THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1914. PREiHifif PLEASED BY 'I SHOtfLDl'JOiY' Wifeon Sends Sharp Rebuke to Colorado Legislature for Mot Taking Any Action to Believe Strike Conditions. MEDIATION REPRESENTATIVE OF HUERTA Coit Pmm Liml Wt Denver. May It. An ultimatum hinting that Firttwf States troops Misbt be withdrawn from he coie ruAa coal strike sone nnless tfce Ccrto rM letrJaJatura ended Its "inaction- was Mrd on the state of Colorado hr PreetaVst WBscm in a ms lata thin afternoon. In spite af It ! Wtolatr ad ' journcd sine die this evening without undertaking further legislation. but rot amis a fierce debate had been e- voneej ra in senate aaruig wnu-a ror Aaasseri was eeaeaaeed by sev - eral pragreaelTa Democrats. The ov message and replying to It. refused ta present either communication t the ftMernbly. As a result ef iais sltsaliou It is a vp j . ri iuuiai i k.-w Q militiamen will be put back Into the coal strike districts wttbin a few weeks and that the federal troops will dp recalled. Strike Issue I-gea. Tba nt result of the two weeks' special session of the legislature called t deal with conditions inTha strike ' sane was tnn passage af an apvropria , ttoa measure and twa bills designed to prevent disorder In future Arlkes. , rh appropriation measure provides a bond issua of 1 1.000,000 to supply ftmds to tne'et past snd future mllU tary dents Incurred by the state as - the result of the strike of coal miners. On bill regulates the possession and sale of fire arms and another provides ' the closing of saloons In times of ln , duatrlal or other disturbances. In ad dition, the legislature adopted a reso , lution providing for a committee eom , posed of three members from each house to Investigate the strike and - report to the next session. President wires Jteaase. While the legislature was proceeding " with -Us program this afternoon Gov ernor Amnions received a message from President Wilson severely criti cising that body, and serving notice that the federal government expected , action. Its test follows: "I am disturbed to hear of the prob- . ability of the adjournment of your leg islature and feel bound to remind you lhat my constitutional obligations , with regard to the maintenance of or- 1 der are not to be Indefinitely contin ued by the Inaction of the state legis lature. The federal forces are there only until the state of Colorado has J" time and opportunity to resume com plete sovereignty and control In the matter. "I cannot conceive that the state is willing to forego her sovereignty or to ' throw herself entirely upon the gov ernment of the United States and I .' am quite clear that she haa no con stitutional right to do so when It is within the power of her legislature to ' take effective action. . (Signed) "WOODROW WILSON." Governor Defend Legislature. When the president originally or . tiered federal troops into Colorado ha . urged the government to take such legislative action aa would be neces . sary to settle the strike and temedy conditions resulting from it. The last paragraph of his telegram was re garded as a stern rebuke and charge "that the governor and legislature had failed to meet this demand. As soon as the message arrived (he ' governor replied asserting that the president had been misinformed and ' defending the assembly from he marge 01 inaction. lie servea no. ties that the state could and would do without the federal troops as soon ss Its funds had been replenished. Aminos s Telia of Acts. "I regret exceedingly that you have been misinformed," he wired in reply. i n legislature nas just passed an act which I have approved providing for a bond Issue of $1,000,000 for the purpose of paying the indebtedness which has been Incurred and which may be incurred In suppressing lnsur . rectlon and defending the state.' A soon as these bonds can be issued, the funds will be available and this state can and will control the situation. This Is the only constitutional method of raising funds In the Immediate future In addition to this act, the legislature nas enacted a law permitting the gov rnor to close saloons in times of dis order and also a law prohibiting the carrying and disposition of fire arms committee on mediation nn h. n..n striae haa been nrnvlH ?n m,A poiniea. vrovernor Amnions decided not to ; , i l i -t't f v1!. F -''--4A -r'i v,-,'- If 1 I "J - '? &Stji& I V" V'' r i n , ? i ' B . t n., -!.. ; ft I ' 'v y I I v T'l AMORS' BOMBS AT MM. SET FIRE TO FEDERAL GUNBOAT Dynamite Bombs Cripple War Vessel and Rebels Pres Garrison of City Hard. REBELS WANT A GUNBOAT Border Offioer Sold TJp Aeroplane Propeller at . XI Taso as "Mani- ttoa of "Wax." Copyright by International News Service. Senor Emllio Rabasa. chairman of Huerta'g mediation committee, who arrived in Washington yesterday on the way to Niagara Falls, Canada, where they will meet the mediators representing , the United States. submit the president's message to the assembly and he Informed a commit tee from the two houses sent to confer with- him that he had no further busi ness to submit. Newspaper men. how ever, had supplied Senators Tierney and Helen Ring Robinson with copies of the president's telegram and the latter read It after a resolution to de mand that the governor submit the message and his reply had been de feated. Hot denunciation and defense of the governor consumed an hour be fore both houses adjourned. More Disorder P eared. Ail sorts of rumors were afloat to night, but none could be confirmed. One was iiat-President Wilson would give the governor 10 days In which to get ready to put militia back into the leld. It Is predicted generally that If federal troops are withdrawn and na tional guardsmen tnke charge, disor ders will be renewed. There is intense bitterness between the militia and strikers as the result of the battles of Liudlow and Walsenburg three weekn ago, and this will undoubtedly manifest itself In disturbances pos sibly exceeding anything that the strike baa yet produced. The federal troops have disarmed many strikers but it is generally be lieved hundreds of rifles have been burleH. These would be quickly recov ered should fighting be resumed. Jaeger Quality Silver 8 Teaspoons, 6 Dessert Spoons, 93.00 6 Tablespoons. 33.75 6 Soup Spoons, 93.75 3 Knives and 6 Forks, $10.00 The sterling silver finish, at one third the sterling price. Eviry PUc Guaranteed Jaeger Bros. 7; Quality Jeweler 266 Morrison Street Between Third and Fourth II 1 A MO ENTANGLING ALLIANCES FOR UNITED STATES Republican Returns In County of Multnomah Returns from J91 of the J2 pre cincts of Multnomah, county show the vote for the several state offices on the Republican ticket as follows: MEMBER NATIONAL COMMITTEE. Ackerson, Charles W 8274 Williams, Ralph E 14.321 CONGRESSMAN THIRD DISTRICT. Jacobson. Nelson R . 8ie Lafferty. A. W , U.ll McArtnur, C. N . 12,638 Shepherd. George 8 3107 GOVERNOR. Brownall. George C S26 Carter, William A 4872 L-rawtord, A. M 4030 Villa (Continued From Page One.) tain effervescence, I suprjose. which ought to be permitted by tbose who allow their hearts to speak in the celebration of the glory and majesty of their country. The country can have no glory or no majesty unless there be deep principle and conviction back of the enthusiasm. Patriotism la a principle, not a mere sentiment. 'We cannot form alliances vltb those who are not going our way, and in our might and majesty and in the certainty of our own purpose We need not and should not form alliances with any nation In the world. Those who are right, those who study their consciences in determining their pol icies, those who hold honor higher than their advantage, do not need alliances Weak When la the Wrong. "You need alliances when you are not strong and you aro weak only when you are not true to yourself. You are weak only when you are In the wrong; you are weak only wben you are afraid to do the right; you are weak only when you doubt your cause and the majesty of a nation's might asserted "It is my Infallible test of a genu ine American, that when ho votes, or when he acts or when he fights. his heart and his thoughts are no where but in the center of the emo tions and the purposes and the poli cies or the United States "An man who touches our honor Is our enemy. .Any man who stands in the way of that kind of progress which makes for human freedom cannot call himself our friend. Any man who does not feel behind him the whole push and rush and compulsion that filled mens' hearts in the time of the Revolution, Is no American. No man who thinks first Of himself and after ward of his country can call himself aa American. America must be en riched by us. We must not live on ber; sne must live oy means oi us. "I come, for one. to this shrine to renew the Impulses of American dem ocracy. I would be ashamed of my self If I went away from this place without realising again that every bit of selfishness must be purged from our policy; that every bit of self seek ing must be purged from our Individual consciences and that we must be great. If we would be great at all, in the light and Illumination of the example of men who gave everything that they had to the glory and honor of America." Monument Is TJaveiled. The monument to Commodore Barry was unveiled by bis great grand neice. Miss Elsie Hepburn of Philadelphia, in the presence of the entire memberahin of both houses of congress and a vast tnrong oi people. Secretary of the Navy Daniels pre sided over the ceremonies, which were preceded oy a parage of army and navy forces, and delegations from various Irish societies, which had been active in obtaining the monument to Commodore Barry. Brigadier General Albert Mills, U. S. A., acted aa grand marshal. A dramatic moment during the un veiling came when Miss Hepburn drew the cords releasing the flaga which draped the statue. The flags fell from the herolo bronze figure and a field battery thundered the commodore's salute of 11 guns.- while the marine band played softly the Star Spangled Banner. UlmlcK. flrant R oono - ' ---... 0V7 Geer, T. T. 2106 Johns. Charles A 2821 Moser. Gus C 7617 Withycombe, James 4401 JUSTICES OF SUPREME COURT. Bean, Henry J 11,296 Benson. Henry L, 16.378 Cleeton, T J 1S,006 D'Arcy. P. H 638$ R11.3! Lawrence T 12,966 McBrlde, Thomas A 16 649 McNary, Charles L. 11.839 Richardson, Samuel T (jll ATTORNEY GENERAL. Brown, George M 8197 Farln. George N 595s Grant. Frank S 10772 Johnson, J. J "' 9410 Lord, William P 4282 STATE ENGINEER. Lewis. John H 18 749 Stockman, L. R . LABOR COMMISSIONER. Bynon. Fred 8 . 44 Miller. M. E " RAILROAD COMMISSIONER. Miller, Frank J 16 437 Patton, Hal D 7898 REPUBLICAN WINNERS ON TICKET VOTED IN MULTNOMAH COUNTY (Continued From Page One.) By N. C. Parke. Juarez, Mexico, May 16. The federal gunboat Morelos has been set afire by dynamite bombs dropped by rebel avi ators In Masatlan harbor and badly damaged, according to a dispatch re ceived at constitutionalist headquarters tonight from General Obregon, com manding the rebel army on the west coast. With the gunboat in a crippled condition, Obregon reported that his forces are pressing the federal garri son hard. Constitutionalist officers declare they are without information regarding the result of the fighting north of Paredon, Coahulla, where a detachment of General Francisco Villa's army en gaged 500 federals. They likewise pro fessed to have no news of the move ment of the main body of Villa's troops, which Is believed tonight to be in posi tion to open the general assault on Sal tlllo. It was learned tonight that repre sentatives of General Carransa's gov ernment, now en route to Washington and New York to hurry shipment of ammunition to the constitutionalists, will renew recent efforts to buy a gun boat for use by the rebels. Several weeks ago rebel representatives went east on a similar mission, but negotia tions were dropped, pending the result of the Tampico campaign. Protest will be made against action of United States military authorities In El Paso, who tonight held up a box containing an aeroplane propeller, con signed to constitutionalist headquar ters here. The box was opened under the assumption' that It contained a ma chine gun. The American authorities held the propeller came under the term "munitions of war. General Carranza, who was at Du rango for several days, left this after noon for Sombrerete, Zacatecas, after reviewing several thousand school chil dren. While Carransa succeeded in conciliating to some extent the Arrieta brothers, who have been at odds with It was learned here on good au b remanded' back to prison, together with the other 19 men affected by the latest order. ' - Immediately after Judge Anderson imposed sentence originally six of the 89 convicted men were given their lib erty on suspended sentences. The oth e 88 went to prison. .An appeal was taken by 82. Herbert 8. Hockin, of De troit, preferring to serve his terra. In the course of 1918. while the men were out on bonds, two of them were paroled. This left 30 to be, disposed of by the court of appeals, ' Lewis County vjonventlon. Chehalis, Wash., May 16. The Lew is county Republican convention was called for Chehalis June 17 by the ex ecutive committee today at a meeting called by Chairman Albers. Nineteen delegates to the Tacoma convention will be chosen. Belgium commercial bodies are con templating the construction of a 824, 000,000 canal to give Antwerp more di rect connection with the river Rhine for .barge traffic. 0. A. C. OFFICIALS ARE PLEASED WITH If L "AT HOME" MUCH ANNUA High School Girls of Portland Entertained in Parlors of Hotel Portland, High school girls of Portland, mem bers of this year's graduating classes, were entertained at an "at home yes terday afternoon in the parlors of the Portland hotel by the Portland O. A. C club. The afternoon was for the pur pose of having the students meet femi nine members of the Oregon Agricul tural college faculty 'and hear from them why girls should go to college. It was an invitational affair and 300 young women were invited tb attend and from the way the biff rooms were crowded from. 3 to 6 o'clock, an over- helming majority of them were pres ent. Members of the O. A. C. faculty, by whom the local students were invited to meet, were Dr. Anna Z. Crayne, Mrs. Henrietta W. Calvin, Mrs. Helen B. Brooks. Mrs. Gertrude G. MoElfresh, Miss Ava B. Milam and Miss Grace Rosaaen. This was the second annual "at home" and its success yesterday de cided officials of the O. A. c. club, who arranged It, to hold another in 1916. The students were encouraged to at tend college, at the O. A. C. or any where else, just so they continue their education. Mrs. W. J. Kerr, wife of President Kerr, of the O. A. C; Mrs. Charles McKnight. Mrs. W. Y. Masters, Mrs. J. H. Gallagher. Mrs. A. C. Rockey. Mrs. James B. Kerr, Mrs. John Scott. Mrs. Robert French. Mrs. Eugene IS' Boyer. Mrs. C J. Smith and Mrs. Oe. wald W. Taylor acted as patronesses Father Carries Wounded Child Aberdeen. Wash.. May IS. Walking 18 miles during the night with hU 3 year old son on his back and taking a stage for another 18 miles early the following morning in order to reach Aberdeen to secure the services of a physician for the child, who had cut off the little finger of bis left hand with an; axe, was the experience oi R. E. Voorhees. a well known ranchet of the Upper Qutnault country. After, the accident the boy's mother tied the upper portion of the finger tightly to stay the flow of blood, and also Joined the finger as well as she could with a handkerchief wound around the almost severed portion. The little fellow slept most of the way on the trip. thorlty that the Arrietas will not com bine their forces In Durango state of 6C00 men with Villa's army in the com ing battle of Saltlllt, DYNAMITERS MUST GO TO PRISON INSIDE OF THREE WEEKS, ORDER (Continued From Page One.) and S. B. Cobb polled about the same number each. S. B. Cobb was eleventh and Oscar W. Horne was twelfth. The vote in the 288 precincts follows: County Commissioners. Conser. W. S 2 6R Driscoll. John tzoi nan, i.. v 7 010 Hohlt. C. W 6 SIS goibrook. Phuo : : :io;o57 Holman, Rufus C 8 714 Kreuder T. J ' l'ilA in various parts of the country, and subsequently several "open shop" iron works were blown up. During 1911 nearly 100 explosions occurred in vari ous parts of the country. The "dyna mite warfare" culminated with the blowing up of the Los Angeles Times building and the killing of 23 men. This was folowed by the arrest of John and James McNamara, officers of the International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers, and Ortie McManlgal, who confessed that he had been employed by the McNamara broth ers to blow up buildings constructed by "open shop" concerns. McManlgal became a government witness at his own request, and was granted immunity. The McNamara brothers were tried in Los Angeles. James was sentenced to life imprison ment and John to serve 14 years. Convicted of Conspiracy. On the testimony of McManlgal and a large number of other government witnesses, 39 men were convicted In the United States district court at In dianapolis for conspiracy to transport dynamite in violation of Interstate commerce regulations. Thirty-three of the convicted men entered the federal prison at Leaven worth, Kan., January 1, 1913. A few weeks later most 01 tnem were re- Or ton G. M 11071 leasee on bonds pending the outcome .10.977 .10,910 .10,339 .12,205 2,058 ..10.337 2,041 Schaefer, John B . Sheriff. Hurlburt, T. M Leonard, Archie F County tnirveyor. Bonser, R. C. , , Middlebrooks, E. A County Coroner. Dammasch, F. H Grant. Daniel . . . Slocum, Sam C Fat ton, H. M Judge District Court Department no, a. Appelgren, C. A. 4,725 Jones, Joseph H 11003 Stadter, E 0 7.66i Judge Dirt riot Court Department HO. 3. Dayton, Arthur C. . 12,210 O'Bryon. Li da M a vma Wilhelm, Frederick S ...1 8,160 Constable Portland District. Frlschkorn, Fred A 6 344 Ryan. Charles N 7.586 Weinberger, Andy 12.026 Circuit Judge Dept. sTo. a Brunswick, Adolph M 887 Gantenbein, C. U IX.khs Olson. Fred L 4.704 Stapleton, G. W 8.147 Senator Thirteenth District. Abbott, James D 11,450 Langguth, Arthur 12,941 Senator fourteenth District. Clackamas Columbia and Multnomah. Clemens, W. J , 8,257 McBrlde, Geo. M 15,188 Bepresentatlve 17th District. Clackamas and Multnomah. Hurlburt. C. M 16,923 Lofgren, David E 6.709 Bepresentatlve ISta District. Multnomah County. Barde, L. B Bates, Lloyd Beveridge, Jos. W Burley, R.M Cobb, S. B ; Darn all. H. A DeNeffe. Frederick M Fisher, Forrest S Gill. John GiU. R. W Greenman. Frank H. ...... . Hall. George A Horne, Oscar W.. Hume, Wilson T.. Huston, S. B T T -c tf UUCS, XX X1 . ..(... Kornegay, H. C. Kuehn, Louii 2,458 . of the petitions to the court of appeals. : This tribune of appeals affirmed the .14,734 ! judgment as to 24. The cases of six vi?re reversed, the government not op- pcslng new trials tor three. The defense followed this by taking the case to the united states supreme court on a petition for a writ of cer tiorari This was refused March 6. District Attorney Miller, of Indianap olis, then filed a petition In behalf of the government, asking that the orig inal Judgment in the case of Tveltmoe, Houlihan and Barnbardt be affirmed. A decision on that petition probably win De nanaed down Monday. Should the government's contention bo upheld, the three men probably will Jojttnal Want Ads bring results. 8,085 7,515 9,161 3,089 11.141 8.108 4.900 6.727 15.326 8.506 4,483 7,064 9.632 5,855 10,090 7,972 2.103 Ule .......11.932' Leet, Win. A. Lewis, D. C. LitUefield. E. y. Logan, Everett ...... Menzles, C M. ...... Olson. Conrad P. ..... Orton, A. W Richardson, Joseph G. Selling, Ben Smith. Andrew C. Southard. E. E Stott, Plowden Wentworth, Lloyd J. Willison, R. A. ...4.. wrignt, Robert G. Toumans, B. 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