4 '. VrYoarLosf ad l$ Is likely to 'be the -j first thing 1a the paper tut t .' the ; , finder . will read, i Try It ooce and PORTLAND," OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY . 3, 1914. PRICE FIVE CENTS 323? SJ Tl - CZ terly . winds. T . .. 1 -i - 7, . . ,,!....,,, , . -U J i 1 . ' t -i, . ,. - " r . '- - , - . . " -, ' -; , -, , ,, , ,.,t - , , ,--,,, ; . , (, - 1 ' ' i, ; ..... , .; I ,. ,f. n ff . Siwfs r vForce of M exican Federals Approaches :Teiena, but Is : Driven Off After Firing Few vXi Shots at Americans. REINFORCEMENTS SENT , QUICKLY BY FUNSTON Fearing Attempt to Cut Pipe Line by Night; It and Res ; eryoir Are Guarded. Executive Offices in Tent for Summer lrsldBt WUo Plnto Spad tli Warm D7 in bm Opm on VThlt Boom OrouBda. Jf fSpedul tn Tin Jmnt. Waahlncton, May 2. President Wil- on will aoon Install his executive of fices for the summer in tent Jtist south of : the . . main tmildlns; of the White House. Anticipating an all sum mer siege in Washington, the presi dent declared lie could not remain In doors. The tent Idea' u suggested to him and he . placed the order Immediately. The new offices will be situated In the. beautiful flower garden between the White House proper and the ex ecu -tire, offices on one of the ' highest points in the. grounds. It- wiir be equipped with a telephone. pusH but- tons, electric lights, tables, chairs and every other office convenience.- Presi dent Wilson will receive all hi callers in the tent and it is possible the formal cabinet meetings will be done" away with and his advisers will group about him informally whenever he desires to confer with them. President Wilson will not sleep in the tent, as the White House grounds are said to be quite malarial, especially In late July and August. Arrange ments have been perfected for open air sleeping quarters under the roof of the White House. There he will be pro tected from mosquitoes and other summer-Insects and at the samVtlme get the breezes if there are any. (Cbittd Piww Useed TVtre.l ' v: Washington, May 2. -Details of skirmish today at Tejerla, a suburb of Vera- Crua, between Mexican federal troops and. a detachment of American marines. Served to make officials ap prehenslva tonight. The Mexicans de : mended surrender of thi water works. supplying Vera Cmib. When refused. . they fired a few scattering shots; Ger.- eral JTunston, reporting tonight In two dispatches to Secretary Garrison, men- . tioned no casualties. :t- A. reinforced body of 'American -. troops Is vigilantly guarding the water . worm and the railroad tonight. A re - newal of tbe attack Is feared althouan the Mexican forces withdrew after flr- lng upon the American forces.. Tejeria, whera the incident occurred. Is . 11 nines distant from Vefa Cruz. ' . The water works, which supply the ' entire city of Vera Crus, are located ' there and hsve been carefully guarded since the American occupation. Tli i. , plant's safety is vital to the health of , ail In the city and its destruction would seriously undermine the success or me seizure of Vera Crus by the .marines. t A dispatch received' "by Secretary uarnson rrom General Funston this atternoon stated that under a flag of , truve me commander . or, the Mexican forces, a detachment of General Maas' rmysent. a courier to the command ,r "of two companies of marines, who have tbeen guarding the water works. The '-.I Mexican commander demanded that the Americans surrender the water works ; e and. retreat , from Jlhctr. ttaaltion within 10 minut. The message Mated that sou, Mexican- soldiers were then in : algbu? messed for a demonstration . again t the two eompanies of Ativer u-an marines. f -With i the- two forces facing , each Other and desperat fears of; a a over whelming; attack, : tha American of f I w curtly : refused ' to surrender. tConclniled on Ptgg Nine. Oohiiaa One) THE BIGGEST MAN ASHORE AT VERA CRUZ k General Sickles HI, ', ; f iiIiife Despaired Of New Tork, May 1. Major General , Daniel K.Slckles, now St years old, is .jc'-serjlously Ul at his borne.' No. 23 Fifth avenue, here, and the gravest fears are i fart "for his recovery. '.V M the filcklea home tonight It waa - said that the general's wife and son, " Stanton,' have been constantly at his bedside sines Thursday when the gen eral had a sinking spell and became . . ysry weak.. .For a. time he was ex tremely low, but rested quietly today. Mrs. Borden Agaiii Is Seeking Divorce 'Wife of Condensed Milk Manufacturer Begins Kew ktnit, Charging Seaer- tloaj Wants Daughter. Los Angeles, Cal., May 2 Mrs. Hel en M. Borden, wifa of Gail Borden, millionaire condensed mQk manufac turer, today began a new suit for di vorce and for the custody of her 18-year-old daughter, Ramona, who three years ago' attracted national attention as the "poor little rich girt, Mrs. Borden was refused a divorce In 1911 by Judge Houser. She ap pealed to 'the supreme court, but was unsuccessful. The suit begun today charges Bor den, with desertion. No ' alimony is asked. It was stated that an attempt la being made to obtain a property settlement out of court. Mr. and Mrs. Borden have been .seo a fated for years. It was this sep aration that drew attention to the daughter. Borden placed the young woman in an eastern school and sur rounded her with all th luxuries that money .could buy,. She was taken slightly 111 and waa placed In a sanitarium. -. She escaped and was finally found in Los An geles with her mother. , May BeLineup'fe Monday on Toll Bill Bvnavor sons expected to Trass a '., Sou Call on HIS Resolution - lre- aanted late This Afteraoon. Washington, May ' 2. A lineup on the tolls repeal bill in the senate will J be obtained Monday If Senator Borah ( presses a roll call on his ' resolution Introduced late this afternoon delay ing the vote On the bill Itself until after the November , election. By righting against the reference of the resolution to a committee where im probably will . be burled until after the tolls fight was over, a count of noaea will be obtained. It la thought tlrfs Is what Borah is after. His resolution provides that no vote shall be taken to repeal the tolls ex emption provision until after a refer endum has been madby the. people, which he saya wMl be done auto matically at the elections in Novem ber. , i i i I W v. y. -sf;-; -,;r , I f , i Aj, , A J7",:ni" "ri : Y" -" '-"-yS - I f, i , ', r Vk - y"y ' r' y- M - if t v. : 3j; . . y :v,ytwrf.s,v,.xv. ; :-x .?.-. White House Silent I OnWeMinPlans Miss Eleanor WUsOs Sat Taken Into Btr Confldenoe, Only Few of Her Most Xntlmata Trlandai Pew Quests. Washington May ; 2. -With the four teenth Whlf House wedding; lust flvs days off : society tonight was . still vainly trying to find out Just what sort of. ceremony would unite Miss Eleanor r Wilson. youngest daughter of the president, to Secretary of tne Treasurv WlUlanv Gibbs MeAdoo. The White House was silent on the plans. Miss Wilson has taken only a few intimate friends Into her confidence. Her plans are complete. It was understood that the wedding would take plaee at 6 o'clock-Thursday evening, in the famous b Viia room of. the -White House. .Miss Margaret Wilsons eldest daughter of the presi dent, will be her sister's only attend ant, and Dr. Cary T. Grayson, United States aavy, President Wilson's aide, will be, best man. An ofcial hint as to Miss Wilson's wedding dress Rave it as a very soft satin and lace of the more conservative type of present styles, with, a V shaped neck and long sleeves of lace. Less than four score guests 'will witness the ceremony he family of the couple, members of the cabinet and their wives. Vice President and Mrs. Marshall and a few. very inti mate friends. Coroner's Jury Finds Soldiers or Mine Guards Respon sible for Death of Women and Children at Ludlow. General . Frederick Funston, commanding the States Army. t Fifth Corps, United MEDIATORS ASK THE FACTIONS TO SEND !1W AFFAIR TO END BASIS FOR BRINGING MEXICAN United States, Huerta and Carranza Asked to Unite iri Drawing Up- Peace Proposals Mediators Said to Agree Huerta Must Go, ' By : feat a. 1. TODAY'S SUNDAY JOURNAL Consists of SECTION ONETWELVE PAGES Onis Max lean Have Agalast Tera wane yBtmn, ' Seaator Ohuabrlaia' - Sivaa Ovatiea Suffnaa VMting, Vaited StatM, Kaerta, ana Ownw Aakad to Saad ro CoaferM. - Womaa Vaiaae for Soffrat la Ckt- oa-, i Cmnw'i wry ' Blamas Milltlamaa for "lndlrw Xunm" In Oolondo. SuffracUt Tails Way Hilltanty U 1 Bwaet fa Bocivty i ExhlT.it ta be la June. ' Kaport Tails af Pert of .Lea Aaralaa. i Taavavara Onrasiaa - for Eeeaom. J. . Taal TaUa Banata Committaa r ef -.Hee for Traa Tolls. .Tagas. . I, 1 I. . . ar. Hydro-El eetrio OommiMion Bpaaka for Xifht Kemtrictiou" in Use of Water romr, i Xortawaat Said to ravoi Signer Frairht Bataa, Frea Tolla. CoUcca Confareaea ExMbita. Plans for Kaad Collate Conference. Junior Olaaa Week a t5 Eur one. Kaoonla ef Caaaidatea for Offioa. Mclntoah Kurdar Trial Begina. Hiatory of Port of Vara Crus. Trereler Laucha at Sooaareit's Di- oovairy ef ?'New Ei-w." Hexioe 8U11 "Maaaaa Land." One Fatal Accident During Weak. Arrest Has Suspected ef Setting Firs te Bonansa, Prinaville Celebrates Good Beads Bay, Ban Fraacisoo News Latter. ' SECTION TWOEIGHT PAGES Pases. 7. Vaed of Efflciaaey la - Ooaduot ef Staters Business. Eodmaa Waaamaker Hopes to Send jwoptanes Aoress tae Pacific, v i. a. 7. l. a. 10. 11. John -E. Xeviaii TUnlted Press thing- ha could not discuss with pro . Staff Correspondent. Priety.. .Waahlngton, D. Wor to ths arrlvsl of tha media- C . May 2. The i tors.; ne secretary had conferred at outlook here for I length with Ambassador Oe Gama per permaaent peace ; sonally.sj-If roml him he had gone in Mexico 'seenied straight ' to President Wilson, with Improved tonight , whom he waa closeted for more than The South Amer- an. hour. Whem he left he fairly rad ican mediators : lated optimism.. He would make no have cleared the further statement than that the altua- aecxs - tor action. Deeded Hotel for California Terrace a. T. Orlfflth of Fortlaadf Oara 30- Boom Sotal Kara for Seven &s la Santa Bosa . and Is Sort. Santa Rosaj Cat., May 2. H. T. Griffith, a Portland hotelman, who re cently bargained off a SO-room Botel for seven lots at "Cloverdale Terrace,- In this county, with: ; a man he met in the northern city, arrived here to find that he had t been buncoed and that the Tlece of land on -a hill fast nesa in the extreme northern part of the county was Only fit , for grazing "and practically worthless. He retraced ' his staps to Portland ana win euner get back his property there or' make ! things hot for the man who misrep- first man who has been wronged over the same land. Asks Chamberlain to Aid His Own Bill lbs, Bnnlway TTrgas Kim to Support the Brlstow Msasurs Olvtag- Staf- fraga He Drew ba Original.' (Wahtnaton Bureau of The Joarnal.) Washington. . C. May 8. Reply ing; to .a. telef ram, from Abigail Scott buniway, Inspired by a luncheon party la honor t Smma Smith Davoa, presi dent of the National Council: of Women voter. Senator Chamberlain assures Mrs. Dufilwav he will vote and work for fhe Bristow bill to give auffraga to women. There's. b humorous feat ure to this for the Brlstow bill is a copy of a bill Senator Chamberlain In troduced at the beginning of the ses sion, so that Mrs. Duniway la earn estly beseachlng Senator Chamberlain tj stand by his own bill. Madame Nordica Reported Near Death BULLETS RAINED ON . , ESCAPING CHILDREN Brakeman Tells of Terrible Scene When Fire Swept Over Miners' Homes. MENTION OF SENATOR SIX THOUSAND nniiinrni liinn iiiilr I BIGS LOUD CHEERS 1 run mmm National Suffrage Rally at ; Lincoln High School !s Rousing Affair. By Fred J. Wilson, United Press Correspondent. Trinidad, Colo., May 2.- Responsibil ity for th killing of two women and 11 children In the destruction of the Ludlow tent colony of strikers two wVeka ago- was laid directly at the The climax of last night's national suffrage rally at the Lincoln High sc'aool was an ovation for ' Senator George E. Chamberlain. Other can didatea who spSke received their meed of applause and favor, - but !t needed but the bare mention of Chamberlain's name by . B. F. Irvine who spoke in Ills stead, 'to bring forth a volume of cheera and ap plause that continued for nearly flvs mlnutea. "The man who placed national iaf frage on the : map needs no . promise from meJ' said Mr. Irvine. "His performance la his pledge." Mr. Irvine showed how Senator Chamberlain aa a young maKOf 2S, back in 18S0, advocated woman-aiiT-frage. how he iad fought for it in this state until the women were fi nally riven tha vote, and how, on April 7, 191 S, he had introduced sen ate joint resolution providing for a constitutional amendment They Cheerfully Face a Chill . Lake Breeze in Typical Chicago Spring Day.r.for Votes for Women Spectacle GOOSE FLESH SHOWS ON LIGHTLY CLOTHED ARMS Society WomenI and Ne gresses step Side by Side ..to Demonstrate Faith. - the right of franchise to women, And Chicago. May 3.81x thousand worn. " en, drawn from every rahk and file ia CUcago, this afternoon silently marched for two miles in view of oyer lOO.OOe Spectators alonar the laka fmn - grantlngjon Michigan avenue, as a daraonstra- door of the militia and mine guards hew in March last be spoke for the suf- this afternoon by a Jury which con ducted the lncruest called by Coroner Sypea. The Jury returned a verdict that Mrs. Petra Valdez. Mrs. Cedelma Costa and -11 children "died through fire or asphyxiation, or both, from a fire set by militiamen under Major P. J. Hamrock and Lieutenant K. B. -Lln- derfelt or mine guards, or both." A second verdict , was returned atat- lng that Alfred (Martin, militiaman. Louis Tlkas and six strikers, killed at Ludlow, "died from bullet wounds re ceived at a battle between militia. mine guards and strikers." The ver dict did. not state whether the strik ers, mine guards or militiamen start ed the Ludlow battle. Militiamen Fira Testa. Tha verdict was reached, after wit nesses' had. testified that: they saw militiamen set fire to tmi tents com prising4 the strike; colony "during the battle fought at Ludlow, April 20. H. A. Riley, who was a brakeman on a Colorado & Southern train which pulled into Ludlow at 7 o'clock on the evening of April 20. testified that dozen militiamen pushed rifles into the faces of himself and Engineer Bashford and ordered them to "take that train out of here and b d d quick or wa will shoot you." Riley added that, aa his train pulled out He saw two tents in ihs strikers colony banning.! and 1 ha observed a-:nian In tha uniform of "the militia touching blase to-a. u-ra. . i - Snooting; xnto Tent colony. national suffrage causa and eulogised Abasrall Seott Duntway on tha floor ef the senate. All snades Saprasaatad, The applause for Chamberlain was unequivocally a ' demonstration, al though all shades of political opin ion were represented at tha meet ing. Mr. Irvine devoted a large por won or tnelr faith in universal J rage. - .- ' - Society leaders, scrub women. eo ' - eds from the University of Chicago. and Northwestern, -., waitresses, ' olu care-worn, toothless women, rosy cheeked girls, little children snd . no -gresses were ' a part Of the motley crowd in Hr.e. - They marched under the banners ot. of tha Iniquities which have arisen because women do not have tha right of the ballot, especially la England. "Votes for women" formed the tin with evil characters T W7 . 9 y ZJauar Kaapanalole far Hast Orima, aays Aaorsai H. Brown, Candidate for Attaraay Oanarel. Baal astau aad Bsudiar Vaws. Editorial. Tawn Topios. -' Harkata. ' Soman Bra tarn Rxnlain.it Law ar dtavitatson Vpaat av Astros. emer Ad Club's xoorsioa ia O. O. " SECTION THREE TWELVE PAGES Sports and Marine News Classified Advertisements, SECTION FOURTEN PAGES Fares. Vara Crus the Military Gateway to ;: ' Mssiae. t. ThaatiloaV Haws and Oossip. t. Maws af ia Koviaa. a-a-a-T. Astoaobitsa aad Good Roads. .agea. f-S-4. a. . niustratad Kawa S. Haws From Forain r.ni.l. , 10. Mas Waa Are Building World's fair Vaivarsitr aad OoUage Vaws. SECTION FIVE TEN PAGES Xorten Art Oollaetioa a Wbita He pbaaV ' . Sooiaty Haws aad Oeasin. Ia tha Kaalm af Hnaia. Haws ef Wemea's Clabs. 7.. . 10. Parant Taaeaar Aaaariattoa Hi Social Barrio. AMivitiaa. Woman's Cbristiaa Xamparaaea Union. New Books aad Thsir Aatkora.' Portland School Haws. la a. - a. a. v if SECTION SIX (WOMAN'S ) SIX PAGES ragae. Tha - Jsstar TJraas la Tashloa's Oaart. Kaasar a rriaad ia tha Fas. . pha AftarnoaB Taa Carnar. Xaaas aad Xaeipaa fa a Waak. a. i. a. BarraatioDa far tha Home Brass. Bwaat Faa Basi-B for Infant's Brass, vwn ami u Lnut jianaas. iam vaoaai jtraraga, a b a. a Stan By Kiohard Wasaiagtaa Child. SECTION SEVEN (MAGAZINE) EIGHT PAGES rasas. a. Baar Admiral Hayo, Xade Els- . Tampariag TaBparaiaaat. a Bnr ' The Jtaaohntae Curoi. ' A Pasta W Walstar. SttUTiUN.lSUiHT (COMIC) FOUR PAGES. 1 ' Firturss ef Faopla aad Flaeas la the Bay's Haws. .Tram tors to Lam bar, ia a Portlaad BaansUL. " - - Kamaira af S oldiar Whe ToagM , Mayolsaa. , " . . T. 'agas. SECTION NINE FOUR PAGES kQaaea Claaa Oaardiaa Aaral of Italy. I 1 Faria Has QoUaga for FoUcanisn. I Yagea Gamaa Press Picklnt Hew Cbaaeallor Hew Tork Foils Coaaiaeioaer Has aay doaa. - - They have decided to bring all of the j parties to the gen eral Mexican .con troversy Huerta, Carranza and the United States to gether. From such a conference they hope to work out a general agree ment whereby con stitutional govern ment will be re stored In Mexico and a president elected who can b universally recognized. The preliminary work is out of the way. The nvoya themselves have worked out a plan of action. They will now aubmit tftla to the representatives of Huerta, Car ranza and the United States for ap proval or disapproval. It is unlikely negotiations which can be carried on tbe initial proposition,' Dut it Is pointed out that it will form a real basis for negotiations which can be' car ed on under such restrictions as the medi ators shall determine. Counter pro posals can be made and the entire The three representatives of tlra South American countries who are act ing as mediatora, conferred with Sec retary Bryan at considerable length thia afternoorv Tonight the, following statement waa issued! ' - Conference Asked For. "Tha mediators have delivered to this government and are sending out to General Huerta and General Car ranaa requests that " representatives b appointed to confer with the media tors." T j-V7.."' Tha mediators refused to add any thing to thia statement at this time. Secretary. Bryan 'likewise waa mute, stating x that thia reported all that could be announced for the present. He refused to sy whether he or some one. else would' represent the- United States or discuss where the mediation conferences would be continued." , f It is reported here that either. John Li nd. John ' Basset t Moore, David J. Hill or Hannis ? Taylor will be the! American conferee in the mediation i and that the board will meet In Cuba or Canada.vv VfiW -V -U-:'. ' The question of whether this action , on tha part of the mediators did not constitute: . a formal recognition of . Huerta was also evaded by tha secre-! tary, who Insisted that this was some (Concluded ob- Page Nine. Column Two) George "W. Toang, Bar Xnsband. Ba. calves Message ConTayinr Tattle Kope; Prima Donna HI a Java. New York. May 2. George W. Toung, husband of Mme. Nordica. the prima donna, today received a cable gram from Java saying that her con dition is serious. According to the message she is gaining little ground and is still near death. , - ; courts are endeavoring to answer. Gf..lfn tViA a. ... a 0 m MlnM.. .ul A Ing at Cowsta. Oklahoma. If all the " "Militia and mine guards were stand ing on the railroad . right of way and firing constantly Into the tent colony J gtariing.' ierd?' 3hT nSr-s noTshoo fu-Po" rea.on of assoola- from the tents. But I heard the women and children screaming and crying as tha flames swept over the tents and wiped them out, They crawled by 'the score out from the streets of the colony and tried to run to safety in the "face of a regular hail of bullets." At the conclusion of Riley's testi mony. District Attorney Hendricks suggested that the Inquest be concluded but the jury examined J. S. Harriman, conductor of the train. He said he saw nine guards and militiamen firing con stantly into the tenta, the flash of their rifles shooting across the railroad tracks. He also saw women and chil dren fleeing under fire from the tents and corroborated Riley in detail. The verdict was greeted with satis faction by the strike leaders and min- Ion of his remarka to nolntlna some wrd organizations, political parties. v.uuB uu societies. om marched like trained Amazons, while others could not and did not try tokeen steo. Moms were in uniforms. 100 or so on horse thm. nf tvi whni amint it wuiw out the majority walked, each not votes for "us" women, but rather wearing a white cloth cap, somewhat votes for "you" women a pledge of j rsnbling a dusting cap, with 19 blue assistance on the part of Oregon's vot- j atars on It, representing the 10 states ers to the unfortunates Of atber statse. I women can vote. n.acn wavea , nr. Ksthei Pohl-Lovelov nresided. I an American flag. whil: th candidates were Introduced " Mra. Grace Wilbur Trout, nrealdcnl by Mrs. Laura Bartlett for tha Repub-I Of the Illinois .Etjual Suffrage assoola) llcana. Mrs. T. B. Neuhausen for the 1 auon, was grand marshal. Clad In m n i . . . . i tt. mrr- 1 m I klt. . . . t- m -t- - - . . . rroiresiiTu aura jsubb - aim , um, i ww .miu iruni wiiuuo Bireamoxi insi former president-of tha College Equal j suffrage colors, blue and white, car-, sunrage leajus, ir un vwvithi.. i itug sv ana, nag, sne Siroae majSSUOai Tha "congressraen-to-ba-: were taKen i ly at the head of the marchers, pre ceaea oy an escort Of CO mounted P iicemen unaer cmtr Uieaaon. . Cold Doesn't Tnmtt Thans. v After band and a hundred abuaa-. triennea, came the Coat "The Suffra. gist Arousing Her Sisters " wbleh t0M trayed a woman with a buala. awaken lag her sleeping sisters to "behold thm dawn" of universal franchise. All ware "Jlaks" snanlnsr BasSaaa Xaplag Bad I tnxair rtrescd.-witb low necked gowns Comnanr aad Xa Aeeusesr af Bank as-a,--arin Dare. pieaii Bebberjr. ( Special to The loniual.i (Concluded Para i Four. Oolaata Two) Is Minister's Son Leader of Bandits? i breess which cams in from tha . laks. mad their akin 'nook biua- -beneath ex, heavy coat of nowder. But ther moved: A.va. ....... m, W v. v., civ. m U PV.IB, .JfEBMU mm BV . .A U V. MK Starling, better known aa Jinks I statuary bandit, or has he fallen J Mrs. Modlll McCormlck, daughter of tha late Senator Hanna of Ohio, and Mrs. Kellogg Fairbanks, led the tw; ti,. i.:vt,. k.-K K-, I sections of women who marched undeg That Im tha, quastlon which tha th- a, .nnr . ir. rn..nZ the progreaslv banner, - Mrs. - Joseph T. Bowen, enraged because the Illinois) , wttH stories about "Jinks- Starling are true th!..emunUB f th," Na0"n1 i?cUt he Is a mbst daring leader of a band of robbers. jhs .waa only a lew days ago ac quitted - at Washington, Arte, of a charge of having assisted In tha rob bery of tha Bank of Fulton on the night of October J. 1913. Immediately following his release from that charge petition congress for early action on woman suffrage bill, did not partlci-s pate. Miss Jane Adams, bead of tha. National society, in the absence of. Dr Anna Howard, Shaw in Europe, like wise disaffected, was in d'Arcviue. Iowa at the bedside of her sick mother. The four main political partiea tookt he was rearrested on a charge of com- Pt in the procession, both man and pliclty in. the robbery of tha Flrat women following the banners or ma State bank of Dardanelle and taken i Democratic, Socialist, Progressive and, on for trial. A brother. Will Starling, Republican parties. - The Republican,: with oeorge a. Thompson and Claude I neaaea oy an eiepnani mai csirriea ma K. Barton have already been convicted I Stars and Stripes aloft only at ths of participation In tha Dardanelle rob-1 benest or a coupie oi snarp aarpoonsv (Concluded on Page Fire, Oolamn One) bery. FATHER IS HAVING HARD LUCK WITH HIS PAPER THESE DAYS mm ' " . ' -j'l'aVaS j 2x ty " mi i, e Railroad Treasury- Looted by Federals had the largest . delegation of - mea marching, loo members of tha HasaU ton club being in line. ., 1000 Volloa Onard Bonis. . ' Fearing that attempta might b made to break up the line of march -by factions in Chicago opposed to suf frage, ' the police department detailed 4 100O patrolmen anions taa line or marsh. - In addition there was a pla toon of 0 patrolmen a abort distance behind the "presidential i escort of mounted police. There was no trou- - ble. The costumes of ttbs womea marchera were novel and mora than striking because of their dissimilarity. a Middle blouses, riding habits, women's Took $160,000 rrom Tehsantepeo Ha- tional's Of floss Tollowlng ran of era Crus, Say American Bsfufees. New Tork, May 1. Mexican federal soldiers helped themselves to $160,000 they found In the offices of the Te huantepee National railway after the fall of Vera Crus, according to Wil-j secret society regalia, ordinary street Ham B. Ryan, vice president of the (clothes, caps and -gowns and a.nun- rOBd. who with 35 other refua-eea ar. I dred other Comblnatlona gave the im rived here today on the Uner Ore-1 pression that annora n wararoos-paa gonia. The men f the party wars in I been exhausted by tha last garment workinar clothea. and the four women 1 to arlve variety and eight children wore tha clothes j A negro women's band, one of tha they were In when they started their 20 musical organisations mat marched. flia-ht. vied witn scoitisn oagpipers-in mi Ryan said that when the news of I for first ravors. ine procession was Vara 'Cruz spread through the distant sections, threats of bloody reprisals 1 were made. Ryan and the others of his party, all employes of tha rail way, were arrested by ru rales and were being marched Into tha country to be shot under ths law of flight. when Intercession by: tha British con- I sul saved them. (Concluded on Page Four. Column Three) ur Federals Ordered To Stop Operations War Minister Slanque Slreeta 04 era! Maas ,ao Ceaaa XOitajry Opera tions for Recovery 0f vara emu. Mexico City, May 2.- War Minister Blanquet tonight issued orders tc Gen eral Maas.- commanding tha Mexican federals near Vera, Cruz, immediately to cease all military operations look ing toward the recovery of the seaport now occupied by General, Funs ton's fighting Fifth brigade of regulars and marines, " . L- ! :.:':.:-' The same order contained ins tr no tions to alt commanding officers in Huerta' s army throughout the republic to suspend further . mobilization of forces. Minister Blanquet explained that the - order waa a result of the agreementv of an armistice. ' t ' 3Irs. Sharkey- Dies, ' New Tork, May Mrs. Kathcr- ine Sharkey, ? wif of Tom Sharkey, former pugilist, died suddenly at, her Sbeepshead bay horn lata today. LIVE NEWS FOR LIVE PEOPLE K. ft E. Transit, 175. Clasa. Upper or lower i Xlat, fli; Class. 13. New, full enameled refrlgrer- ator, $8. Class, 65. Five chair, down town barber . ahop, $1500.. Claaa. 20. ; ; Four h. p. . Thor motorcycle,'. $75. r Class. 55. ; ' 58 room apartment house in the tery best of the Nob Hill district, $2500. Class. 5 J. New . Home drophead aewlnf; : - machine, ' good as new,'. $18 ' Class.: 19. ' Grocery, cash ' . trade, down , 4 town, $2500; - Class, 20. Ten ' room rooming house, only $250. - Class. 58. t f Oliver visible typewriter, only $18.50. Class. 19 , , Hardware and' Implement storey , country, faowo. ciass,' zw. These Items appear In The , Journal Want Ada today. ' Thai . number of the 'classification In - which it appears follows eaca '-Item. ., y . v - j 1