lEA.r isl-' ' Ji'l -Alu'? ; - f 5 - - v AH Principal. Events of Week Briefly Sketched for' In formation of .Busy Readers General News. OLIVE day was celebrated at the Panama-California exposition and In San Diegro generally. Free ripe olives were distributed at the fair rounJsr-and on the city streets, and lectures on the food value of this Cali fornia producrt were delivered. Because he had amonsr his passen gers General La Vega and Major Adrian Menjes,of the Carranaa army, who re- i uscu io do put asnoreat san Bias, Cap- t tain: It. Praaier, of the Pacific Mail ' steamer City of Para, which arrived at Han i Francisco from South American and I -Mexican ports, decided to cut out San Bias from his ports of call. Oreat Britain vainly endeavored to obtain better treatment and education of Jews in RusNia. according to infor mation given out by the Berlin press bureau. The Russian minister of du ration informed the British ambassa dor that the czar did not wish the Jews In Russia educated, the statement as serts. : -A i California senate bill blacklisting Inebriates passed the house, and now Goes to the governor for final approval. The measure makes it an offense for a bartender to serve a drink to a person ; against whom some member of the. family decreed shall ride the."water wagon." , Fear of an epidemic of smallpox w aroused when It wais discovered that a Mexican wounded in the fighting at Matamoras and brought to Brownsville, Texas, was suffering from the disease. He was returned to the Mexican side of the border. Willard Wallace, San Francisco ban swindler, who was pronounced dead after swallowing poison in the city Jail at Boston, and who was later almost miraculously restored t life through the heart massage treatment, died three hours and 17 minutes-after the experi ment. " , . L ' Speakers of national' repute" partici pated in the deliberations of the world's social progress congress, which met i at Ban Francisco. Among the speakers were Chancellor David Starr Jordan, of Sanford university; .Presi dent Benjamin Ide Wheler, of Califor nia university; Congressman Richmond P. Hobson, of Alabama, and Bishop William M. Bell, of Los Angeles. Having brooded constantly over the death of her son, who was killed dur ing a hunting trip recently, Mrs. Ame lia Magemann, wealthy widow, ended her Jife in. her apartments at Santa Crux; Cal. The condition of Carl Busch, son of the late millionaire brewer of St. Louis, Who has been critically Hi for several weeks, remains unchanged. ! .Disappointed because she was un able to find a minister who would" per fornji a proxy marriage that would unit her with Captain Donald F. Ger ard, Vof the British army, Jean Shelby, an actress, of Oakland, Cal., planned to -go to sea In Police Judge Tappan's yacht and be married. Roy S. Tarp will iact as proxy. Miss Vivien Bronson, well known Alameda society girl, expressed much chagrin at Nlles, Cal., when she paid a fine of $25 for speeding. Her friend, Mrs.i W. P. Stone, of Oakland, was lead ing her by 10 feet when Motorcycle ; Policeman E. II. Sherman stopped her, thus preventing her from winning the :: race.: Oswego was gripped by a blizzard last Tuesday which blocked all traffic. The i thermometer dropped 16 degrees within an hour, and a wind, reaching a velocity of SO miles an hour, caused much . damage and suffering In the poorer section of the city The California state sedate passed a bill raising the minimum salaries of employes of the harbor commission to 190 a month. The assembly was taken up with the discussion of the amend ment forbidding the use of Paranzella aetsj ' - An extra session of the Japanese diet will open about May 20. according 10 a i statement issued at JNew York oy the East and West News Bureau. The government, which was supported by the Japanese people In the recent el ac tion, will move the passage of bills for extensive improvements In the army and I navy, and for subsidies for the merchant marine. Having crossed the continent incog nito in her private car, "Boston," Mrs. : Kdward H. Breltung, New Tork society woman, and mother of Mrs. Juliet Breitung-Kleist, whose chauffeur hus band sued Mr. and Mrs. Breltung for J250.000 heart balm after Mrs. Kleist bad left him, arrived in Los Angeles. Mrs. John P. Alt geld, widow of for- : mer Governor Altgeld, of Illinois, died at the home of her niece at Chicago. She had been an invalid for years. . Vice-President Thomas R. Marshall and i MrsV Marshall and Secretary and -Mrs. Roosevelt and party were escorted to the exposition grounds at San Diego ; by a naval and military parade. The pioneer spirit dominated the ded- ; lcation of the Panama-Paolf ic exposi tion at San Francisco of the "handsome Canadian Pac if ic railway building. The principal address was . delivered by George Ham, representing the presl-, dent of the C P. R. i- A I- stock company lost its entire wardrobe, and J35.0OO damage was done otherwise In a. fire which de stroyed the Majestic theatre, at Sieux Falls. S. D. To determine whether the Red Stack tug Sea Rover would be violating neu trality laws of the United States in salvaging the Japanese cruiser A gam a, .wrecked off Turtle Bay, on the west coast of Mexico. Collector of the Port J. Q. Davis wired Secretary of State Bryan full particulars of the Sea, Rover's trip from San Francisco. Four cruisers and three colliers are standing by the Japanese v warship Asama, ashore at the mouth of Turtle Bay, on the Mexican coast, seconding to Captain F. K. Frazier, of the steam ship City of Para, which passed the vessels on March 27. A municipal "twilight sleep' - hos pltal for wives of laboring men or low salaried clerks may bear their children In as much comfort and with as little danger as the wives of Jther rich, is the Utopian dream for Los Angeles of Dr. Arthur D. Houghton, eminent local physician. Divorce looms as the handwriting on the wall at the home of Gertrude Boyle Kanno, of San Francisco, the Califor nia sculptress, who has filed In the secret files of local courts a suit for legal separation from Takeshi Kanno, Japanese poet and philosopher. Vice-President Marshall earned a dollar by serving as an extra camera man at a motion picture studio at Los Angeles. While being photographed by news papermen on the front steps of the Ho tel Maryland, Mrs. Thomas R. Mar shall, wife of the vice president of the United States, missed her footing and fell several feet. Cawston ostrich farm at Los Angeles named a weeks old ostrich "Vice Presi dent Marshall" in honor of the vice president, The farm people may even give the bird to the vice president, they say. Praises of President Wiledn were sung, literally and figuratively, as the feature of the dedication of the Panama-Pacific exposition of the New Jersey building,. During the temporary absence of her nurse, Mrs. A. McLaughlin of San Francisco, 60, leaped from the third floor of her home and was almost in stantly killed. She had been ill for many months. Executive, SECRKTARY OF THE NAVY DAN IELS issued a statement declaring that the navy department is con vinced that everything possible Is be ing done with the means at hand to re cover the foundered submarine F-4 from the harbor of Honolulu. Attempts to raise the submarine F-4, submerged In nearly 40 fathoms of water at the entrance of Honolulu harbor were suspended. The cables chains and tackles avilable for use by the vessels engaged in the salvage work proved to be Inadequate. A bait was called in the work while Rear Ad miral Moore and engineers directing the operations held a conference. Secretary of State Bryan announced that the negotiations over the murder of John B. McManus by Zapatistas at Mexico City recently had been success fully terminated by the payment to McManus' widow of 160,000 pesos. President' Wilson accepted ah Invita tion to deliver the principal Memorial day address at Arlington, May SO, in connection with the exercises of the Grand Army of the Republic. . Technical questions regarding ; the ownership of the cargo of the Ameri can vessel, William P. Frye, which was sunk by the German raider, Eltel Friedrich, are delaying the American note of protest to Germany over the Frye a destruction. President Wilson told callers, Secretary Roosevelt announced that the fleet coming up the Pacific coast in July, via the - Panama canal, will stay in the Pacific six months. Secre tary Daniels, he said, will accompany the fleet, s . , Legal and Criminal i CAPTAIN OF INSPECTORS LOU I . AGNEW. of the Oakland Police. left for Calexico. Imperial-valley In search of Claude Young, said in a letter left by Mrs. Jane Riley, who killed herself whet her sister, Mrs. M. Fulton, died of. tuberculosis in Oakland, to have stolen diamonds valued at $7000 from Mrs. Fulton. Entering a Richland avenue street car, t Sans Franclsc at the terminal sK Nr frc- - , - 'v.v 'will T"": ? - n at Richland avenue and Andover street, a youthful bandit held up Conductor A-. R. Chase at the point of a revolver and robbed him of $1.60. A charge of operating a confidence game against George Webster was dis missed at Chicago,- so that Webster could be turned ever to the federal au thorities. Webster, alias Wakefield, is suspected- of being -a member of- the gang which robbed, the branch Bank of Montreal at New Westminster, B. C, September 15, 1911, of $317,000. Charging a $4550 forgery, a warrant was Issued, at San Francisco for F. II. Conard, identity and present where abouts unknown, who swindled the Union Trust company out of that amount. It was the most successful forgery since the operations of - the Becker-Creegan gang. 20 years ago. An unidentified Chinaman was shot and killed at the corner of Powell and Vallejo streets, San Francisco, mark ing the opening of the tong war in Chinatown. Henry . Foote, an Ameri canized Chinese, was arrested., An unidentified man shot and killed Mrs. Louise Dooelman, In Boyle Heights, a suburb of Los Angeles, then turned the revolver upon himself and committed suicide. Mrs. Dooeiman's 6-year-old daughter, Sophie, was the only witness. F. N. Meek, a Beaumont, Cal., ranch er, discovered a new way to keep a servant girl, and he is now held under $5000 bond. Mrs. Rosie Whitlock, the complainant, told Judge Ellis that Meek has been in the habit of handcuf fing her and then chaining her in his house when he leaves his home In the mornings. Oil lands In Kern county, California, from which operators already have tak en out $600,000 in products, according to the government's claim, are sought to be recovered by the United States, in a suit filed in the district court by the United States against the Union Oil Co, Midlands Oil Fields company and 20 other defendants. The $500,000 estate of Jacob and Eliza Vogel, whom Alfred Sells mur dered in their Fruit vale home on the night of February 11, was brought into probate court In Oakland by Herbert E. Vogel, one of the sons, who filed a petition for letters of administration. Alvah Ross, of Los Angeles, was granted a divorce from Mrs. Ross and given custody of their child.- Mrs. Ross gets $10,000 alimony. Judge Mon roe said he believed the story that Mrs. Ross kept a secret tryst with J. B. Wll braham, prominent San Diego man, at a Loa Angeles hotel. . . Alleging that his wife .called him a "piker" and. a '"human octopus," Elmer H. McConkey, Insurance broker, fried suit for divorce for a second timcT at San Francisco. Mrs. Anetta P. Hicks, of. Los An geles, who her husband said refused an offer of $16 for a kiss, was granted a divorce from : John W. Hicks on a charge of non-support. One of the first of a series of Social istic measures to come up .before the California house was defeated when the assembly refused to submit to the voters of the state a proposed consti tutional amendment which' would take away from the courts the power of de claring unconstitutional laws passed by the legislature or adopted by the peo ple at initiative elections. The California senate defeated the Ballard bill, which would give to eacr defendant, wheir mere than one are oi trial, as many peremptory challenges as in the event of a single defendant and still confine the prosecution to its four challenges. Five indictments for alleged con spiracy were threatened at New. York, as a result of the statement made by Miss Rae Tanxef, in which she exoner ated Jamea W. Osborne, former assist ant district attorney, of charges that he had wronged her. Miss Tanser had brought suit for $60,000 against Os borne for alleged breach of promise, to marry. Federal indictments will be asked at New York en charges of conspiracy and fraudulent use of the mails against Miss Rae Tanser. The woman recently filed suit forf 50.000 for aliased breach Top, left to right The staff of the Tenth Reserve Corps photographed at the German headquarters near Rhelma. General von Eben, corps commander, Is In the. center. Crowds assembling for the dedication of the Danish pavilion at the Pan Jlna-Pacific International Exposition. Bottom,-left to'rigbt Houston B. Teehee, the new register of the Treasury, who is five-eighths Indian; Samuel Lyle Rogers of Franklin, NY C., the new director of the census, succeeding William J. Harris, who now is a member of the Federal Trade Commission; Crews of the British ships Headland and Indian City being towed in their boats by a lug off the Scilly Islands, where both vessels were torpedoed by the German submarine T-2 9; scene at the laying of the cornerstone for the American Red Cross building in Washington, D. C. President Wilson anrfcex-President Taft are seen in the background. ' of promise to marry against James W. i Osborne, former assistant district at- i torney, but later withdrew the suit. Led by Inspector Home, a score or -more of witnesses whom Chief of Po- i lice Sebastian of Los Angeles desires ; to have the grand jury hear before voting on the charges made against him by two young women, will march from the central police station to the door of the grand jury room and de-: mand that they be hear.dl" Two claims, one for $1600 and the other $100, were awarded against the Lincoln Beachey estate by Superior Judge Graham at San Francisco. Wil liam H. Pickens, associated with Beachey In the Lincoln Beachey cor poration, asked $2920 for a fourth in terest in motor equipment. He was awarded $1600. Driven to the verge of insanity by homesickness and reports that Italy was about to plunge into the European war, Enrico Biancho, 23, became des perate and created such a disturbance in his lodgings that a ponce riot can was sent to headquarters, at Los An geles. ' Because her love for her Doy sweet heart was greater than her courage" to live apart from him. Oeneirieve ti. Sweeney, aged 21r divoicea, and the mother of two children, sent a bullet through the brain of Hubbard Fugua, and then ended her own, near Parker, Cal. Port Surveyor Warden at ban Fran cisco announced that his department was in possession of facts indicating that scores of Greek laborers there and in Oakland belong to an organiza tion which is engaged in smuggling opium from Mexican and other lower west coast ports. Stiff sentences - were imposed on four white slavers of Peoria, 111. Jo seph Maloof, leader of the quartet, was given 10 years in the federal prison at Leavenworth. Kansas. All four pleaded guilty. The other three escaped with slightly less severe punishment. A lively race is on oetween v-a.ni.ur-nla sheriffs and detectives and three of the shrewdest detectives in the Ca nadian service, to see who can capture Frederick H. ' Jones, alias J v. J. White, and therefore claim the $500 reward offered in Canada. Jones is wanted on a charge of embezzling $11,000 at Conquest. Hard times claimed .another victim in Edward Rox of Los Angeles. 29. a chauffeur, who was found dead in his room with a poisort bottle in his hand. His landlady said that he baa been unable to find work. European War. THE crew of the British steamship Crown of Castilla, which was sunk by a German submarine off the Scilly islands, landed at Bary. Every member of the crew was saved. - The Dutch steamer Amstel has been torpedoed and sunk off Flamborough, the British admiralty announced. The crew of the vessel was landed at Hum ber. An organized campaign of misrepre sentation of the position of Germany and Austria in the hope ef participat ing an Austro-Italian crisis is charged by German correspondents in Italy in dispatches received at isernn. r . - After being at white heat for morel than a week, public opinion aroused j bv the German submarine attacks upon Dutch shipping finally cooled. This U due to reoort to the marine au - thorltles disproving the charge that a German trawler fired on the steamer Macklenburg. and other Information that reports of alleged German "out rages" had been exaggerated. Dispatches- from the Dardanelles as serted that English reports of bom bardment of the Turkish forts had been resumed and allies had landed ex peditionary forces, were untrue. Commenting on the attack on the Dardanelles, a former Dutch minister has written the Amsterdam Vaderland that the capture of Constantinople by the allies would be a misfortune, as disputes over it would keep Europe Involved in war for many years. The forces of Prince Joachim in the east are declared to continue to make progress to Heydekrugeward. Taurog gen captured by the. prince's army, suf fered severely from shells before be ing occupied. Germany loses Aus, an important trading station in German West Af rica, with the occupation of the pjace by Union of South Africa troops, says ; a report from London. luuivcr Ul VVDSCIB VL lilV fleet are keeping up bombardment X)f the Dardanelles fortifications In order to protect mine sweepers and prevent the Turks from repairing their bat teries. The war office at Vienna declares that the open town of Orzeva having been bombarded the Austrian troops replied by attacking Belgrade. - Germany has taken steps to protect the fodder supplies and keep prices from rising too high. Aviation Lieutenant Garos of the French armed corps brought down a German aeroplane by a machine gun fire. " Germany threatens to make reprisals on Great Britain because of treatment accorded prisoners taken off captured or . destroyed German submarines. Statement was made to United States. German submarines have sunk four more ships, one of them flying a neu-. tral flag. A Norwegian bark was tor pedoed in the North sea. Russian ambassador is quoted as saying that Russia will never make peace with Turkey. Mexican Situation A S THE result of military condl 1 tions, flour is almost an unknown. quantity in the Pacific coast towns of Mexico and only . corn bread is obtainable In .Mazatlan. San Bias, Salina Crux and ' Manzanlllo, accord ing to voyagers who returned from the south. That hundreds of men, women and children are fleeing at the point of bayonets into the Yucatan district of Mexico was the announcement made by F. W. - Blake, general manager of the United Railways of Yucatan, upon his arrival at Mobile, Ala., on the steamship St, Paul. . , General Francisco Villa has started south to direct an attack against Gen' eral Obregoq, ithe Carnrhslsta com mander, now reported threatening Mexico City, according, to advices re ceived at Washington from American Agent Carothers. General Villa, the dispatch said, started south from Torreon. . Will Change Song Tone. Berlin, April 3. In line with the I increasingly popular efforts to change J the tune of the patriotic song "Hell Dir Jn Siegerkranz" which at present M is the same as "God Save the King" and "America"-a concert- is planned at which the hymn will be sung to an entirely new melody. rhe new mu sic has been written by Paul' Weinrich, who Is the latest to attempt the re form. " FROM THE DALLES TO . THE CASCADES OF THE, COLUMBIA BY BOAT (Continued From Proceeding Page.) its Commercial club. Near White Sal mon empties the river of the same name, now used by the Northwestern Electric company in developing power for sale In Portland. On the opposite shore is the mouth of Hood river, and above ' its bluffs stands the town of Hood River. The river's name was not always as now. Pioneers called it Dog river, you are already thinking of the wonderful ap ples, not golden like those of the gar den of Hesperides, but gold producing. You are thinking of blossom" time when the valley, with Its drifts of petals, is more of a fairyland than . Japan when the cherries are a-bloom. You are seeing in fancy the stately forms of Mount Hood in the south and Mount Adams to the north, views that when seen may never be forgotten. Underwood, exactly at the mouth of the White Salmon is on the starboard bow. Idlewild Falls, which drops over a cliff 200 feet high is to be seen be fore the high cliffs of the gorge-obscured view of the snow peaks. Not far below Is Owl Rock, so much resembling the soft winged bird of night that some of the travelers look for signs of life. Shellrock mountain, on the port bow, as, Captain Smith phrases it. is a talus slope about 2000 feet high, which con tinually chatters pebbles and bouloers down upon the railroad track. This point offers one of the most difficult of the engineering problems encount ered in building the Columbia highway. At the base of this mountain are gla cial formations coming to within two feet. of. the surface of the ground. Any navigator could tell you, and perhaps with some profaneness, why they call. that rounded point which we now see on the Washington shore. Wind Mountain. He would say that it is the nesting place of all the winds of heaven. The gusts come from every Society Women Use New . Wrinkle Remover Since the discovery that a solution of ordinary saxollte and witeh hazel haic - a oecullar effect utran wrinkled skins, it has been learned that many srominent society women all over the country i have used this simple ' heme treatment witn great; success. ine formula is: powdered saxollte, ne ounce, dissolved in witch hazel, one- nair pint. : use aaiiy as a wasm lotion. The beneficial action of this wash is leu at once, l nere s an agreeaoie re freshing sensation and feeling of ex nilaration. The skin soon becomes firmer and more youthful 'looking, flabbiness and alt wrinkles are imme diately affected. No one need hesi tate to get the ingredients at the dm store and make the remedy herself, for there are no harmful . effects what ever. - CAdv.) - j0 ..! direction. They never cease to blow, i and the boatmen say, "When the wind is not blowing from some direction it is still blowing." ' Wind Mountain is probably 2250 feet above the river. Near Its summit are rock formations that resemble huge fortifications which are celebrated In Indian legends. At the base of this mountain and in the water, to be seen far down, is the sunken forest of the Columbia. 1 . "This forest is found on both banks of the river extending towards the cen ter as far as can be observed," de scribes Captain Smith. "Immense trees, duplicates of the giants growing on the banks, stand silent witnesses of some vast convulsion of the past. The forest extends'for miles along the river. It is of the greatest interest of scien tists and laymen. It tells the story of another day. Some claim It bears out the theory that once the Bridge-of the Gods actually spanned the river, and its fall hurled these giants to the river bed. Others believe the sunken forest to have been moved bodily to Jts pres ent position by some giant slip" of the mountains, while still others, think there may have been a slide which choked the river and caused the water to riset up amOung the trees." - V We are told of the curative powers of Collins and Carson hot springs as we pass them. We look upon the tall cotton wood trees where in 1856, Chief Chenowlth and eight of his braves were hanged because they attacked and mur dered 16 whites. and wounded 11 oth ers. When Chief Chenowlth was ex ecuted, it is related, the drop- was not enough to kill him, and one of his ex ecutioners fired a bullet Into his brain. He died murmuring, "Wake nika kwass copa nemaloose," "I am not afraid to die." The whistles of the steamers are blowing. We hear the roar of the Cas cades of the Columbia.. The boats are signaling the locks. We will ' pass through Cascade Locks, and, next Sun. day, we will continue the trip through the gorge toward the broad valley. St. Paul School Is . Filled With Twins Teachers Cast Hardly Tell Them Apart to Give Froper Credit for Beading and Ciphering:. - - St. Paul, April 3. Distracted pa rents of twin children often complain of their trouble In identifying them at critical moments, but at the Hill grade school is .a teacher who has a far greater . task" than these parents. -Miss Florence Tucker of the A t first grade nas three sets of twin boy In her room, and it requires the utmost concentration on her part to see that credit for reading or "numbers" Is bestowed , on the right brother when she makes up her report. , This unusual aggregation of twins is made up of Francis and Frederick Reardon, each V years - old; Thomas and Charles McMiirray, e years old, and Robert and Russell Loom is, '7 years old. - - . "Our school is filled with twins this year,' said Mrs. H. G. McGee. nrinci pal of the Hill school, in furnishing the further information that there are a boy and. girl, twins, In the second grade and twin girls in the A seventh room. , Enthusiastic supporters of the HU1 school baseball team are looking for ward to the time when the eight littl brothers now In the first grade will, with one other-boy, make up the Hill nine. Declares Germany Instigated Ohm n Tokio, April 3. The Owaka JijS has published an interview with Pre mier Count Oku ma, during whlf-h , tli Japanese statesman, said he expected good results from ' the negotiation:. going on at the. presenj time wito China. ... . The premier said, among other things, that Germany was instigating China against Japan, but that t! result would be futile. He said ti nt If Russia secured CriBtanUrioPi It. was his opinion that-fthe would content to abandon her Ideas of ob taining an outlet in the orient. The premier spoke strongly of li" changed attitude In the Untied Kt 1 1 . toward Japan. lie said these rela tions were becoming very friendly, and that they were especially goo.i at the present moment. Hair Tinting a a - i The Absolute and Utter Harmlessne- -, of "Brownatone" Has Made Hair Tinting Safe and Easy. ..... i . You need not tolerate gray, streak"! or faded hair, another day. It tak-1 but few moments to apply "Browna tone" with your toml or brush, enl Just'a little "tooth ing up" once a month should key your hair the beau tiful shade you m . desire. Result always the same alwu pleasing. Will not rub wssh off and p . -anteed to nm.n : V none of the din Mm t. . - iJ Prepared In t . i V shade. One to " duce golden or u dium brown, the other, dark bio . or black Sample and booklet sent on rea of 10c. i "Brownatone" is sold. , leading drug stores, in two slzn . and 31.00. Order direft from Kcn' Phtrmncal Co., 681 E. Pike stnt. ; ington. Ky.. If your druggist v.-ill t supply you. You will nave yourr much annoyame by refusing to cept a bUtostitute. Insist on Brownatone" at o hairdresser's. For Sale by THE OWL DRUG CO. 20 Stores on the Pacific Coast. (A... t