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REPORT BANDITS KILLED YANKEES Mexican Troops Said to Be in Pursuit of Outlaws - SOCIALISTS TO DEMAND TRIAL i o | ~ Say They Want Hearing Be- fore Unprejudiced Body | No Wage Increase for 40 Years, U. S. Employes Say in Complaint SALT LAKE CITY, Jan there has been no salary increase In their department for 40 years, Colorado and Utah employes of the United States surveyor general's office have filed a petition to congress asking a 75 per cent increase in salaries to meet tho rising cost of necessities of life, NEW YORK, Jan. 10.—Tho five ed socialist members of the New York ovis wit »y ™| S@nators Await Word From ttention to any action that may | MEXICO CITY, Jan, 9.--Offielal dispatehes from Tuxpam tonight in dicated the mitrders of the Amert cans, Towlea and Roney, occurred i taken on thoir casos by tho legis e at La Playa, north of Vera Crux fel D. Orr, one of the susp eopie on ireaty TSP Te |e ivcvicaiae were paymasters, for 7 men, declared in a statement given BY 1. ©, MARTIN eadtatiny an ol} company and carried the men a O23 2 > our obligation under Gut At socialist headquarters here] crpiteg Preae State Correspondent.) | Article 10." |into the hillt in this belief, When » | WASHIN N, Jan, 10—Con root said: “All talk of interpre-/the bandits discovered thelr error, “The action the judiciary o fused and badly divided in parties | tative resolutions ax the banis af com.) Kooording to the dinpateh, they > tee will take ts ‘cut anc jover the issue raised by the conflict: | promise is idle ne reservations | Killed the Ameridans as revenge for Orr declared ‘We will demand|ing positions of President Wilson | must be vital, We cannot yield upon !scarriage of their plans. before an unprejudiced/ ang William J. Bryan on the peace | the matter of accepting an obligation| Federal troops, It was auld, were treaty, senators today were waiting | under Article 10." jin close reult of the bandits ure was belleveg im 3 to hear from the country Hitchcock did not speak for all the | Thelr ea ; f@dditionat charges against} Within a few days, it is expect: | democrats, nor did Lenroot speak for | minent Be Lusk committee, which, he/|¢d, senatorial mail will begin to show /all the republicans. Within each} The government has begun ‘col > gald, has spent more than $1,000,-| whether the people favor Bryan's de-| party there is a decided split. But} lection of evidence in the murders 000 despite the fact it was given | mand that democrats yield in reser | the fact which seems ta grow clearer |!n order to answer the protest from only $30,000 by the legislature. vations or Wilson'# insistence that| daily in that there never has been,|the American state department. Epeaker Sweet refused to com.| the treaty go Inta the campaign. ia not now, and never will be, any| Ment on Orr's chiirges, He w Meanwhile talk of a compronpise | possibility of getting 64 votes for «| “pected to attend the meeting of the continued today to an extent which compromise which President Wilson Mtahe comlimaittes here to Surprtecd beg euneaors wae believe would accept day, there is no hope of getting one. pana ably oar ve aoe rer Seopa Rese ‘These members painted to the state | ments of Senator Hitchcock, for the Another Reques: democ #, and Senator Lenroot for > me ethalveapneouniain” sa, prest Sent to Mexicans Orr sald the socialists were pre. 10,000 Wisconsin Married Couples - Must Wed Again MILWAUKEE) 2, Wis, Jan, 10 aay | the “mild reservationists.” as proof FAREWELL FOR OFFICERS | that a compromise is out of the ques! WASHINGTON, Jan, 10—4United Marrying parece and justices ‘ He Virectio: ne Me: " rere kod for & prosperous new Col. and Mrs. Walter Duncan, | ton Preas.)—Directions that the Mexican | here a San Sree as Oe Senator Hitchcock sald government be requested to adopt “The president's letter set the limit j “the most energetic measures” to in the Volunteers’ hall, 109|0f compromise as ‘interpretative | punish the murder of James Wallace, lave. S., Suday evening, at §| reservations.’ Democrats never in-|an American oll worker, who wai tended to go any further than tn. | killed by @ Carranzista soldier in the yy have received orders to take|terpretative reservations. They do | Tampico district November 26, have d of the work thruout the/ not now intend to go any further been sent to the American embassy New England states, with|They never did intend, and never at Mexico City, the state department ere at Boston, Mass. will yield upon the question of re-jannounced today of the Volunteers of are to holt their farewell) ral J, J. Blaine that 10,000 onain couptes ahould be re married. Blaine’s advice followed a ing in Mtinoty that marriages ed in that state by per tring to avoid the laws in their own states are invalid, Wi» consin's marriage laws are strict and lawyers said half the Mil- waukee couples married in the last two years took thelr vows dn Hlinol. 42 MERCHANTS FACE CHARGES Portland Retail Men Accused } of Profiteering Malotte on the Wurlitzer 1. Popular Songs 2 “Peer Gynt” Suite, by Grieg a—Morning b—Ase'a Death o—Anitra’s Dance d@—In the Hall of the Mountain King CONCERT— 1:30 SUNDAY PORTLAND. of Portland's te Forty-two hants face federal grand jury charges a» the re sult of an investigation just com-/ Until Tuesday night only, this fast-moving, laugh-com- pelling comedy- drama of a youthful waster who sets London by the ears, then matches wits with a certain girl who rightly believes him a twin cousin to the devil! pleted by United States District At torney Humphreys - | which was in cated by Humphreys, on charges | preferred by citizens to the fair price! committee, shows that Magrant prof. iteoring in clothing, shoes and other necessities of life has been the rule and not the exception here, it is al-| leged, A detailed let of expenses and sales furnished under compulato by | the merchants thémselves shows that most of them exacted a profit! of 40 per cent from the consumer jafter charging off every imaginable expense, including taxes, both fed eral and local, and insurance. } JURORS PROBING MUSTARD DEATH Five in One Family Die in} Four Years’ Time Thin investigation | MARKESAN, Wis, Jan. 10. (United Preas.)—District Attorney M. }J. Paul announced today bodies of four persons will be exhumed here as a result of the “nustard death” ver dict found by a “coroner's jury over | the remains of Mra. Nettie Duffies.” The jury said Mra, Duffies died as | the result of an injection of a pow erful substance containing mustard, lsmade and injected by Dr. J. A Freudenberg.” Freudenberg is Mra. Duffies’ son-in-law, Hers was the fifth death in the family in — care 4 Mrs. Fiske’s stage — triumph s ictures— | ‘The big fellow in the _ funniest thing he has made this year— WOMEN OF “MIDDLE ARE ly bly by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Summit, N. J hi Lydia E. Pinkham’s Venue Oe | ound duri ze of Life | and I think it ia a | much pain and| burning in my I could not sleep, had ; backache, and | worst of all were | the hot flashes, I saw in the papers about Vegetable Compound soll tried | it. Now I feel all right and can work better. You have my permission to ublish this letter.”—VicTORIA ei 21 Oak Ridge Ave., Summit If you have warning symptoms such as a sense of nut sy flashes, headaches, backache, dread | of impending evil, timidity, sounds irt the ears, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation, variable appetite, we: ness, inguietude, and Gecthont, eta bottle of Lydia 'E. Pinkham's Vego- table Compound and begin taking the } medicine at once. We know it will ‘help you as it did Mrs. Koppl. | our head feels ike When a hasket of broker bottles—you need BEECHAM’S PILLS Stomach or bowel dis- | order poisons the blood and thus irritates the SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 31 men under Reginald Dunn, playing the Sextette from . | —_ if the body, Donizetti's “Lucia” wr Sale of Any Mo | fone ny fodicine is mt ‘ocation, hot | | es | cipal speech at the afternoon session. Russell on the Wurlitzer MEXICANS SLAY U.S, WAR HERO Albert N. Depew Dead After Battle With Outlaws LO8 ANGELES, Jan. 10.—(United Preas.)—Albert N. (Gunner) Depew, noted war hero, is dead at Tucson, riz, the victim of Mexican out ws, according to a telegram re- ceived in Los Angeles today from Joseph Burnett, secretary of the Tucson Y. M. C. A. Depew was attacked by the Mext- cans after he had left Tucson alone on & prospecting expedition. His body was found when an attempt was made to verify a report that an American, single-handed, had beaten a party of Mexicans in a terrific fight. All evidences Indicated that Depew had fought hard against heavy odds His body had been riddied with bul lets. Depew has a remarkable record as a war hero, having served in the French army ARCHITECTS ARE. IN SESSION HERE The Washington state chapter of the American Inatitute of Architects | yan ite 25th annual convention at the Hotel > Washington Saturday noon, with delegates from ‘Tacoma, Spokane, Everett, Yakima and other cities In attendance. for Saturday evening to be followed amateur theatricals Charles H, Whitaker, editor of the inal, the American Institute pub- ), and ® national authority on + conditions, made the prin- Paul D, Richardson, chairman of the program committee, had charge of entertainment of delegates, President Daniel Huntington, city Seattle, presided. Jap, Shot in Duel, Dies of Wounds 8. Nakayama, who was shot four times in a street duel at Maynard ave. and King st, Friday morning, following an altercation over a card me, died at the city hospital at 5:30 m, Friday. K. Kamada ts being held in the city jat!, pending action by the prose- cuting attorney: Kamada, according to detectives, said that he had been fleeced out of several hundred dollars by Naka yama in @ card game, and that he met him on the street, following the game and began talking about it Nakayama, he declares, mado a lunge at him with a knife, and that he warded the blow. His hand was dressed at the city hospital, A dinner to which wives of mem-| bers have been invited was scheduled | PLAN FOR CONVENTION! A meeting of the state board and chapter regents of the Daughters of | the American Revolution will be held in the New Washington hotel) convention to be Walla this spring. Mra Gobel, Spokane, will preside. MEN'S GROUP TO MEET | A meeting of the men's group of! St. Michael's chapel, Sixth ave. N. and John st, will be held on Tues day, at 8 p. m, for a «pecial session, at which there will be epeakers, mu-| sic and refreshments. The nation: wide campaign of the Episcopal church will be discussed. | HOLD MEMORIAL SERVICE Memorial services for Miss Lillian | Asht8n, former secretary of Seattle Christian Endeavor union, who died in Denver December 14, will be held | Jat 3 o'clock Sunday in the Pleasant | Valley Presbyterian church. | ‘STIFF NECK, LUMBAGO Aches and Pains of Rheumatism | | Sometimes Almost Unbearable, There are weather’ conditions | that make rheumatism worse, They re not the same in the cases of all persons. Some victims of this |disease suffer more in dry warm | | weather than in moist cold weather, | but all suffer more or less all the| time. | | The cause of rheumatism ts an| lexcess of uric acid in the blood, | affecting the muscles and joints. | Hence the blood must have atten- tion for permanent results in the | treatment of this disease. | Hood's Sarsapariiia has given | entire satisfaction in thousands of | cases, Do not fall to give it a} trial, | If o laxative ts needed, Hood's Pills—they don't gripe. — ~ Reduced Prices Plus Easy Terms | | | | take | | | | | | | CHERRY CHAT The opportunity to secure fash fonable apparel at unusual adyant-| age is now offered by Cherry's dur-| ing its annual clearance of women’s and misses’ coats, sults and frocks, Heavy reductions have been mado in the price of every winter garment | in the store—and choice is offered of an exceptionally fine and varie. gated stock, Including all the correct | modes, and all the desired materials, of the season, | Cherry's regular monthly terms may also be had, enabling you to se: cure everything you need or wish for just a few dollars ensh, | Cherry's Style Shop, 207 Rialto Bldg., over Pig'n Whistle, on Second | jaye. between Madison and Spring. STARTING SUNDAY A fusillade of romantic adventures that leads a hot but tortuous path direct to the altar! # THE GREAT NAZIMOVA In a Screen Version of Maude Fulton’s Stage Story THE “BRAT” A Gem of Human Sympathy in a Setting of Rags