10 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND." MONDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 11913. I i lip Lii ERICANSLIG 0 if E 1Y DESPITE PRESIDENT'S WARNING Majority Remain to Look After Their Interests in the South Jem Republic, ' (Halted Pres. LtlwiJ Wire.) .' Mexico City. Sept. 1. The expected exodus Ct American residents from Mex- f leo u mult of warnings voiced In ' ' President Wilson's message 10 congress i ha failed to materialize. A few Amer- t . leans left the capital today, but the ma i J Jtflitf will remain, being unwilling to ' t sacrifice business Interests unless the j , situation becomes alarming. , .Provisional President Huerta is ex f pected to ignore anonymous charges jf, that a group of Americans here plotted K tos bring about American intervention jv'j.f-1'.i: m I : ' rT Protection for Americans. .'Washington, Sept. 1. The Mexican f situation was practically unchanged to day. Senator Bacon, chairman of the : senate foreign relations committee. ' Cnferred with Secretary of State Bryan. Later' Senator Bacon issued the fol lowing statement: "The president did not Intend that his statement on the Mexican situation - should be construed as an order for f, American citizens to leave Mexico. Neither should it be construed as a ; ; preliminary warning of armed inter i mention. It simply meant that fight- Ing between the two factions is llke f .ly" to become more serious than ever ; and ha suggested that It would be bet i . tT for them to leave the country. T YThs president did not mean that this : country will not continue to protect I American citlxens in Mexico, or demand ' ' satisfaction if any barm should befall 'VthSem.",,---. -iThe state department has not been officially advised of the alleged killing i ' ofr six Americans at Torreon, but press ( dispatches to that effect are being In vestigated. U;:-'.' . - : v No Transports for Refugees. I Vera, Crux, Mexico,, Sept. 1. Fifty! American rerugees are nere, and no transport Is available to carry them to ! IBs united States, and no regular ves- ACCUSED OF ILLEGAL TRAFFIC IN LIQUOR Thirty Men Arrested by Po lice as Result of Raids Sunday. Thirty men were arrested yesterday by the police for illegal sale of liquor The raids began early In the day with the arrest of Frank McNamara. bar tender at 117V4 Knott street, for selling liquor to I.ouls Lavroy. Two charges stand against the bartender, one of selling on Sunday and the other of sell ing to an intoxicated person. Sergeant Harms and Patrolman Wise made the arrest. Sergeant Van Overn later arrested K. Hasegawa and 11 Japanese at 105 North Fourth street for selling liquor in an unlicensed grill. They sold saga, a Japanese liquor. Louis Nlsenos and four men were ar rested at Grand and Hawthorne ave nues by Patrolmen Foster, Rlchdahl and Kerry for selling liquor in an unlicensed grill. The same officers later arrested John Dunn, J. F. Fthyner, K. S. South ard, Lyman Van Horn and Thomas O'Cronza at 283 Grand avenue, for dis posing of liquor In a grill that they say has no liquor license. Patrolmen Schmldke, Epps and Miller arrested John Erlckson and Henry Katz at Third and Couch streets for selling liquor on Sun day. The several cases are to be heard Tuesday In the municipal court. AMERICAN FLAG FINDS DEFENDER N JAPANESE x Man Claiming to Be I, W, W, Attempts to Pull Emblem Down and Is Kicked, eel sails . for several days. United etates consul uanatia has arranged to accommodate the penniless at a local hbtel. John Lind, President Wilson's envoy, will spend tomorrow at a plantation near Terra Blanche. He has given no indication here as to what he believes ttje future holds in the American-Mexican dispute. , ., . Hale Touches at Havana. Havana, Sept. 1. William Bayard Hale, one of President Wilson's emis saries to Mexico arrived here this morning from Vera Crus, sailing later on the Ward liner Morro Castle for New York. H refused to comment on the Mexican situation. LEVY "SHOULD WORRY" ABOUT OLD UNCLE SAM I Washington. Sept. 1. Representative f Levy who represents the New York fl j nanclal district in congress, Is solicitous because he says it Is costing Uncle Sam 110 a minute to prosecute the steel trUBt "Next Tuesday, I Intend to Introduce a Resolution ordering the attorney gen eral to dismiss the suit." Lew said to il night. "It will get nowher for years, T ahdtnetnwhue unreoan 2r a mln- The American flag found an earnest and sucoessful defender yesterday after noon In the person of a little Japanese In a ppol room at Third and Couch streets, when Charles Blake sought to tear it from the wall. Blake claims to be a recent arrival from Canada and professes to be an ardent member of the I. W. W. move ment. About 4 o'clock he entered the Japanese pool hall. The first thing he saw was a large American flag on the wall near the cash register. Ho walked up and attempted to pull it down. The Jap grabbed the man, turned him to ward the door, and kicked him into the street. Patrolman Cameron passed the door at this time and investigation led to the report ot the, above facts, together with the arrest of Blake on a charge of intoxication. OREGON'S EXHIBIT AT FRANCISCO CONFERENCE OBJECT Exposition Committee Calls in Many of State's Leading Men for Advice on Subject. POLICE ARREST 1584- ACCUSED WOMAN SINGS RAGTIME IN CITY JAIL PERSONS AUGUST Over Half Taken Up for Intox ication; Crusade Against Unlicensed Dog, LETS ANOTHER WOMAN RIDE ON WIFE'S PASS Because he failed to let his wife know he was traveling to Huntington witli another woman, E. H. Shafer and the woman, whose name is unknown, are today returning to Portland in the cus tody, of Deputy Constable Hunter. The charge against the two is a violation of the "anti-pass" law. Shafer, who is a telegrapher, secured a pass for him self and wife and took the other woman along. Inquiries made by his wife led to the discovery and the arrest of the pair in Huntingdon on a complaint filed by the O.-W. R. & N. company followed. How can Oregon's exhibit at the Panama-Pacific exposition In San Fran cisco. 1916, be made worthy of the state? Seeking an answer to the question, O. M. Clark, chairman of the Oregon expo sition commission, has called a confer ence of the heads of leading Oregon or gunlzations to bo held In the commis sion's headquarters, 418 Commercial club building, at 2 o'clock next Friday afternoon. One of the plans Is to have the "Ore gon First" record maintained, arranging it so that Oregon will be first to com plete plans and let contract for the state building on the expostlion grounds Mr. Clark believes that nothing Is more Important than to secure the co operation of the organizations which do much of the work for public good In Oregon. The following delegates have been selected for the Friday afternoon conference: Delegates to Conference. J. Henry Booth. Dresldent of the board of agriculture, Roseburg; W. K. Newell, prasiueni or me stale boara or horticul ture. Gaston; W. L. Finley. state game warden; R, K. Clanton, master fish war den; J. D. Mickle, state dairy and food commissioner: H. N. Lawrie, chairman stats bureau of mines commission; C. E. Spence, master of the state grange. Ore gon City; Thomas C. Burke, chairman of the state board of immigration; Joseph Teat, president of the Oregon con servation commission; W. B. Mackay, West Coast Lumber Manufacturers' as sociation; J. A. Churchill, state superin tendent of publlo instruction; Dr. Calvin 9. White, state health officer: John H. Lewis, state engineer; A. F. Swift, farm ers' union. Baker; O. P. Hoff, commis sioner of labor statistics; N. C. Maris, pure bred livestock association; O. M. Plummer, Oregon Eugenics association; W. H. McMonlee, Oregon Manufacturers association; P. L. Campbell, president University of Oregon; W. J. Kerr, presl- ent Oregon Agricultural college: J. H. Ackerman. president of the state normal school; John G. Hope, Oregon Woolgrow ers' association. Medical Springs; J. M. Dickson, Oregon Dairy association, Shedds; Theodore B. Wilcox, president Oregon Development league; William Hanley, Burns; W. M. Colvlg, Medford: John E. Gratke, Astoria; J. 8. Van Win kle, Albany; Bruce Dennis. La Grande, vice presidents or the Oregon Develop ment League; C. C. Chapman, secretary of the -Oregon Development League: Governor Oswald West, Secretary of State Ben Olcott. State Treasurer Tom Kay, President of the Senate Dan J. Malarkey, Speaker of the House C. N. McArthur. and the members of the ex position commlsslon.'O. M. Clark, chair man; W. L. Thompson, secretary; John F. Logan, R. A. Booth. Eugene; C. L. Hawley, Monmouth. PLAN CULTIVATION OF WINTER CAULIFLOWER (Special to The Journal.) Roseburg. Or.. Sept. 1. The grangers of Douglas county are forming an as sociation for the growing of broccoli and winter cauliflower for shipment to Minneapolis in carload lots. Already It Is assured that more than 20 acres will be devoted to this product. It is said that conditions In Douglas county aro ideal for the growing of these products. The report of Harry Circle, record clerk for the police department, shows there were 791 persons arrested for be ing Intoxicated during the month of Au gust. V-""- Twenty were arrested for auloDioBile speeding, while 10 were arrestetWor mo torcycle speeding, fighters td the num ber of 27 were taken into custody, while 4K were arrested ror gambling. Thieves to tho number ofS4 were caught. Va grancy caused 2OT men id be arrested, The crusade against .unllCensed dogs re sulted In the arrest of owners. There were 76 accidents; 126 Injured persons were assisted by the police, 101 lost chll dren were taken home, 5 suicides were reported, the patrol wagon made 950 calls, and 161 nuisance notices were served. The total number of persons ar rested during August was 1684. Inmate Passes Hours Away With Light Heart, Con fident of Outcome, S. P. NOT TO PUT ON EXTRA TRAIN SERVICE No extra train between Portland and San Francisco is to be put in service by the Southern Pacific, at least not for some time, according to General Pas senger Agent J. M. Scott, who returned from San Francisco yesterday. Mr. Scott was In conference with high offi cials of the road for two weeks, at which nearly every phase of passenger travel was taken up. "To be sure, we talked about the proposed new train service." said Mr. Scott this morning. "But we made no decision and probably will not for the present. Our business has been excep tionally good, but we figured It out that ths putting on of an extra train now would cause such a sweeping rearrange ment of schedules that we will get along with increasing, travel by putting on extra equipment and no new train. 'One of the principal matters of dis cussion was the prospects for traffic during the Panama-Pacific exposition, and that took up moat of our time at the conference." PREPARING SITE FOR NEW S. P. & S. DEPOT Old buildings that have encumbered the site of the proposed new freight depot and warehouse of the S. P. & S. near Union avenue and Belmont street are being moved away, preparatory to beginning work on the new building. "This dses not mean that we will be gin actual construction work there at once," said Frank A. Pell, assistant to lresldent J. II. Young of the North Bank, this morning. "We expect to build a depot there and we want to get ready, that's all: Nothing definite has been decided on when the work will start." rians for an east side freight station were completed by North Bank officials some time ago, the property having all been acquired and arrangements for trackage tentatively made. The switch ing and yard tracks are now being laid on the tier of blocks owned by the com pany between Belmont street and Haw thorne avenue. Tickled His Palate. Los Angeles, Sept. 1. Omar Woll forth, after laughing himself Into hys teria, arrived at the receiving hospital in an ambulance unable to tell his trou bles. His wife substituted: "He swal lowed a Kardlne tall first. Ho said It tickled his palate, and then began laugh. Ing at himself." I.' 7t You Owe It to Yourself to See the Wonder's Glorious 1913-14 Display of AUTUMN Mi We announce our first complete show? ing of exclusive high grade Hats and exclusive models in Dress Hats on Tuesday, Sept 2d and the days following The authoritative styles are here. The values are here. The breadth of assortment is here. A great range of price is here. Our Autumn and Winter styles are ready. Ready with the service. , Ready with the merchandise. Ready with a broad wel come, whatever your millinery requirements or desires. O 0 Tss Wonder M AT MORRISON AND FOURTH STREETS MJimriery- Musical airs, ranging from rasr time to grand -opera, were heard all day yes terday rrom the woman s quarters at me ponce station. ine singer was Eva Ferris. 19 years om, arrested Saturday evening for ob taining goods by a method not approved uy tne law. To herself and Matron Simmons, the young woman hummed and sang, then beat a tattoo on the dusty window pane, trying to pass away the time until Tues day morning, when she proposes to tell Municipal Judge Stevenson why and how she secured $0 worth of woman's finery from local department stores. August 6. 1912, the young singer mar ried John Ferris at Chehalls to cancel a $200 mortgage Ferris held against her mother. The marriage proved unhappy and separation followed in May. Since that time; the girl-wife has been making her way the best she could. She filled a few engagements as a singer, but could not find steady employment, and took up work as a domestic in the home of Ralph Crysler, 574 East Pine street. A trip to St. PruI to live with her grandmother was planned, as she says, to start life over. To make this trip, new clothes were needed. The huahanri failed to keep his promise to send mon ey. While waiting for the money, the young woman obtained the needed goods upon the credit of the Crysler family. The department stores learned of this before she had time to adjust It. and uer arrest roi lowed. "I have telegraphed my husband to come and help me out of this," she said this morning at the' police station. "If ne naa given me any attention, I would never have been in this trouble. If I work as a domestic, I guess I can't be very bad. I would even do hard work In a laundry, rather than steal to get clothes, but at the time there appeared no way to get my clothes on time, other than secure them as I did and pay later." GOVERNOR WEST HAS NQPATIENCE HESAYS WITH KAY AND LEWIS Likens Them to Governor Sul- zer in Their Stand in Land Controversy, WHEN HIS FATHER DIES, SON COMMITS SUICIDE Davenport, Iowa, Sept. 1. Thomas Lj'nch, L'6, received a telegram Satur day announcing the death of his father in Pennsylvania. The son bought a bpttle of carbolic acid and drank the contents, dying soon afterward. Salem, Or., Sept 1. Comparing State Treasurer Kay and State Engineer Lew- Is to Governor Sulser. of New York, by saying that like him they are afraid to fAce the music and are attemnHn sunt rctponsiouity ror their acts, and charging that in the Deschutes Land company fight they, and Attorney Gen eral Crawford are allied In protecting a eiiueairing promoter engaged In prac tices ine mue sky law Is aimed to prevent, uovernor West today Issued a reply to n statement appearing In a Portland morning paper signed by the unro. mm uuiuning ineir positions In the fight. ine right also took on a new ancle today when Corporation Commissioner vvaison announced that he had advised the irrigation company that it la he- hind 4wo years In Its annual fees, and subjeci to a $200 fine. He also says that it has failed to provide the nre- Itmlnary statement provided for under the Blue Sky law, and that it must set tlo these matters at once. Governor's Statement, The governor's statement Is as fol lows: "In his statement made through the columns of the Oregonian this morning, Mr. Kay Insists that my charge that a certain petition addressed to the inter- or department asking for an extension of time upon the contract between the state and federal government covering the Morson project was prepared by Lewis and himself Is untrue: that It wn prepared by Assistant Secretary Van Winkle, an employe in the office. Mr. Van Winkle could no doubt with propriety clear himself by saying: that it was prepared by the stenographer and the stenographer In turning the blame on her machine. "I have no patience with heads of de partments who, when trouble cpmes and they find they have put their foot Into it, try to shift the blame to some help less employe. 1 have always stood ready to assume responsibility for the acts of those In my employ. Sympathies Chsnre. "My sympathies were with Governor Sulzer until he began to shift the blame for some of his acts onto his wife. I IF R: M ORGAN HANGS MAY BE NEW WARDEN Understanding Is That Lawson Will Resign Rather Than Conduct Execution. (Stlem Bureau of Tbe Journal.) Salem, Or., Sept. 1. That before he will execute Robert Morgan, sentenced to hang here next Friday for killng his sweetheart, Virgle Hart, at Condon, in October of last year, he will resign from his position, is the ultimatum dellverd to Governor West by Colonel Lawson, warden of the penitentiary, according to an authoritative source here today. - Since his Imprisonment Morgan has been a model prisoner, and this and the fact that he is but a boy, and that his crime was committed While he was In sane with Jealousy has caused the war den to reach a decision that he would rather resign his position than hang the boy. The ultimatum was given the gover nor when Colonel Lawson called on him some time ago to plead with him to, commute Morgan's sentence. Palling to get from the governor a statement as to whether or not he would fio so, he told him that if he decided tohang him that he could depend on his resignation. and that he would have to look for soma other warden to take charge of the exe cution. .Since then he has repeated the statement, and demands that he be ad vised soon of the governor's decision. Colonel Lawson is temporarily out of the city. believe in a man facing the music on all occasions. I find, however, that my charge that Messrs. Kay and Lewis pre pared this petition needs a little modi fication, further Investigation repeals the fact that with the exception of the introductory and closing paragraphs. which were prepared under the direction of Messrs. Kay and Lewis, that the nine remaining paragraphs were prepared by air. Morson, "Most of the troubles of the desert land board have sprung from the prac tice of State Engineer Lewis and At torney General Crawford permitting promoters of these projects to prepare moBt of the contracts and petitions which the board was called upon to ap prove and sign. In this fight Messrs. Kiy, Crawford and Lewis are lined up to protect a shoestring promoter who is en gaged in practices which the Blue Sky law Is aimed to prevent. I am thankful that I am lined up and making the fight In behalf of the public." Journal Want AJs bring results. I Another Brewer afraid of liglilt KEEP J Jf" m Minneapolis Brewing Co. tacitly admits on its case cover reproduced above that light affects the quality of beer that the light Bottle is insufficient protection. It is not enough to make pure beer it must be protected from the light. - Schlitz in Brown Bottles is pure and wholesome from the brewery to your glass. 49 See that crown or cork is branded ' ltSciitz."' I Main 153 A 4666 Thanes j "Rothschild Bros. ao-26 N. First St Portland, Oregon Ililat Hade ffliili