zm'", L2J LtJiilViiiiwairt OLBajANttJQWJ! A AN I1VKIUM)AY REQUISITE la meat, according to the belief . nn but vegetarians. Instead af ordering your roast, or your Bteak, in a haphazard mannor, why not liudy the nils In The, Times, nnd ,ce what tho butchcra have to or fer you? VOL XXXVH. Biffcjifftafair FNGUNO FACES RESULT CF t x :Wany Troops Belnn Sent Into Norm 01 ireianu iu .Subdue Tories ARMY OFFICERS QUIT RAIHtH I HAN Ml A lll One Soldier Killed in Melee Stramea oonmuons Cause Alacm I oiTicnns hesian. inr Atm-Wnt rnt It n tlty TIitim 1 DUBLIN, March 21. Hold Marshal Sir John French, Chlof of tho Imperial General Staff, arrived today In connection with tho resignations of officers when ordorcd to march ngnlnst tho unionists In Ulster. Nearly all tho offlcors or tho Fourth Queen's Own HuBsnrs nro said to have resigned and tholr plac es have been filled. I'll tsr kolider killed inr i'"i i'" ' Cnn "" TimM DUBLIN, Mnrch 21. Tho first victim of excitement In Ireland was a soldier nt 'Cur rash Camp, who was late for roll call. Ho attempted to fcalo the wall of tho barracks and w a aim bv a sentry. Tho ound will piobably provo ra tal. 4 . D; Am IVI ln lo Poot flty Timet, BELFAST, Ireland, March 21. Ulster presented a vory martial as pect. All tho towns nro occupied by tho soldiers of tho regular army nnd other detachments nro arriving along tho country roads with long trains of bacgago and ammunition enrts. on their way to strongthon tho various garrisons. At nil Ulster coiners tlioro was great animation ninong tho Ul ster volunteers. Two torpedo boat destroyers arrived nt nolfnst Lough and landed troops nt Cnrrlckforgus Castle. Tho mutiny of two companies of Mho Dorsetshire regiment stationed Mn Delfnst Is roported by tho Pnll ijuii uazctto of London. Tho 1'nll Mall unzotto says: "Men of tho First Datahlon of tho Dor setshire reglm nt, throw down tliolr arms when told they wore to bo transferred olaowhoro. A sergeant stepped forward, saluted tho offl- 'rs and said: 'Wo will hnvo no homo rulo hero.' " TIiIh Is thouclit , i)n sorao qunrtcra to bo nn oxnggorat-j a lers on or rnnorta. or unrest smonR troops In Ulster. I The Immediate dispatch of rog-l ular ravnlrv from nuiiiln in nintnrl UJ '3 bo r nr Dpi) mvlnc In hn Teslcnntlou of officers. Within twentv.fnur linnrs ovpp n. 00 troops, including lour battalion. , SrSBS. T i!H0i '??!? sor: 1.7.:"" "" "..l'" X" l"w"H '" ' RUSril or a lnrcolv nrmn,! nr ,1.IpI, ... ...vau wlli H1U 1. 11,1. ill U trOOPS are on fhnlr wnw from r'nf. rSh. Field guns wore mounted at wrrlckrorgus Cnstlo. Dattorles woro ' 'stationed around UeUnst nt strat Hc points. Sir Edward Carson, IBS UnlOnlnl lojlflnp umpnn.l l.lu trim. -?.'tl tnc! noni6 rulers start the tlrst puree miles frnm Ilnlfnnt linl.l .nli. wt councils" with Cnpt. Craig, tho ' Marquis of T.nnilniwlrrif n, rn.l nf ,' nlurly, the Enrl or ' ClanwllIIam , B"a others. Ttmtr iinn,innrori. urn' P Captain Craig's resldonco, whero othTnortW fe Libera s "This country Is o prevent Biiumntlon of covornment I c0,,front0'1 wMl tho sra';e8t ,88UO V aatl-lome Tuli??. HnS ' history rf nomocrnle gov-rn. iir niiiirnn nnii.n.uiA -- ...u. i iiiu -a iijiw iu . ni iaw nas been doclared by tho u tno l-euerui uisinci luu, i-uu-inlonlsts, Everv volunteer in Til- lln A. Coolloy. J. E. Munsoy and iter stands ready ror Instant moblll- IV. i i.Ano aruB BtoreB of Belfast Pave laid in in.. ....n .. n ln j "ft" OUIUMIUH Ul I1ICUI- me and surgical enulnmnnt.. Ilnlnn. documents havo been hlddon In USequence Of tlin nnnnnnnomanH nf E Impending arrests, which the union ist wllma brought about the pres- rUl CrlSlS. Thn tlllralaoo ctnllnn nil Che unionL01:! ?.i!r ha,U lB keep,n? w louch with the furthermost points M Ulster. The feeling of dlssatls "moa amonc tim nritui, i.n.nmoni P'uopS (a very Strom nn.l whnlnanln fertIons are expected. - BAD BAXDIT KILLKD pofcher Shot l Corona, Calif., After Pi. amoI "' ?rtL .. . r i. A Cal- Mnrch 21. Geo. fratchma; 'unu . K? railroad Uorio ', ". waa kiiiou ny sam 'ne, a bandit fr.,,nH n ?. r MnrlA nft....7 I.'Im led orUu xr'. . ".'"'u "" "" th nf ' V "et8 b? tWQ Policemen, ho wounded before W dn T. weniy-inreo bucks dead Hy UTnn SSr:Rr?vrqp SATISFACTION. ""LI, CO CAHNK at SARTGR'S. LyMr COAL. Thn HnJ Vrt u PwAys used. Th.. to n-.i.i. . ,y and Transfer Company. J tu (&&m Smj Wxmtx MARSHFIELD, OREGON, SATURDAY, MARCH 21, 1914 EVENING EDITION. EIGHT PAGE& CRISIS AS ULSTER REVOLT TROOPS REBEL OVER ULSTER British Army Threatened With serious Dissatisfaction Many Resign ttlr Adj. Ult Prmi In Coot nT Timet.) LONDON', March 21 The out standing rcnturos of tho news from Ireland was th0 disaffection among tho offlcors of tho rogulnr army un der orders to prornod to Ulster with tholr reglmonts. Tho actual number of resignations was hMII problemati cal, but that It was consldornblo was evident from nn enrncst early morn Ing consultation of cabinet ministers regnrdlng the best monns of counter acting tho movement. Tho actual fact of this dlBaffcntlon Is moro ills comforting to the mllltnry aut'iorltles ninco tno army is already Borlously snort of commissioned officers. Threats of a crisis In tho nrmy If n movement of rogulnr troops was un dertaken agnliiBt Ulster had long been current. Immediately after Colonel Secloy, Secretary of Stato for war, had been In nudleuro with King Oeorgo, Sooloy summoned tho nrmy council, which took stops to roplnco tho vacancies. According to roports, howovor, tho number of vncnncles Is Increasing rapidly and It seems pos sible that all tho regiments which hnvo been serving In Ulster may havo to bo withdrawn and replaced with fresh troops. It was thought In many quarters that If tho government would consent to glvo tho counties of Ulster pqrpotunl lornl option on tho question of homo rule, Instead of compelling Uiom to como under tho Dublin parliament: nt tho ond of six years, a way out of tho present dif ficulties would bo opened. aoaixst home rule Army Offliirs Xotlfliil to Either Itc.Mgii or ln Heady for Hostilities u w UM I'im i Von 1y TlmoM ) rNltiKII.MUiV. irOlnllll, .MniCII . 21. Army offlcors received a com-h0 CooH nay t,)h w0llI(l ))icnn rnon,, rniinlpnllrin frnni flirt u'nr ifflrn rflll.l ,hnnn..n.u,u.. ....i ii,in 1.....111 . Idk on them to mnke n deflnlto -.... .. ...w ..... ... ...-..--- , stntemont within twelve bourn whuthop thoy wore propnred to re tain their commissions In t;io event or hoBtlllllcs In Ulster. If not thoy must resign forthwith, Similar no- ticca w ro sont to oilier officers or'c,"lnn "V"1 t0" t0,1H o Jnpnn ns sani troops stationed In Ireland. IIOWX WITH TOHYISM 'HaUil Lloyd (leorgo Maintains Mnn htmiil In lielnnil . , '"I "T.S",, .TJt ..... wl . no' I fnrl n Inch beoro 'tKS urrosant nlaRiio or Toryism." snld ,...,., , i -... n,. -Il.ii.i. wnvja l.ioyn ueorgo. uiiuiicuuur ui meeting Hepreaenntln government In this lnnd Is nt stake." DVXAMITKHS IX)SK OUT. Tlu-eo. Union IdMidw-s ItefiiM'd lle- h lcasu fi-oui Iedenil Prison. lljr Aolii1 Prt to Coot Btj TlmM KANSAS CITV. March 21. Tho i nnnllcatlon or tho throe labor mon pnnvlptnil nt TndlnnnnollB for trailS- porting explosives Illegally, asking tliolr release trom tho nonitetnlary at Leavenworth, was donled Inst night Frank u. wouu, wno aougui. ruicuon, woro unable to got out on bond nt tho time their companions did. OF EL-KAB KLUB New Officers Are Chosen and Plans Made for Bio Stirr ers' Pilgrimage At mm or tho best sessions they I lin Ivnlinllinr1 tn H mnflO mont sinro ipb uiiyn oi uio siiujii. IFCIIliN hiave had slnco they organized, El Kab Klub last evenlug eiecieu me following ofHcers ror the ensuing year: President August Farley. Vice-president C. M. Byler. Secretary E. I. Chandler. Treasurer W. U. Douglas. Preliminary plans were made ror the Initiation or a big class or no vices between July 15 and August 1, when Hlllah Temple or Ashland will have another big pllgrimago to tho Oasis of Coos Day. Follow ing tho election, Geo. Welstead, the retiring president, presided-at a fine Hiimni when a number of Imnromp talks were delivered. BROTHERS, BUT HEARTS THAT iVIAKE FRIENDS MEMBER. OP THE GOV. WEST WANTS Chief Executive Wants 27,000 Acres in Harney County to Revert 1o State for Alleged Fakes. tOj AmnrltiM Prnt to Coot Dr Tlm.) SALEM. Or.. Mnrch 21 fSover- nor West presen'cd to tho Attornoy Bi Exporter and Steamship Man Forecasts Great Fu ture for This Section Capt. Robert Dollar, hoad of tho Robert Dollar Company of San Fran cisco, the blKUCBt lumber nml uhtti. ping operators on tho const, was horo last night on routo to Dandon, going on the Drca,kwntcr today. Ho has boon at Dandon for tho past- week on matters connected with tho Johnson Lumber company, of which ho Is now irusieo, nnu oxpects to return to Coos county within a few weeks. n was ncrnmimnln.i i.v i.i. nn si.ni; nni. lar. Who has l.onn hi. nnr-mnnlrnJ scntatlvo In the affairs along tho low ot Caqulllo. Capt. Dollar, although woll ad vanced In yenrs, Is still vory actlvo. and only his whlto hnlrs glvo evidence of tho three score years and ten nnd then somo thnt ho has passed nnd over a half century of active business. Rooster of Cook Huv. Cnpt. Dollar Is qulto n Coos Day booster and believer In tho future of this section. Last evening nt tho Chandler, ho portrayed as purely n business proposition nnd no flight of inncy n ruturo ror Coos count" thnt IIIIKln th .ntkn ,,, o w onth ,. i. ...ZZ K" r.u-7. other cnthuBlnstlc boosters look dim. 'Wo hnvo Just ben figuring on n I plan ror Inking cargoes rrom hero to tho Orient," snld Cnpt. Dollnr. "Tho plan Is to tnko two or throe thousand tons or pulp, finish t'o gen eral cargo with lumber and then tnko on our yunkcr coal horo. Every time our trans-Pacific vessels como to this short they require about 1000 tons of bunker conl. Coos Day has all theso. - auuu uiiin lit products nnd It Is a combination that Is hard to bent. Wrt would llkn In huy the pulp, tho lumber nnd t''o coal outright on bonrd ship hero, paying for It Immediately. Then. i coming nnck maybe smno of our par L.n.,u',Vnnl,l lm millml In rnnin llronl , , ,iniiui uiiiifii 111111 iiliiu iiiiiiiiiiiiir either way, ns our vessels would take the pulp and lumber direct to the mills nf tho Orient. "Wo Vnvo sont ton tons of null) from tho C. A. Smith pulp mill to pies nnd wo nro vory hopeful or It "Of courso tho harbor nnd bar will havo to be deepened to onnblo our vessols to tnko on full enrgoos hero, but both of theso will come. You aro working on tho harbor now nnd If tho bar dredge does not deonnn the bar Riifflelontlv ton thev will build the Jetties. There Is no cnuso to worry about that. Lumber Market Poor. "Tho lumber market Is poor Iu fnct, It can get no worse. It bus ronched bedrock, especially bo rnr as tho coast business Is concorned. Over thirty-two lumber carriers havo been tied up at San Francisco all winter, Tho trade In tho Orient Is protty ralr. though. Tho rope of the coast Is In this foreign market n place whero tho surplus can bo disposed or. Dur ing tho last year we havo taken ovor 00,000.000 root or lumber abroad. Wo haven't tnken nnv from Coos Day because .Mr. Smith believes that thn coast lumbor market's idemand Is moro suited to tho cut of his mills," Illg Foreign ItiiHliH'hH, Tho Dollnr company has sevon (lif erent offices In tho Orient now nnd one of Capt. Dollar's sons resides In Shanghai looking after nffalrs there In order to get return enrgoes lor their ships, thoy have to do a general commission business, buying this and that and carrying It to the United States and selling It. Of rouree they hnndle frloght but to guard against short cargoes they havo to engage In the other line. As an Indication or how multifarious the business Is, Capt. Dollar said that recently one of their vessels had firty-seven dif ferent varieties of freight aboard on her return from Asia. Recently they have been bringing quite a bit of oak timber from northern Japan and also mahogany rrom the Philippines to tho United States. During the last year they even brought considerable coal Into San Francisco from Asia. They brought peanuts, feathors and plg-lron. Not long ago Capt. Dollar was astounded when he round that one or his 8000-ton vessels had car ried n whole cargo or peanuts from one port In China to another. Panama Canal Will Aid. Capt.' Dollar Is a great believer In the Panama Canal and while he does not oxpect the rapid development that some have been propnesymg, he saya It will be gradual hut certain. In connection with the present free tolls controversy, ho Is a strong ad vocate of free tolls ror coastwise shipping. Ho says t'.;at tho expecta tion at Washington Is that Irco tolls will be knocked out by President Wil son but he thinks It la wrong, Per- CAPT. OOLLAR BOOSTS COOS BAY ASSOCIATED FItKSS TO REGAIN LAND General of Oregon a statement show ing methods by which tho Pacific Livestock Company ncqulred tltlo to 27,000 acres of stato school land, swamp and Indemnity InndB In Har ney County, with a request thnt ho tako action to recover tho same. Tho Governor contends tho lnnd was acqulrod through dummy applica tions, sonally ho Is not Interested as most of lll8 VCSSCls nro under hn )lrltUI, Mnn- at any rato tho ones most llkoly to uso tho now wntcrway, but ho says LllUr nn n rrnnnrnl tuialm... ...... , -- . .... , tucHii UIIOIIII'BB 1HU1IUBI- . Hon, ho thinks tho United States should oncourngo Irs own shipping. Ho says that the trcntv with TCniinn,i does not mean thnt tho United States cannot do this becnuso It would not be ony discrimination, ns only Amer- , lean vessels can ply In tho coastwise ' trndo and henco foreign shlpB would not bo affected. -rim rinim f Mm vni.t. m,. .,,' "?.c . '."l.f t,, .L.nB'lR" Umt trt "nl '" American snips would mean ",nt V10 fore gn trndo VCSSCls would havo to pay higher tolls In ordor to meet tho oxpenso of hnndllng tho constwlso shipping Is n wrong theory, ho snys, bccnuBo tho Panama Canal rates nro. going to bo regulated bv v o romnotltlon of the Suez Canal and tho straits of Magollan. If tho Pnna ma rates aro too high, than the ships with go the other routes. At any rate, ho savs thn TTnltml Stntefl, Instead of knocking the frco tolls In Congress, should submit tho question or tho treaty rights to Mip Hnguo Tribunal. Ho says thnt tho oxnresslon of somo that Tho Hnguo Trlhnnni wnnM nnnniai mn,iii. t rn. Z,' .."""" ,":""" .-'T ...w, w. ii - ".B'" '"ier? cu. "K"'"'. Amor ca and consequently tho United stares would not got n fair decision Is all wrong at any rnto ho says that Tho Hague Tribunal Is thnt kind tho! poorer Amerlcn rinds It out tho bet- tor nnd ho dnos not know of a qnes- (Inn It would bn enster to loso on than tho proscnt toll controversy. SomupirN Mlll.v Pilttt. rinllnt lino Ilia! tsitittmt vi'i"i ""mn tti'a Jil I ' ill nv" rrom Was' Ington, whore ho nnueared bororo tho CongreHRloi,inl mmiult'ooi aRlllnst tho now Rnnmon'n hill lln ' snvs tho pnsmigo or thn bill, whlnh requires thnt all mnmlmrM or Hie crow snonk tho same langungo' Miat fbo nrrirors sim-'k wnni 1m di" - troiiB to Amorlcnn Bhlpplng. not only to American vphboIh hut to American Mn.iA ti i.i 11..1 1. . ' trado. Ho said that It would mean, tnnt Amorlcnn ships must nvo nil Engllsh spenkhiK crews, thnt nrit Ish shins havo the same, or nnd thnt thov would then havo to com ppto with Japanese vessols, otc, which Vnvlng oftlcors of that nation ality would havo crows of tho samo and pay tho crows loss than one 'mirth whnt t'o Amorlcnn nnd Dril ls!) shlpB would hnvo to pay. Reforo leaving Washington, ho says that o and his associates woro given assur ance that tho bill would never bo ro ported out cf committee In Its pres ent form. S OF Coquille Vallev Cow Testing Association Formed Fine, Alfalfa Fields J. L. Smith, ngrlculturnl export, returned today from Coqinllo, where ho has just perfected thn organiza tion of tho Coqulllo Valley Cow Testing Association. Ranchers In the vicinity of Coqulllo, Arago, Fish trap and Norway have signed up for ovor 000 cows. They eUcted the following dfflcors: President Claronco Schroedor. Vice-president J. D, Carl, Secretary and treasurer Frank Wlllard. Mr. Smith will go to Myrtlo'PoInt next week to organize an associa tion there. He reports that Price Robinson has one of the finest fields of alfalfa he ever saw. Ellis Brothers, on the Carl place, also havo a fine field of It. ASSASSIN TELLS CAUSE Mine. Callluux Explains Why She Shot Figaro Editor IBr AuocUlod Frnt lo Coot VtJ Timet. PARIS, March 21. Madame Call, laux gave her version of the killing of Gaston Calmetto before the In vestigating magistrate. She said that her Indignation was aroused be cause of the two years of political attacks against her husband, In whoso probity she had flnpllclt faith. W. U. DOUGLAS returned yesterday from Gardiner. He had planned to go through to Portland, but received word that parties with whom he was to confer In Port land liad been called away and so he returned to the Day, H I GENERAL VILLA OPENS BATTLE FOR CAPTURE OF TORREON TODAT DOW BUSINESS IN Liabilities May Exceed Assets Several Times and Loss May Reach $20,000 AlthdtiKh tho settlement of tho Into F. S. Dow's affairs has not reached tho point whero thoy know exactly tho status of them, It was stated to day by a mnn closo In touch with thorn that tho liabilities would many times exceed his nssots. By. somo It Is estimated that his liabilities will exceed his assets by about, $20,000. -v- Tho nalfour-authrlo company, tho Goldorod Milling compnny, tho Murphy-Dow Building Mntorlnl company nnd somo others nro reported to bo among tho lnrgest crodltors. So far no claims havo been for mally filed with Admlnlstrntor W. P. Murphy, so tho exact amount or his doriclt Is not known. Administrator Murnhv has arrnnir. d to havo Export Wann export tho linnirn nr u.r. nnu- r... ,i.. n .. ' as Mr. Wann comnlotos his work tho Dandon Woolon Mill company,' which will bo within n few days. ' Sa far da can bo ascertained now. ' Mm .inrinit i. .i.. .i. . . .i.. ' , . v..b.h ,a uuu iu U1U IIICI. UlUk donv nnd no been doing a proHtablo. business and hln ovorhead oxponsos had been "entlng up" his own inon- ir'ey and tho funds ho handled. Thin doing buslnesB nt a loss hnd been ito. Ing on ror n long time, hut tinder tho complicated business ho wns doing, Dnw wns either minwnrn nf ITm ovlmu . of It until recently or had been hop- ling ror n growth thnt would snvo ' lilut lllllli Tho amount or Dow's nsotH win m known nB soon ns I. 8. Smith, A. 13. Mlnimit nml W I.' Mllln ..,.iinl.Wn.i to appralso his property, got nlong protty well with tho work. Wlf Alsu Tm-. , In addition to tho loss nf Mn own funds for tho comimnles which ho . wns representing, It Is said thnt Mr.. n . ...A A..AA ..... 1 Dow lost $4000 or JC000 which Mrs Dow received from nn ostnto nnd which wns put In to develop tho IiiibI ness. I Question of Iiimii-iiiic. 1 Thero Ih also n question ob to pnrt I of Mr. Dow's lusurniico. Ho carried $3000 lu tho Woodmen In favor of , his wife and this will go to her. Thn otl or $5000 wns In tho Mutual Llfo or Now York and ho had Just made .aonllcatlon ror tho bonoflelnry or this policy to bo changed rrom his eri tato to lily- wire. This application ror tno ciir.ngo in benericlnry was not ror- wnrded to Portland until tho Sunday I previous to tho ratal Friday on which , Mr. Dow ondod IiIb career In tho Day. in consoquonco tno formal chnngo had not been mndo In tho homo of rirn or tho rntnimiiv and now Rnmn or tho creditors will ondonvor to bo-' euro tho iriOOO. It Is said on tho grounds that It Is payable to tho es tate ArfuliN llailly Iniolveil. Tho badly Involved condition of Mr. Dow's affairs makes It difficult for those trying to straighten 'them out and Is groatly regretted by tho many friends of tho family and es pecially of Mrs. Dow. Tho warehouse business hnd re cently been separated from tho oth eiB.and Incorporated as tho South west Warohouso Company. TIiIh In cluded tho docks and warehouses in Mnrshfleld, Coqulllo, Dandon mid Myrtle Point. W. P. Murphy Is Con tinuing the business under this nB lie was a stockholder and officer of tho company. IS Marshfield Woman Elected to Highest Office of Oregon Royal Neighbors EUGENE, Oregon, March 21. The triennial convention of the Oregon Grand Camp of tho Royal Neighbors or America ended bfero af ter the selection of Portland as the plnce of the 1017 meeting and the election of tho following offi cers: Oracle, Mrs, Helen Downs,wMnrh f If Id ; vlco-ornclo, Mrs, Rohq Corl, Corvallis; recorder - receiver, Mrs. Franc Hood, Portland; dolegatcs to the Supreme Camp, Mrs. Orllln Starr, Eugono, and Mrs. Mary Fpr tune, alternates, Mrs. Allco Kirk, Albany nnd Mrs. Nellie Bailey, Portland. In Oregon thero aro 50 camps of BAD S I M EVERY MERCHANT Who uses Tho Times advertising columns will tell you he makes money by so doing. Tho reason Is simple. Dependence Is placed In Tho Times ads because no "fako" ad cau enter Its columns. "nmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm A Consolidation of Times, Const Mall Mn -orrr nnd Coos lla Advertiser. nu cw Mexican Rebel Leader Im bues 12,000 Followers With Great Zeal MEAGER DETAILS OF ENGAGEMENT RECEIVES Bryan Confirms Report of Hu- erta's Secret Conference With Lind BATTLE IS ON tnr AMOctMed rrrtt to Coot l)f Tlmn.l MEXICO CITV, March 21. Tho engagement between tho v Federal nnd rebel nrmles tit ' Torreon bFgnn today, accord-' Ing to a torso meesago receif-' cd at tho Mexican War1 Office J - mr .ociiihi rri lo Coot nir Tlmm 1 l WASHINGTON. D. C, Marclf 21. Secretary of Stato Drynn announced thero hnd been a conforonco botween John Llnd nnd Sonor Portlllo y Itojns. Minister of Foreign Affairs of Mexico, but tho nature or the conforonco wns not reporlod. Wr Mocrtloj IVtt lo Coot ntr Tlmnt CONSTITUTIONALIST II E A D QUAnTEHS, YEHMO. Durnngo. Mex. . March 21. With cannon nlnnted-ncS nti.w,tn. ! his nccoutromonts of wr iV...nlBM(;". n!'il ron,I' Ooncrnl Panchc Villa, with his 12,000 robol soldlejrp, ,wnB l"M0"t propnred to begin the investment Of Torreon; to Imrl Ihn , ,. , .,... ... .. --.-" " "'".i.r'i ""."' "'" "c8 . V"? ""''"Nng Federal nrmy under General mu," voinsco in wnnt is conBicierea wl11 u? tho declslvn lmttlo of tl o Con BHiiitionnllst revolution. FuH conrnionco nnd certain of victory, Vll In has magnetically transmitted Ms energy to bis subordinates, refreshes! by a night's sleep after tholr1 bar march through tho desorr rrom Mup Iml nml Ilermejlllo. Tho little khnkl tlnd soldiers sprang to tholr "work with zest, and tho boglnnlng or todar saw the rohol army stationed on Aht "8K'ns or tno Federal utrongndU. , n position thoy gained without n- Blstnnco. Within Torreon all Is com- lirntlvoly quiet nnd nono lit tho robsi CftD know what preparations Volni- co wnH "'"king. AlOIti: TKOOl'H TO ROUDEU- (llr Aviiml fmt ii root Bt Tlu0 LAREDO. March 21. Tho ThlrS, Imttnllnn, Ninth Infantry, today ar rived In Laredo for bonier patrol duty. Two nddltlonnl battnllonB juio duo tomorrow. i CONFER AT VERA VUVZ American ami KuglMi llcpresi-nl tlvi'N In Mexico Meet lllr AmocIiiM prrtt lo Toot P.tir TIoim ) J VERA CRUZ, Mnrch 21. It 1 "'orstond that Cnargo d'Afmim O Shanghnessy and Thomas U, Koh ler, Rrlilah Chnrgo do'Afralrs, who enmo with him from Mexico Cltr today, will confer this nftornoon with John Llnd, MAY NOT GET Coos Bay's Hopes and Prom ises May be Blasted by U. S. Engineers Cooa Day's hopes of getting tUo dredge Oregon bnck horo this sum mer based on promises of Major Morrow nnd others engineers, may be blasted. Some time ago, a report that Washington was going to get the Oregon this summer wns denied, but hero Is the latest dispatch from Washington: "In n lottor to Senator Chamber lain, Daniel Kingmnu. chlof of en gineers or the Army, says that the stato of Washington Is entitled tw tho use or the dredge Oregon ror tno noxt two years If it should ba needod thero for that length oC time. It was the evident purpose of Congress, he says, to provide for tho use of this dredgo by Oregon and Washington equitably. Ho suk gests that If Congress nuthorlza the construction of a new dredgt ror Oregon It could be comple-te within less than two years. yUs dredgo will bo kept on Oregon wprlw until tho coming summer and JHetc ' transferred to Washington." the ordor with a total membersbty or approximately 2600 and tn lHe entire United Stntes there1 nr JSr, fia camps,, with 300,000 mi.'BuJH!.,, ELASTIC ROOFING CEM HNT WWtt iiiako your roor better than jirwX. L. UIIICE, Phono Ml). COOL. SANITARY IVKliXfX DRINKS at BARTER'S. r DREDGE OPOK 'I i rf 4' ?i - r .... ''- j M