The Omaha Daily Bee advertising is the untvehsaii language bpoken evekvaviieke by buyers and selleiis. THF WSA1 ?,Z VOL. XLIV-NO. 12. OMAHA, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 2, lyj-i-NIXTEKN PAUES. On Trains and at Kotfl News Stands. Be. SINGLE COPY TWO CENTS. SENATE TO YOTE ON TRUST .BILLS AT THIS SESSION Democrats of Senate Serve Notice on Business and Country Action Will Be Taken. 'RESOLUTION IS VOTED BY BODY Motion Declares Members to Stay on Job Till House Measures Disposed Of. IT IS NOT OF BINDING FORCE Another Conference May Be Held to Hold Senators to Program. JUST EXPRESSION OF PURPOSE Trntle Commission, Itallrond Se curities hud Clayton III1U Arc Named'hy Official Number, WASHINGTON, July l.-Democrats of the senate In conference late today adopted a resolution declaring their pur ring in slnv In session Until the trust legislation passed by the house had been put through the senate. Their resolu tion does not bind senators to voto for the bills without change. The resolution Is designed to serve deflnltc'fBd final notice to business and the country" that antl-truet legislation Is to be passed before congress quits Wash ington. It was proposed by Senator Stone after a talk with President Wilson and with other democratic leaders. Sena tor Stone said U waa Intended as an answer to the propaganda for Immedlato adjournment of congress. Another Conference, Perhaps. It the party leaders decide In the fu ture that it will be necessary to make party measures of the threo house bills or the substitutes offered for them, an other conference will be held for ths public of binding demands to definite legislation. Some senators, though tho resolution might bind senators to vote for the bills, but Senator Kern, chair man of tho conference, declared that such was not Its purpose and a clause stating this In specific terms was adopted by a close vote. The resolution says: "Resolved, hTat tho conference of dem ocratic senators after due consideration hereby declares that the present sossion of congress should not adjourn until at least the following bills now pending in tho senate have been finally disposed of." It names by tho official number tho trade commission, the railroad securities and the Clayton anti-trust bills as the measures to be Included. Tho explanatory clause attached to the resolution" Sead am ifoH'ows.;. ' Expression of Purpose. """''ThC'-resolutlon hereinbefore adopted - a4ntepdcd fWCtelj4 jis an expression of Tihir64(VDt the majority party4-ln ref erence to adjournment.1' ' Senators who hope to get away from Washington within the next six weeks or two months found a morsel of comfort In the announcement from the conference ihat Senator Kern, ns majority loader, will ask the senate to hold night ses sions next week to take up the calendar nnd "other business." At the same time Senator Lewis, the democratic whip, was Instructed to keep a quorum present at all times. These facts Indicate an intention on tho part of the majority to press the trade commis sion bill to a vote as soon as possible nnd to put the appropriation bllla through when opportunity offers. The trade com mission bill already Is before the senate and a voto may be nsked for any duy. Twenty-One Naval Officers Retired WASHINGTON, July 1.-Twenty-one jjaval officers today were placed on tho retired list, fifteen of the number hav ing been selected by tho plucking board, while the other six voluntarily asked retirement. NEW IOWA LAWS BECOME EFFECTIVE ON WEDNESDAY DBS MOINES, la., July 1. Three laws passed by the thirty-fifth general assem bly became effective In Iowa today. They ere the workmen's compensation and jemployers' liability measure, the state in eurance commissioner act and the teach ers' Institute law. 'Ml FT" The Weather Forecast till 7 P- n. Thursday. For Omaha. Council Bluffs and Vicinity -Fair, slightly warmer. Hurs. .Deg. 5 a. m.. C b. in.. 7 a. m.. 8 a. m.. 9 a. m.. 10 a. in.. 11 a. m.. 13 m 1 p. m.. 2 p. in.. 5 p. m.. 4 p. in.. 6 p. in.. 6 p. in.. 7 p, m.'. 8 p. in.. .60 ...62 ...6.1 ...6fi ...70 ...7S 77 78 79 .......81 82 .......82 81 R0 78 Comparative. Local Itccord. 1914. 1913 1912. 1911. Highest yesterday ., sz SO S8 102 Lowest yesterday fio CS KS 80 Mean temperature ..... 71 79 78 91 Precipitation . 00 T .00 .00 Temperature and precipitation depar ture irom the normal: Normal temperature 75 Deficiency for the day.... , 4 Total excess since March 1 316 Normal precipitation lfilnoh Deficiency for the day..... 15 inch Total rainfall since March 1..13.S2 Inches Deficiency Elnce March 1...... .281nen Deficiency for cor. period. U13.. .62 Inch Deficiency for cor. period, 112.. S.Mlncnes Reports from Stations at 7 P. M. Station and State Temp. High- RJn of Weather. 7 p. ra. est. fall. Cheyenne, partly cloudy. s 70 .00 Davenport, clear 78 8! .03 Denver, cloudy M 78 .08 Dea Moines, clear Si S2 .00 Dodge City, partly cloudy 74 S .00 Omaha, clear SO St .00 Rapid City, clear 78 78 .U) Sheridan, partly cloudy.. 76 .8 .0u flour City, clear 80 80 .00 Valentine, clear M SO .00 T indicates trace of precipitation. U A- WBLII, Local Forecaster. Baron Newton Roasts Lipton During Debate on Canteen Scandals LONDON, July 1. The canteen scandals which culminated last Mny In tho con viction of nine British army officers and eight civilian employes of Upton's, lim ited, had an echo In the House of Lords today. Lord Saye nnd Brie, formerly lieu tenant colonel of tho Royal Scots Fuel Hers, and now controller of the king's household, said the charge that ho had tempted Lieutenant Colonel Whltaker of tho Second Yorkshire regiment, who was sentenced to six months' Imprisonment, was a foul lie. Ho declared he had been deeply wronged by Justice Sir Charles Darling, who said In reference to a letter from the present Lord Sn.ye and Sele: "Tho letter shows sail decadenco from the traditions of a great family. 1 myself. If I belonged to such a family, would starve rather than get my living by cadging for orders for beer." Lord Saye and Sele today repudiated the "mischievous Idea that the possession of an illustrious ancontry debarred a man from earning an honest living In trade or otherwise." Baron Newton took up tho cudgels In defense of tho Judgo's strictures. Refer ring to the position of Sir Thomas Lip ton, tho baronet remarked: "if I were chairman of a company which had engaged In proceedings of that kind, I sliould bo Inclined to seek temporary bc clusion rather than be continually adver tising myself In every conceivable way." Baron Nowton asked to be Informed If Llpton's, limited, had been removed from the list of contractors for the war office. The marquis of Crewe, liberal leader In the house, "unhesitatingly accepted" Lord Saye and Scle's statement and said the government did not purpose arty further action In the matter. Five Men Probably- Suffocated in Mine; Thirty-Five Escape wtt.t.iamsok. W. Va.. July 1. Miners worked with feverish energy today dig ging a shi.ft into tho workings of MIno No. 1 of the Sycamore Coal company, near here. In the hope of reaching five men who were cut off when fire broke out last midnight. The throng surrounding the pit reaiizea the hope was forlorn, but the men, un der tho direction Sf a inino Inspector and thplr bosses, continued to dig. Dense volumes of smoke poured from the open ings, and it was feared the lire was spreading rapidly. The fire broke out In tho fan house and that structure destroyed.- Alarmed by the failure of the air, twenty-flvo men made their way to the surface, but live ware caught in entries far from the open ing. The entnmbfri miners. George Seibold, James Collins, Benjamin James, , Henry Lyons and Marlon Lyons, wero Dcnovea by Deputy Mine Inspector Edward Lam bert to be in a pari or me mine noi yci. tmmhoit In- llio fire, tin snlrt thOV had probably been cut off by the flames and had taken refuge In a room bdoui i.ww feet from; the mouth, Suffs Think House Rules Committee is Dodging Them WASHINGTON, July l.-Dlscouraged, but undaunted by President Wilson's declination to use his Influence for congressional action on a constitutional amendment for woman ruffrage, lead ers of the votes for women fight turned their heavy artillery In tho direction of the house rules comnlttcu today only to find that a meeting called to vote on tho Mondell-Brlstow amendment had been postponed until August 1. According to plans, the commltttee was to meet and vote on a special rule providing time for debate on the amend ment in the house at thin ecssIoii of con gress. When the suffragists reached the capltol they wero surprised to find the committeo room empty and that thn meeting had been postponed. Fearing a coup by their enemies, the suffragists posted sentinels to watch tho committee room and dispatched others to appeal to individual members to have a meet ing. Cashier of Bank Who Staged Fake Robbery Makes a Confession SAYRE, Okl.. July 1. How he staged a fake robbery six years ago and ob tained $5,000 from the First State bank at Texola, Okl., of which he then was cashier, was told to a Justice of tho peace here yesterday by P. W. Jones In a voluntary confession, according to the Justice. Jones was Jailed on a charge of robbery after his surrender to the Justice. The cashier was found bound and gagged in the bank building on the morn ing of January 19, 1908. At tho time he declared he had been forced by bandits to turn over the bank's money. The bank's affairs were liquidated after the robbery. Loyal Albanians Are Routed by Insurgents DimAZZO. Albania, July l.-A force of Albanian government troops, which had remained loyal to Prince William, was defeated by tho Insurgent Albanian Mussulman tribesmen at Malkuch, a little north of Duraxro, on Sunday, but the news was suppressed until today. The government troops, under Prenk Bib Doda, were compelled to retire to Ishml, near the coast beien Durazzo and Alesslo. The defeat and flight of the loyal troops are attributed In government cir cles here to foreign Influences and also to the fact that PrenkBib Doda's men had dispersed Into small bodies and had gone on pillaging expeditions on their own account. It Is feared by the authorities here that the rebels are concentrating tljelr forces preparatory to making an attack on the capital. SEEK MOTIYE FOR mun MURDER flaying in Doctor's Office in Free- port, N. Y., Puzzles Police and County Authorities. MRS. WILLIAM BAILEY IS VICTIM Wife of Brooklyn Hat Manufao-i turer Dies Instantly of Wound Made by Bullet. GUN THRUST THROUGH WIND I Pane Broken and Ball Fired from Revolver Causing Her Death. KILLING SCENE IS REHEARSED Physic-Inn Insists He Hail Not Met Woman Until She Called that Nlaht at Office for Pro fessional Advice. FRKEPORT, N. V July l.-The police and county authorities today are seeking a motlvo for tho murder last night of Mrs. William Bnlley. wife of William Bailey of Hempstead, In the office of Dr. Edward Car man. William Bailey, husband ot the woman, Is a hat manufacturer In Brook lyn. He was surprised to learn that his wife had been a patient of Dr. Carman and declared that so far as he knew she had no enemies. Dr. Carman, too, told the authorities that he knew of no cause for tho crime or reason to believe the shot waa intended for him. Mrs. Bailey was shot through the heart and died Instantly. According to Dr. Carman, she arrived at his office, which Is In his home, at 7:30 o'clock. An hour later, he said, she was preparing to leave when a window pane was broken, a man'a hand holding a revolver thrust In and tho shot fired that ended her life. Chief of Police Roland M. Lamb, who also Is president of Frceport, began an Investigation with County Detective Phineao Seaman. They found that the window through which Dr. Carman said' the shot had been fired was covered by j a wire screen, which was on hinges and could only be opened from the- inside. j Further investigation showed that the glass broken from the window and the putty holding the glass had fallen both Inside and outside the room. Dr. Carman said today Mrs. Bailey's visit to his office last night was her first and that he had not been acquainted with her before that time. Two men patients, who were waiting in the physician's outer office when Mrs. Bailey was shot, said they heard no noise until they were startled by a report of a pistol. When they entered tho consulta tion room Mrs. Bailey was dead and they helped Dr. Carman carry her body to a couch. So many persons had trampled the grass, outside the windows of the doctor's office that bloodhounds brought to the scene today proved ueeleM'They "became confused. In the maze ofttrtiU..," Jealousy ?H ay Be Motive. Evldenco-accumulatcd today to support Dr. Edward Carman's story that Mrs. Louise Bailey waa killed by a shot from outside through the office window. - In the physicians room, four feet from the window, detectives found an Instru ment case bearing on Its white enamel fresh powder burns and furrow that might have been plowed by the bullet as It sped towards Sirs. Bailey. This Instrument case Is so low that had the shot been fired Inside tho room, the persons who held the pistol must have squatted on the floor. It was how over, directly In the path that the bullet would have taken from a pistol shoved through the 1 roken window pane. In the prsunce of detectives, Dr. Car man today rehearsed the murder scene. He was about to pull aside the curtain to permit Mrs. Bailey to leave his office, ho said, when he heard a crash of glass and saw -a hand with a pistol poked through tho broken pane. Ho and IiIh patient were barely two feet apart, he said. He ducked behind an operating chair and as he did so the pistol waa fired and quickly withdrawn. The de tccttvas learned today that a few minutes after the shot was fired, a young wo man hurried Into the Frceport railroad station, apparently in great- agitation. and took the flrRt train for New York. She was described as well dressed anil auburn haired. Although Dr. Carman Insisted today he had not met Mrs. Bailey until she called at his office ln?t night for pro fessional advice, tho detectives began their work with a Jealous woman In the background of their theories regarding the Identity of tho criminal. Man Assassinated in Grinnell Station GIUNNELL. Ia., July l.-(Spectal Tele gram.) A stranger, supposed to be Wil liam Rogers, of Terrc Haute, Ind., waa shot fatally yesterday afternoon In the Union station here by a resident of this city named Frank Raleigh. Several walling passengers were witnesses, Ra leigh walked up in front of the stranger and shot him just abo;e the heart. The wounded man ran out of the south door, followed by Raleigh with the pistol still In hand. After running a few yards tho man fell dead on the Rock Island paving In front of the hotel. Bystanders seized Raleigh, hut he threatened them with hU revolver and escaped, going north along the line of the railroad. Raleigh has lived here several years and has been subject to brief upells when his actions were Insane. He was obsessed with ttio Idea that the stranger waa a white slaver and it was his duty to kill him. Wanamaker Flies Sixty Miles an Hour HAMMONDSrORT, N. T July l.-Fly. Ing over a measured course today, America, the Rodman Wanamaker trans atlantic flying boat, developed a speed of sixty miles an hour. This was attained with the motors throttled to 1,3)0 revolu tions a minute, as against possible maximum of 1,300. The test was made at this speed to offspt a lack of some 20U pounds ot load. mwmm w w vr jsvvii 11117. e- c- Drawn for Tho Bee by Powell. MANY CONCERNED IN PLOT Conspiracy Against Archduke Had Many Ramifications. DEADLY BOMBS UNDER TABLE Another Hidden In noom Occupied by the Dnohess Womnn Cnnsht rrltli Seven llomhs In Her Possession. VIENNA. July l.-Tho conspiracy against the lives ot Archduke Francis Ferdinand and tho duchesa of Hohenbarg was so well planned that It would havo boon Impossible for them to escape from Bosnia nllvc, according to some member of the late archduke's suite, who returned here today. The officials, doclare that two clock work bombs were found beneath tho table on which luncheon was awaiting ' thf archducal party on the return to the city hall. A similar Infernal machine also was .discovered" ln the chjmney-jnf the. room occupied by the duchess ot Hohen bcrg at 'Illje, a watering: jMsce a few miles from Sarayevo, and' a. Yorrmn. was caught' with' seven bombs In her pos". session.- The bullet which killed' the arcti duke wns an explosive one. It has been ascertained by tho Authori ties that Oavrio Prtnzlp, the assassin, is the son of the proprietor of a hotel nt Sarayevo and passed his twentieth year. so that he may be sentenced to death for tho crime. Demonstrations at Aftrani. AORAM, Croat, July 1 Antl-Servinn demonstrations continued " here today when crowds gathered In front' of the town hall and demanded that the mayor return a Servian decoration recently con ferred .011 him; Another crowd went to the house of the speaker ot the Croatian Diet, who is Servian, and made a noisy demonstration against him. Beveral per eons were arrested, but later released. M. Marconi Expects to Telephone from Wales to New York LONDON, July. 1. "Mr Marconi con templates being able to telephone from Carnarvon, Wales, to New York before the end of the year," was the statement made today by the manager of the com pany In testifying before the dominion's royal commission on Imperial communi cation. He added that Mr. Marconi also anticipated Increasing the speed of the wireless telegraph to io words a minute. ALLEGED KIDNAPERS AflRESTEDJN NEW YORK NEW YpRIC, July 1 Tho return home today of Frank Ingo, an 8-year-o'd boy who was kidnapped on May IS, led to the arrest of eight men who, the police say, form the nucleus of a band of kidnapers who havo been terrorizing Italian mer chants of the city for several .years. BARTENDERS STRIKE FOR INCREASE IN PAY NEW BEDFORD. Mass., July l.-Two hundred bartenders struck here today he cause the liquor dealers refused to grant a weekly minimum wage of $18. The National Capital Wednesday, Jnlr 1, 1014. The Senate. Met at 11 a. m. Caucus wss called for agreement on the administration legislative trust program. Senator Burton resumed his attack on the river and harbor appropriation bill. Joint resolution empowering President Wilson to Invite foreign delegates to the international congress on home education in Philadelphia In September U passed. Adjounred at 3:(S p. m , until 11 a. m. Thursday. Tbe House. Met at qoon. The rule committee postponed Its vote on the woman suffrage constitutional amendment until August 1. Calendar Wednesday bills were set aside until tomorrow and the conference report on the legislative appropriation bill was debated. Railroad officials opposing the bill for federal Inspection of locomotives were heard by the Interstate commerce committee. Adjourned at G:8 . tn., until noon Thursday. A Dampener to Their Celebration Fifteen Thousand Men Have Income of One Billion Dollars NJ3W YORK, July l.-Estlmates made today based on tho total amount of In come assessments paid Into tho oftlco of Charles W. Anderson, Internal tax col lector, Indicate that In this one district, which Includes tho Wall street financial houses, 15,000 persons have a total an nual Income exceeding Jl ,000.000,000. The section of the city In which alt this money Is received Is about two mites square. Adjoining thn district, which it la said, the Income tax figures will show to be the richest In the United States, lies tho territory east of the Bowery and below Fourteenth street: that Is, tho most populous, occupied by C00.000 persons, tew of nhom pay an Incomo tax. , The final rush yesterday to pay the' tax before the S per cent penalty Is added, re sulted In tho biggest day's receipts at tlio offlco of Collector Anderson since the In ternal rcvenuo' 'department was estab lished. The amount waa estimated ut tf.OOO.OOO. Throat Specialist Tells Roosevelt to Rest for Six Weeks NEW YORK. July l.-Dr. Holbrook Curtis, tho throat specialist, told Colonel Roosevelt today ho would have to rest six weeks. Then after the colonel hail made a few speeches ns a test, the doctor said, he would bo able to tell morn defi nitely Just what Mr. Roosevelt could do In the campaign. 'I'll be able to make some speeches all right," ald tho colonel confidently. He agreed that the six weeks sentenco was prefernblo to four months rest re cently prescribed hy another physician. "Maybe the doctor will let you be a candidate for governor after nil,' said the questioner. 'They won't have to let me," unswered the colot)el, He did not make It clear Just vnnt he meant by this remark. Law Two Centuries Old Invoked to Stop Fireworks Display iI'IirUDELPHIA. July l.-A law which has existed since Kit, fifty-five years before the Declaration of Inde pendence was signed, will be lnvo"ked by the police department of this city to insure a safe and sane Fourth ot July. Fortified by an opinion of the city solicitor that tho ancient ordinance forbidding the sale or use ot squibs, rockets nnd other fireworks without special license from the governor Is still In force, the director of puhlto safety yesterday ordered the police strictly to enforce this ana uinr m against fireworks and 'dangerous ex plosives. Lansdowne Asserts Ireland Armed Camp LONDON, July l.-When the b..l tt amend the Irish homo rsfH olTl came up tpday for the second reading In the House of Lords, the Marquis ot Lans downe, the Unionist leader, announced that as Ireland waa ono vast armed camp, it was necessary to find a way out of the calamity which was threaten-In-, Thu unionists, therefore, he said, would give the amending bill a second rtadlnc and Introduce amendments dur ing the committee stage In regard to the area to be excluded from the operations of the home rule Mil, the duration ot the exclusion and the governbent of the excluded area. Tho unionists he con cluded would not agree to the second reading of the home rule bill Itself. Ulster volunteers have been notified, according to the Belfast RehouJ, that the time has arrived when on an order from their commanding officer the men may carry arms openly and tht any attempt to selce the arm1 or the volunteers who may be carrying them In accordance with this order Is to be resisted. COLOMBIAN PACT EXPLAINED Minister Dubois Takes Issue with Views of Roosevelt. NO MAN IS ALWAYS RIGHT Revolt In Panama I'omented by United Htntes and Only llnndful or Men Knew of Plan Until It Wns Kxeonted. HALLSTEAD, Ph.. July 1. In a state mcnt Issued hero tonight dealing with the proposed Colombian treaty, Jumcs T. Du bois, who wns United States minister to Colombia under tho Tuft administration, tukes' Issuo with tho vlee recently ex pressed by Colonel Roosevelt nnd explains his own reasons for supporting the treaty- Regarding his difference, wltji Colonel Roosevelt on this subject Mr, Dubois ex pressed regret at opposing "a grcit leader wlioso fortunes I devotedly 'followed for ten years," and states that "no man will tolerate tho thought that any ot Colonel Roosevelt's acts wero Inspired by tainted motives, blit no man Is always right." NfgoUtloiiH for, a treaty during the Ta'ff 'administration failed, he says, bei cailsc hlil instructions, out of excessive 'care 'not to Impugn tho motlvra of Presi dent oRosevelt "In taking" Panama failed to give Cblombla sufficient Justice. The pending treaty, ho bcllovcs, should be heartily approved by tle American people. I'lilotnlilnnn .Men of Chnraeter. Taking Issue with Colonel Roosevelt re garding tho character of tho public men In Colombia, Mr. Dubois declared that they compared well with tho public men of other countries In Intelligence nnd re spectability, Instcnd of being "blnck mailers and bandits." Quoting Mr. Roosevelt's declaration that the neonle of Panama were a unit In de manding tho revolution, ho says "a hand fuF of men who wero to be the direct beneficiaries of tho revolution, conceived It and not tho hundredth part ot the In habitants ot the Isthmus knew of the revolt until an American officer In tho uniform of the United Htntes army, raised tho flag of the now republic." Tho claim made by Colonel Roosevelt that tho Colombian treaty Is a blsck inslllng agreement is dealt with by Mr. Dubois In hlB Interpretation of the docu ment I'.'xpresslon of Regret .Not Anoloiry. "While negotiating for a treaty I made the Colombian nuthorltlr s understand that under no circumstances would the United Htates apologize to' any nation for a po litical act that was our unwritten law that never had been and never would be broken. In purely Informal conversations nnd In my unofficial memorandum, I sug geetcd that a chivalrous expression of regret that our friendship had In any way bcon marred, such as any real gen tleman would freely grant to another, might later bo embodied In the treaty as a balm for the wounded feelings of a once friendly nation which liHd been hu miliated beforo tho world, whoso credit had been destroyed In foreign countries, whpeo borrowing ability had been annlhl laied and whose persistent appeals for arbitration had been Ignored. Tho opposl tlon to this feature, on the ground that It Is an apology, Is not Just and Is not In the true Interests of the United mates. If the Anglo-Saxons are to live In har mony with the Latins on this continent they must treat them with absolute Jus tice, Just as we "hall exact Justice from them." Dealing directly with article III of tho treaty, providing a puyment to Colombia, which Colonel Roosevelt attacked as blackmail, Mr- Dubois describes the claims of Colqmbla for the unpaid an nuities on the cession of tho translsthmlan railroad company, tho reversionary rights In the Panama railroad and Panama's poitlon In the Colombian national debt, all of which, In his opinion, should be met by the United States. Blackened Steam Rises Mile Above Summit of Lassen RED BLUFF. Cal., July 1. After ins than twenty-four hours' of quiescence, Lassen peak burst forth early today in a stupendous eruption the fourteenth In the series that began May 30. No flames were seen, but the vast plume ot blaek ened steam from the crater waved a mile high In the sky and volcanic ash fell at Macombcr Flats, thirteen , miles dlstaut. HUERTA SAYS HALF PEOPLE OF CAPITAL will die ram Dictator is Quoted as Saying in Pointed Terms that He Does Not Expected to Resign. BRITONS LEAVE MEXICO CITY Spcoial Train Filled with Refugees Starts for Vera Cruz Instead of Puerto Mexico. MEDIATORS POSTPONE RECESS Wilson Tells Them Action Might Be Taken for End of Parleys. LAMAR CONVEYS INTIMATION lluertn Defoliates Also Object to Proposed Break and Diplomats Postpone. Depnrtnre from Niagara I'nll". VKR.V CRUZ, July l.-"Before I re sign, halt tho people of Mexico City will die with me," Is the remark President Vlctorlalii. lliieitiv Is credited with hav ing made to friends on Monday afternoon while xlttliig In a Mexico City cafe nt ten. Tho party was discussing tho efforts of tho mediators at Niagara Falls to find a solution of tho Mexican problem. General Huerta was more grim and taci turn than usual and showed little of his accustomed Jocularity, Special Leaves Cnpltol. A apcelal train hearing Rrltlsh rcfugeos left Mexico City .today. The plan to carry tho refugees tn Puerto Mexico has been abandoned and they will bo brought here. The British subjects arc leaving the Mex ican capital on tho advice ot the British minister. When passengers who nrrlved here today left the capital yesterday morning. Gen ithI Hucrtn's family was still there. Tho British subjects In Moxlco City were not likely to leave, they said, In spite of Sir Lionel Garden's warning. The constitutionalists In possession ot Tuxpan on June 73 made a dcmonetratlon against Americans in that port. They marched through the streets shouting. "Death to tho Americans." No one was Injured. Mediator Delay neceas. NIAGARA FALLS, Ont July l.-Plan for the Indefinite recession of mediation were somewhat disturbed today by tho suggestion of tho United States govern ment that such a break might be Inter preted gonerally as a disruption or the proceedings. The Washington adminis tration bolleves the departure of the me diators and delegates might tall to In fluence the constitutionalists to hurry their delegates to the proposed Informal conference with the Huerta commission. Justice Lamar conveyed tho views of the Washington government to Ambassa dor Da. Gams, and Minister Kaon today, after whlcU both diplomats cancelled their reservations tot tonight and said they would not depart Until tomorrow. The mediators explained "that tho rcceM did not signify an adjournment, but they thqught they could be ot mord service In Washington nnd elsewhere In forwarding tho peace program. Immediately after the conference with Justice Lamar tho mediators talked with Emtio Rabasa, head of tho Huerta dele gation. It was understood ho too was unwilling that mediation should recess without somo definite understanding as to the future. The Huerta delegates consider their work on thn Internal controversy as lltl Ishctl, and It Is believed would like to linve other delegates appointed by Gen eral Huerta to take care of tho Internal questions. The Huerta delegation It ex pecting definite word from Mexico City today and may leave on Friday or Sat urday, MARXE NOMINATED FOR AMBASSADOR TO RUSSIA WA81MNOTON, June 1. George T, Marye, jr.. ot Ban Francisco has been finally determined an for ambassador to Russia. President Wilson today sent his nomination to the senate. SAN FRANUISCO. July l.-George T Marye, nominated today by President Wilson to bo ambassador to Russia, Is retired stock broker, who at one tlmo was president of the an Francisco StocK exchange. Born In Baltimore In ISIS, his father brought him west In the early days of the gold rush. Mr. Mnrye was educated In Cambridge, England, Parts, Berlin and Barcelona, with the original IntcfWlon of practicing law, and was admitted to the bar. Al though he abandoned his profession for business he retained, his Interests In schol arship and for one term served as re gent of the University of California CONDITION OF COTTON NEARLY EIGHTY PER CENT WASHINGTON, July l.-The area planted to cotton this year Is 24,960,000 acres, the department announced today The condition of the crop on June 25 waa 79.6 per cent of a normal. Clearance Time July Is clearance time la most ot the great retail estab lishments of tho country. It Is the between season that precedes stock taking the time when tbe stores "clean house." It Is one of the axioms of merchandising that it is cheap, er to clear out odd lots with no profit and sometimes at ac tual loss than to carry them over. , t That Is why ''cUBrajvcQ time" brings many ungual offerings. Glance through Uhi v-adve.r Using columns oftyepjp' favorite newspaper and yqu, will find many invitations 'that make July shopping wen worth while, 0