ARIZONA REPUBLICAN
THE
AN INDEPENDENT PROGRESSIVE JOURNAL
TWEXTY-FOURTH YEAR
2G PAGES
PHOENIX, ARIZONA, SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL 19, 1914
26 PAGES
vol. xxrvr.
NO. 33G
MOST SUCCESSFUL GET
TOGETHER OF ARIZONA
ELKS COMES TO CLOSE
Rides Over Valley With
Luncheon at Country Club
Fill Early Part of Bay
Places of Interest All
Visited
VISITORS FILL TOWN
WITH PLEASURE
Ladies' Reception at Adams,
Theater Party and Dance
Close Festivities Tucson
Lodge- Adds Fun to Pro
gram All Are Happy
The third annual re-union of the
Arizona Elks is a tiling of the past
now. It closed yesterday in a blaze
of glory. The visiting Elks took
the, town in their own hands ac
cording to till' invitation ami in
structions of thr-ir host ami pro
ceeliil pi enjoy themselves to the full
all during the day. It started early
In the morning and continued late
in the night. The Elks from all over
said tiie re-union was the best ever.
It must have heen if tley said so.
Early in the d;ty more than forty
automobiles were loaded up with vis
itors and their ladies and taken out
all over rile valley for a drive and
sightseeing. The ostrich farm was
visited, C.ranile Reef dam. and all
the notable places around the valley.
They picke 1 orange blossoms iVom
the proves and ended at tile Country
Club for luncheon. Some continued
to town and had bnich at the Elks'
Club.
Ill the late afternoon Tucson took
charge and with a marching corps
headed by two drums and with fifty
or w following; with tin pans and
whistles and horns.
Home howl with trie.
At night tile ladii
literally
at their
enjoyed
mailt
antics.
a re
am! a
after-hoen;-;
cepiion at the A'iams
Hotel
theater party at the Empress
"ivard as the guests of the I
ladies and a raif ilic.ee " Ph cab:ir i
features was -r " l'oilo.i iic; ":
J;:ivs .ilui cimunu d to . have a j.oo.'
time until after the dance ended lieu.
K. M. Dickenii.m arrived in time t
take in the later features. He was
frrected by crowds of his fellow
"Kills' as he walked into lhe Adams
Hotel with Mrs. liiekerni.in on bis
arm.
Many of the visitors hi can leaving;
last evening and more went out on
the morning train. By tonight the
city will know them no more until
the next re-union is held in this city.
It was the most successful and larg
est attended meeting yet held and all
were full of praise for Phoenix and
the way the event was handled.
o
COFFEY OUTFIGHTS KENNEDY
I ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCH
NEW YORK. April IS. Jim Cof
fey, "the Dublin giant." outfought
Tom Kennedy, of New York, in ten
rounds.
i J
Honored Among His Fellows
I -ist night in the lobby of the Hotel on the face. A monogram and a
Adams. Joe V. Prochaska, who for the short statement complete the decora-
past year has guided the destinies ofjtions.
the State lteunion Association of the j
Arizona Elks, was presented witn a i
splendid diamond set gold ring. The
ring is made of heavy old gold, with j
the l'.lks' emblem in massive shape
-A. " w -it..' - r ail
Jv rr-
Hon. Joe V. Prochaska, Exalted Ruler
Past President Arizona State
f,
i
. "
A - - -l -7-1
i.
f -
. J & -1 fi?'-W"-J "it 4 J
Letter Of Appreciation
Phoenix. Ariz.. April IS. 1914.
Arizona Republican,
Gentlemen: 1 1 gives irn- great
pleasure to extend to jou on behalf
of the Elks' State lie-union Asso
ciation of Arizona, and of myself, our
heartiest thanks for the cordial co
operation and assistance given by
your :ipi'r toward making tho third
re-union an absolute anil unqualified
SUCCcSS.
The publicity features of your pa-
! per showed mo
ommendablo en-
spirit. Again
thusiasm ami p
we thank yoii.
Very truly,
C. K. PISHON,
Publicity Committee.
chairman
HOTEL MARYLAND IS
DESTROYED BY FIRE
Finest
Hotel in Southern California
Reduced to Ashes
associated press dispatch 1
I'ASAPK.NA. April IS. Fire lute
tonight in the Hotel Maryland, one
of the finest hotels ill Southern Cali
fornia, is destroying the structure.
Apparently starting from a defect in
the heating apparatus in the base
ment, the flames soon spread through
the left wins, and from there to the
main structure.
The police and fire departments
stated the flames are beyond con
trol, and they expert the hotel, which
icst several hundred thousand dol
lars, will be a heap of ashes by
morn in?.
All the wealthy guests reaped, but
many were without their valuables.
No one was reported injured.
ON TO WASHINGTON
Mother" Jones to Place Grievances
Before House Sub Committee
' ' ' iTrul
i J-.. i-.li, A pm In. .Mollier"
s, ihe a Red str'ke leader, left Pcn-
v " 'omght for Washington, where she
proposes to place he grievances against
the state militia and Governor Am
nions before the house sub-committee
which investigated the roal strike in
Colorado. Tt was arranged that she
would leturn in the event her presence
is necessary before the state supreme
court to answer the habeas corpus pro
ceedings instituted shortly before her
voluntary release.
ADMINISTRATION PRAISED
f associated press dispatch"!
CLEVELAND. April 1 s. Laudations
of the accomplishments of the present
administration and tributes to Thomas
Jefferson and his influence upon legis
lation, occupied the speakers at the Jef
ferson "dollar dinner" of the Cuyahoga'
comity democracy tonight.
The speech of presentation was
made by Oapt. J. L. 15. Alexander of
this city. Mr. Ilochaska. responded
with a few short, but appropriate,
words of thanks and appreciation.
r-fi .-st
1 1. iT-
5w 'J.iK(."7
v i jXi tr
Globe Lodge, No. 489, B. P. 0. E ,
Elks' Reunion Association
PROGRESSIVES
F
E
FOR U.S. SENATE
Illinois State. Convention
Brings Out Candidates for
All Offices But That of
Governor and Lieutenant
( Jovenior
COL. ROOSEVELT
IS ENDORSED
Senator Clapp Denies Xew
Party Wrecked Repub
lican Ship Which Was
Already Shattered and
to IVces
r ASSOCIATED PRESS tiJSPATCHl
INDIANAPOLIS, April 18. The con
vention of state progressives nominated
Albert K. Reveridge for 1'nited States
senator and a state ticket with the ex
ception of governor and lieutenant gov
ernor. Theodore Roosevi
i ' 'as urged
-viners.
number
'.' ptrtv
allimiU
!: jsenator
pton, Moses
for president by several
The convention listenf
of speakers who urged
remain intact and predi
victory. The speakers
Miles Poindexter of Wash
Clapp of Minnesota, and Charles Sum
mer Turd of Massachu"f as.
The mention of the names of Hever- 1
idge and Roosevelt each time started ;
a demonstration, and the bands p.'irad- ;
ed through the aisles, followed by a i
number of delegates. i
The nomination for I'nitivl States ;
senator was forced upon Bovorluge. .
who said he went into convention fully
intending to decline the nomination if :
it was offered to him. in his speech
of acceptance ho asked a. pledge that
complete tickets he placed in every ;
township and county in the state. I
There were , few contests for places
on the state ticket and in only one in- i
stance w is a r' i.J, n.- 'rsary to de
cide the winner' ,
The rt,-!,.i','., y.tit ' ' rnll
after the speech! nakiiig and a lare .
number had departed for their homes
before the convention adjourned. A
number of women were seated in the
galleries.
Kdwar,i C. Tenor, editor of the An- i
derson Herald, was elected chairman of
th progressive committee at the meet- i
ing tonight. He succeeds Edwin M".
Lee, who resigned because of business
interests.
"Political parties come aR a protest
against wrong and as the necessary or
ganized instrumentality to meet ron
'Utions," declared X'nited States Sena
tor Clapp of Minnesota, in his address.
Senator Clapp told of the defeat pf
the republican party saying:
"Tou progressives are some times
charged with having destroyed the re
publican party. Remind your detrac
tors that the party was shattered and
shot to pieces, dismantled and scuttled
hv its crew, then in command, and was
nlunged bow foremost into oblivion be
fore the progressive party wss ever
dreamed of."
DYNAMITE TENT HOUSE
Logging Camp
Hit Wife
Superintendent
Blown in Air
and
r ASSOCIATED PP.EPH DISPATCH I
SCAPOOSE. Ore.. April IS. -
charge of dynamite set off at mid
night on Friday nieht under the tent
house of J. H. Oilmore, superinten
dent of the Xehalcm Timber and
Logging company, and his wife, as
they worn asleep, wrecked the struc
ture, and blew the couple high in
the air. Mrs. Gilmnre alighted in the
wreckage and was seriously injured.
Cilmore escaped with a few bruises.
The heavy mattress upon which
the couple slept, probably saved both
from immediate death.
FLAGPOLE WRECKS AUTO
Man
Is Instantly Killed and
Daughter Injured
Little
ASSOCIATED PRESS MSPATCltl
CHICAGO, April W. E. Vosslet
was" killed by a flagpole that was
broken oft by a gust of wind, thrown
across his automobile while riding
with his daughter, Alice, aged four
years. As the pole fell, Vosslet put
on full speed, but the heavy nole
struck him across the head and kill
ed him. The car dashed on un
guided. The little girl screamed and clutch
ed lier father's coat. After running
half a block the automobile struck a
lamp post and stopped, wrecked. The
child was hurled out and severely
injured.
MYSTERY VEILS MURDER
ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCH!
GEDD.ES, S. D., April IS. Deep mys
tery still a-eils the killing of William
Menzle and Miss Blanche Signal, his
bookkeeper, whose rharred bodies were
found in the ruins of the Farmers Ele
vator company's office on Friday morn
ing. Local authorities cling to the
double murder theory, while some of
the circumstances point to murder and
suicide.
o
THE WEATHER
WASHINGTON,
Arizona: Fair.
April IS. For
G
w
ILSO
UML
AN IMPORTANT STEP THAT HAS LED MILLIONS IN
THE RIGHT DIRECTION AND NONE IN THE WRONG.
By John T. McCutcheon.
if I t I I I 1 )'' nifH',-in"'i w" 'V1 1 'wi)im'w;"iiw i J I f I I
It Hill M; r- 'V- - fVl", 1 It 1 1
w, j y a -1, . , i
Ls'i 'u-MVi ;
t- I
M r
ji 1 fe' f
I K K II IU I II H H I IU I. II I I I F is 111 I II m II I
uimuuiunmurt rr-- - - NurLii uhihl
, party of Maricopa countv are re- !
IILIULILMUIinLI r.-r-n.e 1,r,.-i,;,., t(1 ; U IU UmlL
' of the state conference in the ; '
NTUSHDHIS.- OUR COASTS
: !'
utei Adams
Among!
Handsomely Gowned Wo
men in Lobby as He
Shoots at Steward
Five revolver shots, fired from the
hand of a drink or drug-crazed bus
boy, injured two men, narrowly
escaped striking scores of others, and
caused a near-panic among crowds of
finely gowned women who sat in the
lobby of the Hotel Adams last night,
waiting for the opening of the Elks'
ball and reception. Neither of the
men struck were seriously hurt.
With women in evening attiro
strolling about the lobby. Elks hold
ing closing meetings In the balcony,
anil streets about the hotels crowded
with merry-makers, Stanley Herndon,
bus boy, of English nationality,
sought to wreak vengeance upon Ar
thur Freed, steward of tho Hotel
Adams. During the day. Freed had
announced that a small sum of
I money would be deducted from Hern
don s wages m payment ot china j .
ware which the bus boy had frac
tured. "And I one you a dollar anna
'arf?" Inquired Herndon, as he met
Freed at the corner of Center and
Adams streets, in front of tho hotel.
Freeed said ' nothing, but a moment
later, the sound of the shooting at
tracted attention throughout the
crowded streets and in the hotel.
Causes Panic
Herndon. reeling from the effects of , mnissi is. merely' that the other
alcohol or more powerful drug shotit.rn P!,ii ror th
towards the sidewalk. Freed ran to
wards the Adams Pharmacy.
Four shots from the .Ss caliber re
volver in the hands of the bus boy
were fired in quick succession.
In the hall on the second floor of
the hotel Joe V. Prochaska, retiring
president of the State Elks Reunion
Association, was extending his thanks
to his brethern for a, glittering dia
mond ring they had given to him.
When the. echo of the revolver fire
(Continued on Page Seven.)
N TO
HUERTA
fCoprrtsbt: Mle: By Jobs T. McCutcbeoa.i
Special Officer
Farish Dries Up
Adams Rag Party
lioffing his authority as manager
of the city of phoenix. W. A. Farish, J
exercising that power vested in him
when he had himself sworn in as a
special policeman, entered the dining
room of the Adams hotel last night
and turned off tho flow of w Ine and
other spirituous or malt liquors.
Xo little stir was occasioned by
this action. The people who occu-
pied the lobbies and halls of the ho-
tel last night had the pleasure of
witnessing a strange, perhaps a
unique sight that of a public rag
party without liquor.
Farish touched off no fireworks
when he halted the flow of the bowl.
He merely approached Mr. Adams
with this proposition: i
Tut it!"
J: C. Adams, proprietor of the ho- i
l tel.. simply went to his manager and '
issued the necessary order. There
j was no fuss, no confused hoarse j
cries from the multitude. .Not a
single drop of wine, beer or any
other cheering compound passed
down the throat of a thirsty tango
ist after the hour of midnight.
The order issued at tbe Adams last
night was not repeated at the, Ford
I or Commercial, where liquor is serv-
1 after twelve. The reason for this
meals." None of the raggists were
eating
busy.
anything. They were too
-o-
ROOF CAVES: THREE DEAD
BA KERS FIELD, April IS. Three
men were killed and four were in-1
jured. two probably fatally, when the
roof of the big oil reservoir, the 1
property of the Kern Trading and
Oil company in the Kern River oil
field, broke, precipitating the Nnen
feet to the cement floor below.
LA., j'vjsV" , i' A'-''' r - t
-W , I i t -A V A
CALL TO PROGRESSIVES nnru nimi
EHZE PORT!
message from o snaugnnessy, mciuu-
Fm-mor Utni'iicv Genei-il inR time for the ciPherine and deciph
1 OIIIRI AUhl III lit III l.tl pHmT thp answer can not be eXpected
Bonaparte SaVS to Allow j here before early Monday morning, as
rul. X"., ;o 4-.-. TT-.. Pli i suming Huerta will take has full time.
Other IN at 10ns to JlSjf0 ,,lcat,n(f his intentions. The
Ditcll Unrestricted W Ollld president made arrangements to leave
ln,.u - ..(.,, I late tonight for White Sulphur Springs
I1IU J'lli' to bring Mrs. Wilson, who has been ill.
back to Washington.. He will arrive at
associated press dispatch!
WASHINGTON", April IS. In de
fense of the Panama tolls exemption,
former Attorney General Charles J.
i'.onaparte, of Baltimore, told the
senate that the canals committee ad
vocates of a repeal could not escape
j from the position that the Fnited
! States in case of war. Is bound to
. permit its enemy to use the canal,
i "If we were at war with Japan,''
ho said, "our garrison at the isthmus
would be mere idle spectators of a
peaceful passage of the Japanese
fleet to attack New Orleans or New
York. If we were at war with Ger
niuny, troops would look tranquilly
on while German vessels traversed it
to take San Francisco, and the net
result of our enormous expenditure
for the construction of the canal
would be to make our coast much
more vulnerable than it was before."
Honaparte contended the rules of
construction required that the Hay- .
Pauncefote treaty be interpreted as ,
not requiring the Fnited to States to
(Continued on Page Seven)
Air, Land And Sea Attack
Planned Against Guaymas
ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATTIll
DOUGLAS, April IS. A simultane
ous land, sea and air attack upon
Guaymas is planned by Mexican in
surgents, according to Constitution
alist Agent Lelevier. He said it is
planned to have the war aeroplane.
1 "Sonora,'
drop bombs; the warship
recently purchased by rebels will be
?,a ; joined by the gunboat Tuinpico In
a sea attack while land forces con
SALUTES
Gravest International Crisis
the United States lias
Faced Since the Spanish
American War Looms
Ahead
CONGRESS MAY
ACT MONDAY
President Declares Unless
Ilnerta Accedes He Will
Take Tampico and Vera
Cruz and Blockade the
Pacific Ports
! "Huerta is still insisting upon
doing something less than has
been demanded, something less
than will constitute acknowledg- .
ment that his representatives
were entirely in the wrong in the
indignities they put upon the j
government of the United States.
The president has determined that j
if Huerta does not yield by 6
o'clock Sunday evening he will
take the matter to congress on I
Monday." Statement last night j
from the White House. ,. 1
ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCH
WASHINGTON, April IS. The
-ravest international crisis the Fnited
States has faced since the Spanish
American war looms ahead. Unless
! Huerta. accedes to Rear Admiral
.Mayo s demand for a twenty-one-gun
ilute before six o'clock Sunday eve
ning to the American flag at Tam
pico, the president will go personally
before a joint session of congress on
Monday and ask for the authority to
use the army and navy for such
steps as may be necessary.
Huerta may actually fire the sa
lute before six o'clock, which would
lhe ?:S o'clock Washington time, or
ir ld" by advising Wilson of his in
tentions to do so. El'her region,
taken al the last minute, e.,u be
known ber.- b.forc wr - s ..aV
fjre empress.
This final word went to Mexico
City, after Huerta. parleyed for tho
last time and reiterated his demand
for a ''simultaneous salute." Leaders
m congress said the president would
be clothed immediately with all the;
authority necessary to take action.
The seizure of Vera Cruz and Tam
pico and of the Mexican warships in
these waters and of the section of
railroad leading from Vera Cruz to
Mexico City as far as the trestle
twenty miles west of Vera Cruz and
a Pacific blockade are features of the
plan of action the president outlined
!to. his. closest, advisers.. Such, a
(course of action authorities on inter
national law describe as "short of
i war," but not an act of war. Huerta,
I however, might construe it as one.
i The climax came with dramatic in
tensity when the third message wa
received from Huerta insisting on his
own conditions for a simultaneous
salute. A conference of the president
and his cabinet resulted in a prompt
decision to brook no more temporiz
ing or dilatory tactics.
Allowing five hours as the average,
time for the transmission of the cable
the health resort tomorrow morning,
and leave at night, reaching the capi
tal early Monday. Huerta's continued
evasiveness and his desperate condition
both from a financial and military
point of view, especially on account of
tiie recent rebel victories, have, led
many high officials to believe he will
defy the Fnited States and take his
chances on the consequences through
which the national spirit might be
I Continued on Page Ten.)
BRYAN SAYS
"ENCOURAGING"
! WASHINGTON. April 19. (Sun-
( day Morning) "Encouraging, but
not final", is the way shortly after
j one o'clock this morning that
' Bryan summed up a message just
received from Mexico. Further
! than that, the secretary would not
! disclose what the latest despatch
I contained.
r
I
sisting of Indian veterans and volun
teers under General Alvarado, will do
the land fighting.
It is announced that oo-incidentally
with the attack on Guaymas, General
Obregon. with 10,000 men, will start
a campaign against Tepic and Jalisco.
Obregon announced that he will be
"knocking on the gates of Guadala
jara" by the first week in May.