Jwitriiiiic VOL. L.VI NO. 17,338. PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 16, 1916. PRICE FIVE CENTS. . PROFESSOR SAVED BY PORTLAND GIRL VOTE ON RAILROAD STRIKE CALLED FOR DEMOCRATIC PLAN IS MADE APPARENT ADVICE" COSTLY IN RAPID TRANSIT DEAL HUGHES IS SILENT UNTIL NOTIFIED SOMISEK BUY MAKE FOURTH OP JULY ADDRESS. GEORGE II. LEARNED PULLEl) FROM PERIJJ IN SEA. 'WILSOX KEPT ITS OCT OF WAR" TO BE SLOGAX. SOU DEAD DEMOCRATS i OTHERS ARE SAFE Captain Quits Wreck After Night and Day Vigil. FOGi CAUSE, OFFICERS SAY Only 1 3 Lifeboats Left Vessel, Declare Skipper; Purser Says 14 Got Away. , DOG CAUSES 2 TO UPSET Woman's Grab for Pet Makes Small Craft Collide; Port land Man Hero. SAX KKAXCISCO, Jnne 1. All tbe 210 pasungtri and members ( the mir of the wrecked steamer Bear have been aceonnted for. according to a statement giTen oat early today by the Ban Francisco A Portland Steamship Company, owners of the vessel. The five who were drowned and whose bodies have been recovered were the only persons that perished, said George I Blair, 'general manager of the com pany, after checking all names over the telephone with Parser C. V. Heywood at Eureka. . "Owing to the fact that there were a number of theatrical people on board," aald Mr. Blair, "and a consequent mtxup between their stage and real names and owing to the dispersal of the survivors In Eureka to different parts of the town, a correct check of the names so far has been Impossible. "Mr. Heywood assures me that all have been accounted for." - The salvage steajnev laqua left here tonight for the scene of the wreck. EUREKA, Cal., June 15. After a careful toll of the survivors of the Virrecked steamer Bear the record at midnight showed that of the 210 per sons aboard when the steamer left Portland, 200 have been landed alive, five are dead and five unaccounted for. The bodies of the known dead all came ashore and four of them have been identified. The unidentified body la that of a young: girl. 13 Boats Left, Says Captain. A difference of opinion developed tonight between the captain of the Bear and the purser as to the number of boats sent away from the wrecked steamer. Captain Nopander said that of the 15 lifeboats lashed to the Bear's deck only 13 were required to take care of the passengers and crew. Purser Heywood maintained that 14 boats were sent away. A careful tally, however, based on a personal investi gation made by the Chamber of Com merce relief committee, lent consider able strength to the captain's report of 13 boats. He said the remaining two boats probably still were aboard the Bear unless they had been dis , lodged by the pounding of the vessel and floated away. Captain Nopander said tonight that at the time the Bear went ashore he was taking every possible precaution for the safe handling of the ship in foggy weather. Quake Changes Ocean Bed. "There were five of us on watch," he said, "at the time she struck. The sounding machine was going continu ally. When the soundings showed 28 and 30 fathoms we headed the ship off shore until we got to bottom. We changed the course slightly south and a few minutes later the ship struck." Navigators here familiar with the Coast said that the 1906 earthquake affected the ocean bed in the vicinity of Cape Mendocino and that there are numerous sink holes near Sugar Loaf .Reef. A woman passenger's dog was said to have been responsible for the cap sizing of the lifeboats in the surf at Bear River. According to one of the survivors the dog fell overboard. The woman who owned it grabbed for the animal and in grabbing knocked one of the oars out of the oarlock. . Portland Ulan Is Hero. This caused the boat to veer into the other lifeboat and in the collision P" both boats capsized. ' T 1 T- F T- i n josepn iiooney, oi i-ornana, jt., risked his own life when he undertook to save Miss Hazel Hansen from drowning by the overturning of . one of the lifeboats. Dooney grasped Miss Hansen's ankle as she disappeared in (Concluded on Fa 7. Column 8.) Lifeboat Swamps and Pacific Uni versity Man Flounders Until Vera Adams Rescues. EUREKA, -CaL. June IS. (Special.) Miss Vera Adams, cabaret singer of Portland, saved the life of. Professor George H. Learned, when the lifeboat capsized after leaving the . wrecked steamer Bear. Clad only in a sweater and nightgown, Miss Adams climbed into the lifeboat at the officer's di rection. The craft contained mostly women and children. The lifeboat swamped before it left the side of the vessel and the occu pants were thrown into the water. It was righted and all were placed aboard safely. Twenty-seven finally put off, according to the young woman, and again the ' lifeboat capsized. Mrs. Learned clung to her Infant. . The father was a few feet from the life boat, floundering in the water unable to swim. Miss Adams, clinging to the side of the boat, reached out and hauled Professor Learned to safety. A thoroughbred horse being shipped by President Farrell, of the Oregon Railway & Navigation Company, to San Francisco to participate in a pre paredness pirade is still aboard the wreck. Vera Adams Is a cabaret performer and was employed as a singer and darcer in th- Oregon Hotel grill for several weeks. She discontinued her service at the Oregon Hotel a few days before the Bear sailed. She was bound for San Francisco, where she had obtained employment as a cabaret singer. ; ' APARTMENT FOLK SCORED Bishop Hughes in Talk at Tacoma Advocates More Homes. TACOMA, Wash.. June 15. (Special.) Bishop Matthew S. Hughes, of Port land, rapped apartment-house dwellers, old maids and bachelors here last night at the cornerstone laying of the First Methodist Church when he spoke on "The Place of the Church in the Community." , "Both the church and state reet on the foundation of the home," said Bishop Hughes. "Too cannot build either out of hotel people, nor can you build them out of old maids and bachelors. If we are going to have churches we must have homes. . .We must have homes if we are going to have a state. The church and state are not the products of hotels and restau rants, but of homes. It fills the great est, element In man's makeup, his do mestic nature." CALL FOR GUARD INDICATED Orders for Militia for Border Duty Unofficially Intimated. Intimations that the Oregon National Guard is to be called out Sunday and dispatched to the Mexican border for service were received in Portland last night, when it was unofficially learned that muster blanks had been received. When asked to conftrm the report Adjutant-General George A. White said he had received no official Indication of anything of the sort. However, the Adjutant-General did admit that all precaution had been taken for imme diate mobilizing and that all necessary instructions had been dispatched to the various commanding officers. He refused to discuss a report that muster blanks and other reports for mobilization had been received re cently. DR. MARCOTTE BACK HOME Westminster Pastor to Tell Parish ioners His Plans Sunday Morning. rr. Henry Marcotte. pastor of the Westminster Presbyterian Church, re turned yesterday from a trip to Kan sas City, where he preached last Sun day. Dr. Marcotte- while there, re ceived a call from the Second Church of Kansas City. He now has three pas torates offered him. The first call came from La Grange, 111., and the next from Pottsville, Pa. On Sunday he will annouce which of the three charges, if any, he will ac cept. The announcement will be made to his congregation at the morning service. FRIDAY HOODOO AVOIDED Convention Cuts Off Speeches to Nominate Before Midnight. COLISEUM. St. Louis. June 15. (Spe cial.) Opportunity was denied to sec ond the nomination of Woodrow Wil son. The convention, swayed more or less by dread of the possible result of nominating on Friday, cut off -seconding speeches at seven minutes before 12 o'clock, and Mr. Wilson was nominated by acclamation. Judge Bennett, of The Dalles, had been selected to make the nominating speech, but the nomination by acclamation shut him out. . Mr. Marshall escaped a Friday nom ination by four minutes. WILSON FEELS GRATEFUL President Notified at 1 o'clock Ht lias Been Nominated. WASHINGTON, June IS. President Wilson was notified at 1 o'clock by Secretary Tumulty that he and Vice President Marshall had been nominated by acclamation at the St. Louis con vention. His only comment was: "I am very grateful." Managers' Terms Are Refused by Men. 500,000 WILL BE AFFECTED Ballot to Be Sent to Union and Nonunion Men Alike. SECRET MEETING DECIDES Result Expected to Be Known by August, 1 Negotiations to Be Renewed If Brotherhoods Sustain Leaders. NEW YORK. June 15. More than 503,000 union and nonunion workers of America will vote within a month on the advisability of calling "a gen eral strike to enforce their . demands for an eight-hour day and time and a half for overtime as a result of the failure by representatives of the rail roads and the men to reach a settle ment here today after a two weeks' conference. Hope of adjusting the dispute through the conference faded when' the railroads submitted a tentative com promise offer to the men, 'granting their demands, but eliminating the ma jority of "double compensation" rules. The conference adjourned yesterday to give the railroad managers an op portunity to discuss further their stand on this point, but when they met the men today they not only refused to make a specific offer covering the com pensation rules, but advised that their differences be submitted either to the Interstate Commerce Commission or to a board of arbitration to operate tin?2r the provisions of the Newlands act. Both Offer Declined. The men declined both offers and the decision to take a. strike vote fol lowed. The leaders and the 500 delegates of the four brotherhoods of trainmen, en gineers, firemen and. conductors, who attended the conference decided on the necessity for the strike vote at a secret meeting following the break. A. B. Garretson. president of the order of railroad conductors, an nounced later that the ballot would be drafted at once and distributed to all railroad men, whether members of the brotherhoods or not, before the close of next week. The canvass will consume at least three weeks, the leaders agreed, and before August 1 the result will be known. If the men vote for a general strike, the leaders will return here and again present the demands of the men to the railroads in an effort either to gain their demands In full or a compromise offer without the necessity of putting the strike actually Into ef fect. Past Gains at Stake. Say Men, Elimination of the "double compen sation rules." the railroad men contend. (Concluded on Page 2. Column 2.) Chairman James Alludes to Mexico . in His Remarks, but Makes Lit tle Defense of President. COLISEUM. St. Louis. June 15. (Edi torial correspondence.) Permanent Chairman James, a physical giant with a voice, made a rattling good stump speech at the day session of the Demo cratic National Convention. With more courage than ex-Governor Glynn, or perhaps with greater bravado, he lugged Mexico into his remarks. But he made no special defense of the President beyond, asking what his critics would have done. That is about all anybody can say for him. Senator James stirred the convention to great enthusiasm by his eulogy of the Presi dent. But it was little more than an appeal to the country not to change horses in the middle of the stream. The course of the convention up to this time makes it clear that thet key note of the Democratic campaign Is peace, prosperity, preparedness and Americanism, with emphasis upon the slogan that "Wilson has kept us out of war." The resolutions committee is at this hour of writing wrestling with the platform. There Is no disposition to reject any of the President's sugges tions, but the average Democrat would like to have more light on the real meaning of the proposed White House plank against "hyphenism." Possibly the committee will work out something more definite than the published text of the assault upon the unnamed ene mies of the republic whom the Presi dent would denounce. Naturally the delegates want to know who is meant, and if they are not to know, why say anything about it? This brief dispatch Is written in the recess between the day and night ses sions. It is obviously impossible now to review the day'a events or results. There is talk of concluding the ses sions tonight, but it is not likely that it can be done. K. B. P. PREHISTORIC HORNS FOUND Wallula .Trapper Sends Discovery to Biological Official. PENDLETON, Or., , June 16. (Spe cial ) Tie horns of an animal of an extinct species of the ox family, which were dug up by Trapper R. C. Fulker son. at Wallula last week, have been sent to E. F. Averill, District Inspector of the Biological Survey. . The head of the animal was too decomposed to send, but it is said to be -more than three feet long, which is much larger than that of any uilmal on the North American continent today. Mr. Averill will send the horns to the Biological Survey Department at Washington. SOCIETY TO GET $10,000 City to Appropriate 8 d Per Cent of . Total Taken In Dog; Fees. Ten thousand dollars le the estimated amount to be received this year by the Oregon Humane Society as its share of the city's receipts for dog licenses and pound fees, 80 per cent of the total. An ordinance has been prepared appro priating that amount to the society. The society took over the pound May 1. At that time the city allowed the society to borrow (4000 which is to be paid back next year. The $10,000 la additional. THE WATER'S FINE! J. P. Morgan Explains Item of $500,000. HALF CHARGED FOR TALKING Financier and Investigator Lock Horns at Inquiry. BIG BOND SALE PROFITABLE Quarter Million Charged for Stand ing Heady to Supply $100,000 000 When Needed Inside His tory Revealed by Witness. NEW YORK, June 15. "InsKe" finan cial history was revealed by J. P. Morgan when he took the witness tand today before the Thompson legisla tive investigating committee and told of the relations of his banking house with the Interborough Rapid Transit Company in connection with the build ing of New York's subway system. The witness was questioned closely as to the services for which his house received $500,000 from the Rapid Tran sit Company. After a clash with Frank B. Moss, counsel for the committee. In which the financier declared heatedly that the questions asked him were In sulting, he told of the advlc given the corporation. Advice Valued at 9250,000. Half of the $500,000. Mr. Morgan said, was paid his company after al most dally conferences with Theodore P. Shonts. president of the Interbor ough Company, for watchful supervi sion of propositions made the company with suggestions to the Interborough officials as to how to frame their pro posals to the city; what to include and what to reject, and numerous confer ences with city officials. "So you got this $250,000 Just for talking to Mr. Shonts?" asked Mr. Moss. "Yes,-sir, and It was well worth it." replied Mr. "Morgan. Asked to be more speclflo as to what services he had rendered. Mr. Morgan said he had told Mr. Shonts how to convince the city officials the Inter borough could obtain the money needed to build the subways and thus guaran tee that their plans would be carried out. "But I want you to tell Just what you did for this money," persisted Mr. Moss. "In your suggestions to Mr. Shonts how much did you charge him. say. for advising him to go and see the Mayor?" Morgaa Reseats Qaeatlom. "I won't stand this," asserted Mr. Morgan, angrily. "You are insulting. You seem to Intimate in your sugges tions that I was getting up some sort of plan for cheating the city." At this Juncture Mr. Moss declared he, too, was being insulted, and State Senator Thompson, the chairman, took a hand to end the controversy. Mr. Morgan said that his company received (Concluded on Pace 2. Column 2.) So Many Visitors Flock In That Day Is Given to Welcoming Them and Conferences Are Pnt Off. NEW YORK, Jjine 15. Pledges, promises and predictions continued to pour Into the ears of Charles EL Hughes today from many Republican leaders and from the rank and file of the party. So many callers crowded into the some what cramped temporary headquarters that the Presidential nominee had vir tually no time for conferences, but spent nearly the entire day welcoming visitors. Party plans apparently are still in abeyance so far as the immediate work of the campaign the selection of Na tional committee officials, appointment of the executive committee, designation of the date of notification and selection of a campaign manager is concerned. Mr. Hughes reiterated today his in tention not to comment on political Issues' until his notification of nomina tion, which probably will be subsequent to July 4. In the meantime, however, a half dozen invitations to make Fourth-of-July addresses have been received, and these are under consideration. The nominee was the dinner guest tonight of Samuel H. Ordway, a class mate at Brown University. HUMP ON FISHJS MYSTERY Oddity Develops Years After Plant ing In Rock Creek Lake. BAKER. Or, June IS. (Special.) What put the miniature camel-like humps on the fish of Rock Creek Lake is the question that Etlert Etlertson. Rock Creek rancher, is putting up to State Biologist Finley. Mr. Ellertson planted 5000 Lake Michigan trout in the lake many years ago and until this year they showed no difference from others of their specie. Recently, how ever, small humps Just behind the first back fin were seen on many of them. It is not believed to be disease and the size and the flavor of the trout do not seem to be impaired. There is no possibility of a cross with any other breed because nothing but the Lake Michigan trout have been planted in the lake, which was orig inally devoid of fish. Cowboy Is Injured. ALBANY, Or.. June IS. (Special.) Robert Hall, one of the cowboys who will appear in the Philomath. Roundup, was injured today when an outlaw horse kicked him as he was leading It from the corral at Philomath. The hoof of the horse shaved his ear, but the injury is not considered serious. A carload of outlaws arrived today from Eastern Oregon for the show, June 22. 23 and 24. ' INDEX OF TODAY'S MEWS The Wtmtiier. TESTIS RD AY'S Maximum temperature. 91 decrees; minimum, 6 decrees. TODAY'S Fair, not so warm; westerly winds. Bear Disaster. Anxious Portlanders seek word of Bear sur vivors. Page ft. W. H. Rowe rescue deaf boy from steamer Bear. Pace 7. Bear is third vessel of same line lost. Pace 7. Vera Adams, of Portland, saves lire of George H. Learned at wreck, of Bear. Pace 1. Portland man la last passenger to leave Ber. Page 8. , Five passengers dead; all accounted for. Page 1. Politic. Hughes not to comment on political Issues until after formal notification, page 1. Convention. "Wilson kept us out of war to be Demo cratic slogan. Pag 1. Wilson and Marshall renominated. Page 1. Cobb feels deep sympathy for smothered chicken. Page S, Wilson platform, ideas . meet opposition; President stands out. Page S. Bryan defends Mexican policy In speech - before convention. Page 2. Wilson's work Is held epoch-making. Page 3. War. Russian advance proceeding swiftly. Page 5. Official war reports. Page 5. i Mexico. Three American soldiers killed In Mexican raid into Texas. Page 15. Domestic. Strike question submitted to railroad em ployes. Page 1. Prosecution seeks to prove Orpet gave girl poison In liquid form. Page 15. J. p. Morgan testifies to expensive "advice"' given by his firm in Rapid Transit deal. Page 1. Sport. Pacific Toast League results: Portland 4, Vernon 3; Los Angeles 2, San Francisco 0; Salt Lake 6. Oakland 4. Page 18. S. CoeIeskla beats Yanks. S to 2. Page'19. Phils outbat Reds, but lose, 2-1. Page 18. McCredle to give three Northwestern play er once over. Page 18. Pacific Northtwest. Girl tells of buying liquor at Frits Boysen's hotel. Page 6. Highway Commlrslon rellnquishec direction of Mr. Cantine again. Page 4. Bandon father fatally shoots man In daughter's room. Psge 15. Forest Grove gets next encampment. Page 4. Move to recall Polk County Court voted at Dallas meeting. Page 6. Commercial and Marine. Wheat carryo-er In Korthwest of record jlxe. Page 19. High prices paWt for wool at Pilot Rook sale. Page 19. Public intercut lacking in stock market. Page 19. Employers refuse to meet longshoremen. Page 16. Chamber demands open shop; calls long shoremen ungrateful. Page 18. Portland and Vicinity. School Board asked to pay S1O.80O to pupil and employe. Page 14. Chinese students conference discusses race bias. Page 13. Six schools unite in gar 'graduation tn Laurel hurst Park. Page 14. Portland gasps with mercury at ftl. Page 14. Contributions for Independence day celebra tion given willingly. Page 11. Fisheries delegates open session. Page 20. School election on bill for tomorrow. Page 17. Arson defendant blames union leaders for Menefee mill fire. Page 17. Mr. Dleck refuses to let men testify before Civil Service Board unless they are paid. Page 13. Weather report, data and forecast. Page 18. HoRher nomination over old guard related by National Commltteman Williams. la 14. EXPECTED TICKET Wilson and Marshall Are Chosen by Acclamation. SPEECH BY BRYAN IS HEARD Preliminaries Cut Short to Permit of Nominations Before Midnight. PLATFORM TODAY'S TASK Confusion Reigns at Close and Prominent Leaders Are Marooned Outside. COLISEUM, St. Louis, June 16. President Wilson and Vice-President Marshall were nominated by acclama tion late Thursday night by the Dem ocratic National convention, the ticket being: completed four minutes before Friday. Contrary to expectation, however,, the convention did not finish its work, because the platform was not ready, and it will meet again at 11 o'clock this morning:. It was announced in the convention that the sub-committee drafting the platform had finished its work, but that the entire resolutions committee was not assembled to pass upon it, and it was not known when that could be done. President's Plank Accepted. President Wilson's own plank, charging conspiracy among some foreign-born citizens for -the benefit of the foreign powers and denouncing any political party which benefits and not repudiating such a situation, was incorporated in the platform just as the President himself had sent it from Washington. It was understood that the President insisted that the plank should be put in the platform in the way he had drawn it. There never was any doubt of Pres ident Wilson's nomination tonight, but there was a possibility that some Vice-Presidential booms might be brought out in opposition to Vice President Marshall. Prepared Speech Cast Aside. They melted away, however, when the convention got in session, and as soon as President Wilson's nomination had been made a roaring chorus of ac clamation, Senator Kern, who re nominated Mr. Marshall, cast aside a long prepared speech and simply de clared: "I nominate Thomas Riley Marshall, of Indiana, for Vice-Presidentl' To President Wilson's nomination there was only one dissenting vote, Robert Emmett Burke, of Illinois, who came to the convention declaring that he was opposed to the President. His vote technically made the President's nomination 1091 to 1. Bryan Called On to Speak. A striking incident of tonight's ses sion was the action of the convention in calling on William J. Bryan to speak. This was done on the motion of Senator Thompson,' of Kansas, that the rules be suspended and the ex Secretary be permitted to take the platform. The motion was carried and Mr. Bryan was escorted to the plat form immediately. He spoke 45 minutes, pledging his support to the President in the cam paign and defending the Administra tion's policies. Hall Completely Filled. For the first time since the conven tion began the big hall was completely filled. Since the distribution of tick ets began, the admission coupons have been shuttled about in a confusion of pasteboard and badge speculation. While hundreds of people have been clamoring at the doors for admission, empty rows of seats have stretched through the galleries, because ticket speculators, who had obtained posses sion of the prized tickets, were hold ing them for larger prices. The convention's sudden decision to day to proceed with nominations and finish tonight instead of prolonging the sessions through tomorrow and probably into Saturday, as had been planned, let down the bars and the speculators unloaded their tickets. The big Coliseum was packed to the roof as a result. The speculators were unprepared iCoucluvled oi I'ajco 2, Culuma ircn 102.0