8 - :vhb ; Oregon: daily Journal; Portland,- monday. January 15; 1917. M1LVAUKEE-STARTS- HOPE OF BREAKING UF SALVAGING VANISHES Efforts to Be Bent Toward t'. r Saving of Moveable Valu ' ables Aboard Cruiser, TRESTLE MAY BE BUILT - JUst to iMwtrd lm tnemiisf Feresp- tlMr, Bwy X.arr WaTa Uftls tka T Warship Blfhar Onto the Bud. Eureka. Cal.. Jan. 15. (U. P.) 'Hope of floating the cruiser Milwau kee, aground In the surf near Samoa r- wbji virtually abandoned today. Although the eliip has- been on the ands only 48 hours, she is Degmning -to. break up. With Lieutenant W. F. - Newton, an expert engineer made a Visit to the stranded cruiser and pe.ne- trated all sections of the vessel. They 'returned with the message that there was no possibility of gttung tne cruis er off. The iua valves are already , breaking open and other sections of the " Jiull are falling away under the ter rific battering to which the Milwaukee lias been subjected. ir The rommandinEr officers today a -ntnH tlirlr thoughts to saving the valimblr-K aboard, especially the ord f tiance. machinery and jthcr movable onnlnment. It Is reported a trestle will he built from the beach, 400 feet in the cruiser's deck. Over this the fuim ammunition and other valu Hhi will be brought to safety. If there la let time. The Milwaukee's list to seaward Is J Increasing perceptibly. Every big wave that smashes her lifts the hull .-liifher on the sand. The fact that 4 - una la lying broadside to the sea. It Is , (said. Increases the possibility that ahe . ' way turn over. I igj The coast guard ahlp McCulloch Is on the scene, and her men are assist- Jng In such salvage work as can be i'-Attempted. Tho McCulloch is also caring for members of tho Milwaukee's crew. Admiral Caperton. commanding the jPaclfc fleet, is expected to arrive here "4 , eometlme today, on board the cruiser San Diego. i Waves Drive Craft 20 Yards. - Kureka, Cal., Jan. 15. (P. N. S.) "With her bow burled deeper In anl and carrying a list of approxi- WHITE SLAVE CONVICTION UPHELD IN HIGH COURT iff ii . I IT : vs..- ip4C . V...v. CssV - i -topi i- 1 i :f- r-s 1 1 1 1 I K'1v- tL-yjJ III i 4iT c I under- the question of tbV conatltu tlonallty of the Mann act. 1 Ooaiarolal nomas gUmtaaf a. (Today's decision that a "commercial clement does not nave to be present I nnder tne Mann act applies directly to iue Lrigga-,amineici case. . -Since his conviction Dlggs has been divorced by his Wife and married Mar sha Warrington. They have a chill tfnd are living In Oakland. Efforts to reach Dlggs at his home immediately after the decision was an nounced failed. He was away xroi home and had not yet been the spureme court's ruling. United States District Attorney Pres ton said that a warrant providing for the commitment of Dlggs and Caml netti would be issued and handed ta the United States marshal as soon as the high court's ruling could be for- imally certified. Man and Near Bride Asleep in the Gas Seattle, "Wash., Jan. IE. (U. P.) Police deteetives are investigating I wiim mey oeiieve was bji aueinpi iu i murder William Colberg, 38. a long 1 shoreman, and the girl he intends to marry this week. Mamie Watson, Z8, who were found unconscicus in a room here Sunday noon with a gas jet open. They were revived with pulmotors and hospital attendants today say they will recover. Mamie Watson told the police an- other woman, who was their enemy, j had entered the room with some milk to drink. That was the last thing she remembered before losing consciousness. MUCH OREGON GIVES GETS LITTLE BACK OF RECLAMATION FUNDS apprised ot, ony jwo states Pay More '' 1 Hi- r i ll iei mne neceive more in Way of Investments, NORTH DAKOTA SADDEST Has Contzlbnted $12,115,000 and -celved Bat $1,973,000 Oregon Ome of States to aire store Tnam Becelved. having contributed $UJ7.000 and re ceived $U.J17.000. Kansas has paid 1.005,000 and re ceived t7.000, and South Dakota has paid I7.2S2.000, receiving $2,284.00. On the other side of the list. It states have received more than they hav contributed, including Montana, which, as shown above, is only slight ly ahead. arlsosa, Idaho rortoaate. Arizona and Idaho must be "counted as the most fortunate in recelv'ng much for little. The former has ra!d in $1,430,000. and has led all the rest .n the aggregate expenditures within its borders, amounting to 817.SfJ.O00 Idaho has paid In t5.S80.000. and has received 816.S72.000 for Its projects. Other states on the winning side of the ledger are Colorado, with 17.763.- 000 paid and $8,854,000 received; Ne braska with 8l.8S8.000 paid and $4, 797,000 received; Nevada with $.- 000 paid and $5.78,000 received; Nw Mexico with 84,521.000 paid and $ .- 681.000 recelvel; Utah with $3,108.00) raid and $3,095,000 received; Wash ington with $6,933,000 paid and $. 054,000 received, and Wyoming wltn it. 985,000 paid and $6.3(7,000 fe ed ved. proportion of the land was paying con strue uon cnarges. i nese cnarges. ll will be remembered, have been spree 1 ever 20 years. Instead of the ten years contemplated in the original act. Another difficulty now arising; Js the provision in the act. authorising A $20.000,ooe bond issue, which re quired repayments on these bonds from the reclamation fund to the ex tent of one-half Its receipts at the and of a stated time. - Congress iy Ala. Marshf ield Women Walk in a Circle Washington. Jan. 15. (WASHING TON BCRKAU OF THE JOURNAL) Only two states have paid more money into the reclamation fund than Ore gon. Nine states have received more money back, in the way of investment in reclamation projects, than has Oregon. Putting It another way, Oregon Is one of six states that have contributed more than they have received. It is neither the most nor the least for tunate of these six sisters from which money deceived from sales of public i land have gone to the development of projects in other states. The figures used are from the latest report of the reclamation service. Just available, showing conditions to the end of the last fiscal year. Worth Dakota Ctave atuch. Texas Stands Alone. Texas "stands in a class by lte'.f be It has no public lands, but has re clamation projects. More than $2.- .'00.000 has been invested there since the reclamation policy began. The estimated cost for all the pro Jects In the United States on which work has begun is $174,844,000. The I total construction cost to June 20 list was $109,885,000, leaving about $65-t-00.000 required for completion. The work is progressing at the rate of $6,000,000 to IK. 000, 000 a year. Officials Save Hopes. Reclamation service officials rely on a largely Increased acreage brought Into cultivation to make a more favorable 3howing on the reim bursement side within the next few years. Recent years, they say. have i been the hard ones, because so much smaii This time will arrive next year, and congress this year la asked to ameni the bond repayment plan, which would seriously cripple the reclamation fund if left unchanged. In the sundry civil bill which will later be reported it Is planned to carry a provision allowing repayment of the bonds at the rate of $1,000,000 a year, Beginning in ize. ims wui give the reclamation fund a chance to fatten before the payment of the bond loan begins. In some quarters there Is disquie tude over the possible effect of the new 640-acre grazing homestead law tn public lands receipts, which form about half the present Increment of the reclamation fund. Th graxlnir homestead bill requires no pay men for the land, but only a requlremen for improvement. This law will effect the reclamation fund In that the latter will lobe ray merits on whatever lands are entered under it, if such lands are of such cnaracier inn eairy migni nave been expected under the general or enlarged homestead act. Some think this !o84 will be large, others believe it w U be small. Dr. Erich Zoepffel is in No Hurry Seattle. Wash.. Jn . ii (V T Dr. Erich Zoeuffcl will -not Seattle to relieve Frana Bopp as Ger man consul general tn San Francisco until, he has personally, turned over affairs of his orfio tn Dr. liana Ohrt. his successor, from Cincinnati. "Dr. Ohrt will probably arrive here some time during 1 h. lttr iart of 8a,d l,r Zoepffel today. Ill not leave Seattle before seeing hint. Reward! A REWARD of $500 is hereby of fered for the arrest and conlction or for any information which will lead to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons guiltv of having killed Ixu Sun at In tailoring estab lishment at 91 North Second street. This money will be pal l by his rela tives through the mrrchandis house of either Yea Wh. '".4 KwoniJ street, or bv Kwong Shew King. 91 North Fourth street. CHUNG KINO JOHV. Gq INT HIW3 j- vjBcrcviwb S. Drew Caminetti (left) and Man ry Dlggs, sons of prominent Call- , fornla citizens. inately 40 degrees, the United States .. cruiser Milwaukee lies 20 yards close ' v Inshore today on the Samoa beach where she was wrecked Saturday morning while endeavoring to saive the stranded submarine H-.1. . Members of the Milwaukee's crew made six trips to the cruiser yester day in a siftall boat. On one re- turn trip, Paymaster Ray Spears .' brought ashore $85,000 which va .-? transferred to the monitor Cheyenne. Sr Valuables belonging to officers and some of the seamen's effects were ' ulso landed on the beach safely. . " Lieutenant William Davis, who came to Eureka as on advisory officer In connection with the H-3, and Lleuten ant Howe, commander of the Chey enne, forwarded recommendations to Washington regarding salvaging op erations. Neither officer would C- , vulge the nature of their recommenda tions. rents near Eureka, Cal., was held re sponsible today in official circles for the stranding and probable loss of the United States cruiser Milwaukee. The neighborhood has long been known as the "uraveyard of the Pacific," be cause of the large number of vessels that had been lost there. It is said that the failure of con gress to appropriate enough money for charting Is responsible, as only $6500 the is at present available for this use on all the coasts of the United States. The new appropriation will be only $11,000. Inadequate Charting Cause. "Washington, Jan. 15. tl. N. S.) Inadequate charting of the local cur- MANN LAW IS UPHELD BY U. S. HIGHEST COURT (Continued From Page Oae. was chief counsel for the defense in the supreme court hearing, with As sistant Attorney General Wallace act ing' for the government. DoEens of convictions under the Mann law hinged on today's decision. With the Mann law applying only to commercial vice, it would be Impos sible to obtain a conviction if a man transported a woman across a state line for immoral purposes, unless a" money consideration was proved. Justice Day read the opinion. "There is no ambiguity In the law," he said. "It covers transportation of a woman for immoral purposes, in- ll Lowest Rates on Foreign Exchange Merchants engaged in trade relations with foreign countries will find it to their advan tage to avail themselves of the un excelled facilities offered by our Foreign Exc LUMBERMENS Department hange National Bank Fifth and Stark Capital and Surplus, $1,200,000 eluding purposes of debauchery. The ; plain terms of the act must prevail. ; "Congress plainly has the power to , regelate the transportation of passen gers In interstate commerce, and so to forbid the transportation of women for immoral purposes. Interpretation Is Explained. j "Statutory words," Justice Day held, "are uniformly presumed, unless the contrary appears, to be used in their ordinary and usual sense and with the meaning commonly attributed to them.- "To cause a woman or girl to be transported for the purpose of de bauchery, and for an immoral pur pose, to wit: Becoming a concubine or mistress, for which Caminetti and Dlggs were ccjnvlcted; or to transport an unmarried woman under 18 years old with the intent to Induce her to engage in prostitution, debauchery and immoral practices, for which Hayes was convicted, would seem, by the very statement of facta, to em brace transportation for purposes de nounced by the act, and therefore fair ly within its meaning." Of the plea of the defense that the law opens the doors to blackmailer's, he said: "The fact, if it be m, that the act as it is written opens the doors to blackmailing operations on a large scale, is no reason why the courts should refuse to enforce it according to its terms, if within the constitu tional authority of congress. Amendments May Be Made. Such considerations are more ap propriately left to the legislative branch of the government, which alone had authority to enact and may. u it sees rit, amend the law. In the dissenting opinion, written by Justice McKenna and concurred In by Chief Justice White and Justice Clarke, it was argued. that it is nat ural always to resort for explanation or a law to its first words. The transportation made unlawful, it was said, was or a "woman or girl to be come a prostitute or to give herself up to debauchery or to engage in any omer immoral practice. The intent of the white slave law. the dissenting Justices held, is to sup press "the -white slave traffic, com mercial vice or immorality havlnc a mercenary purpose." That Representative Mann, in writ. lng the law, said there was no inten tion to Interfere with the police powers of the states, was another reason for holding the law was not Intended to cover non-commercial vice. The result," the opinion summed up, is grave and should give us pause.' Marshfield. Or., Jan. II. Dora Brown, a school teacher in the Golden Falls district above Allegany, and Miss Wilkinson, a resident of that neigh borhood, were lost In the woods from Saturday afternoon until four o'clock Sunday morning, when they were found by a posse, composed of the entire countryside, after Miss Wilkin son had discharged her rifle as a aig- Inai. Despite the severely cold weather, the young women did not suffer mcch. They gave up wandering at dark. . and walked In a circle to keep their blood In circulation. A Oerman automobile tmllder is ex perimenting with hammock seats, sus pended from steel spring frames, which he claims are the easiest riding seats yet developed. see North Dakota has been the chief contributor to the reclamation fund, j rr.oney lias gone In and such its public land sales aggregating iz. 115.000 since the reclamation fund was established. There has been expended in that state only $1,973,000, a fact calculated to make North Dakota feel much sadder than Oregonians when they contemplate what has gone Into other states. Oklahoma Is another state where a still sadder tale may be told, with $5, $50,000 paid In and $79,000 expended on Oklahoma projects. California, too. has paid in $(.112,000. and only $2, 780,000 has been expended there. Oregon Gave f 10,83,000. Oregon's contributions have amounted to $10,836,000, while the Investment In Oregon projects totals $4,102,000. Mon tana, the only state besides North Da kota that has paid a larger sum into the fund, is a little ahead of the game. Alleged Dynamiters Held. Haskell. Texas. Jen. 15. (I. X. S.) Three young men, members of prom inent families, have confessed to set ting off charges or dynamite undr five negroes' houses here two weeks ago. according to county- officers. Tin dynamltlngs caused an exodus of ne groes from this county. Many hav returned. HOTELS Business Getting Business Cards 75c This is ta sest bargalm we bw mt offered ta a rood, heary, wU-sTlatd Card, We do aU klads of Printing at Cut Prices ROSE CITY PRINTERY ZSSTEL ViST1- Oat la the Kig-ht Place. Be Store o Sorry. lis tltie War Approaching- a Climax? EXCURSION RATES EAST January 20 and 21 NORTHERN PACIFIC RY. The Yellowstone Park Line To ST. PAUL and return $60.00 To MINNEAPOLIS and return $60.00 To C H I C A G O and return $72.50 To S T. L O U I S and return $70.00 Return limit February 18. Stopovers permitted in both directions. Take advantage of these fares to St. Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago and St. Louis and points East. Ask about the diverse return routes. Full Information, Tickets Berth Reservations City Ticket Office, 255 Morrison St. Phones Main 244, A-1244. A. D. Charlton, A. C. P. A. Portland, Oregon. DIGGS AND CAMINETTI MUST SERVEJERMS IN PRISON; DIGGS MARRIED San Francisco, Jan. 15. (TJ. P.) Maury I. Dlggs and F. Drew Caminetti must serve terms in the federal prison for taking Lola Norris and Marsha Warrington to Reno, Nev In March. 191S. Their four-year fight for freedom ended today when the United States su preme court affirmed their conviction In lower courts under the Mann white slave act. Diggs must serve two years and pay a fine of S2000. Caminetti must serve 18 months and pay a $1600 fine. Both Diggs and Caminetti were mar ried and the fathers of children when they were arrested. Their prominence caused the case to attract widespread attention. The famUies of both have exhausted every resource during the four-year fight In federal courts. To day's decision leaves no recourse but the. federal prison. rotUf Arrested In Bono. It was on March 10. 1918. that Dlggs and Caminetti, with the two girls. boarded a train at Sacramento for Reno, Diggs was then 86 years old, a former employe of the state architect. Caminetti, 27. was a son of Immigra tion Commissioner Anthony Caminetti. The girls were daughters of well known Sacramento people. Lola Norris was 19 and Marsha Warrington 20. The four were arrested in a bunga low at Reno on March .14. and the fol lowing day Dlggs and Caminetti were charged at Sacramento with wife-aban donment and released on $1000 bonds. Later the federal authorities took the case n hand, and on September 17. 1913, Dlggs and Caminetti were con victed in federal court under the Mann white slave act of transporting the girls into another state for immoral purposes. . Two years ago the United States cir cuit court of appeals affirmed the low er court's decision. The United States supreme court In June. 115, refused to review the case. , It was later taken up When the ten Allies slammed, if they did not lock the door of diplomacy, in the face of the Central Powers' request for a peace conference, what did that act portend for Europe, for Canada, and for the Untied States? In THE LITERARY DIGEST, dated January 1 3th, there is a most comprehensive review of the peace negotiations from all angles. The first impression of the German press, as gathered from Berlin dispatches, is that the Entente's reply could only be answered by the sword. "Let Hindenburg answer," exclaims, the Berlin Lokai Anzeiger. Other German and Austrian editors are confident of victory and equally as energetic in citing their opinions. Press comment in the Entente nations endorses the rejection of Germany's proposals, and expresses confidence in ultimate victory for the Entente Allies. The London Morning Post quotes its Budapest correspondent's statement that peace proposals of the Central Powers are prompted by "the knowledge that relief must come witnin six months from the present time at the outside, if internal troubles of the most ser ious character are to be avoided," since "in Austria-Hungary the available stocks of food will not last even for six months." Read THE LITERARY DIGEST this week by all means, if you would get a true per spective of the peace negotiations up to date. Other articles of great public interest in this number are: Business Conditions America .Will Face After War Ends Opionons of Prominent Financiers and Authoritative Economic and Commercial Journals How the United State Led the World in Commerce in 1916 What the Allies Mean by Peace Germany and the Next War Unheard and Unseen Artillery Haeckel's Conversion to Militarism The Soul of Roumania Justice as the True Peace Basis What Is to Be the Next Step in Mexican Tangle? The Somme Drive Ended The Dog As a Menace Secret Wireless Shall We Give Up Meat? A Good Word for Slang The Church's Duty to the Stage A Splendid Assortment of Illustrations, Including Cartoons from Everywhere "The Digest" An Impartial Chronicler of the War ' A great war such as that now decimating Europe tends to push men very far apart. The ideals and ideas for which each group is striving become neces sarily more and more emphasized as time goes on, which tends inevitably to foster in each faction a point of view so alien to that of the other that it is almost impossible for its adherents to form a fair estimate of what their opponents think or do. How then shall we of the West arrive at an impartial judgment as to the positions and aims of the various combatants? The answer: Read THE LITERARY DIGEST, which gives without bias the views of both sides. This is the one perfect solution of thi3 difficulty. Better begin reading it today. January 13th Number on Sale Today All News-dealers 10 Cents tterary m. If tlnxlx of f( Distinction to 1 ft Tim a Header ol 1 ThmIAtMX9xym 0 -A- eesic FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary). NEW YORK Imperial Hotel Broadway, Stark aa& waafeiaftoa romTXhaJrs'a ubabxxo moTxx I4a11y located in tha hart of thlnca on Broad ' T h . o bo I n i canttr. 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