1 THE ' OREGON DAILY JOURNAG PORTLAND, FRIDAY EVENITflV. SEPTEMBER 20, 1007. V ?v 10 MOORS SHOT DOWN IN COLD BLOOD BY FRENCH i" Eyewitness Gives Graphic Account of What Happened During Bombardment of Casablanca Innocent , Men, Women and Children Shot Down. action, la f" : (Special Cable to The Journal.) i Tangier. Morocco. Sept. 10, via Ne 5"ork, Sept. 15.- Reliable account of the ocupatlon of Caaablanca by French . troops on Monday. August 6, lve to the term "pacific penetration" a nhaatly arcasm, and Indicate that the history ft that French military action will re , cord cruelty, insincerity and Intrigue , Vueh aa have been attendant upon no Wther mlHtary mancuvr In modern hls lory. In the Ilfht of these accounts the occupation of the town becomes noth Jn more or less than a political move ment; the deaths of thousands of Moors ,Cmen, women and children becomes (but ao many murders charV'ble to tho riendieh "foreign legion" of Algeria; , ' taun tha orlrlnal massacre of French, I finanlfeh and Italian workmen employei ' at the port becomea a link In the chain : Vnnm haa bera forclna with which to kind Morocco. , I Threuah the enterprlae of French of irioiaia nnrraannnd'nia and newspapers. )W of the occupation of Caaablanca haan aa ahaDed aa lo reflect the greatest poaalble amount of credit upon iwl In the movement . anil tn p.haracterlse the defense of 1 ha Unon aa another Indication of Mo hammedan barbarity. But now the 1 tale la changing color. People who know, and who are not French, are be- .i.nin. tn tali what they aaw. and the ' result la that a public proteat, which, It 1 la believed, will cauae the Britlah goy- A taltfA vaatralnlnar , , ; being organ laed. Among the many peraons who speak i wits luinui at the terrible nature of lithe occupation la an.Engllah physician. I ' man who for two decadee haa lived t i.mona-' tha Mnon. and who was in Cana- Kianoa. fliirln the time of which he peaaa. This is his story of the occu vtattnn! : 'The presence of a French officer at tithe customs house at Caaablanca was lot looked upon wltn ravor Dy tne Moors, nor was the railroad used tn the construction or me new pri mrccuio to them. But while the did not favor than ii not the allahtest In- ; 'dlnatrtoi. to be rid of them by violent meana. The cauae of the killing of the '(nine workmen waa thla: Several Moora ' employed at the port had been badly - treated by the foreign workmen, had fceen kicked, elapped and otherwise 4 abused, to say nothing of curss heaped . ' ucpn them. Theae, with their friends. : Who were not among the beat claaa of ' Moora, by any means reaolved upon re venge, and their desire was Inflamed i and encouraged by Moors, who. it la now ' fairly well established, were connected with the French. "At any rate they waylaid the work men and assaulted them, a crowd of perhaps ZV Moors, in tne meiee wnicn followed the nine men were killed. It Is significant to note that not only was ''thla not a concerted movement upon the 'part of the townspeople but that after tha 'wave of excitement naturally at ' tendant upon anything of thla sort had " rubalded the town was la an absolutely normal condition. , -"There waa no excitement upon the - streets, -nor were any other foreigners molested. The entire affair could have ' been handled aa simple murder and ret ribution have been demanded. But fu ' ture developments pointed to something 'more pointed to the fact that the Moor fish workmen had been incited to the waa shown on French. The purpose t Monday. September 6. ; "Sunday at sunset the town was quiet. ! with tha French warships lying m tne - f harbor.- At sunrise the native quarters lof the town were In ruins, hundreds of ' I Moora had been killed, and the town w iat tha mercy of the looters, both foreign ana native. " : , Beclamlntf of Bombardment. About o'clock in the morning 60 "French marines had landed. At the ' rates an excited guard discharged his I rifle, striking one of the marlnea in the band. Immediately a volley was Hired by the marines, whereupon the guard took to their heels. This wss the signal-to the warships a signal which manifestly had been designed before the marines left the ship. At once the war- t Constipation i Easily Cured akaBaaaaaaMiwaHaaB In (he Privacy of Your Own Home lVItfaonl Medicine bex rasa coupon beiow. Y V ships began to ahU the native quar ters of the city, although thousands of Moors and Jews were there asleep. As the shells brfrnn to hurst, the 60 rlnos went toward the French legation, shooting continuously, although they receive.! not the slightest opposition Men. women and chllurrn who, fright ened at the sound, rushed into the streets were hot down without mercy or hesitation. "For three days the hombardmen continued, now of the city, now of the knblU, or tribesmen, who. hearing the gutia, fame In, quite naturally, to pro tect their country. In the town there waa no fighting, only murder. Outsldu the walls the French sheila brought death to thousands of Moora, who, he llevlng their country to be attacked. had gathered to repel tha Invader. With them It waa war. but their war was play for the French gunners. "In the town conditions were almost too horrible to tell of. No coherent story can be told of them, for to all those who saw and heard they were like a nightmare, a dream of an inaane murder in a nursery. There waa no quarter. Every living thing that waa not a foreigner waa killed. Old men, women and children, even donkeys and frightened dogs, were the victims of the terrible thirst for murder. It waa not capture. It waa not occupation. It waa extinction. "Immediately the slaughter began many Moors commenced to piling Moors whom even their own dnnger and the deaths of their countrymen could not stay; Just such men aa one finda on every battlefield. Like Jacknli they skulked about, robbing, murdering, afraid hot only of the sotdrera, who were killing every living thing, but equally afraid of each other. I saw L Moor atab to death his brother that he himself might have all the enolls. and. later, I aaw him fall to the ground be neath his load of Ill-gotten spoils, his head burst by a dum-dum bullet. Olrls Blddlod With Ballets. mere were sights to make a man turn ill. I saw two frightened Moorish girls, perhaps 20 years of age, crossing aireei in aearcn or eneuer. A voney, and both fell. One, lying huddled in the atreet, tried to null her halk. or ooat, over her head. The motion waa aeen, and a dozen bullets struck her. I aaw an old. old woman, 80 yeara at least, running wildly about. A moment later I counted 20 bullet marks upon her body, i aaw a group of children, frightened and in tears, searching for their father. Juet aa they found him lying dead In the street, they were torn to plecea by a score of bulleta. These are only Individual cases the like of which I could tell for hours of the Jewish woman whose eight children were killed before her eyes, of babea torn from mothers' arms to be dashed to death by some drunken sailor against convenient wall, of old man totferlnar about begging for mercy, only to be torn to pieces by the fearful dum-rtum bullets. But, while Individual cases ap- fieal more strongly to one's sympathies, t Is the general riila which la ao horri ble In this instance. Every Moor who couia De round regardless of aex, age or Innocence was killed, with the ex ception of a certain small number wnose orrtces protected them. "Every Moorish house, every house of any sort in the native quarter, waa entered by French soldiers, and who ever was found therein waa killed with out hesitation. If found In his home, the Moor was shot with the remark that If he were not guilty he would not be hiding." WEIGHERS IfL BE CALLED 001 Telegraphers Denounce Men Who Said They Wanted the Strike Settled. (raited Press IhhmI Wirt.) few York, Hept. 20. President Small, of the Commercial Telegraphers' union, said today that Thomas Mahan and Arthur Douglaa, members of the lo cal union, who went to Washington and made the statement that the telegraph era are dissatisfied and wanted a settle ment of the strike, made over the heads or the officers, will be reproved at a mass meeting of the strikers toda Hmail says there Is no settlement sight. I ay. Iti esplte Small's statement. It Is de clared that direct negotiations with President Roosevelt have been started looking toward a settlement, and while the fact Is discreetly denied by strike leaders and officers of the company, It Is known that Percy Thomas, deputy vice-president of the national union, and Daniel L. Russell, former president of the New York local had a two hours' talk' with the nresldent In Ovatas Hi last Wednesday, and this conference was by appointment Slmultaneoualy with tha reaDDearance of Thomas and Russell came the report that Labor Commissioner Nelll would be In New York within a week and would call on President Roosevelt. Then there were reports of expected arbitra tion coming from various Quarters Tha moat oerinne or inese came from Wash ington, where It waa aald a peace move waa In progress, and that three men were to be named by the strikers and a like number by the companlea to under take the settlement of the strike. OCEAN PARK MAYOR THREATENED BY HOB Feople Denounce City Exec utive for Knocking Man Down Stairway. (naHMl rrM Leased wirT.) Ocean Psrk. Cal.. Sept. 20. Angered cltlxena threatened to lynch Mayor Dana Burke last ntght after he had attacked ei-Poltceman r'annon In a public apeech and later knocked him down a stairway when Cannon confronted him anrl A. mniiaen an explanation. For a few min utes It looked as thOUnh the Ihraat might be carried out. Keel In ran h(li and persona In the crowd yelled "Ivnch him. ' Trouble waa averted, hnwever y a doxen or more of the less excited Itlaena. The Two Slstera. From the New York Time THEOSOPHY ACTS AS PEACEMAKER 3Irs. Besant Says the World Would Be Much Bet ter for It. (United Press Leastd Wirt.) Chicago, Sept 20. "Theoaophy Is the peacemaker reconciling all religions." That was the burden of Mrs. Annie Beaant's lecture at Orchestra hall. It was entitled "The Place of Masters in Religion." "Theoaophy," she aald, "demands of no man that he leave hla faith and come into a new fold. It says, 'Stay where you are.' to all Christians. Mo hammedans, Buddhists, Hindus, alike. It bids him only recognise all religions as coming from the same source, and seeking the same goal. "All have different oaths, aeeklna the same goal. Each religion built around tself a high wall. In It were the be lievers; without were the unbelievers. It was narrow, and heresies constantly arose. 1 "Theoaophy holds that the search, no matter Dy wnat pain, is never uncer tain of its ending. It holds that you already have a wealth of theosophlcal eachlng In your religion. Don t change your faith. Onlv learn better to live it. Theoaophy has no exclusion. No matter what your Dener, it is yours, even as It is mine. We are not for labels, only for what the labels describe. Your religion may be clothed in Christian words, in Hindu phraaes. We re the conscious theosonhista. The others are the unconscious ones. It is the youngest child, the latest impulse of religion and Into all languishing reli gions It puts a new life. It touches hla world with worlds that are invisi ble. It has crowded Into the Roman Catholic church, and it is being touched with a new spirit, which Is moving it toward liberalism. 'There is a gradual moving amid the dead bones of dogma and the reign of new spiritual lire has begun. A woman who had been summering In pretty town In New V.nrarA xat, home the other day with a atory of the delightful way In which Christian Sci ence aometimes works to the comfort and .profit of its followers. The town was a stronghold of the cult, aha aald, and near -her lived two sisters the elder married, the younger not; the for mer a shining light of the church (a reader and healer), the iir humble pilgrim in scientific paths. "One afternoon," she proceeded, "I saw Mrs. Errol Heeler sitting on the front porch In an Immaculate white frock, her hands folded and a general air of self-satisfaction and conscious holiness about her that waa quite mad dening to watch, when the mercury was In the nineties and everybody else was In a frame of mind that mif?ht be de- wriiH-a as unappi-n. it got on my nerves, no I thought I would run over and see wnat I could do toward disturb Ing the holy calm. Quite useless she scarcely noticed me, and the beatific expression Increased, If anything finally got tired of It and asked: "Where's EllaT for I had not a anything or the younger 8lter. "Oh. in thi Mrs. Heeler. "I went In. called upstairs, got no an swer, and finally penetrnted to the kitchen, where I found Ella white as a sheet in spite of her occupation and the temperature, stooping over an Iron ing board, hard at work Ironing a fussy wnne uress or ner mster a, tne one that usually adorned the lady when she read 'Science and Henlth' aloud to her con gregation Sunday mornings. "'What's the matter?' I asked. 'You don't look able to stand up.' " "I'm afraid I have a headache." ad mitted Ella, reluctantly. " 1 should say you had It's a perfect shame of your sister to sit out there in tne snaoe doing nothing while vou are Ironing her dres for her,' I scolded. "'Oh, don't please,' she almost cried; "vou don't know how good my sister Is. She Is giving me treatment now, so that I can finish this dress for her to wear tonight. She Is always ao kind and thoughtful ' "And at that I went home, leaving suffering Science In the kitchen and placid Health on the veranda." ' I Fair Faces Marred by Signs of Silent Suffering A woman's features quickly announce by lines of sufienns any disturbance of health. Dull ' - a sunken eyes surrounded by dark til i i i it- nnss, blanched cneeu ana ups, and a sallow complexion tell of anaemias ravages; while low spirits, indigestion and backaches complete her miseries. To the tufferinor sex at all aoes. Dr. Williams Pink Pills give a helping hand and the joy of full health by increasing, enriching, 1 ! .1 111 and punrying tne Diooa. Mrs. Evelyn Creuiere. of 8n Boule vard West, Detroit, Mich., says: "My trouble began about six years ago and after a time I became so weak 1 could not do any work at an. i naa a t J J a severe Dactacnes ana sucn areaaiai headache! In The back part and ep f my bead. My eyes ware easily tired and at times I saw black spots before them. I consulted several doctors but without the slightest benefit. I lost continually in weight and strength and was almost In despair until I tried Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. At the end of three months I had gained ten pounds in weight snd had no more trouble with my nerves. I have been In perfect health ever sines and heartily commend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Dr. Williams' Pink Pills (oc. per fco ; ill boxeS i U drouMt. wur booklet, nin iiiai id nimcii, irvc Dr. Wllliiau Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y We Will Outfit You for Less Than Our Competitors SPECIAL NOTICE, TO OUR TRADE, FALL STYLES IN HATS, SHOES AND CLOTHING HAVE ARRIVED BARR & HOGG ATT Ha fa Juit Jho0$ Vndmrwmr HotUry Smcktl 208 Morrison Street, Between Front and First . .fjBrcrszicxarT. w'S-is HciUg Theatre $g Tonlcht. 1:18 o'clock. Special Plica ..'.' Matinee Tomorrow Last Tim Tomorrow Night Special Jardiniere Sale TEXAS WATERSPOUT DROWNS MANY CATTLE Hundred Thousand Dollars Damage Done by Storm in the Southwest. : Llebler. A Company preeens; MZSI .TXSIXB IMITT Supported by an excellent cast In the delightful western drama, "SALOMY JANE" A beautiful play, admirably acted. Evening prices: $110 to ttc. Matinee, f 1.00 to JSc. Seats 4elling at theatre. 14th and Washington HE1LIG THEATRE ri VMAT UU OFBVI TODAY. Miss Jessie Busley In the Intensely interesting dram In The Bishop's Carriage jlu. nxi yruxx. Beginning Monday, 8ept. II. Special Price Matinee Saturday. Evening pricea: $1.60, $1.00, 7Se, JOo, S5c. 26c. Matinee prices: $1.00, 7 60, SOo, 8 Bo. 26c. Seats selling at the theatre. Phone Maine 1. he house, somewhere,' said (Pacific Coaet Prree Xmm4 Wire.) DaUaa, Te., Sept. 20. Reports from Leroy, 75 miles southwest of here, say that heavy ralna ylsited that section Thursday. A waterspout washed ojit a long section of the tracka of the Inter national 4 Great Northern. Large num bers of hnisi'S, rattle and sheep haye benn drowned. Property losses are es timated at more than $100,000. SATURDAY AND MONDAY ONLX 20 DIFFERENT SHAPES IN ALL SIZES Pompeilan Green, Conventional, Utopian and Classic 25 PER CENT DISCOUNT From regular prices during this introductory sale. The Elite China & Glass Co. EXCLUSIVE CROCKERY STORE 352 MORRISON, BET. 7th & PARK STREETS OPEN EVENINGS i MARQUAM ORA1ND (Phone Main 6.) Tonight, Saturday matinee and night. ending Sunday night, last four per formances. "TO OBJSXA." "The Californisns' Greatest Hit" Don't fall to hear Miss Rhoda sing "The Jewel of Asia." Evenings, 26c, 60c, 76c. Matinee, 16c, 60a. BAKER THEATRE rtMtte Mala t GEO. L. BAKER, Gen. Manager. Baker Stock Company Greater than ever. All thla week In Ed wsrrt rwpte's art p3i "Til &OTS MOVtTM. As produced in New York by Gray Standing and Odette Tyler. A atrong waatern play. Ev'g pricea, 26c, 6o, 60a. Mat. 16c. iSc. Matinee Sat Next weak. Hoyt's "A Stranger In New York." Empire Theatre EftS'm Geo. L. Baker, General Manager. Tonight All Week. Matlaees Wednesday and Saturday. The Charming Actress, "C'hle" Perkins in "Tin TaZTTU rBOSnCTOB." A typical story of mining life in the fsr west. Special scenery and effects. Night prices, 10c, 20c, 10c, 60c. Mstlnee S rices. 10c. 20c. Next week. "For other's Sake." The STAR "gB Week of Sep. IB, 190 Jtew, A. 14 THE R. E. FRENCH STOCK CO. Present. "TXI QVTXX or TKB KZOKWAT." Regular matinee days, Sundays, Tues days, Thursdays and Saturdays, at 1:10. Prices, 10c and 20c. Every evening at 8:16. Prices 10c. 20c and 30c Re served seats by both phones. Signs of Long Life. From the Philadelphia Record. "In the medical world," said a well known veteran doctor of Tioga yester day, "it is a generally accepted fact that every person bears physical indica tions of prospects of long or short life. "A long lived person may be distin guished from a short lived person at sight. In many Instances a physician may look at the hand- of a patient and tell whether he or she will live or not. The primary conditions, of longevity are that the heart, lungs and digestive organs as well as the brain, should be large. If these organs are large the trunk wiii.be long and the limbs compara tively short. Tha person will appear tall in sitting and short ln standing. The hand will have a long and some what heavy palm and short fingers. "The brain will be deeply seated, as shown by the orifice of the ear being low. The blue or brown hazel eye, as showing an Intermission of tempera ment, is a favorable indication. The nostrils, if large, open and free, Indi cate large lungs. A pinched and half- closed nostril indicates small or weak lunge. These are general points of dis tinction, but. of course, subject to the usual Individual exceptions." attXDGXaET, Constipation Specialist, Inventor of the Dregless Oonattpiation. Cure. - v 'Without the use of pllla, purgatives r drugs of any kind, I can and do cure the worst casvs of chronic constipation cure them to stay cured and restore the patient to a state of health and : happiness, such as they had . never known before. I can cure constipation, no matter hew bad it is. I can show you how to cure yourself right In your own home without the use of drugs. Constipation is cured for all time when cured my way. Fill out free coupon be low and mail today. COUPON y Fin In your namend" address on aottea lines Detow and matt to toi. T. H. Midgley, 1626 Midgley block. Kalamaaoo, Mich., ant by return nail he will tell you free how to cur : constipation without medicine. -it LAWLOK CALLS FOE ANOTHER JURY PANEL (Special Dlapttcb to Tht Jonrnti.) San Franclsro, Sept. 20. Twenty four of the Tirey I,. Ford Jury panel were excused at yesterday's session of Judge Lawlor's court and the sheriff was ordered to call a special panel this mprning of 40 to "be selected outside of bystanders" in the courtroom. Ford is being tried for alleged bribery of Supervisor Ionergan. who received money, so tne prosecution says, for voting for the t nited Railroads franchise. Mansfield and the Drum. From the Washington Herald. It is not generaJly known tha!t In ad dition to his other activities Richard Mansfield was at one time a reporter. He did all-around work on a small pa per In Boston, and from the city room graduated to the desk of musical arid dramatic criticism. Only one of his criticisms seems to have attracted no tice, and that was because he devoted the major part of It to the work of the bais drum. He read the bass drummer a long lecture on his ignorance of the dynamic value and capabilities of that instrument. The Idea of criticising the bass drum made the professionals smile, but Mansfield maintained that It was but natural that he, the son of a mu sician Himself, should be acute to de fect that ether critic ignore. OUTLET CLOTHING CO. We can easily and forcefully illustrate this fact to you. If You Want a $10 Suit That Is Worth $10 for $10 The Outlet is the place. We have no premiums to offer, nor can we offer you a $20 suit for $10. Just look that is all we ask. And we will convince you that we handle " the best that's made in Men's Apparel at live and let live prices. Sole Agents for The liawes and The Wilbur $3 Hats N. P. Corner first & Morrison Sts. wf One LYRIC THEATRE Both Phones i Stain 4685, Some, A-1020. Week commencing Monday, Sept. 14. NEW liYKIC STOCK COMPANT IN uAZJm TOM OOU." Matinees Tuesday Thursday, Satur day and Sunday. Prices lOo and 10c Every evening at 8:16. Prices 10c, 20c and 10c. Boxes 10c. Office open 10 a. m. to 10 p. m. X5hQ GRAND I would call yoqr at tention to my line ot Diamonds I can show you a selection of the finest stones in the city and guarantee my prices to be right. Nothing better as an investment, as prices on diamonds are steadily advanc ing. I will sell you on small weekly or monthly payments as cheap as you can buy elsewhere for cash. All Goods Marked in Plain Figures Get my prices before buying. NATH.W0lFF,Prop. 165 FIRST STREET Bet Morrison & Yamhill Franklin's Collateral Banks. aaderllla Be latUM. WEEK OF MONDAY. SEPT. Is. buds mo CO.. "Burner tiz jaiuiu." OTKBB BIO ACTS. Three performances dally at 1:30, 7:J0 and 9:16. ' Prices Matinees. 10c; evenings snd Sundays. 10c, 30o, and box seats, 30c. BASEBALL l RECREATION PARK Corner Vaughn and Twenty-fourth Los Angeles vs. Portland September 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22. Game Called at 3:00 p. m. Dally. Game Called at 2:30 p. m. Sundays. LADIES DAY FRIDAY ADMISSION Grandstand 25c 25c Children 10a THE OAKS all Only Successful Wood and Coal Heater rufiin iTWin7 a mini. a I sir. HNBTtf AKIV js.Ja.aU.a-J JBAW i IftAmv SPECIAL FEATURES Complete Combustion onsumes Smoke ontrols the Beat aves Fuel aves Labor aves Time J. J. KADDERLY 130 FIRST STREET, NEXT TO 0. 17. P. WAITING K00US KcnniniBiiiEiiiiiiunHiniiiniiiHiKiHiBnitio a s II a H FREE ADMISSION Dally, excepting; Sunday, for women and children, till 6:80 o'clock p. m. Cbiaffarelll and His Band Danolnr, Bkatlaff, BowUnff, Chutes and thirty other at tractions. Beserre your Skates at tha Bin for Saturday nlffht. H a M i 3 n a a s ft 3 I KSZZSBaxaEKKEEIBZSBSZKSZMlSIXSXXlEairaKSKZZSZSSSSSii JOUMALXINEKS COST LITTLE, ACCOMPLISH MUCH TEETH EXTRACTED FREE When Plates or Bridges Are Ordered All Work at Half Price for a short time to introduce the "Electro Painless System" Full Set, that fit $5.00 Gold Crowns, 22-k . . . : . S3.50 Bridge Teeth, 22-k. . . . .83.50 Gold Fillings $1.00 Silver Fillings 50 Guaranteed for 10 Years. Open Evenings. DENTAL PARL0P; 303 Washington St. Opposite Olds &