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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1912)
al, fo:;tland, Saturday evlnikg. November ti:s r.zw way. ON 2 CF Ti:!. TOO KICH FRAISE. PERFECTLY WILLING. A NEW ONE. POETRY ACTIVE. J. :mi c::::co:: daily ' " r.i r-.- 5-- "H I Wifet-Ca yon Judie people by their frif-nds? Hubby-Kot aof more. . Show me their car and 111 tell you what they are. - , - T Short Stories Tell Delayed News Resume of the Events of Friday Afternoon and Night; Paragraphed t or Quick Digestion bjr Journal Readers. Political. H E. Roberts, Republican, Is reelected representative at large in congress from Nevada by a plurality of 69. votes over ,Clay Tallman, Democrat. On! the face of the official returns f com' every county In Nevada, Key Pltt tnan. Democrat, is the choice of the Ne vada; voters for United States senator to fill the vacancy made by the death. : of the late George 8. Nixon. The offi cial count shows a majority of 8? for Plttman. The tangled condition of the official canvass of the presidential vote In Los Angeles county, upon which now de- ' pends California's verdict in the recent election, became even more Involved Fri day when the board of supervisors started to count all over again without completing the count almost concluded. Representative Longworth of Ohio, who was, defeated for reelection by 91 votes, spent $1600 in his campaign, ac cording to hla report received Friday by the clerk of the house. His opponent, Stanley F. Bowdlc, reported that he spent 8857. An agreement between the United States and Russia to take the place of the commercial treaty of 1832, the ab rogation of which becomes effective January 1 next, has been virtually reached, according to Information from high official authority. Nothing as to the exact nature of the agreement Is announced. Secretary Knox and Ambassador Bryce exchanged ratifications Friday of the treaty signed July 7 last, providing for an adjustment between Great Bri tain and the United States of the North . Atlantic fisheries controversy. Speaker Champ Clark Is urging a special session of congress at the ear liest possible date after March 4. Ho says "The party has made its promises, and it should not put off the fulfilling of them." ' Official denial of the report that Ja pan is seeking or had secured a naval base at Manzanillo, Mexico, was made by a state department official at Washing ton Friday. Eastern. -Title to western oil lands valued at the: Btuoendous llkure of S500.000.000 Is laid to depend upon the outcome of the legal controversy which opened in ear nest Friday before the supreme court of the United States. The land in contro versy in this particular case la In the oil fields of southern California. The Southern Pacific claims It under the land grant act and Interior department patents which contained the provision "excluding and excepting all mineral lands should any such be found in the tract." Mrs, Margaret L, Rirby, . wJfe..cL.the president of the KIrby Savings bank of Chjcago, which failed, related Friday in the federal court a story of how her husband had been swindled out of 860, 000 through the wiretapping scheme. She failed to Identify the two men sus pected of tha swindle. Desire to make his permanent home in Europe is said to be behind Frank J. Gould's negotiations with the Missouri Pacific for sale to that railway of his entire holdings in International & Great Northern preferred and common stock, and It Is probable that the deal will be carried out within six weeks. WOMEN SHOULD BE PROTECTED Ssgeinst So Many Surgical Op- i terations. HowMrs.Bethune and Mrs. Moore Escaped. Sikeiton, Mo. "For seven yearn Igof f ered everything- I was in bed for four RSplPI or five days at a time every monui, anu so weak I could hardly walk. I cramped and had backache and headache, and was so nervous and weak that I dreaded to sea anyone or have any onemoveintheroom. The doctors gave me medicine to ease me at those times, and said that I ought to have an operation. I would not listen to : j that, and when a friend of my husband told him about Lvdla E. Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound and what it had done ' ! for his wife, I was willing to take It " Now I look the picture of health and feci - like it, too,- I can do my own housework, ' hoe my garden, and milk a cow. I can entertain company and enjoy them. I can visit when I choose, and walk as far i as any ordinary woman, any day in the : - month, I wish I could talk to every Z- Buffering woman and girl." Mrs. Dema Betiiune, Sikeston, Mo. Murrayville, III "I have taken Ly dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for a very bad case of female trouble and it made me a well woman. My . health was all broken down! the doctors 1 said I must have an operation, and I was . ready to go to the hospital" but dreaded it that I began taking your-Ckwnpound, V-1 got along so well that I gave up the doctors and waa saved from the opera tion." Mr VHARLE3 WOO RE, K, Vm : No, & Uurrayvlila, U, . gillie Pa, what ia & crneltiaa of DiroMwrmT . - P-HTtaf .h barter eat jm and 0aW im '' "ticking plaster. , Striking miners on. Friday attacked a passenger train on the' Chesapeake & Ohio railroad, near Charleston, W. Va. The miners stopped the train and re fused to allow it to proceed because two carloads pf alleged strikebreakers were attached. Governor Glasscock has or dered a company of state militia to the rescue. Amid a storm of applause, a resolu tion was adopted by the Illinois Federa tion of woman's clubs demanding a state law forbidding the granting of marriage licenses unless applicants could produce guarantees of their good health. The appellate division at New York ruled Friday that William J. Cummins, a director at the time of Its failure, and also Interested in the subordinate banks Involved in the' crash, must serve the term In Ting Sing prison. Imposed upon him by tha supreme court. A publio rally marked the conclusion of the tenth biennial convention of the Luther League of America atf Albany, N. y., Friday night. Milwaukee, Chica go and Portland, Or., extended lnvita tlons foe. the 1911 convention, but the choice was left to the executive commit tee. ' J. H. Plummer, wanted in Oregon on a charge of forging checks on the Eugene Loan & Savings bank, was arrested in Milwaukee, Wis., Friday. Joseph Bush, who killed James Mc- Namara In a fight in Brooklyn, N. T., September 19, was sentenced Friday In supreme court to pay the widow $3 a week for one year in lieu of spending a year in jail. Bush thankfully agreed to the carrying out of the decree. Affidavits alleging that Christian Science is not a religion but a privately owned business conducted for money profit, were filed in the superior court at Concord, N. 11., Friday, in the case of George W. Glover of Lead, S. D.. who seeks 'to have set aside the residuary bequest made by his mother, Mrs. Mfcry Baker Eddy. Glover seeks to have the $$,000,000 bequest to the Christian Sci ence church set aside and the estate re vert to the natural heirs. Mrs. August Belmont, Miss Anne Mor gan and other prominent New York women are among the founders of a new organisation, "The Society for the Prevention of Useless Giving." Tha so ciety will do Us utmost to abolish the exchange system of Christmas giving among those who can 111 afford It. Pacific Coaat. Ray Wilson, a brakeman on tha Pa cific Railway & Navigation company, died at Hlllsboro Friday, from injuries received at Banks. He lost his balance and fell from the train while it was tn motion. Mrs. Elvira Teel. a resident of TTmatll. la County .since "ISGO, died Friday morn ing on the old Teel homestead, half a mile west of Echo. Mrs. Teel was 82 years old. A wreck occurred Friday on the Cor vallis & Eastern about one mile west of Chitwood, the smoking car going through the bridge and into the -river. The pasenger coach on the east' Bide of the bridge turned over. The pasen gers all are safe and no one was seri ously injured. Sheriff Payette and posse returned to Montesano Friday from-four days hunt for John Turnow, alleged slayer of his nephews, John and Will Bauer and Dep uty Sheriffs Elmer and McKenxle, bring ing with them clothing and provisions found in tha camp of tha wanted out law, but no trace of Turnow was dis covered. J. T. Trlvett, a Seattle street car con ductor, who shot and killed .Oliver San- ford and his son, as they were alighting from his car at tha end of the Ballard Beach line the night of August 31. was found guilty of murder In tha second degree Friday night General Homer Lea, the mysterious little hunchback who wielded great pow er in China, left an estate of only $4000, according to his will, which wss filed at Los Angeles Friday. The small ex tent of Lea's property is a great sur prise, for he ,was generally considered wealthy. Ha rode in the finest automo bile In the city, had an expert chauf feur and was credited with an enormous Income, it boln nothing unusual for him to take friends out for an evening and' give them a $100 dinner; Gottfried Hugg, who until recently was first sergeant of the Twenty seventh , company, coast artillery, Unit ed States army, lies near death at the Presidio from a self-Inflicted wound. Also in the hospital Is Private Charles W. Caton, Tenth company, coast artil lery, who attempted suicide because Hugg had taken like action after having been reduced to the ranks because he had participated In a poker game. In a wreck between a Southern Pacific passenger train and an automobile at FreBno, Cal., Friday, Mrs. C. Nelson and her 16-months-old child were Instantly killed and Harold, the 6-year-old son, was so badly mangled that the doctors hold little hope for his recovery. The Nelsons recently went to Fresno from Woodburn, Or. Joaquin Miller, the poet, has so far recovered from his illness that he has left, his bed and resumed his strolls along the wooded slopes of his beloved homo In the hills back of Oakland. He ascribes his "rejuvenation" to a diet ot honeyed hominy prepared by his daugh ter Juan it a: E. P. Hample, the l$-year-old son of J. E. Hample, a wealthy merchant of Butte, Mont., baa been arrested at Stqckton, Cal. Young Hample left Butte October 29 to see tha world. At flan Frarhiisoo he left some clothing on the wharft with a telegram to bis "mother to tha effect that he had committed suicide. Foreign. A Hahi. maUl aMa&aaM to ba apabt of rendering Infantry practically im penetrable against bullets, la Bald to have -been invented by a German en gtneer named Bchaumann, Yolleys fired at a distance, of 6i yards during expert- Jinks He's a regular cabbage head. Isn't be? , Winks Ob; no: ft cabbage bead is worth 10 cents, and he isn't. ments on th. Dahler rifle range only slightly dented one of the newly In vented plates. Lu Cheng Hsiang, ex-premier of China and minister of foreign affairs, has been reappointed to the latter office. IiU Cheng Hsiang once was minister to Russia and possesses the confldenee-of the Rusisan government, which is con sidered doslrable, as China intends to accept Russia's Invitation to discuss Mongolian affairs. I " The Nobel prlae for1 literature was awarded to Gerhart Hauptmann, the German auttfor and dramatist. The payment of members of parlla ment was condemned at Friday morn ing's session of the conference of Unionist associations now meeting in London. A resolution was carried In vltlng tha "next house of commons" to restore the principle of gratuitous par llamentary. service. Miscellaneous. David V. Waldron, 90 years old, one of tha founders of Los Angeles and prominent In Montana and Washington half a century ago, was fatally burned at Valdez, Alaska, Friday, when an elec tric lamp used by him as a foot warmer set fire to his bed. Waldron had been a resident of Alaska, for 20 years. The storm which has raged through out Quebeo province the past 24 hours has effectually tied up navigation on the St. Lawrence. Twenty-three persons at least were killed or badly wounded on the Ameri can side of the Mexican boundary last year by bullets fired during the fighting between the rebels and government forces under Madero. This fact tjvas developed by the speolal army board, headed by Colonel Francis Kernan. President Taft told official visitors Friday that he did not expect to rec ommend -to congress tha repeal of the free toll provision made In the Panama canal bill last summer for American coastwise vessels, in spite of Profes sor Emery R. Johnson's strong recom mendations against free tolls for American ships. Progress tn classifying agricultural lands In national forests, In the selling of mature timber and in the mustering of strong local support to meet tha fire problems, was reported by Henry S. Graves,, chief of the forest service, "who returned to Washington Friday from an inspection tour of the national forest reserves. He visited most of tho western states. There were 1453 men killed In and about coal mines of the United Stfctcs during the first eight months of this year, according to an announcement of the bureau of mines Friday. The fa talities m 1911 numbered J71J. I E Wesson, Miss., Nov. lS.Abgfy art what he considered was an attempt to make their wedding ridiculous. Joseph Farmer fired his shotgun loaded with squirrel shot In a band of musicians who were serenading him and his bride, a Miss Mabel Rutland of Strong Hope. The shot wounded William Hall and Eddie Polk, two youths who were rn- gaged In the serenade, both being pain fully but not seriously wounded. The remainder of the serenaders broke and ran. Newspapers for Walls. From National Review, Shanghai. The Chinese are the greatest consum ers of old newspapers in the world. Tbe offictal returns to the custom house at Newchwang state that that port alone In 1911 received 1918 tons of old Euro pean newspapers valved at 14,500. It Is not at first easy to discover to what use so much obsolete news can be put. However, we gather that the middle class Chinese prefer newspaper to the native variety as a covering for their walls. It has a greater power of resistance and affords a more effective barrier to th invasion of the vermin that plague Chinese houses. Moreover, the natives are experts at cutting out of the newspapers waist coats which they wear next to the skin. Tnese paper waistcoats are said to he the best possible protection against a sudden cold stiap. In view of these ad mirable uses to which European news papers may be put it is not surprising to learn that tho Imports of 1911 show a considerable Increase In weight. The value of the Import has, how ever, declined. It Is interesting tn note the reason for this decline. It is ex plained by the rapid development of the native newspaper press which has taken place diirli.gr the last few years. Chlneso newspapers are now printed for the most part on paper Imported from the United States, so that Instead of paying high prices for Imported newspapers the Chinese of the interior use the "returns" pf the native press for their walls and their waistcoats. Journal Want Ads bring results. Pills Headaches. Biliousness. Constipation. Headaches. Biliousness. Constipation. Ayefs Pills. Ayer's Pills. Ayer1 Pills. If your doctor says this is all right, remember it I v LSifdfc: SQUIRREL VERSUS ROM Pills The Learned Couneel Can you sweat that what you hare told me Is true? The Witness Oh. yes; I can swear te it, but I wouldn't bet on it NEW MEMBERS ELECTED TO STATE LEGISLATURE y 1 ' 1 '' l". I . .1' I k. f I .. , , ', " ':!'- ' f v t'li v. 1L2 W. F. Homan, Democrat, representa tive from Harney and Malheur. (Special to The Journal.) Ontaria, Or., Nov. :6. W. F. Homan, Democrat, of Ontario, Or., representative-elect for Malheur and Harney counties, was bora in Llnneus, Linn county, Missouri, June 17, 1873, and re ceived his education In the schools of that state. He removed to Milton, Iowa, In 1900, and to Oregon In 1910. For the past three years he has been a resident of Ontario, during which time he has held the position of cashier of tha On tario National bank. He has in turn been a printer, telegrapher and station agent In various towns along the Bur lington route In Missouri and Iowa, and served a term as mayor of Milton, Iowa, In 1908-9, and four years previous to that was a .member of tho Milton city council. For eight years he was cashier of the Milton, Iowa, bank. Mr. Homan la president of the Ontario Commercial club, also of .the Bead Ox Flat Irrigation district, a settlers' or ganization which was formed to reclaim 2(J,000 acres northwest of "Ontario. It was in the Interest of this company of farmers that Mr. Homan went before the Interior department and secured con cessions from the government for a power site above Horseshoe Bend, on the Payette river In Idaho, whereby elec trie power will be furnished to pump water. fxqm Snake river to irrigate this land at a great Saving to the farmers on tho flat. Work on this enterprise will begin next spring. The work of Mr. Homan in securing this concession was one of the Important factors in securing for him a large ma jority for representative in a district over 700 Republicans in total vote of about 3500. A Substitute for Wood. From the New Orleans Picayune. A substitute for wood made out of straw Is attracting uonslderable atten tion in Kurope, where the steadily In creasing price of lumber makes the question one of no small Importance. It Is fashioned with a single piece of ma chinery by a process at once simple and Inexpensive. The straw' waste Is first split longitudinally, according to a de scription given ln the Scientific Ameri can, and this is done by a special cut ting device to destroy the resllliency in the stalk:. The ripped material is then placed in the machine, together with certain ingredients, being laid upon a traveling plate. The latter Is kept at a certain ynlform temperature by means of steam so as to cook the straw and substances associated therewith. When this stage has been carried to the requisite degree. Intense pressure is ap plied, the results of which are to knit or compress the fibers of straw very closely and tightly together to form a homogeneous mass. A pressure of be tween two and tlirte tons per square inch is required in order to produce the best results, and the fabric issues from the machine ln continuous lengths of the required thickness and width, to be sawed as desired. In general appear unce the material resembles whltewood. The first experiments wore made five years ago. Do Pons Ruin Writing. (From tho Splngfleld (Mass.) Repub lican. The modi rn pin has ' been held re sponsible fur the degradation of mod ern penmanship concerning which an an imated debate, initiated by the head master of the Shcrborneachool, has been going on In . England. One expert ln rallgraphy calls attention to the merits of style enforced by the broad stiff pen of the days when beautiful books were mada-'by hand. Such a pen pre cludes looping and fantastic display and Is, etthe saint, time, an aid to un iformity of stroke, tlUck and thin alter nating as the pen passes from the ver tide to the horizontal direction. The flexible modern pen seeks to imitate this by pressure upon the. down stroke, but the effect la weak and uneven. Of course, ln rapid cursive writing the flex- lblo pen has the advantage, but for leg lbie and beautiful manuscript the super iorlty of the stiff, wide point may be en n ted. Whether it is possible at this late day, when we depend so greatly upon the typewriter, to arouse interest in handwriting as an art is doubtful, though it might be argued that the use of shorthand snd typewriting save o much ttrr.e that what, writing ia still done In the old way ought to be done ' -wfli ea pasalbla. , ,, . . . More than 60 cases of industrialize cldents have occurred in California un der the compensation side of the' lia bility law during the last few months, Bit Sportsman (surprised) Look at all the game you got, What kind of a call did you wet - ,-. SJ ". Little HunterI blew ft : police , whittle and all the rame Tan up to aee ' which gam wu jetting pinched. AMERICAN TELLS OF CONFINEMENT IN MEXICAN JAIL Claims Rebels Confiscated His Property, Destroyed Home, Starved Companions In Foul ' Prison in Chihuahua. (Special to The Journal.) ""Chlckaaha, Okla., Nov. 16.-Reduced from 170 pounds of vigorous manhood to a mere shadow of his former nelf by a 10ng confinement in a Mexican dungeon, C. W. Macatee, once a resident of Chickasha, is now Under the care of Dr. L. E. Manuel, the city physician. -Stooped, thin and sallow, almost be beyond recognition, it was hard for men who knew him to believe that the thin, wasted figure Is the same man of sturdy physique who left here some years, go. Macatee says he went from here to Wichita, Kan., where he Joined a Mexi can colony, went to Mexico and pur chased 40 acres of land from the Mex ican government, receiving from that government a deed. Having stocked his holdings with necessary horses, cattle and mules, he began preparation of the soil for future crops and had five acres in shape 'tor "pineapples' and weven acres" ready for banana culture when the i Mexican revolution broke out. His place 1 was near Chihuahua, which city the ' Insurrectos captured after a spirited fight eafly In the rebellion and made It the rebel capital. The story of his Imprisonment covers 16 months of privation and hardship, wherein he was fcced to live on prac tically nothing and submit to condi tions almost beyond human endurance, when death stalked Into the cell and claimed, one by one, four of his com panions, whose bodies were allowed to lay in the cell nearly two weeks be fore they were removed by the prison authorities. Telia Own Story. The following in Macatee's own story: "I had about $350 In money and several hundred dollars' worth of horses, cat tle and mules when the present Mexican revolution broke out.. When the rebels captured Chihuahua they seized all the American colonists and demanded that they turn over all that they - stosseaMed to the rebel leaders, because, they said, we belonged to the American and not to the Mexican government. They de stroyed all we had, took our livestock and money and marched us In a hollow square of soldiers to -prison. In Chi huahua there are two prisons, one knewn as the 'outside' prison and the other as the 'inside' prison. in company with 34 other Amerl- L.aY., i was pla'c'ed ln tne -outgid prlson where, ror about 16 months I did not seo a ray of sunshine nor get a breath of fresh air except that.fiUaradlnta tne oeii Dy means of a circular pipe that reached the roof. We were thrown into nrlson on April 15, 1911, end were liberated August 15, 1912, when Made ro's army .recaptured Chihauhua. Companion's Died. "The cell which I shared with S4 other prisoners was possibly 10 feet square and during all the time we wtre there the cell door was unlocked but three times, twice to clean the cell and once to remove the bodies of four of our comrades, which rnmnvnl occurred two weeks after their- death. The hell boles of the Mexican orisons are indescribable, The cell was with- NEW TRAINS EFFECTIVE NOVEMBER 20th Wo. 17-'Ttnseburg Passenger," leaves TTnIon Depot 1 45 P. M., East Morrison Depot ,1:88 P. M., arrives Salem 4:Jt P. Ma Albany 6:30 P. M., Kuaene 7:00 P. M.. Roseburg 10:05 P. M.. stopping at all stations en route. Car... ries Dining Oar Portland to Eugene. Ko. 37 "Willamette Limited," leaves Union Depot 3:60 P. M., East Morrison Depot 4:j50 P. M., arrives Salem MS, St , Albany :80. Eugene 7:60, Springfield 8:05 .P. M. t XfO. 38 Returning, leaves Springfield- 7:00 A. M.. Kufteno 7:20 AM., Albany 8:40 A. M., Balem 8:80 A. iL, arrives East Morrison street 11:20 A. M., Union Depot 11:30 A. M. ... THE "WTXtAKBTTB LIMITED" WIU CARET PAKLOS OATH CAB BBTWSZH rOSTTJUTD, EUGENE AND SPUINQI'IEia), BE&TXNQ B&EAK7AST NORTHBOUND AND DUIEB SOUTH BOUND. . ' ' NEW TBAXff BEST ICE. No, "Hub City flpeclal, ' between Portland and Albany, will leave Portland Union Depot 8:00 P. M., East Mor- rlson street 6:10 P. M.; arlves Salem :30 P. M., Albany 9:36 P. M. JTo. 10 Returning, leaves Albany 6:3o a M , H.ilcm 7:24; arrives East Morrison 9:40 A. M Union Depot I 88 A M. Both trains stop st :tll intermediate points. i . . , ' Ko. 14 Will arrive Portlanu 7:40 A. M., instead of 7:00 A. M. as now. ' f NO. 30 Leaves Ashland 7:00 A. M. Instead of 7:10, arrives Portland 10:15 P. M. . Parlor observation car will bo carried on trains No. 13 and No. 14 between Portland and San Francisco". LOCAL SLZEFINO CAB. PORTLAND AND ETJOBNII. Pullman Standard Sleeping Car for Kugena will leave Portland, train 15, st 1:80 A. M. dairy.- Car -open for passengers at 9:30 P. M. at Cnion Station, and will be set out at Eugene and occupied 'until 8:00 A. M. Northbound, sleeper will be open for passengers at Eugene at 9:80 P. M., leaving Ktigene on No. 14, arriving Portland 7:40 A. M. Service begins, southbound, Nov. 19th, northbound, Nov, tOtn, . No. 1 "Corvallls Passenger." Fourth street at 7:15 A. M. Instead of 7:20, as st present. 8 Will arrive Portland :20 P. M. 3 "Sheridan Passenger," leaves Union Depot at 8:30 P. M.: arrives McMlnnvllle 6:38 P. M.. Sheridan 7:3-0 P. M. NO. NO, No. 6 Leaves Albany 6:36 A. M. ; a. Ai., j-nuomatn mi a. m. Jto. 5-r-Leaves Philomath 7:40, Corvallls 8:00; arrives Albany 8:30 AM,,, CONNEC'ri ON S M ADB' A t' A L Tot rnrther Xafonuation, Oal at Olty Ticket Office, Third and Was bin ft o a Streets) Agastr East ISorrisoa ItreelL C . Tnloa Depot, or Agent, Fourth and Tamhill. . 7 VL SCOTT. Qeaerai passenirer Agent, rortlaao, Oregon.' ' Caller Hag there been a fairly large output of poetry lately? : Magatine Kditor Yes, I bare thrown ihxee poet down gtalra this morning. ALL I WOMEN PAINTED SAYS MME. MICHAELIS Jt V.' 4 ? 1 Karlne Michael Is. Copenhagen, Nov. 16. In a Copen hagen newspaper, Karlne MIchaelis, author of 'The Dangerous Age," who Is now Mrs. Stangeland, and resides ln America, gave some of her Impressions of American women. On Fifth avenue, she said, the nionde and the demi monde cannot be distinguished apart Both are terribly painted and their golden hair and violet eyes are of the highest chte as wen as their Liillpatran ankles and carmine lips. out bedding of any kind and we were forced to sleep as best we could on tho cold stone floor, n the filth and germs. "Our food consisted of four tarterls, one-half pint of black, half cooked bee.ns and a pint of water and was doled out W -at IweaaleR Interval. "We were fed whenever they hap pened to think of us and our next meal might come within the next day, but more frequently four or five days elapsed 'between meals.' The guard would come through the corridor bear ing a small lighted torch and Would puiih our scanty food through a hole at thu bottom of the solid steel door and go away, probably not to return . for several days. Others Starved to Death. "We fared decidedly worse than a drove of hojis and death came to my four companions absolutely from star vation. We could not get a particle of f and IMPORTANT CHANGES ON THE SUNSET 06DEM &3HASU ROUTES MAIN LINE WXST SIDE CHAHOES. leaves Portland via NEW TBAINS OVaiB. arrives Corvallls 7:10 Ver,' 80 Leaves ..10;6 P. Vo. 19 Leaves B Ai YwltTi i ALL N ORTHA!ND BQUTHBOUND TRAINS OV TUfifL p7 Un. Pry What la ail that aoise ia yonr house. Willie? - : j: Willie Ma told pa I was Jort like Mm always flgsttn' and pa said I wasn't, and sow tharYe savin' it out. exercise owing to toe crowded cond! tion of our cell and eventually put la most of our, time sleeping. 'Our cell, was 13 f eet , nndergrotind and we did hot even hear the cannon adlng ef the two armls in the six-hour battle when Chihauhua fell again Into the hands of- Madero and the federal government. We did not hear the fed erals When they lyattered down the front door of the prison and the first knowl edge we had that something nausual was tAKing - place - was - w uen t npy , pat- terec down tha inner doors to the cell rooms. We naturally. thought that our hour of execution liad come, but were happily mistaken. Being almost naked We, were given some clothing and amug- -gled across the line to El Paso, where I stayed two weeks. It waa fully; that - long before I dared to attempt to open my eyes In daylight. Even bow I have to wear clouded" glasses. .,:.iHJ' ', osea 70 Pounds. " "Though I weighed 170 pounds when 1 ' I went into prison, my Weight was leas than 100 pounds when I arrived in El Paso. I remember three of the men- who were in prison with me. Charlie Gardner of Arkansas City, a man by tha name of Woods and another named At-.- well from Kansas. .t'" "We were taken from El Pas to Tu cumcarl, N. M., from which plaoa- we " walked to Amarillo and were taken from from there to Fort Worth. From Fort Worth I made my way as best I could to Chickasha, . . i - 'h --.' , "The Kugllsh consul visited US once, but the consul from our own nation lld not come to see us. lied we teen French or English we would never have been thrown Into prison. Unole Sam has subjects ln the same position today from which I have Just escaped, and . many are the poor wretches who per- ! tah ln the Mexican hell hole every '' 6t" An A. F. of L. national transportation department, to Include miners, railroad men, freight handlers, clerks, longshore men, teamsters, tugboat and lighter men' and the sailors, is to be recommended to the A. F. of L. convention at Roches ter, N. Y. . yyi-f: Edlefsen guarantees Hiawatha coal C-2J08. ' "" Heartburn, Gas, Dyspepsia and All Stomach Distress Ended With "Pape's Diapepsln." Ton don't want a slow remedy when your stomach Is bad or an uncertain one or a harmful One your stomach Is too valuable; you musn't injure It with drastic drugs. Pape's Diapepsln Is noted for It's speed In giving relief; it's harmless ness; It's certain unfailing action In regulating sick, sour gassy stomachs. ' It's millions of cures ln indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis and other atomact troubla' has made It -femeua the world '" over. Keep this perfect stomach doctor in your home keep it handy get a large 60 cent case from any drug store and then If anyone should eat somthing which doesn't agree with them; if what they eat lays like lead, ferments and sours and forms gas; causes headache, dlislness and nausea; eructations ot add and undigested food remember as soon as Pape's Diapepsln comes in contact with the stomach all such dis tress vanishes. It's promptness, certain ty and ease in overcoming tha worst . stomach disorders is a revelation to those who try IU MAIN LINE and BRANCHES OIIE KIIES lirai go. M !;?''T 1 No. 75 "Dallas Passenger." leaves Jefferson street St- 8.45 P. M. 'I ;j .,: , - No,, 77 "Dallas Passenger," leaves Union pepet 7:29 A. M. - , " ; ,j . , Mo. 74 Arrives Jefferson-street Depot 10:30 A. MV Ho 75 Arrives Union Depot 5:45 P. M. ( : Albany l:J5 P. M l arrives Corvaliia M. . '.' , ,. ' ; Corvallls .10:10, P. M. arrives Albany