The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, April 09, 1905, Page 6, Image 6

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    Tii3 oesgon Sunday 'jour.:TAi; postlaiiiv cu::daV t-icniauo; AriL g. r:
iiiPJCATES TO
u IMN KILLED
AND FOUR INJURED
D3IST0U VAFITS A
, . - . ...; ft. .. ....
.v. ::
CI -STREET -CARS
C9VEDIT LIKE
- IS UhDEB ACutST
Commissioner J" Will V Report . in
t:ivor-Elct - Duhn' Plan to
Locomotive . Boiler on Northern
J. Ccullen Taken Into Custody
Purchase Electric Lines
s . Meets -With Approval. ; !T
FINANCIERS PRONOUNCE
;, ? Pacific Train Explodes ; ,
i Favor of Government Steam
" . ship System to lsthrmisj
: Because He Was Acting in
i Suspicious Manner.
in Montana.
ENGINEER DEAD AND
COMMERCE DIVERTED TO
THOUGHT TO HAVE CEEN
SCHEME PRAISEWORTHY
tr -TIREMAN MAY EXPIRE
. EUROPE BY PANAMA ROAD
. OLD-TIMS STOOL PIGEON
, Proposed Issue Will Be Very Pop
: ular and Over-Subscribed 1
. '-, Several Times. '
Scarcity of Water Supposed to
South American Nations Testify
Says He Has to ReportDirect to
Be- Cause of Terrible
Disaster. ' ;:v ' V :
That Concerning Practices ,
' of Private Ownership. ;
Chief Hunt,- Who Ap
( pointed Him. . ;
- ..... ( ' M
- ; ' n j -v c vi
- "w f 1 s!T i 1 I 7 V i V ,r at
fif !i
el
0 .5::iv;T:,;!
'': ' - .
(SeetIOIlatrt orlaeeaVWlMtsTae Jearaal)
New Yorlc, April lid ward F. Dunn.
' mayor-elect of Chicago, left for horse
n the Twentieth Century Umtttd today.-
after receiving a host of f rlende
end admirer In bla apartments st th
Waldorf-Aatori.- Daring the day there
X waa a continuous atraam of callers, and.
warm omi or praise wer apos.en rw
gardtng Ma plan for tha municipal own
ership of tha street railways of Cbl-
, cago. . . '
Mr. Farson. of Farson. Leache Co.,
one of the largest dealers In municipal
bonds- In tha country, told Judge Dunne
that kla Man for financing his program
was eminently sound and would be vary
popular.'
"Tour proposed Issue of certificates
... 1 1 1 BMluhlit h. nu.r.
Mid Mr. r.rwii, -
- subscribed many tiroes."
Mr. Faraon was only one of the many
financier and business men who told
the mayor-elect tha same thing. '
"I waa viewed by a gentleman who l
a millionaire many times over, and who
la one of the largest stockholders In the
' New Tork street railways." aald Judge
Dunne. Just before he left the Wal
dorf, "and who la in touch with avery
move In 1 the great financial market of
the city and country. I 'withhold hie
mn fori the preeent. for good and suf
ficient' rfasons. though I may make It
public at- soma future time. He was
. with me for half an hour, and during
that time he gave me many valuable
suggestion regarding the transfer of
atreet railway of Chicago from private
to public ownership. He thoroughly ap
proved of -the plan by which I propose
to make the transfer, and spoke most
encouragingly of every feature of It
a haul, aaa oodaDaen in my worn oa
told me -that he believed my plan won Id
iot only be successful, put very popu-
ar." L. ' ' ' '
Judge Dunne was entertained ' at
uncheon today. byMr. and Mrs. Wll-
Jam Randolph Hearst. :
.:ade a fortune by
; ;v swindling servants
(Special Dlspatck by teased Wire to The louraal)
- Pittsburg. Fa,. April . Attorney B.
Mead Whlppo or IMtiaourg naa tmn
placed tinder arrest at St Louis, charged
with embeaalement andwlU be returned
to pmsburg for trial. Ha waa arrested
on request of Pittsburg authorities, who
allege that Whlppo, up to a few weeka
. ago. had an office la this city and
swindled servant girl and young women
out of not leaa than 1J.00. , Lena C.
Nelson. a serrant girl, has sworn that
Whlppo swindled her of a tl.te United
. flute - Steel corporation bond which
represented the savins of a Jlfetlm.
WhlDros wlf U la Pittsburg on the
verge of starvation. When Whlppo waa
tarreeted In 8t Louis there waa found
Iwlth btm a young woman thought to be
Khe caahler of a big plttaburg atora. .
!' mVMMM9 TO MATH. '
I (special IMe'sateh ts The Joorsal.) f
Clifford. Ida., April I. Bam Allen, an
employe at Elmer Cassel'a. attempted to
get the furniture from a burning bouse
Jast nlghv and the building collapsed,
burning him. to death. . t '- I
Most forms of sickness start with ths
Insld nerve. Indigestion, our store-
b. Jt .n.nal, . wea,kv. kid-
nays, diabetes.. Bright Dlaoaae Liver
Irregularities Heart Irregularities
Bowel Irregularities all of thee all
tnent, and the ailment which they, is
turn, bring on, are due directly to de
rangements of certain nerve centers.
?, Understand llrst that we have two en
tirely separate nerve systems. When
wa walk, or talk, or act, we call Into
lsy a certain net of nerve nerves
which obey our mental commends. That
s why the arm can be raised, or tha
mouth opened, or the eye shut, at the
slightest desire. That la why your fin
gers can delicately pick up a pin one
moment, and hold a heavy hammer th
fiext. -.-!-. -V - -
i But these are not tha nerve w are
to consider here.
There la another set of nerves which
control and govern and actuate the heart
and the stomach,, the kidneys and th
liver and all of tha Vital f unctlona. - Vou
Iran not control these nerves. - By no su
preme effort of mind can you make your
hear atop or start nor can you, even
Jnaks It vary by a single beat a minute.
And so with ths stomach and th liver
and the kidney' and th bowels they
pre automatic they do their work at a
t-ertain set speed whether you ar awak
W asleep whether you will It or not.
' It Is on these inside nerves that life
and health depends. , So long as thess
nerves perform their proper duties we
are well and strong. When 'they fall, we
now It by th Inevitable symptoms
einach. heart liver, kidney troublea
And theee troublea have no other origin,
ever, than In theee aame nerves. For
the stomach, the heart, tha liver, the
kidneys, have no power of their own,
lio self-control- Thar owe their avery
Impulse to tb Inside nerve. The
nerves era the masters. Th organ
their slave.
' But th most Interesting part 'about
the Insld nervee la the bond of aim,.
pathy-which exists between all centers
and branches of this greet automatic
rstro.
... Th center, which, for Instance, con
trols the stomach, la known to science
hs the "solar plexus." The heart center
' xw.iw . 1 1 vm uir.un. A ne K IQ
;ey -eenter, the 'atwl plexus.' Tet It
. Is n well-known fact thst In prise
fa-Ma. a - solar plexus blow Inatantly
'slops tha heart, although Its usual op
4 :
iiiiiilti
!-'
t (Special Plapeteh ts The JoaraaL) :
Butte, Mont., April t. On man waa
killed and four Injured by the explosion
of the boiler of .an engine attached to
an east-bound frleght train at Central
Park, a email station on the Northern
Pacific, about 100 mile east of Butt
tonight. Tha dead: ..
DAN OILLI8, engineer, of Livingston.
Injured: . Richard Kllney of Living
ston, fireman, may die.
Everett Parka, assistant fireman, seri
ously. :. s,.. .. t ; :
Conductor Charles Bryant and Brake.
man John Freeman-were badly cut and
bruised, though their Injuries are not
believed to be serious. - QUlla' body waa
hurled through the slr a distance of
more than Sv feet from the track, hta
mangled corpse being found beneath a
mass of tangled wreckage. t
The engine was completely demol
ished, the (Ire box being driven several
feet Into tha ground, tearing up track
for a number of yards. No Cars were
throws from the ralla, though tha one
close to the engine ware badly dam
aged. Conductor Bryant waa thrown
completely through the caboose window
by the eudden stopping of the train. A
scarcity or water in in Doner i De
lia ved to be reaponalbl for tbe disaster.
TUGBOAT TURNS TURTLE I
THREE OF CREW PERISH
(Special Dispatch by Lease Wire to The Joanal)
New . . Tort April. . . The . tugboat
Greenville turned turtle In the North
river oft Thirteenth atreet today and bar
captain, engineer and one deckhand were
caught, lav the trap and -drowned. Three
men saved themselves' by leaping rar
eut Into the water when the boat be
gan to awing over and were rescued
by men on nearby tug. i
The accident was or a most peculiar
nature and it. happened In jruch quick
time that there wae-no chance for thoso
on the Inside of the deck; house toy es
cape, i , ? . f ''..:- -. ..
The Moran cam puffing . up th
river, bearing four empty barges, whan
the Greenville set out to take over two
of them, and maneuver them Into the
tip beside the dredge. - Somebody blun
dered. Instead of the line from'. the
Greenville being paid out after It end
had reached the barge. It waa mad fast.
The Moran, still fastened to the four
barges by a steel hawser, continued mov
ing ahead, i while the. Greenville moved
oR In the oppoatt direction. . niii.i.U.: i
In -an tnatant tha hawser was drawn
taut. Then the Greenville waa brought
about suddenly by the tugging of the
Moran. Sh awung half way around,
dipped, .the water rushing Into her fire
room and before any one knew what waa
happening, the boat turned completely
over,- and floated bottom ' up.'
V - .y.j. ;
""." oza xvAnaumx mrnun. ....
' ' ' (Speelal BUpateh to The Joeraal.) i )
' Cheney; Wash., April I. A tf.nor fir
destroyed the storehouse of J, EL Bur
bank and the warehouse snda four
story flour milk The latter waa an old
landmark. The fire la thought to have
been of Incendiary. -origin. r .
erations , -concern . only the stomach.
Why? Because of the bond of sympathy
between the various branches. That 1
th reason the Inside nerves are some
times called the "sympathetic' nerves.
This explains why stomsch trouble
Often develop into heart trouble why
indigestion brings on nervousness why
diseases become complicated. It ex
plains, too, why-ordinary medical treat
ments are wrong why medicine ao fre
quently falls. t . ,
Uy tree Dollar Offer
Any sick one who has
not tried my remedy
Dr. Snoop's Restorative
may have a Pull Dol
lar's Worth Free. 1 asfc
no deposit, no reference
nd security. V There ! Is
nothing to pay, either
now or later. I will send
you anT order J on, your
druggist which he will
accept in full payment
for a regular, standard
size Dollar bottle. And
he will send the bill to
me.
C. I. Snoop, iVlCD.
- More than : thirty years ago . this
thought came to me: -
"If life and health depend upon per
fect heart action, dpoa proper stomsch
dlgeetlon, upon correct kidney filtering,
why doe not life' Itself depend upon
these . life-governing., power nerves
these Inside nerves f"
I realised, too, that all ailment which
result from on csus may, of course, be
(Special Dispatch by Leased' Wire to The louraal)
Washington. April '. (.It reaulred
some govern merit ownership of the Pan
ama railroad to prevent It continually
diverting the trad. of the west coast
of South America to foreign lnstesd of
American port. - - . .-v.
v Thla la tha atsrtllng revelation (which
was accentuated today at the war d
'partment) mae by the purchase of the
i vmu vj mi vuuvv. Burn uu n n ,.
mediate keen lntereat taken In the road's
future by the representatives of all the
western American republic from Nica
ragua Bouth.r " i , .
The Panama railroad waa run In eon-
Junction -with tha Paclflo Mali Steam
ship company and transcontinental rail
roads." it la now proved by the Boutu
Americans that such a combination. In
stead of helping American trad, actu
ally killed It. Secretary of War Taft
conferred today with tha representatives
of Ecuador, Chile, Peru, Bolivia. Guate
mala, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua, - their
object being the diversion of the trade
of those oountrlea . from Europe Into
their legitimate channel. American At
lanto porta
' It I aald her that the report of Jo
seph W Briatow, the president's special
ageftt. Who went ,to Panama to study
the government's Interest In connection
with the running of the Panama rail
road, will report to eongrea tn jfavor of
a governmental steamship Una . from
Panama to' Ban Francisco, and a line
from Colon to New Tork, and on from
Colon to New Orleans. - ---v"
The work of Mr. Brlatow Is Intimate
ly related to the subject matter of -con
ference at th war department today
between the 'South Americans and th
secretary of war. ' 1
It Is evidently to th Interest of Nica
ragua and the- .other Latin republic'
literal Interests that there should be-a
government line on th west coast, be
cause It has been demonstrated on th
east coast that th Panama railroad was
adverse to the South American trade.
There -appears to be no question that
the Hearst bill, which seeks to regulate
the Panama railroad Interests fairly
with reference to- th transcontinental
railroads and th steamship trade eaat
and west, wlrl be passed by-the next
congress. . Ths Hearst bin cannot p bo
changed a to Bo service, la masquerade
as a Republican bill. 'It covers all
th point a and it Is noteworthy that aa
aobn as it provisions had Teen. gener
ally discussed th president- took spa-'
clal "lntereat In the affalra Of the Pan
ama railroad and- Brlatow went to work
and has been discussing with commer
cial bod lea the neceaalty of steamship
connections for the Panama railroad eaat
and west as provided by the Hearst bill.
This bill contains a prevision wnicn
would enable the government to eetsb-
ltah steamship Itnea Immediately by the
utilisation of government transports o
be sin the work, which- would,, of course.
be capable or outer aeveiopmenis. '
; HAWAIIAN PROTEST,
deveraoT Oartar Befasts ts Xi Jap-
amass la Xslaad do to Panama. ;
(Spxilal Dispatch by Leased Wire to Ths Journal)
Waahlngton. April I. Tha experi
mental draft an Hawaii for, 1,000 Jap-
cured br tut remedv. ' I resolved not
to doctor the organs but to treat- the
one neme system wnicn operates mem
Por those who treat onlv the ermn
turns .need a rilfTerant remedT for each.
Such treatmenta ar only palliative, the
results do not last. A cure csn never
come In disease of tha. stomach: heart.
liver or kidneys, until the Inside nerve
power la restored. When that Is dona,
Nature remove th symptoms. : There
Is no need of doctoring them.
My remedy now known by druggists
everywhere, as Dr. Snoop's Restora
tive la tha result of a quarter century
of endeavor along thla very line. It
does not dosa th organ or deaden the
pain but It doea go at Once to the
nerve the inside nerve ' the power
nerve and builds It tip, and strength
ens ix and majr.es it wen. . '. .
- There la no mystery no miracle. I
can explain my treatment to you aa
easily aa I can tell you why cold freesea
water and why heat melts Ice. Nor do
I claim a discovery. For every detail of
my treatment is bssed on truths ae
fundamental that none can deny them.
And every Ingredient -of my medicine
la aa old aa the hills It growa on. 1
aimply applied the trutba and combined
the Ingredients into a remedy that Is
.practically certain.
' I have mad my offer that strangers
to my remedy -may know. It Is not In
tended for or open to those who have
uaed my remedy. They need tio further
evidence. ' But to those who have not
heard, or hearing, may have delayed or
doubted, I aay '"simply writ and ask."
I will send yon an order on yerur drug
gist whloh he will accept a gladly a
ne wouia accept a auuar, nm win nana
tou from hi ehelves a atandard alsed
ottle of my prescription, and h will
nd the bill to ma
-Will you accept this opportunity to
learn at my expense absolutely how to
pa na xorever or an lorrai oi nines
which ar caused by Inside nervous
weakness to be rid not only of the
trouble, but pf the very cause which
produced It f ; Writ today. .
for a free erder fne Bank 1 ea f)f Tria. -S
fall dollar bottle Hook I ea Us Heart.
roe aniat sedms Bonk I ee the Ktoaera,
Dr. Shoes. Box 40T3. "Hook 4 for Woswa.
Raetse, Wis. Stat Booe for Mr-
watch book res wast. Book I n Rbeejaattesa,
. . - -'..o.-T
- - . . .
Mild cases are often cured by a sin
gle bottle.- For sale at forty thousand
drug stores. ' . ,
Taken Into ' custody by Patrolman
Gibson last night because for a week or
longer ' hs had -been . prowling " in th
vicinity of 8evnth ' and Washington
streets, with apparently no' legitimate
purpose la view. J. Scullen caused-. a
sensation at police headquarter by
proving, to Captain- Moor that ha Is a
newly appointed patrolman and worked
as a member of th department today
for the flrat tlm. '
Itebuked by Captain 1 Moor for hi
suspicious actions and what at first ap
peared to be his lack of reason in re
fusing to acquaint Gibson with hi Iden
tity, scullen made th exeas mat na
"wasn't aaked," After Gibson left th
atatlon,, Detective- Vaughn, defending
Scullen, made several comment reflect
ing on the older of fleer,-
"I -know why Gibson arrestea mat
man and brought htm in here," he as
serted warmly. Ha ha seen me talk
ing to htm In front of a saloon and
store there two or three times."
This remark waa construed oy every
officer present to mean that Vaughn
wanted to convey th Idea that Olbaon
had taken Scullen Into custody beeauae
he thought him a tool-plgeon and
caused shrewd glances to pass back and
forth. - - --...; v -"' ''
-Scullen began to make som state
ment relative- to th airair. wnen
Vaughn sharply advised hint not to talk.
-antain 'Moor, however, asked Scul
len a number of question, and brought
to light th fact that when Gibson had
asked Scullen to What captain he made
his . report the latter naa repnea ini
he reported to nobody hut Chief Hunt.
"He threatened to repuri m w
Hunt walL" aald Gibson. "I-told
him thst my duty was to report to my
captain, and that h could report the
affair to whomsoever h pleased.''
r-.ntaln Moora Instructed Scullen to
pass bis tlm in other ways than by ,
"holding down aorner."
"lav other officer would hsv TaJten
iha aame motion aa Gibson under the
aam circumstances, asserted Captain
Moor.
l.k.M.i tnr arnetr nit tha Isthmian
canal haa been made Impossible by a
protest or Governor tn m nawau
i Wa Taft and It now
becomes necessary to enter upon a sys
tem of Introducing actual Japanese
aliens for tb work. -
i In; his reply. Secretary Taft snakes
the elgnlftcant -qualified reply, however,
that the Japanese will not be aaked to
come from Hawaii "If th contract for
Japanes 1 approved by tb commission.
Thl indicates that ther I now soma
doubt as to th employment oi jap-
aness. i" ' r- v.. i ....i.-r . -
Yesterday th governmental - official
estimate appeared to be from . 10,00
to 40.00 - Japanese and not run up
against the . alien contract labor law,
t-u MAnnA. fiw the fl.inmanuJ noel.
tlon were that th law waa not paaaed
before tn unitea rsiaise oouinai con
trol over th son and that tho United
cj.,u Anm i aveiwlsa suverelsiitT over
th - son and therefore th Japan
could oe introaucaa , innwin
ports. The question hae now . become
on of importance ana interest. t
SUMMER-READING FOR
- THE SUPREME COURT
' A If 1-page abstract of record has
boon prepared by R. B. Dunlway at
torney for th county of Multnomah as
nlalntlil and appellant. In. th case
aaalnat the Willamette eV " Columbia
River Towing company. William Mitch.
HI, Pilot Henry Emken and th Paclfle
Exnort . Lumber . company, . respondents.
appealed to tha supreme court from the
ludement of th circuit court of Clucka.
mss county.- Th case was begun by the
county to collect If.sTi alleged to be
duo for damages - caused, to ua Jaorri
aon atreet bridge February II. 101,
hv f ha ataamahlD Almond Branch. A
verdict was obtained In th circuit spurt.
a motion for a new trial waa allowed
by Judge Sears and then a non-suit
was granted, and the county took tha
caa Into Clackamas county on a change
of venue, and from thst jeoiuh ..the
appeal was taken from the Judgment'
The towing company was encaged In
moving the Almond Branch from In
matt. Poulsen It Co.' sawmill through
the Madison snd Morrison street bridges
snd whlls it was near ths Morrison
street bridge th tug lost control of
the vessel and the stesmshlp swung
against ths bridge cauaed damages. In
the - repair - of . wnicn , tns county ex
tended M.fTl a
. It wss testified hat th captain of
th steamship reversed hi engines, thus
eaualng tha accident -It waa on thla
evidence that Judge Sears granted the
non-suit. r...-,. . . (-
CON BLACKCATENATED ?
1 0R0ER OF HOP HOP
For ions week, beginning September
I, black eats will overrun the city
without fear of molestation. They may
climb tha near by . fence and hold a
feline saengerfest and wo betide the
small boy who dares to hurl etone. .
Extensive preparations ar.belng made
by Paclflo Coast Hoo-Hood to entertain,
Hoo-Hoo from all over the' country
during, that week. Tha executive oom
mitte In charge of th arrangement
consists of R. v. Inmaa, chairman; H.
W. Ooddard, H. A. Sargent, F. Hv Ran
som, M. C Banfield, J. 8. Hamilton, W.
B. Maokay, O. M. Cornwall, F. L. Zim
merman. A. H. Potter, supreme jabber-
wock x-offlcto, and E. It Habtgghorst,
secretory, r- ;
Mrs. Edna B. Jones, press agent for
the Portland executive committee, la
compiling a. souvenir book of the order
to be Issued at ths convention. .
GPVERNPR FPLK CLOSES
! : SALOONS IN ST. LOUIS
(Seed si Dteaatch y Lease! Wire te the Journal)
. 8L Louis, April . Fr th first tlm
tn many year It will be Impossible to
morrow to buy a drink. In St. Louis.
Governor Folk haa ordered, his -appointees,
ths excise commissioner, the
nolle commissioners snd the. chief of
polic to enforce th Sunday cloalng or
der rigidly snd ths word haa gon forth
that the saloon that opens Its -doors.
either front or back, after It o'clock
tonight, wilt lose Us license, and be
closed permanently, .J i . y .,
mm s
rut . ) l
v
The expert pianist demands a Grand Piano. Why . should the ambitious amateur be: r
less easiljt; satisfied ; ; - -' . ' - ' ''-'.'Jy- V."'--.'-':,'vf:v'',i':;;v-:,A -!'.;';.:';
1 For years this demand has been growing.' Today it . Is well-nigh umrersaL But the.', '
""a; desire' has been. the slave of conditions. ; -' '"; , ' . '. " v 7'ST.i
r; The physical limitations of the modern home small rooms, compact (apartments, have .
compelled the musician whose artistic , ear rebelled tb be-satisfied with, an upright piano.
t'.. i But the highest artistic talent in jpiano construction -that .exists in the- world." today i
Chickering & Sons has been working1 on the problem for years : ' ' . ' .; '' r . ' ;;; '
- ."How to produce grand piano tone quality - that shall be available to modern space I i
requirements?".
- It haa been abundantly proven that no upright piano could perfectly solve ths difficulty. Then began ths .
great sclentillo work which, after years of expert achievement,' haa brought from the, workshop f Chtokerlng
V Sons ths marvelous Quarter Grand, snd th stllL later and smaller marvel the Chickering Infant Orand, ,
'"Today ther I no home where any piano can be accommodated that, doea not hav ample apace to devote '
to a Chickering Infant or quarter
Tneae auperb Instruments are, In th first place, beautiful, and th ton quality marvelous, srtlstlo, reao- --.
nant. powerful, satlafylng. Never, heretofore. In all. the Si years of "Chickering piano making haa ths Chick' .
erlng quality been approached in piano of such dlmlnutlv dimensions. ". - . .... ...i .
' It 1 our pleasure to demonstrate th powers and beauties of Chickering Orand Piano to those ho hsv '
V i'fi minutes o listen. ;r - ' '-.':'-','?.,' - ' 'r w" ''
tit -r-,.
i, . -. '"T.
" Other large atores, Ban Francisco, Stockton and Oakland, CaL( Spokana
NAVAL DEMONSTRATION
. IN HEpiTERRANEAN
..... tJ
Franc and England May Sand
. Warships to Settle Mo-
- rocco Qusstiori. r v
(Special Dlaaateb by teesed Wlrs ts Ths Joeraal)
Washington, April 1 Th - German-French-English
correspondence over the
open door in Morocco, Is not regarded
her as by any meena a closed incident
and ther ar soms diplomata who think
that It will not be ssttled until, as In
timated from Europe today there Is a
ntatstits
Week
V'-We never had so many Buffets and Side
boardsA full carload of each came In this week
and they are the newest and best: designs; ask
to see them when down this week. ;
x n ft
I : inienry J
snnin
172-174
sy.ti.ttsllWWW.VWW
mm a
AMJS 'II II
V
ft . -V
iMiwI
t
orand.
V ,;351 .Washirigton Street, Cor. Park, Portland, Or. "
Frsneh-Engllsh naval demonstration tn
the Mediterranean. - - --
Notwithstanding tha aeml-Offteial ut
terances to th contrary her yesterday,
It Is stated unequlvocably today that
Franc ha not mads any representa
tions to Germany or to tha United
State giving any assurances -whatever
of th open door In Morocco other than
the open door which now exists.
The .British ambassador visited- th
war department today to see Secretary
Taft and ther I good reason to believe
Morocco precisely ss It wss Interpreted
by Ambassador Jusserand to th stats
department yesterday. -
France snd Knglsnd are not yielding
to th kaiser. Although th kaiser hss
mad openly, a direct Issue, demanding
categorical assurances of th open door
as It Is understood. In China, all of
...'
The sale of Din
ingroom Furniture
of course includes ; .
ROOM
.chairs: ,
AND
EXTENSION I
TART.R55 '
FirttStrest
Spsciai Sale of . . :
s '
Ji
and SeatUeT Waal,' antf 5ot tiad "
th avidenc her la that To hss been
anawered flatly and adversely by both!
Anglo-Franch treaty. . . . . . -. '
RUSSIANS-PURCHASING -
; . WyOMING RANGE HORSES
(Special tMapetch by Leased Wire te The 7erulV
Cheyenne, Wyo.. Aprtl - The Rus-,
slsn government Is purchasing It.soo
rang heress fee tb us f Its csvalr
from ranchers of this stats. ' Ths gen- ,
sral rendeavous of th animals bought
Is at Mooiworoft, where already avrsl!
thousand horses ar herded. : They are .
to be hlpped to th Atlantlo seaboard
and theno to St. Petersburg and over'
th Siberian railroad. , .
ft SSBwa-s-saaaBasw , , . m
" K - III !-- .--..S
K
:V. ..-.f'.. K-' -''--.''-;: .('
I ......