. , i. , . . , ,(!,,; ''''. t ' 1 -'. .''... ' f . . ej Aim .V, i JOURNAL WANT 1 DS ; tent rentable) , property quickly "and-" ; , makes all rood property rentable, , , '. And tb.y cost but littla. .,, ; : t 1 COAST TEMPERATURES V . :. ' SA.1L today. V. . '( 4 v i Beta M .".we m i ppokana .....,..,,,.....,,,..,..., M lwarsafiald )....-, i. ". Sea rnulHo e rrtUid M -1 ' " ' The weather yalr' tonight ."and V Bundajj easterly .winds, .'. . . - rrv:VOi;x.;'N0.84.'.'v; ;t'cvj i sections -is . pages rl PRICE TWO CENTS; tf-TLvr; 2- FORGERIES FILL ALL REIKI PETITIONS FILED Hiiman Rosebud Gorgeously Arrayed, Trip Fantastically; Under Bowers of Perfumed flowers SAY GOOD-BYE TO OF 4. BELIEF OF POLICE ii ii-iKF? r.. MAY MULATTO MURDERER SUBJECTS TOHEGH Magic Electric Parade to Once More :,- Dazzle V Spectators ; With Brilliant and Beautifu Oregon Scenes. V- ' ' ' "v SPORTS OF ALL SORTS ' - TODAY'S ENTERTAINMENT ; Weather, Roses, Enthusiasm, ,;rAII Have Contributed 'to: Make Festival Success. A " y Seturdaya Program. 4 i I p. m. Racine . matinee. Hunt 4 dub. Country club race track. e) S'tA a, an laiH.ua 1.4 A 9 norssoaca pusnoau. Muitnoroan e ' 4 field. ' : e) 1:10 p. m.- Farewell to Rex Ore e t e tonus, king of th Roae Feetl- 4 , vat Repeat mafic eleetrto pa- red. Form oa Morrison between ' Twelfth and Fifteenth atraata. e e Proceed aaat On Morrlaon o 4 4 Third; on Third, north around e ' union depot1. loop to Fifth; on f e Fifth south to Washington; on 4 e waahlnaton writ to Lawla and f e Clara fair arounda. 4 1 The hirh tide of the Rose Featlval " eomea tonight. . Rax Oreaonua. ruler of the Rose Festlvsl and kins of napplneas, " In a white flash of lctrls brilliancy will bid farewell to his crowded sub jects as he passe then on Morrison. i Third, Fifth and Washington streets. tonight as ciimsx of the most success' "ful Ross Festlvsl ever given, will at tract . the ' festlvsi's greatest orowd . Of Tlewers. More 'than 300.Ooe. saw the parade Tuesdsy nlght,. Sta, bauty and eeraing magio oewnacrta wmie u charmsd them. . It was Impassible to be aatlsfUd seeing . the pageant . but Once. i r ;'.,' rew Tunore Hare ooae. Few of the Rose Festival's "visitors ave gone a war. Many have chosen to stay several days 'longer, enjoying the scenie beauties of the city and Its an Ttrons, . some -of ' them going .to the J ' (Continued on Page Three. - .' NSURGENT MOVEMENT JUST BEGUN NORRS v BLITHE AND GAY. El (United Lmm4 W1r.l Washington. June - IS. Denying TO mors tbst the Insurgent movement had Slowed up, Congressman Q..W. Norrls, "Republican, Nebraska," in a statement lasued today said these report were set afloat by certain newspapers in , the V interest or rresiaeni xait . ranomina- :; - The insurgent movement pas scarce it begun." said Norrls. "Fighting in resl earnest for progressive principles, notwithstanding, ths .machlnationa of any single man or group of men, will not stop. i . . I "The entire' crop of rumors and re ports that the Insurgents are panle Stricken or discouraged is absolutely without foundation. : The tissue of false report Is the result of. a combination of certain newspapers for the purpose J of helping Taf t get the (nomination next year because he has favored reciprocity with Canada, which Is expected to lower the price of print paper." . Delightful; Scenes Enacted by ,4500 Smiling Children, Per- fectly . prilled, and" r Gorge ously Plumed. .s; ; Frlae tflnnera OhHdrens rarada. Best ' drilled . school Vernon,: ' East Bide Business Men's silver CUP. -.;.( - i. fleoond beet drilled school Al : bins. - Homestead, y ; Oonunerolal . club eup. Best costumed school Clinton Keller, sliver cup.. 1 '' - " ; Second best -costumed School Olencoe. ' ' 1 ' Largest attendance Lenta ' school. Largest percentage attendance Creaton school (90 ' per cant enrollment),' winning the Manley challenge cup for second time. - Best character presentations ' 'First, Ockley Green, Honeyman Hss-Jjsat, epmnanT cupi ..Robin. . Hood second,' Brooklyn, Mother Oooss characters; third. Sell- wood, baseball fans. and team. . e SJjSg At top ia picture of Vernon public school children, winners -of first prxe In Rose Bed parade; at bottom la Ockley Green school's pupils, showing "Brownies" at drill. Mother Goose, spilling from the pages of nursery tales her bonds ;of nymphs and fairies and gnomes, paraded them on Grand avenue yesterday afternoon j to the vast delight of. 200,000 everyday folk. Lr'-. r --.;: - In the twinkling, of an eye the street was changed from a, crowded ponce- oe-1 aet place to an eerie land where .roses bloomed In red ' and' pink and white, pennies in purple, popples in flaunting scarlet and violets In gentle -unev.- (Continued on Pace Three.) .... , ,V ... , ... . .. .,, - - -;V,;V-y I - . .IS T ,,.V GATENS' DECISION Measure Held ( Discriminatory; This Is Third Law of Kind That Has Been Declared In valid by Courts. INSTATEPRINTER S Spirit Broken When She Meets Roystering -Grandson Uj a Chicago Dive, . P I H f ?? Leavenworth, body of Mrs. mnlted 1niM Leased trire.1' " ' i' Vf xvon., guu iir. mil Carrie ; Nation, : saloon smasher, whjdied In a. sanitarium here Of paresis -last night, was removed to day to Kansas t City, ' Kansas. Where funeral service wlU be' held,; probably tomorrow, i Mrs.. Nation, who achieved -fame by her hatchet attacks on Kansas liquor "Joints" and her later crusade in the cause of temperance and against cigarettes,.' had been ' In. a sanitarium here since January 17. From the time Of her arrival It was expected that she would not recover, r 'tf.iWT. 'A' nervoua - breakdown,1 following her spectacular crusades and litigation with a lecture bureau for Sieged failure to Pay for her services on the lecture plat form, were the indirect cause of her death. She became unconscious at noon yesterday and . remained in : a state, of coma vntil - her death. "None - of her relatives was present when she died. f :nr Bva.'s "IWnsfcatCAJirS! :Carrle Moore Nation waa born near Versailles, Ky., nearly SS years ago, In 1875 she Was married to Dr. Lloyd and lived for One year at Holden, Mo. Her husband died of delirium tremens. Aft- s ten yarsrof widowhooM.1 she rntr nea David Nation and for a time lived ,iransbur.- Mo where she was The .vehicle tax ordinance was -' de clared unconstitutloaaT this morning by I Judge Gatens of the circuit court This is- the third measure that has . been knocked ' out .by the courts. The one declared invalid this morning Is. held to bo discriminatory among member of tne same class... The last case was . brought by .Dan Kellaher and others. More than 100 owners of vehicles Joined in the action It was contended by the plaintiffs that the ordinance, .excepts from Its opera tion in; language that is'iubject to but one- interpretation, namely, that all per sons who have paid and obtained an pocupatlon license under ordinance No. (Continued on Pegs' Three.) GIRL CLERK POISONED BY LI COnlted Piss 1m4 Wire.) j J V r Fayette, Pa, June 10. Miss Grace Hamilton, 'clerk ' in the postof floe here, Us in serious condition from , blood poison, caused, according to phasic tana, by licking postage stamps for, govern ment patrons. Her lips beoama infected from the colored inks, it is ssJAVj, L ' jr i ; Pendleton Postal Sarlngs Monday. ..' (speeui in pa ten to Tb. ionratl. , Pendleton, Or June 10.-On Monday momlnar the Pwnrtltnn nn.t .'avinara r.t?f?.ht JT ' k.e?t h 1n. SUr bank wlU open for, business but the post state in, a- constant, turmoil. . ... :r ,i I 1... mw w nv awMvyw xstitvM Mrs. Carrie Nation. Saloon Smasher, the editor of a paper. They later moved to Richmond.. Texas. where Nation eon- ducted ' such a stronuou reform .cam-. (Continued on Psge Five.) ' master - I business f or the present OFFICE "INITIATED" Authors of Bills Rejected or , . Amended During January Session Join .Committee; ; Petitions , Go to Granges. WIN' (Special 'Dispatch to Ttie JonraaM Salem, Or., June 10. By use of the initiative, a committee composed of C. E. Spence, master Of the StateGrange; Will Daly, president of the Oregon Fed eration of. Labor; senators M. A. Miller, C C. McColloch and L. E. Bean, Repre sentatives Ralph C Clyde and Timothy Brownhlll and H. H. Hill, secretary of the Salem Typographical union, hopes to. end the fight of a decade In Oregon to put the etate printer on a flat salary. The members of this committee are act ing" voluntarily and In no, way compro mise the organisations which they re present, i The ' movement was inaugur ated and the committee gotten together by Mr. Hill This union has had a flat salary law , before , every legislature since this form of .regulating state printing was put In vogue in several other states eight yeart ago. The .last legislature passed the flat salary bill but amended it to make It take effect January 1, 1915, so as not to affect the present state printer.. The raw passed fixed the state printer's sal ary,: at 14000 a year. The initiative measure reduces the salary to 13000 a year and puts the law into: effect De cember 1, 1912, or immediately; after the election. The ' committee plans to get the .petitions .circulated by sending them to the local granges of the state, local unions and to other frlenda of the measure, so there will be little money expended in circulation The petitions are now in ths hands of the printers and will tie ready, for signatures next week. ';'.;'. A v .--'.i V"V H - BeooTtl of. the Segialatue on'yt , -The? flat 'salary bill was the pith of one of the hottest fights of the last ses sion of j ths legislature. The legislators on. this committee are among Us most ardent advocates. Bean is ths pioneer in the movement having made a slml- Superior Court at Riverside Holds Act Is Discriminatory and Therefore Unconstitu tional. rrjntted Press Leaned Win.) Riverside, Cel.. June 10. Superior Court Judge Densmore today ruled that the eight hour law for women Is dls criminatory and therefore unconstltu tional. The decision wag . rendered In the case of Frank A. Miller, proprietor of the Mission Inn of Riverside, charged with working his head waitresses nine hours on the day that the law went into effect. . Judge Densmore held that the law is discriminatory In that It permits worn en employed In lodging houses to work more than eight hours whllo women em ployed in hotels may nof. The case wss made a test by the Hotelmen's as soda (Continued on Page Three.) (Continued ,on Page ThreeJ j RIOT AT CLEVELAND rCnlted Frrna Leased Wlr. . Clevelarid, Ohio. June 10. Rioting in the garment workers strike, was, re sumed today and , an unidentified by stander Was ehet In a fight between police and the, strikers-and their, sym pathisers. He ; was taken , unconscious to e hospital, where it was. discovered he was wounded in the leg and, abdo men.. He will probably die. :. . , - Benjamin Aquino a striker, was ar rested, -It is asserted' - that ' be , was picketing, .fired at a policeman, end that the shot struck the bystander- 1 . - Josephine Casey, national orraniier for the Women Garment. Workers.? was arrested while picketing.- X test of the -,1) - J ; Bsjss rysy ' 'i'l.,. '- ,i".! -I-- y '.-f J lf-r ; I r t i I t ,i ' a. Suspect Seen Last Night Near Ardenwald Station Inquires Direction to. Port land of Women. ENDEAVORS TO KEEP IN SHADOW WHEN TALKING j City and County Detectives Running Down Every Possible-Clue. 4 Mnrder Kystsrtee Unsolved. May I. 1110 Mrs. Hannah Smith, residing at Twelfth and Flanders, mysteriously disap peared; supposed to have been murdered. November 7. 1110 W. W. Chappell, proprietor saloon at I7S Sherlock avenue, and Wil liam Harvey, awamper, ahot and .killed by unknown masked rob ber. February 14, 1111 Five year Old Barbara Holtsman, found murdered In a lodging house at Mississippi and Russell streets. No clue to the identity of mur derer. February S7, 1111 Dominlck Bonnelli, ahot and killed by un known person at ' ths homo of Nick Tomlno. 676 Hood street He was a guest at a christening. June 6, 1111 William Hill, wife and two step-children, beat-, en to death with an ax. In their home near MDwaukle. Every detective- and deputy sheriff within 30 . miles nt Portland has been searchrag since tmunlght last night for a mulatto, dressed In light colored clothes, who was seen at Ardenwald sta tion last night near the scene of the atrocious Hill murdsr of yesterday morning. ' -,- - The mulatto was seen about 10 o'clock last night by several women living near Ardenwald.' He acted ' peculiarly, and seemed afraid to step into the light while he talked with several -women, In quiring the way to Portland. He left walking up the car track In the direc tion of Oswego. W. B. Wills, who Uvea St. Wlllsburg. near Ardenwald, notified Sheriff Stev- (Contlnued on Page Three.) So Many Names Are Bad on U. of 0. Referendum That It Probably Will Never Get : on 1912' Ballot at All. 5000 LOST TOO ON LEGAL POINT, SAYS W. T. SLATER General Attack on Petitions Promised by Amazing Dis closures at Salem. (Special Dtopatrfc te The Jenraal.) Salem. Or June 10. "I Just casually looked over the Malarkey bill petitions yesterday," aald ex-Supreme Justice W T. Slater today, "and find many vol umes of signatures verified by the same msn who verified signatures te the uni versity referendum. There ar4 many evidences of forgery there, too, but I have not gone Into the Malarkey bill petition more than to take a passing glsnce into ths psgea of signatures. While this Is all I think bss been done in regard to ths Malarkey bill petitions; thorough Investigation will bemsd In thle case ss in ths ease of the uni versity petitions." . . r 1- Salem, Or- June 10. Wholesale for geries, perpetrated for the sake of the so-much-per-name paid by persona bo hind the different " referendum move ments, together with names thrown out through technicalities, threaten to in- validate part or all the referendums on tile at Salem..'.-,'.. "..:. "It ie an alarming stste Of affairs when ths referendum, powers can be so shamefully abused,', said ex-Supreme Justice W. T. Slater today. . Jin the case of the referendum on the University of Oregon .extension - ap propriation, ; Judge Sister, acting for friends of the university, says he has discovered 1200 names In one nqsclr oi - the IT. of O. referendum petitions which, are "manifest forgeries.", "Any, one of three or four other coh lections of names of 400 to 600 each are forgeries on the face of them,'" he : edded. .v-,,-....-,..- v; '? ' This, if true-dooms the chance for the university referendum to go upon i the ballot for Judge Blater claims to , have 6000 names in one bstch which are Invalid - on another point of law. and this leave only 1600 names to invall- , data with, all the forgeries yet to be stricken out ' v- , "Similar condlUons," said Judge Sla ter, "are known to prevail in eonnec- . (Continued on Page Three.) HEAT IS TERRIFIC;. BOARD S SEIZING CE FOR TNE POOR Ihicago Boils Under. Blazing Sun; County Authorities Commandeer Ice for Peo ple Unable to Afford It. OFFICIA G1S F IN CITY ElECIII IVolM Press taasd Wire.) , enicago, June io. The hot wave throughout the middle west continued todsy with little hope of relief in sight A number of prostrations have been re corded here. From other cities re ports today indicate high temperatures continue. . Yesterday's maximum was 9SH de grees and it Is expected that '100 will be reached today, breaking June heat records. The county board is commandeering ice for the poor. If the board finds that it cannot legally pay. President Peter Bartsen has promised to settle the bill personally. (United Pres. Leased Wire., Milwaukee, June 10. Street thermom eters before noon today registered, lift There have been a number of prostra tions. : ''- Drys Poll Only 27, While Op ponents Cast ! 87 Ballots in Suburbs Rushlight's Total Voe Given as 13,662. .-. . . Kenton is a wet suburb. This Inter esting fact became known' today ' when the official count of the votes cast in a local option election held in Precinct : 162 on the date of the recent general . -election was announced by Deputy City Auditor West The 'vote was 27 for prohibition and 67 against prohibition,''' thirst winning by 2 to 1. ' The official count of the votes cast' ' for mayor shows that ; the total num ber of ballots for all mayoralty candi dates was 26,004. A. G. Rushlight's , plurality-' over- his 'nearest' competitor, , Joseph Simon, was 4827. Mayor-elect Rushlight lacked only 141 votes of hav . ing a clean majority over, alt w George v H. Thomas. ths defeated Democ ratio aspirant for the mayor's chair., received -2418 votes. City Auditor, Barbur re ceived the highest number of votes cast (Continued on Page Three.), IGNORANCE IN EDUCATION-i'; Some startling: allegations against the educational system of the land are made by Leonard Ayrej of the Russell Sage Foundation in an mterview .with Edward Marshall as. related in The Sunday Journal for tomorrow, Read what this authority has to say in' support of his charge that the business of education is sadly neglected, j ' .! . ,, ? . THE SUNDAY JOURNAL MAGAZINE AS THE WORLD MARRIES-i-Ihtere'sting Custotna That. Accompany the Institution of Marriage. . i s 1 , MURDERERS BY PROFESSION Mystery' Surrounding the- Chinese Gun Men WhoAre Paid to Kill." . ,V i r .FUNMAKERS -AMONG THE COLLEGE , GIRLS Qusfnt TnnU nThat Prevail Among Women Students Throughout the Country. FOUR PAGES OF. ILLUSTRATED' FEATURES FOR" WOirv: -CHILDREN'S PAGE; POPULAR SOKG PAGE, MRS- LOXA C , LITTLE'S TALKS ON HEALTH AND EFFICIEN'CY. TOMORROW'S SUNDAY JOUri '. '. picketing rights will be made, .. ; , r; '''. -.' j 'v;VV'.v: .. V'.:X'-T 'ft.