VOL,. LiIV. NO. 16,697. PORTLAND, OREGOX, MONDAY, TO SAYRE IS IN CITY 1905 FAIR QUEEN'S SERVANTS THREATEN STRIKE JUAE 1, 1914. PRTHP! fttt. rrvTq WAR HAS mm WOMEN EXCHANGE GROUNDS STORSTAD'S CAPTAIN DENIES HE BACKED Empress Blamed for Vessels' Separation. INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS TO BOOST COLLEGE ITS BRIGHTER SIDE TART AMENITIES The W eatner. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, decrees; minimum. 59- degrees. SCENE OF BIG FIRE PRESIDENT'S SOX-IX-LAW AIDS ECONOMIES MENACE DOMESTIC WILLIAMS ENDOWMENT. TODAY'S Increasing cloudiness, followed by showers, cooler; winds becoming PEACE OF PALACE. Huioeny, 1 s v V Life on Battleship Is Full of Interest. EFFICIENCY MOST STRIKING John T. McCutcheon Tells of v Voyage Toward Vera Cruz. WEN ARE LIGHT OF HEART BOoring: Pictures Help Slake Hours "Pass Pleasantly for Men and . v Are Expected to Stimu late Recruiting. BT JOHN T. STCTTTCHEON. 0pecial Correspondence The Oresonian and the Gnlcag-o Tribune. APPROACHING VERA CRUZ. TJ. a B. Wyoming-, May 18. It la probable .that the Mexican situation will have undergone a radical change by the time these words are printed. Per haps La Paloma, the Mexican dove, will be cooing- a peaceful duet with an amiable looking--American eagle, or perhaps we may be involved in the stern actualities of warfare. Qulen Babe? Weeks, or days, alone can tell. In the meantime, before grim vis aged war has become so grim that one may not have the heart to look upon the lighter and pleasanter as pects of It, there Is still time to con eider "going to war" more from the angle of an Interesting experience than from that of a tragic fact. Men Gay and Light of Heart. If the reader Is thirsting for somber details of the stern business of prepar ing for war this story will be a bitter disappointment, for It has to do with moving-picture shows, of sailing on Summer seas, of busy, alert and light hearted jackles and of broad, smooth decks as expensive almost as parade grounds. The ships of the Navy may have to send landing parties cshore, and the men to whom this duty shall fall must be thoroughly prepared for any service that may fall to their lot. It was the necessity for this sort of service and the preparedness for It that made It possible for Admiral Fletcher to seize Vera Cruz so quickly and effectively with the marines and bluejackets un der his command. And future emer gency of a like kind will find the Navy ready, as usual. If one may judge by the thoroughness of ' the drills that have been filling the days on the Wyo ming during the week since she left New Tork. Men All Highly Efficient. To any one who has never seen a giant battleship In Its daily routine on the eve of war the experience is un forgettable. There are 1200 men on this ship, and each one must know what he is to do and know how to do It when the word comes for action. Each one must know how to take care of himself ashore in camp conditions and how to act in order that his effi ciency may be of the highest sort. In consequence the last few days have been filled with small arm drills. machine gun drills, tent pitching drills. knapsack packing drills, and drills and talks about every possible phase of their duty ashore under conditions of warfare. Lieutenant-Commander Mil ler will have command of the Wyoming battalion If it goes ashore for war service, and If he has overlooked any feature that makes for effectiveness I can't Imagine what It can be. Chief Surgeon Oman has given talks to the men In order that each one may know clearly how to preserve his health tinder climatic conditions which may be very trying. Activity Is Ceaseless. Men are cautioned about the drink Ing water, about files and mosquitoes. about fruit and vegetables, about the necessity of cleanliness in person and equipment, and about the proper care of themselves In case of sunstroke, snakebite or wounds of all kinds. From the bottom to the top of this great ship there has been the steady ami orderly and almost ceaseless activ ity that is fast transforming green sailor boys into experienced fighting men. One is struck by the yonthfulness of the sailors. Most of them are boys or very young men.' The older men, the second or third enlistment men, seem to be In a decided minority. The same Is true of the officers. Captain Glen lion, in' command, is little over 30 Lieutenant-Commander Todd, the ex ecutive officer and the one to whom falls the duty of running the ship ac- coming to the captain's orders, is hardly 40; and the rest of the officers range down in age from that point to a point- low In the 20s. In no equal number of men would one find a greater degree of clean-cut, high-grade qualifications of excellence and effi ciency than may be found among the men who direct the destinies of the Wyoming. Moving Pictures Shown. Efficiency, however. Is taken as a matter of course in our Navy, and one Is not surprised to find it. It Is In other matters Incident to life on a battleship that one finds the surprises. There is a completely equipped hos pital, dispensary and operating room (Concluded on Fage At Dinner at University Club To night He Will Tell 15 Alumni of Plans to Raise $2,000,000 Fund. Francis Bowes Sayre, son-in-law of President Woodrow Wilson, is In Port land. He arrived yesterday from San Francisco and registered at the Hotel Benson. Mrs. Sayre, who was Miss Jessie Wil son, Is not with him. The reason for that, Mr. Sayre explained, is that he is on a business trip In the interest of Williams College.. at Williamstown, Mass. Mr. Sayre is assistant to the president of Williams College. Active steps were begun last Fall to raise an endowment of $2,000,000. On his present trip throughout the country Mr. Sayre Is meeting alumni and inter esting them in the endowment plan. There are nearly 15 Williams men In Portland, Mr. Sayre said. He la to meet them at a dinner tonight In the University Club. From here he will go to Seattle. Mr. Sayre Is enthusiastic on the sub ject of the endowment. Its purpose. he said. Is not to put up new college buildings nor to Increase the equip ment, but to increase the salaries of its professors and provide new pro fessorships. "Wo want to make Williams College the best small college in the United States," said Mr. Sayre. "It now has about 500 students, and we are not campaigning to increase the number, nor trying to compete with the large colleges. "Our aim Is to develop our students so that they will be thoroughly equipped to take Intellectual leader ship, but even more important than that is to make them real men. "We hope to have the first JL000.000 raised by next Fall. Already about $800,000 has been pledged." NEW BISHOP TO BE CHOSEN Clergy of Diocese Select Prelate; but Confirmation Is Required. To select a successor to Bishop Scadding a diocesan convention has been called for September 16. The convention will be attended by members of the clergy and laity. The clergy, by majority vote, select their candidate for bishop, who must then be approved by majority vote of the laity. After this the name of the candidate must be submitted to the house of bishops of the United States and ap proved by a majority vote and finally ratified by standing committees of the various dioceses of the country, but this latter is largely a formality. No one has been suggested yet as a probability. , MEN DIE TO SAVE GIRLS Three Jump From Sinking; Boat to Lighten It; Companions Rescued PHILADELPHIA. May 31. Three young men Jumped from a leaking row boat sinking in the Delaware River late yesterday and were drowned. Their four companions, rescued by a motor boat after . their own craft had cap sized, said today that the trio, oom of whom could swim, took to t4r water. hoping the lightened boat coi.d reach shore. Raymond Tinney was the first to jump. His fiancee, Sarah German, was one of two girls rescued. The others who Jumped with Tinney were John Mouchoch and John Murphy. WOMEN DISTURB CHURCHES Snffragrette Delivers Harangne in St. Paul's Cathedral, London. LONDON. May 31. A suffragette, evading the officials in St. Paul's Ca thedral, mounted the steps of the lec tern at the morning services today and harangued the astonished worshippers upon the "wrongs -of women." despite the efforts of ushers to dislodge her. She was finally carried bodily from the cathedral. Other suffragettes then be gan praying for "martyred women." They were also ejected. In the Birmingham Cathedral women rose In their seats and shouted "In the name of Christ, stop forcible feeding." RADIUM CURES ONE MAN Florida Railroad Official Leaves Baltimore Free From Cancer. "BALTIMORE, May 31 It was an nounced tonight that radium had ef fected a complete cure of cancer of the throat, for which A. L. Glass, a railroad official of Gainesville, Fla.. came here for treatment two months ago. Last January Mr. Glass experienced an irritation of the throat which grad ually grew worse. After an unsuc cessful operation the trouble was pro nounced to be an Incurable case of cancer. STORM HITS MILWAUKEE Damage That May Reach $500,000 Is Done by Wisconsin Cyclone. MILWAUKEE, Wis, May 81. A se vere wind and electrical storm, resem bling a cyclone, struck Milwaukee and its western suburbs today and blew down a score of buildings in West Al l's and Wauwatosa. It demolished fences, barns and other buildings on the state Fair grounds and crippled in terurban traffic The damage may run to 1500,000. No lives were lost. Antis' Methods Likened to Polecat's. RETORT ACCUSES 'FEMINISTS' Social Revolution Declared Real Plan of Extremists. SUFFRAGE IS ONLY PART "Free Woman's Concern Is to See to It She Can Bear Children With out Soliciting Maintenance From Man" Is Quoted. WASHINGTON. May 8L (Special.) Ihe headquarters of the National As sociation Opposed to Woman Suffrage today issued a statement which charges that the suffragists called the antls "polecats" in a resolution adopted by the 47th annual meeting of the New England Suffrage Association. In their retort the antis call the suffragists "social revolutionists" and declare there is nothing in common between the suffragist and true feminist. The antis say the New England suf fragists passed a resolution at their annual meeting saying: "We denounce as a erross slander th charge of the anti-suffragist that equal sunrage means loose morals, and w protest especially against their attrib uting to prominent women statements which these women have emphatically disclaimed. ' "Tactics of Polecat" Charged. "These are the antics of the polecats when badly frightened." Mrs. A. N. George, of Brookline, Mass., a leading platform speaker among the antis, said: "This is perhaps the most extraordi nary resolution ever adopted by a pub lic assemblage. Is this metaphor a foretaste ot the amenities " In which political women will deal? These suffragists should not condemn their opponents, but they should hasten to withdraw from the suffrage platform those who are preaching feminism. The resolutions should be aimed at the suffragist feminists who are giving daily evi dence of the tendency of the younger suffragists to work for the 'social revo lution' promised by Mrs. Harper Gooley. Feminism Defined by Woman. "A New York dally under date of May 26 quotes the secretary of the National Suffrage Association as de fining feminism as the 'rebellion against being ticketed and treated as (Concluded on Page 8.) CHEEK, UP, THE T "I n ! i j j-ijaijL.i.jijL.jiiiuii aisiiiMiii in i ii i iii man la,... nsaKuiei.il i . .. u mi a .... - - - - - J T - ! , T , , sinj.sSSSSSSS.SSSS .. . 1 ........ ..p.... Man who went down with Empress, but lives, tells story. Page 3. Storstad's captain denies be backed away mvui Aiupreia. fage A. Foreign. Royal economies threaten to cause strike of queen a domestlo help. Page 1. National. Mediators virtually decide to Ignore Car- ranza. rage 2. Domestic. Suffragists denounce methods of antls as those of polecat, badly frightened. Page 1. Colorado strike settlement seemingly no nearer, face 3. Marvelous development of wireless subject of report. page 3. John T. McCutcheon describes blighter side oe going to war." Page 1. Sports. -Paclflo Coast League results Portland 10, Los Angeles 4: Oakland 2-5. Venice 2-4; - Sacramento 3-2, San Francisco 0-5. Page Northwestern League results Portland 1. Seattle 4; Vancouver 4, Spokane 1; Vic toria 2, Tacoma 4. Page 10. Los Angeles buys 'Joe Gedeon from Wash ington. Page 10. Evan Evans arrives to Join Beavers. Page It, Pacific Northwest. Resolution denouncing prohibition move ment adopted by Uerratn Staatsverbund in Eugene. Page 4. Astoria will -welcome Important delegation Wednesday. Page 2. Karluk's crew believed to have saved in struments and supplies. Page 2. Queen Thelma and party entertained roy ally in North Yakima. . Page 5. Two counties hold up official count of primary election. Page 4. Portland and Vicinity. Fire destroys California building at 1905 fair grounds. Page 1. Orpheum has dual wizards in Japanese psychologist and chimpanzee. Page 14. Oaks visited by 12,000. Page T. Mrs. O. H. Snell says Raymond Merz bad her jailed . and . robbed her apartment. Page 14. . Bishop R. J. Cooke preaches at Sellwood Methodist Church. Page 11. Francis B. Sayre, President's son-in-law, ar rives nere m interest of Williams College fund. Page 1. Weather report, data and forecast. Page 12. TAMPICO RIOT QUELLED Rebels Promptly Put Down Anti American Demonstration. WASHINGTON,' May 31. Constitu tionalist authorities promptly quelled an Incipient anti-American demonstra tion by drunken peons at Tamplco yesterday,, according to Rear-Admiral Badger's report to the Navy Depart ment tonight. Admiral Badger gave no details of the demonstration. The Admiral said native keepers for the. Lobda Island lighthouse had not yet arrived and that the beacon was being maintained by a detachment from the Cummings. PORTLAND GETS SESSION Swedish Mission Church Conference at Tacoma Concluded. TACOMA, Wash., May 3L Portland was chosen as the next meeting place of the Paclflo Northwest Swedish Mis sion Churches at the conclusion of a ten days' conference held here. Reports were made showing the growth of the faith among the Scan dinavian peoples of the Coast. PRESIDENT SAYS IT'S ONLY PSYCHOLOGICAL. California Building Is Prey to Flames. FORESTRY BUILD! jG SCORCHED Sparks in Spectacular Blaze Are Carried Far. WHOLE CITY IS LIGHTED Chimes Toll as They Topple From Belfry Tower Police Early on Scene Believe Fire Was , of Incendiary Origin. The California State building at the Lewis and Clark Fair grounds was burned down at 1 o'clock this morning In, a spectacular fire that threatened for a time to destroy the Forestry building, the Oriental building, and houses in the Willamette Heights dis trict. Sparks from the blazing structure were carried by a west wind over the northern part of the city. Had the wind not been light many other blazes would almost certainly have resulted. Patrolmen Waddell and Johnson, among the first persons to arrive at the fire, think it was of incendiary origin. They were a distance ot only a few blocks away when it started. When they reached the scene the entire build ing was burning. Walla Fall With' Crash. The fire started shortly before 12:30 o'clock. When discovered it had gained great headway. Within 10 minutes the entire build ing was in flames. Fifteen minutes after an alarm had been telephoned to fire headquarters, bringing Chief Dowell, Battalion Chief Young, five en gine companies and one truck to scene, the south wall fell with a crash. Shortly afterwards ' the" east .' wall tumbled to the ground, throwing sparks high in the air. Sparks Carry to Forestry. Showers of red-hot embers and sparks were carried from the burning Cali fornia building to the famous old For estry building, situated about 60 yards to the south. They fell In streams on the roof. Three times portions of the roof were ablaze, but each time the firemen managed to extinguish th flames. Chief Dowell sent crews of his men on the roof and they fought these in clplent blazes. Others worked from the sides of the great log structure. It was hard work, in a very furnace of heat, but they saved the Forestry (Concluded on Page A.) Reduction in Force of Maids Makes Longer Hours Necessary and This Has Been Refused. LONDON. May 8L (Special) Queen Mary Is confronted with a strike among her domestic staff at Buckingham Pal ace. The servant problem has lately grown acute In London and discontent among the maid servants at Bucking ham Palace, which has been smolder ing for some time, culminated In their flat refusal to conform to the new regulations by the housekeeper, by which the working hours of servants were Increased by more than two hours a day. The discontent arose from Queen Mary's economical policy of reducing her staff. No servant was dismissed, but. as retirements took place, either on account of age or marriage, no other servants were employed. The to tal number Is now smaller by 14 than It was In the reign of King Edward. The housemaid staff last year brought to the notice of the house keepers the fact that their hours of work were becoming longer and the work harder, and they asked for more help. The Queen has promised to receive a deputation of maids, and the proba bility is that her majesty will have to increase tne staff. She -has been strongly advised by the master of the household to do so. TEMPERATURE HERE IS 86 Sunday Is Hottest Day of Year, With Exception of May IS. Except for one day May 13, no day of the year in Portland was hotter than yesterday, when the mercury leaped to 86 degrees at 4 o'clock and remained stationery for more than an hour. The three hot days of the past month were May 13, which established the record of the year to date with a tem perature of 87 degrees, and May 20 and yesterday, when 6 degrees was recorded on the official Instruments at the Custom House. The hourly temperatures for yester day follow: - . Deg. Beg. 2 a. M 00 1 P. M so S M 1 S P. M 83 ? A. M. 63 3 P. M 85 8 a. M tJ 4 P. M Ml 8 A. M. ei ft P. M.. 6 P. M. . T- P. M.. 80 1 A. M 70 11 A. M.. .74 84 81 12 Xoon... T6 JOSEPH CAILLAUX HURT Ex-Premier in Auto Accident After Visiting Wife in Prison. PARIS. May 31. Joseph Calllaux, the ex-premier, was Injured today in an automobile collision. He had passed the afternoon with his wife, who Is in prison for the killing of Gaton Cal mette, editor of the Figaro, and was returning home, when the car was struck by another machine. The ex-premier was cat by glass and was taken to a hospital. After his wounds were dressed he went to his home. BULL MOOSE BACK IN FOLD Progressives and Republicans Under One Banner In Idaho County. NEZ PERCE. Idaho, May 31. (Spe cial.) The Progressives of Lewis County have decided that they will unite with the Republicans during the coming campaign. All Progressive and Republican can didates will file their nominations on the Republican ticket and let the best man win. Similar action is expected elsewhere in Idaho. GAYNOR NOT MILLIONAIRE Transfer Tax Deposited Indicates Estate of About $500,000. t NEW TORK. May 81. (Special.) That the late Mayor Gaynor died poorer than was generally supposed is indl cated by the small amount. $9500. de posited with the State Controller to cover transfer taxes on his estate. If this deposit is ample to cover the tax. as executors seem to think, it Indi cates that the estate is worth little more than $600,000. 200,000 WITNESS MASQUE St. Louis Pageant Depicts Chief Events in City's History. ST. LOUIS. May 81. Approximately 200,000 persons, about one-fourth of the city's population, attended the second full performance, pageant and masque of St. Louis here last night, celebrating the one hundred and fiftieth anniver sary of the founding of St. Louis. Seventy-five hundred men. women and children are in the cast for the spectacle, which depicts the chief events in the city's history. MANY SEE AERONAUT DIE Balloonist at Denver Park Plunges 2 000 Feet to Ground. DENVER. Colo.. May 3L Harry Cor bett, an aeronaut, plunged 2000 feet-to death today while attempting a balloon ascension and parachute drop at a local amusement park. Several hundred persons saw the fall. A strap fastened about Corbett's wrist and attached to the bar of the para chute broke, it is said, when he at tempted to leap from the balloon. j BENT BOW CITED AS PROOF Collier Said to Have Almost Stopped Headway. VESSEL HELD IN ARREST Canadian Pacific Brings Action for $2,000,000 Damages Storstad Owners Plead That Public Suspend Judgment. FATE'S RATIO. , Saved. Lost. First cabin passengers 82 66 Second and third cabin pas sengers ISO OSS Crew i;g Totals .418 U6t MONTREL. May 31. With her bows crumpled in and twisted and a gap showing on the port side only a foot or sobove the waterllne. In mute evi dence of the tragedy in which she fig ured, the Norwegian collier. Storstad, docked here toaay. A few minutes later a warrant of arrest, taken out by the Canadian Pacific Railway, was nailed to her main mast by order of W. Simpson Walker. K. C, registrar of the Quebec Admiralty. "By what authority do you come on board my vessel and place it under arrest?" Captain Andersen, commander of the collier, asked. Authority of Empire Asserted. "By authority of the British empire," curtly replied the deputy sheriff. The ship at once began to unload her cargo of coal. , The of fleers and men bore traces of their harrowing experiences. When questioned on the subject of the dis aster they were averse to talking. Cap tain Andersen, after the collier docked, was in conference with Captain Ove Laneie, American chief of the Maritime Steamship Company of Norway, and John J. Griffin, attorney for the com pany, both of whom had come on from New Tork to take the report of the captain and sailors first-hand. Backing Away Is Denied. Captain Andersen declined at first to discuss the accident, saying he would make a statement later. Subsequently a statement based on Andersen's re port, as well as the reports of other officers to Messra Lange and Griffin, was given out. According to the captain and officers, contrary to what had been said by the captain of the Empress, the Storstad did not back away after the collision. On the contrary, she steamed ahead la an effort to keep her bow In the hole she had dug into the side of the Em press. The Empress, however, according to the Storstad's officers, headed away and bent the Storstad's bow over at an acute angle to port. After that the Empress was hidden from view of the other ship, and despite the fact that the Storstad kept her whistle going, she could not locate the Empress until the cries ot the victims in the water were heard. Empress' Position Changed. Andersen denied he moved a mile or so away from the Empress after his vessel struck the liner. The Storstad had not moved. It was the Empress which had changed position, he assert ed. According to the report made by Captain Andersen to the owners, after the collision he heard Captain Kendall shout, calling on him not to pull away. "I won't," shouted the Storstad's captain, as loudly as he could. After that the Empress disappeared from the Storstad's view. The statement follows: "The fact that the Storstad has only (Concluded on Page 8.) ROSE FESTIVAL OREGON I ANS Six Issues, Including Post' age, 20 Cents. Mail to yonr friends in the East, The Oregonian during Rose Festival Week, beginning; Tuesday, June 9, and ending with the GREAT SUNDAY EDITION, June 14. Complete and exhaustive re ports with numerous high-class half-tone illustrations will be featured daily. The Portland Annual Rose Festival has been widely adver tised throughout the United States, and no more attractive testimonial to your friends could be given than a subscription to Oregon's Great Daily daring the event. Orders given now in the busi ness of f ice, or sent in by mail to vThe Oregonian, will receive prompt and careful attention. Subscription price for the six issues, including postage, is 20 cents. ar- (A l s m 108.2