the rebel leaders thought of the proposal, was allowed to leak out. Hale went direct from the conference room to the American side and en tered into communication with Wash ington. 1IIEKTA WILL. XOT ACCEDE John Llnd Gets No Answer and Pre pares for Departure. MEXICO CITY. Nov. 12. General Victorlano Huerta tacitly refused to I (Concluded ea Pas W. STOP, LOOK, LISTEN SIGNS ARE IGNORED STATISTICS OX CROSSINGS SHOW DRIVERS ARE CARELESS. Only' One Per Cent of Those Ap proaching Tracks Pause, Say Officials of Southern Pacific. SAN FRANCISCO., Nov. 12. (Special.) More than 57 per cent of all people In automobiles, carriages or on foot, who cross railway tracks In California do not stop moving and, fall to look either way for coming trains. Sixty nine per cent of auto drivers never "Stop, Look and Listen." ' The Southern Pacific Company today made public the results of a check made at 12 typical crossings in San Francisco, Oakland, Sacramento, Stock ton and the country in an investiga tion to Improve crossing conditions. Statistics show that 1 per cent of all auto accidents occur at cross ings. The railroads and the automo bile associations are co-operating to lessen the number. Here is the Southern Pacific sum mary of 151 hours at the 12 crossings: Motor vehicles crossed, 16,522; horse drawn vehicles, 4246; pedestrians, 4528; total, 25,296. ? This is how travelers treated the "Stop, look, listen" signs: Pet. .1 Stopped and looked both ways. . 85 K.epc moving ana looKea botti ways S05O Kept moving and looked one way , 1694 Kept moving and. looked ahead 14,617 8S.4 6.T 67.8 Of the 16,522 automobiles, 2860 crossed at high speed. The drivers of 9926 automobiles looked neither way. The Southern Pacific officials say they must have more co-operation in guarding- against accidents. WOMAN DIES FROM BURNS Home of C. M. Bragg, Xcar Bend, Destroyed While Rancher Absent. BEND, Or., Nov. 12. (Special.) Burned in a terriBle manner while alone at her home, six miles east of Bend, yesterday, Mrs. EUa N. Bragg, wife of C. M. Bragg, a rancher,' died this morning. The Bragg- home was de stroyed by the fire, the origin of which is unknown. Mr. Bragg was returning from Bend with supplies when he saw the smoke from the burning house while about two miles away. A neighbor who was' on horseback reached the house before Mr. Bragg did and put out a fire in the barn which Mrs. Bragg started by tearing off part of her burning cloth ing. When Mr. Bragg arrived his wife had struggled along the road about 100 yards. She was taken to a neighbor's house, where she died at 5:30. She was 42 years old and has been married 15 years. There were no children. AVALANCHE BURIES MINERS Alaskans Carried to Within 10 Feet of Precipice One Dies. VALDEZ, Alaska, Nov. 12. (Special.) Robert Martin was killed and John Connelly, Warren Nelson and E. S. Bruner were injured in an avalanbhe on the Big Four mining claims on Min eral Creek, near here. One of the sur vivors was beneath the debris seven hours. Bruner, Nelson, Connelly and Martin were overwhelmned in their tent by an avalanche of snow that descended and carried them and their tent to within 10 feet of a 1000-foot precipice, Bruner chopped his way out of the debris by using a part "of a whisky flask as a knife. Naked and badly cut, he walked a quarter of a mile to the tunnel and procured a shovel, with which he dug out his companions. OREGON WINNER RETURNS Load of Prizes Brought From Drj Farming Congress hy T. Reuter. Loaded down with cups, ribbons. medals, diplomas and other insignia ol championships won and honors extend ed, Tillman Reuter, Oregon's dry-farm ing wizard, returned yesterday from the annual International Dry Farming Congress at Tulsa, Okla., where he won the grand prize for the best state ex hibit. Every state in the Union and nearly every province in Canada had an ex- nioit enterea in competition against Mr. Reuters Oregon display, ' gathereo from Central and Eastern counties. This is the fourth successive year Mr. Reuter has won the grand champion ship for this state. WOMEN ESCHEW POLITICS Daughters of Confederacy Ignore Greetings Prom Suffragists. NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 12. The Daughters of the Confederacy refused flatly, today, to receive greetings from the Southern States Woman Suffrage Conference, after the organization f that body was effected. This action was taken on the grounds that the Daughters must eschew poli tics or ay kinds. ; ! JUDGE KNOWLES INJURED Hunting Hatchet Glances and Gashes Knee of Jurist, LA GRANDE. Or., Nov. 12. (Spe cial.) Circuit Judge Knowles may not be able to convene the Wallowa term of court next Monday, as the result of a serious Injury which he sustained when a hunting hatchet glanced and struck him a severe gash on the knee He is unable to walk and suffers much pain. CURRENCY CAUCUS PLANS ABANDONED Administration Wins Votes in Committee. REED AND O'GORMAN GO OVER Hitchcock, However, Cannot Yet Reconcile His Views. EARLY REPORT INDICATED Pressure Brought to Bear to Secure Adjournment, hut Mexican Sit uation, if Nothing Else, Will Prevent It. WASHINGTON, Nov. 12. The attempt to force the Administration currency bill through the Senate by the use of the Democratic caucus was abandoned today and the currency committee of the Senate obtained time for further consideration of the bill. The practical agreement by six Democratic Senators, half of the committee, and hope for a final report within five or six days was reported to the Democratic conference when it met today by Senator Owen, and at his request the conference took no action. Since the call for the conference was issued Senators Reed and O'Gorruan had Joined Chairman Owen and Sena tors Pomerene, Shafroth and Holtis in support of the Administration measure. despite their votes against some of its provisions in the committee. These six Democrats have virtually agreed on a bill which meets the view of Presi dent Wilson. This measure will be taken before the Senate as soon as possible. Hitchcock Holds Out. A further attempt to swing Senator Hitchcock, of Nebraska, in line with his Democratic colleagues was made in j. meeting of Democrats of the commit te after the conference, but Senator Hitchcock insisted he could not recon cile his ciews with the demands of the President. Tr.e full . committee. Demo crats and Republicans, will meet tomor- ow and another attempt will be made to secure an agreement among a ma jority. If this falls, it is probable that the Democrats and Republicans will make unanimous report on those details of the bill which all approve and then submit supplementary reports showing the Senate their disagreement on the fundamentals of the bill. The Republic ans and Senator Hitchcock have an nounced their determination to stand out to the last for the public owner ship of the regional banks in the n,in system and for Government control of those banks. The Democratic conference was in (Concluded on Page 2.) r . ........................... ........... ........................................ i soiled. :: : : :; " INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY S Maximum temperature, 44 degrees: minimum. 86 degrees. TODAY'S Fair; northerly winds. Foreign. Mexican rebel leader receives Wilson's 1 pro posal. Page 1. National. Wilson's proposition to Mexican rebels de livered to Carranza. Page 1. Plan for currency caucus abandoned. Page 1. President's family busy opening boxes con taining wedding gifts. Page 2. Domestic. Lawyer convicted, detective free in Funk conspiracy case. Page 2. Anti-Saloon League works for "dry" Na tion. Page S. Purity Congress hears neglectful parents blamed for vice. Page 1. Passengers from Orient have experience with law against aigrettes. Page 5. Gould family displaced by Rockefeller char ities in control of New York's elevated railway. Page 2. Statistics show "Stop, Look, Listen" signs are ignored. Page 1. Sport. Uniform contract may be adopted fr ball players. Page 9. Old grudges expected to make contests for Pacific Coast honors spirited. Page 8. East and Middle West teams practice for final games. Page S. Giant-Sox banquet orators to be numerous. Page 9. Three Portland freshmen make University of Oregon team. Page S. Pacific Northwest. Columbia George convicted of murder at Pendleton. Page 6. High-bred cows urged by expert for dairies at Chehalis. Page 7. Young Eccles' coup wins In dealings with Sumpter Valley Railroad trainmen. Page 2. Plea for church heard by labor at Seattle convention- Page 5. Girl who wins many prizes for baking and sewing wins now many offers of mar riage. Page 1. More accidents recorded second year over first under Washington's workmen's compensation act. Page 6. Oregon hen lays 003 eggs in 12 months. Pago 18. Salem "wets" would restrain prohibition from going Into effect. Page 7. Crook County plans higher tax levy next , year to aid roaus. page o. Commercial and Marine. Ready demand absorbs all hop offerings. Page 19. Hulk of Canadian crop reported moved and Chicago market advances. Page 19. Improvement in speculative sentiment in Wall street and abroad. Page 19. Mammoth ves3els to navigate Columbia River. Page 14. Portland and Vicinity. Gorgeous floral displays are sold for char ity. Page li. Holden puts O. K. on Portland school gar den system. Page 18. i Weather report, data and forecast. Page 14. Cltv Commissioner Brewster Itemizes plan for using $200,000 In park bonds asked of voters, l'age 13. Oregon citizens make preparation to com ply with Income tax law. Page 13. Rehearsals for "Jappyland" keep society folk busy. Page 12. Mrs. Henry Waldo Coe sues for divorce. making many cnarges. rasa -if. State-wide conference makes recommenda tion to Industrial Welfare for ruling. Page 1. Suspect leaps from high window Into arms of officer. Page 14. Unique acts revealed La Investigation of po . lice ftcoDdaL- rae 4. Multnomah must act now on good roads, say speakers at auto club banquet. Page 18. $3500 PAID FOR DOG BITE Streetcar Company Makes Xo 70e fense Against Passenger's Claim. ST. LOUIS, Nov. 12. A Jury in the Circuit Court here 'oday awarded Al bert J. Good J350C- damages against the United Railways, the local traction company, because he was bitten by a dog while he was ri-ding on a street car. The dos was picked up on the street by a policeman, who was permitted by the streetcar conductor to board the ear with the anims., 8.25 MINIMUM PAY LIMIT IS PROPOSED 54 Hour Work Week Is Conference Idea. RECOMMENDATIONS ARE MADE Suggestion Covers Mercantile. Factory and Laundry Aid. SIMILAR RULING NEXT STEP Industrial Welfare Commission Tem porarily Allows Stores to Stay Open Until 8 P. M. Pending Action on Recommendations. That $8.25 a week be the . minimum wage for experienced women workers; that 54 hours a week be the maximum hours; that the period before a worker shall be considered experienced shall be one year; that $6 a week be the minimum wage foe inexperienced work ers not engaged on piecework, and that 8:30 "P. M. be the limit for night work in mercantile and manufacturing estab. lishments and laundries were the rec ommendations adopted by the state wide conference on hours, wages and working conditions for women and minors yesterday afternoon. The Industrial "Welfare Commission, which called the conference as part of its administration of the Oregon mini mum wage law for women and minors, will give four weeks' advertised notice of a public hearing, to take place prob ably December; 13, at which the recom mendations may be discussed by all who wish to urge or oppose therrj. Ninety Days Time Needed. Following this public hearing, pro vided the recommendations are satis factory to the commission, a ruling em bodying them will be issued, to become effective after 60 days. Thus It will be approximately 00 days until the ear liest dae that the recommendations ex pressed in a ruling can become legalli binding. The recommendation that women may not be employed after 8:30 P. M. does not include hotels and restaurants, canneries, confectioneries, nor tele phone arid telegraph olfices. The rec ommendation that 54 hours shall be a maximum week's work, and the otiier recommendations, however, do appfy to these places, as to other enterprises in the state in which women are em ployed. Rollnjc Is Modified. The Commission yesterday issued an announcement modifying its ruling that after November 2S women shall not be employed in Portland mercan tile establishments after 6 P. 51. For a period of six months from that date women will be permitted to work in (Concluded on Page :i. ) MANY SUITORS WOO GIRL WHO CAN SEW LASS WHO BAKES PRIZE PIES GETS MARRIAGE OFFERS. Letters From Bachelors of Wealth and Standing Seek Hand of Capable, Practical Maiden. NORTH TAKIMA, Wash., Nov. 12. (Special.) The ability to bake the best loaf of bread and the best cake, to make the best shirtwaist and the best plain dress, in a contest open to school girls of the state, has brought to Miss Helen Townsend, of North Yakima, more than the prizes she has won at the "Washington State Fair in this city and the Children's Industrial Exhibit in Spokane in the last month and a half. The latest things her ability has brought her are matrimonial oppor tunities. That they are excellent op portunities is admitted by the men Who offer them. ' The offers are all by letter and all of them describe in detail the worldly wealth and physical attributes of the bachelors who make them. One letter that has been received by Miss Town send is from a rancher near Farming ton, Wash., who owns 360 acres and who now. does his own cooking but who wants someone else to do It for him. Miss Townsend is a student in the North Yakima School and the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Townsend, or chardists in Frultvale, a suburb of this city. In the last two months she has won as prizes two sewing machines, a cedar chest, considerable cash and a number of miscellaneous small articles for her culinary ability and dexterity with the needle. PRESIDENT IS FOR ECONOMY American Ships Must Bid on Same Basis as Foreign Bottoms. Democratic economy has taken from the Matson Navigation Company, of San Francisco, the business of trans porting a cargo of coal in their new steamer Manoa from Norfolk to San Francisco. President Wilson is t,aid to have re fused to sign a contract yesterday to pay the Matson interests $7 a. ton for moving the fuel while owners of for eign vessels bid from $4.75 to $5.50. A telegram received here made known his action. The Manoa has been completed at Newport News and is intended to oper ate from San Francisco to the Hawaiian Islands. As a means of getting her around cheaply and earn something on tho voyage, the owners bid on the fuel contract.' INFORMATION BUREAU GOES Appropriation for 114 Cut Off by Budget Committee. Portland's attempt to have a public information bureau at the City Hall to hand out municipal information has been a failure. Announcement was r.ade yesterday that the department vill be abolished Monday and the in formation clerk. Miss Mina Smith, will go back to her former position as clerk of the women's division of the 2ree employment bureau. The budget committee refused to al low an appropriation' to cover the cost of the work during 1914 and Commis sioner Brewster, who has charge, de cided that it would be useless to con tinue the office unless It could be made permanent. COLLIER ASHORE ON GUAM American Is Drowned in Typhoon In Philippines. WASHINGTON, Nov. 12. First news of a great typhoon, which swept the Island of Guam and threw the collier AJax ashore, came to the Navy Depart ment today in a report from Lieutenant-Commander Hinds, governor of the island and commandant of the naval station there. One American was drowned Hospital Steward George M. Nicholson, who was sent ashore with a rescue party from the AJax. The storm demolished native houses and destroyed roads, wharves, lighters and telegraph and telephone poles. PERUVIAN CITY IN RUINS More Than 2 00 Deaths Reported as Result of Earthquake. ' LIMA, Peru, Nov. 12. Official tele grams report a continuance of earth quakes in the province of Aymareas in the department of Apurimao. The City of Challhuanoa, capital of the prov ince, with a population of nearly 4000, is reported to be in ruins. A private telegram says that the deaths number more than 200. Apurimao is a southwestern depart ment of Peru, with a population of nearly 200,000. It is, composed of the provinces of Abanacay, Aymareas, Anta arid Cotabambas and a portion of Ayacucho. FIELD IN JAPAN FERTILE Eliot Suggests Mission Work by Uni tarians in Nippon. BOSTON, Nov. 12. In an address before the missionary conference of the American Unitarian Association here today Emeritus President Eliot of Harvard recommended Japan as a fer tile field for the mission work of the denomination, which already has some missionaries there. " The people or Japan, said J.e, are giving serious consideration to a re ligion which means righteousness in the conduct of life. It is for us to go to them in answer to their Quosclons as to what religion supplies the right nu tiv for every-day living:.- ' PARENTAL NEGLECT BLAMED FOR VICE Love of Finery Also Takes Share. RGMANGE IS ANOTHER CAUSE Moral Educator Proposes Rec reation as Remedy. DAWN OF NEW ERA NOTED Purity Congress Hears Causes of Evil Catalogned and Cures Pre scribed Children Asked to Aid Anthony Comstock. MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 12. A depart ment of recreation to combat the evil influences of the dancehalls in all cities. Federal laws governing divorces and marriage of an interstate nature, and a congress of newspaper men to discuss methods of governing the dis semination of news relative to th white slave traffic were among the recommendations offered by Clifford G. Roe, of Chicago, in an address be fore the International Purity Congress, which closed here tonight. Mr. Roe is the president of the American Bureau of Moral Education and was appointed a delegate to the congress by Secretary of State Bryan, by authority of a Joint resolution of the Federal Congress. The subject of Mr. Roe's address was "White Slavery and the Best Method of Dealing With the Evil." New Method In Vogue. "The term "white slavery' has broad ened greatly in recent years," he said. "In the past efforts to deal with tho social evil problem were largely reg ulative. Within the last seven years a. new method of dealing with it has been adopted. A scientific study has brought about the adoption of the at titude of constant repression, as tho immediate method, and absolute sup pression of commercialized vice as the ultimate ideal. "Neglect by parents in bringing up their daughters is a big factor in the making of white slaves. Mothers are often too busy attending clubs, thea ters and card parties to find time to spend on their children. Fathers have keener interest in their properties than they have for the welfare of their daughters. They let their children grow up like the weeds in the prairie, to care for and look after themselves. Many Causes Enumerated. "Girls who are brought up under such influences are easy prey for the white slave procurers." Among the causes of white slavery enumerated were: Ignorance on the part of the public, the parents and the children. Double standard of morals. Hasty marriages and divorces. Love of fine clothes and suggestive fashions. The spirit of adventure Mid romance. Discussing some of tho economic causes, he gave the following: The deferring of marriage because men cannot afford to marry. Competition of girls and women who do not need to work and help lower wages. Wages are regulated by supply and demand. Employment of young girls, who practically lose the home care and training of mothers. The absolute elimination of the vice districts and a single standard of mor ality for men and women were urged. Prison Proponed as Cure. Winifred C. Ziabel, former District Attorney of Milwaukee, made a plea for the extermination of the segregated vice district, urging long-term prison sentences as a cure. Farms and homes throughout the country where refuge may be extended to unfortunate women are to be estab lished by the World's Purity Federa tion, under the auspices of which the congress Is held. Five members of the organization were appointed by Presi dent Steadwell to study conditions among these women and to establish the refuges. Funds for the enterprise will be raised by the committee. A purity congress will be held at Kansas City in November, 1914. The next regular congress will be held in 1915, but the location has not yet been decided. School children over the entire coun try a asked to contribute 10 cenLs each assist Anthony Comstock, o New York, to carry on his crusade against immorality, according to reso lutions adopted today. The children are requested, to forego one evening at a moving-picture show for that pur pose. VOTE OF WOMEN IS LIGHT Proportion in City Precincts Is Heavy, but in Country Small. GRANTS PASS, Or., Nov. 12. (Spe cial.) At the recent special election 1554 votes were cast, while the regis tration stands nearly 4000. It is esti mated that about 900 men voted, while there were but 600 women. In the country preclnct3 the women took but little interest. Althouse precinct cast 69 votes,' only six of which were cast by women. In the populous precinct oE Kerby only eight women voted. In the city in Ward Two 140 votes were cast, 107 of which were by women. r