Image provided by: Oregon City Public Library; Oregon City, OR
About Oregon City enterprise. (Oregon City, Or.) 1891-194? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 2, 1912)
OREGON CITY ENTERPRISE, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 2, 1912. through tyrim i ir ti iment par excellence. I hare used It for broken sinew, above the knee cTp caJd l-r. fall, and to my great satisfaction I was able to resume my dutie In less than three week after the accident. IIIIMEM is an excellent remedy for sprains, bruises, sore throat, asthma. No rubbing necessary you can appiy wiw uma.u MA r Dalnil. OKn ROOm A $1mOO t an ajowm-va t-, i tt r.. Dr. EARL S. SLOAN. BOSTON. MASS. HOMESTEAD BILL TO COMMITTEE REPORTS FAVOR ABLY ON MEASURE MAKING TITLES EASIER. SIX-MONTHS' ABSENCE ALLOWED Homesteaders To Be Given Right To Work Elsewhere Half of Year Three Year Time Required. WASHINGTON. Jan. 25. By a unanimous vote, the Senate commit tee on public lands on Wednesday combined and favorably reported the Borah three-year homestead bill and the Jones bill granting homesteaders six months' leave of absence in each year of residence. As the bill Is reported, homestead ers, after the first six months of con tinuous residence upon their land, will be entitled to leave their homestead for six months In each succeeding year, the time when absent to be counted as part of the three years' residence required by law. Thus, the homesteader will be able to get title after cultivating his land for three successive summers, and will be per mitted to be away from his land each winter to earn money elsewhere. The committee was unanimous In reporting the bill and it will be called up and unquestionably will pass the Senate at an early day. This com bined bill is In direct line with the reform urged by Senator Borah In his speech last week. So effective was that speech that many Eastern Sena tors stand ready to vote for the meas ure, which Is framed to facilitate the acquirement of title by homesteaders. It Is believed that the bill will pasB without opposition. The bill applies to enlarged home steads, as well as to 160-acre entries. DANDRUFF GOES. Quicket Dandruff Cure World Has Ever Known. If you want to get rid of dandruff In the shortest possible time get a bot tle of PARISIAN SAGE today and use It. Besides banishing dandruff and mak ing your scalp Immaculately clean, PARISIAN SAGE Is guaranteed to stop falling hair and itching scalp and impart life and beauty to the hair. One of Rochester's most prominent barbers writes. Gentlemen: ''I am a barber of fif teen years experience, have used many things for hair but never found anything equal to PARISIAN SAGE for removing dandruff. It Is also a splendid hair dressing and quickly stops Itching scalp. I have used It for the last three years." T. D. Smith. Chamber of Commerce Bldg., Roches ter, N. Y., June 27, 1911. PARISIAN SAGE Is sold by Huntley Bros. Co. and druggists everywhere for 50 cents. 2-16 Podolax Is as pleasant as maple syrup. Try It for Liver, Kidney and Stomach trou bles. 60c per bottle. Does not gripe nor sicken. For sale by Harding's Drug Store. One Car Heating CERTAIN AS Are displayed on our floors frcm the tiny little oil heater to the most elabor ate nickel ornamented Parlor Stove our prices run from $1.00 to $25.00 Ask For Trading Stamps ST Frank BuSCh Rheumatic Pains quickly relieved Sloan's Liniment is good lor pain of anvaort It penetrates, without rubbing, the muscular tissue right to the bone relieves the congestion ana gives permanent as.wcll as temporary relief. Here's Proof. A. W. Lav of Lafayette, Ala., writes: " 1 hd rhcim.atum f.ir fire year. I tried doctor and several different remedie but they did not help roe, I obtained a bottle of Sloan' Liniment which did me so much good that 1 would not do without It lor anything. Thomas L. Riciof Eaaton, T., write: "I have used Sloan' Lini ment and find it firstla for rheu matic pains." Mr.U.G, JONtsof Baldwins, L.I., writes: "I have found Sloan' Lin . . Ckn onrt Pnnltrv ent free. AQareai Iddres STEEL HEADS DEFY. U. S. PROSECUTORS DEFENDANTS DECLARE THAT IT IS TOO LATE TO MAKE CHANGE. ROOSEVELT KNEW ALL, IS PALE Answer of Magnates Astert That No . Secrets Were Kept From v Him Carnegie Has No Voce. TRENTON, N. J, Jan. 31. Abso lute denial of alleged violations of the anti-trust law Is made by the United States Steel Corporation, its subsid iaries and directors, in their answers, nich will be filed tomorrow in tn United States Court, to the govern ment's dissolution suit. Five separate answers will be filed among thirty three defendants. .The effect of its organization, the corporation declares, has been to cheapen production, effect economy and increase foreign trade from $8, 000,000 to 160,000,000 annually within ten years. So long has the govern ment acquiesced in its existence, the answer says, that it is now too late, as a matter of equity, to insist that its organization was illegal. Nothing was withheld from Presi dent Roosevelt by Messrs. Gary and Frick on November 4, 1907, the an swer says, when they sought his con sent to the corporation's proposed purchase of the Tennessee Coal & Iron Company, nor were the so-called Gary dinners productive of agree ments to regulate prices. The answers made public tonight are those of the Steel Corporation, Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefel ler, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., and Ed mund C- Converse. The Rockefellers make a joint answer. Mr. Carnegie says he had no part In the plans for organizing the corpor ation and no voice, direct or advisory, in its management. He admits sell ing the Carnegie Steel Company to the United States Steel Corporation, but denies that the acquisition by the Carnegie Company of its subsid iaries was in restrain of trade. The answer of Edmund Converse, a director of the Steel Corporation, is similar to the corporation's answer. The answers to be filed tomorrow, with those filed Monday by the Minne sota group of land and mining com panies and five individuals named as trustees, will complete the answers from all fifty-six defendants named In the suits. The next step will be the filing of replications by the govern ment, which must be done within thirty days unless an extension of time be given. After that a Commis sioner will be appointed to take testi mony. NEW YORK, Jan. 25. A painting byCorotsold for 85.000, after an ani mated bidding at an auction here. The dealer who bought it said he acted for a well known Western collector. The price marked a new record in this country for a canvas by the Barbizon master. The title of the painting is "Lake Nemi," and it was executed in 18C5. Load of Stoves Oregon City, Ore E WARNED BY TAFT PRESIDENT TELLS THEM THAT THEY MUST CEASE THEIR DENUNCIATION. REPUBLICAN PARTY SURE TO WIN Alarming Report Regarding Health of Executive Discredited Declare Facts Are Demanded, COLUMBUS. O. Jan. 30. Review inff th arhiavemonta of his Adminis tration before the Columbus Glee Club here tonight, president Tuft drew the line sharply between the old line nuniitilfrnna and the "wOKresslveS ' of his party, and said that the time was at hand when the "denunciation by the "progressives must cease ana when the Nation will demand facts." Mb said ha had not the slluhtest doubt that the Republican party would carry tne KovemDer elections. ThA Prualilent' second dav In Ohio developed loss speechmaking anJ more politics than did his sixteen hour stop in Cleveland. Many Ke publicana who did not Journey to Northern Ohio to welcome him drop ped In today to have a word or two anH in aiiri unmethlna to the Presi dent's growing Information about the political condition here. The President spoke today at the Chamber of Commerce luncheon on "Peace'' and dedicated the new fed eral building with a speech against the judicial recall. As the guest of the Columbus Glee Club, he repeated tonight portions of his speech last night to the Tippecancoe Club of Cleveland. He spent the night in Co lumbus and will end his trip tomor row at Akron. Shortly after his arrival he held a reception in a hotel and, according to estimates by members of his party, more than 3.000 persons marched by and shook his hand. His receptions at the Chamber of Commerce luncheon and tonight's banquet were friendly in the extreme. The alarming reports as to his physical condition that went out of Cleveland last night were discredited today by the President and Dr. Thomas L. Rhoades, the Army physi cian who is accompanying him. Dr. Rhoades said that the President was recovering from a bronchial attack that could be expected to run its course without serious consequence in several days. The President was accompanied from Cleveland by Committeeman Vorys, of Ohio, but Mr. Vorys said no political talk took place en route. Careless About Appendicitis in Oregon City. Many Oregon City people have stom ach or bowel trouble which is likely to turn into appendicitis. If you have constipation, sour stomach, or gas on the stomach, try simple buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as compounded in Adler-i-ka, the new German appen dicitis remedy. The Jones Drug Co, states that A SINGLE DOSE of this simple remedy relieves bowel or stom- ach trouble almost INSTANTLY. HARMON DENIES HE NTW YORK, Jan. 26. Declaration that he is the friend of everybody who is straight and square, whether he be the president of a big corpora tion or a street laborer, is made by Governor Judson Harmon, of Ohio, Democratic presidential possibility, in the current isue of the Outlook. Harmon's statement is in the form of on "authorized Interview," and says in part: "Of itself, a corporation is neither good nor bad. It is only what its of ficers made it. From my viewpoint there is nothing to be gained by fin ing a corporation. Proper and effec tive punishment of the men really responsible for wrongdoing Is the only thing that will have an Immediate and wholesome effect." Referring to the quip of the Gridlon Club in Washington, which quoted him as saying, "I am a friend of the classes, and the classes are friends of mine,-' Governor Harmon says: "I want to be friendly with every body who Is on the square. It makes no difference whether be is a farm laborer or a trust president, so long as he does the right thing. But I am against grafters. As for the classes being friends of mine, I don't know whether they are or not. If they are and are hoping to get some thing from me that they should not have, they are going to be fooled." Harmon also declares that so far as Ohio is concerned the initiative and referendum measures are still In an experimental stage. In reiterating his opposition to the recall of judges, the governor says: "Incompetent and unworthy officials are rare exceptions. The recall of Judges by a mere vote would, I think, be especially injurious to the proper administration of justice." Away Goes Pimples, Blackheads, Ec zema, Dandruff and Other Skin Affections When Zemo and Zemo Soap Are Used. The Huntley Drug Store says, "We are so confident that ZEMO and Z& MO SOAP used together will rid the skin or scalp of infant or grown per son of PIMPLES, BLACKHEAD, EC ZEMA, DANDRUFF. INSECT BITES or any form of itching, irritated, dis figuring skin or scalp trouble, that we do not hesitate to recommend these clean refined remedies to every per son who dsires quick relief and a cure from any form of aggravated skin or scalp affection. Oftentimes one bot tle and one cake of soap will care a minor case of skin trouble. ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP produce sure and swift results. You will not suffer another day after you com mence to nse them. Ton will feel like a new person. ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP can be ob tained from one leading druggist In, every city or town In America and in Oregon City by Huntley Bros. Drug Store. pr on SSIVES ARE STATE UNIVERSITY PLANS NEW COURSES UNIVERSITY OF OKEliON. EU GENE. Jan. 30. (Special.) Three new courses, to be given at tho I'ul vcrslty of Oregon next semester, are, "Birds," by Professor Vovard, head of the department of soology; "How to Study." by Miss Montana Huntings, an Instructor In the department of ed ucation; and "Economic iiotuny," by Professor Sweetior, head of the do partmeut of botany. The ktudy of birds will cotisUt of the observation of all tho whims, characteristics, and halilis of the Ore gon songsters. Miss Dusting's In struction of students in the art of studying will consist of a lecture course which will treat of the psy chology of study and will explain the reasons for lack of the ower of con certratlon. Under the title of Econo mic Botany, Professor Sweetxer hits outlined a course that will embrace the study of the relative value of foods and combinations of foocla and will treat of tholr proper preparation. As some of the students at the Uni versity batch and others have charge of the buying for the clubs and the fraternities, the study of food values will be a very popular course. EASTING KILLED GIRL, SEATTLE. Wash.. Jan. 25. The death of Miss Claire Williamson, the wealthy English woman, on account of whose death Mrs. Linda Burneict Hiu.ard Is on trial in the Kitsap fnnntv finnorlor Court nt Port Orch ard charged with murder in the first degree, resulted alono from the star vation treatment, according to the testimony of Dr. T. J. Baldwin, of Port Orchard, and Dr. John F. Munns, of Bremerton, the only witnesses callpd hv the state today. IrresDective of any ordinary ail ments with which Miss Wllliamsou mlrhr have heen afflicted, the treat ment insisted upon by the fasting Riierlallst was sufficient to cause death, the witnesses said. "Miss Williamson did not get the right kind of food ana ueatn resuuea from starvation," was the positive declaration of Dr. Baldwin, when on the stand. BOLD BANDITS LOOT BANK IN DAY TIME VANCOUVER. B. C. Jan. 26. The Royal Bank branch at the corner or Mnln street and Seventh avenue, was robbed of all Its cash by two robbers at 11 o clock Wis morning, manager A. A. Stevens and the members of his staff were backed into the vault and locked th re, while the robber helped themselves to everything in sight. It is not known how much money was taken, but the sum will undouoteaiy be high up In the thousands. The first report was that $30,000 had been atnlon The two robbers entered by the front door, herded the clerks into tne vault and then leisurely took all the money. One or the clerks made a show of fight. He was knocked down by a blow on the head with the butt end of a gun which knocked him senseless. Tho rnhliorn are hellnved to have left the place by the rear door. They walked out leisurely ana joined witn the people on the street oerore any one realized what was going on. Tho rnhhorv una niceedinalv bold for the corner Is a busy one. As soon as the clerks were released, there was a great hue and cry, but there has so far luwri nr trace of the robbers. It Is asserted by officials In the head office of the Royal Bank that only $1,000 was taken. 15 IN MEXICAN REVOLT EL PASO. Tex.. Jan. 31. The gar rison of Juarez. EI Paso's Mexican nleehbor across the river, rose in re. volt at 6:30 o'clock tonight and In half an hour were in possession of the city. Looting and promiscuous shoot ing prevailed for hoirs. The commander of the garrison was thrown into prison, and the Chief of Police locked In with him, while pre vious prisoners were released. American residents in Juarez and many Mexican officials and citizens fled to the American side. onortly after midnight an Italian surgeon, holding a commission In the Mexican army, returned from Juarez and reported that he bad counted fif teen dead, including two Americans man and a boy of about twelve years. The boy was lying in the street, shot through the heart. The surgeon said most of the dead were near the cus tom-house. FOR FOLK AND CLARK ST. LOUIS, Jan. 25. W. J. Bryan, after he had missed a train here to day, tried to patch up the difference between the factions of Speaker Clark and ex-Governor Folk, who are seek ing Missourfs Indorsement for the presidential nomination. The three-time Democratic candi date was met at the railway station by Mr. Folk, who conferred with blm for more than an hour. Later two of the leading supporters of the ex-Governor were called Into the conference. A short time after the Folk men de parted, two local leaders for Speaker Clark, ex-Governor Stephens and Virgil Rule, had a talk with Mr. Bryan. National Committeeman Gol tra was the last Democrat who con ferred with Mr. Bryan. All 8kln Troubles Are overcome by using Dr. Bell's An tiseptic Salve. It Is as pleasant to use as pure cream and Is guaranteed to give satisfaction. 25c a box. Hard ing's Drug Store. CURES OBSTINATE COUGHS QUICK RELIEF OF WHOOPING COUGH CHIEF IS KILLED WALLA WALLA BLOCK BURNED AND ENTIRE CITY IS THREATENED. VICTIM SUFFOCATED IN BASEMENT Aide Injured And Comrades Are Balked In Effort To Aid ' Firemen Flames Subdued. WALLA WALLA. WaBh., Jan. 26. Assistant Fire Chief Robert J. Wolf was killed, Lieutenant William Davis, dangerously burned, and approximate ly $00,000 In property wa destroyed today by fire in the Jones building, a three-story structure at Second and Alder street In the heart of the busi ness district The fire was the worst Walla Walla has had for a quarter of a century. For six hours it raged uncontrolled, and at times it was thought certain parts of the business district, sur rounding would be burned. The fire started In the cotton store room of the A. M .Jensen & Company dry goods store, and was discovered by an employe, Edwar Strauss at 1 o'clock. After vainly trying to combat it with buckets of water from a faucet, he turned In an alarm and both de partments responded. At first it seemed but a small basement fire and stores upstairs were not alarmed. It was while the fire was still In the basement that Wolf lost his life, in Wdlna a atriufr of hose to the basement he became lost and It is thought that a door slammed snut on him, for his cries for help were heard wir Weslev A. Tureman. of Jen sen & Company, saw Wolf go down just as he came out and Wolf was not seen later. vi ro rhipf William Metx made an heroic attempt to rescue Wolf, as also did Lieutenant Davis, who is in the hospital with badly burned arms and legs. He used an oxygen helmet, but the fierce heat drove Davis back. The body of Assistant Chief Wolf from the building at 8 o'clock this evening. He was not bad ly burned and the position of the body, at o,a font nt thn Htalr leading to the main floor. Indicated that he had been suffocated. Tho flro mounted the walls of the i.niMino- which Ih an old brick struc ture originally built for an implement house. Twice it scemea unuer con trol, but both times blazed out fierce ly. " THIS IS CERTAIN. The Proof That Oregon City Readers Cannot Deny. What could furnish stronger evl- dence of the efficiency of any remedy than the test of time. Thousands of people testify that Doan's Kidney Pills cure permanently. Grateful endorsements should prove undoubtedly the merits of this reme dy. Years ago people right in this lo cality testified to the relief they had derived from the use of Doan s Kidney Pills. They now confirm their testi monials. They say that time has com pleted the test Mrs. A. S. Cummlngs, 221 Clacka mas St., Portland, Ore., says: "The public statement I gave In 1903, rec ommending Doan's Kidney Pills, still holds good. This remedy relieved me St that time of a severe attack of kid ney and bladder trouble. I shall take Doan's Kidney pills occasionally and find that they prevent kidney disor ders to which elderly folks are sub ject. Other members of my family have also received great benefit from Doan's Kidney Pills." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. Animal Doctor In China. Because of l be fondne of the Chi nese for animal the veterinary sur geon forms a elm by blmxelf. fie treats horses, uinle. donkeys, camels. cattle, dugs. rats, bird and goldfish. He baa four principal prescription. each consisting of about a dozen dif ferent drags and each efficacious ac cording to th veaaon of the year. Ab-r-ees are punctured with steel nee dle, of wbicb be has various forms. Dried lizards are good for burses suf fering from pulmonary troubles. In giving medicines to a horse a special bit is used, by means of which the animal is tied op and the concoction is poured Into tbe mouth with an ox horn fashioned Into a ladle.-Excbange. IN $200,000 FIRE THE KING OF CURES DR. EMNG'S NEW DUSCOWLW FOR ALL DISEASES THROAT AND LUNGS PRICK .boo $ r 3 SOLD AND GUARANTEED BY C ALL DRUGGISTS AVIATOR DRESSED AS LOS ANGELES. Jan. 27 Uncoln lleachey, the crack flyer of the Cur tiHS ramp, took the honors at todny'a aviation meet. In a wind so strong that many of the aviators refused to go up, he gave the ((Mutators a great exhibition of during. Incidentally, ho furnished a surprise for Mis Blanche Scott, one of the women aviators, by Minklng bis first flight garbed as a woman, his purpose being to make Miss Scott believe that she had a rival. A thlrty-flve-mllo wind swept the aviation field when lleachey, who had previously announced that a new girl aviator would appear, sent his craft rounding "Death Curve" at sixty miles an hour, and not more than twenty- five feet from the ground. Ilosplte the sale, lleachey as a wlndup of th day's event, climbed 5,000 feet In the air, shut off his motor and volplaned to the ground, making a beautiful landing. At the time he came down the aerometer Indicated a wind ve locity of forty-two miles an hour. Despite the gale Farnum T. Fish, the seventeen-year-old boy aviator or Ix)s Angeles, rose In the air at 2:08 p. m., and was blown out over the ocean. Thirty minutes later he had disappeared In the mists hanging over the sea. Weldon B. Cooke, the San Francis co flyer, who dared the gale with Fish, fought his way back to the aviation field, after having been blown as far as Redondo. PLANNED FOR PUPILS SALEM, Jan. 30. (Special.) Be fore the first of March the greatest series of tryouts ever held In the schools of Oregon will be under way. The boys and the girls of the state are going to determine "who is who'' In gardening, farming, carpentry, cook ing, sewing, and In raising chickens, ducks, and pigs. Enthusiasm for this state-wide series of Industrial con tests is waxing warmer than it has ever been for contests along athletic lines. m The plan is for every county super intendent to enlist tbe support of his teachers In explaining the plan to the children and Interesting them In the work, and to secure the co-operation of commercial clubs, bankers, and business men In obtaining prizes for their local or county fairs. These county or local premium lists niay be made out Independently of tbe state list, but in order that children com puting at a local or county fair may also be In line for state prizes the local or county list should Include the articles on the state list, which are: field corn, pop-corn, sweet corn, wa termelons, muskmelons, pumpkins, squashes, potatoes, cabbage, grain se lections, bird houses, piece of furni ture, mechanical toy, labor-saving de vice for homo, bread, canned fruit, Jelly, mending, darning, aprons, dresses, asters, sweet peas, chickens, ducks, and plge. A bulletin of Information and In struction, Including the state prize list, will soon be sent out to tho school children, one for every home. All the boy and the girls now need to do Is to go to work. If they want to com pete In gardening they should at once secure a plot of ground, which they may have plowed. If boys expect to win prizes In woodwork they should begin practicing with their tools. If girls wish to carry off laurels In cook ing, and sewing they must begin early either at school or at home, if it is the poultry contest that lures most settings of eggs should be se cured from breeders of pure strains of chickens or ducks. Or If hog rais ing seems most attractive, the com petitor should secure a thoroughbred pig and start to feeding and caring for It There Is nothing to prevent a boy or girl from competing In all these lines. A Fith That Look Lika SiiwHd. It la a well known fail ibiit many In sects, bird iiul uiiluial rnive n way of simulating leaves, twit', foliage and tall pra? anions which they seek shelter, but who ever hmi'd of a fish Imitating mm weed? The Aus tralian sen drn'on in a kind of sea borne, but one xtrnncelj tr.inxrorintil by extravagant trappings. It Is so richly ornamented with loone and Unit ping ribbon of skin Unit It lo.,k like a bunch of eaw-d when traveling through tbe water, and tbe ravenous wolves of tbe sen searching for food may pass It a dozen time a day with out suspecting that the Innocent look ing bit of seaweed U really a Ball. New York World. ROUTS STUBBORN COLDS OF HEALS WEAK, SORE LUNGS DAHW CALLED M'NAMARAS ATTORNEY ACCUS ED OF TRYING TO IN FLUENCE JURORS. TWO TRUE BILLS RETURNED BY JURY Lawyer Laughs at Charge and De clares He Will Be Acquit tedBall Fixed at $20,000. I)3 ANGELES, Jan. 29. Clarence 8. Darrow, tbe noted union labor law yer, and chief counsel for the McNa maras, was today chargeJ with brib ery In two Indictments returned by the county grand Jury, which for four weeks has been Investigating allega tions of corruption In connection with the trial jury In the McNamara dyna miting case. There are four counts In the two bills. Two of the counts charge Dar row with the bribery and attempted corruption of Robert Bain, the first Juror sworn to try James II. McNa mara, the confessed dynamiter and murderer, now serving a life term In San Quentln prison. Tbe remaining counts alleged tho bribery and cor ruption of George N. Lockwood, a venireman summoned In the McNa mara case. Bert Franklin, the detective who Is alleged tc have actually passed the bribe money to Bain and Ikwood, Is accused of the same offenses In In formations filed some time ago In the Superior Court and his trial has been sot for February 17. The maximum penalty that could be Imposed upon Darrow for conviction on all count I thirty years' imprison ment and fine aggregating $10,000. Ho Is under $20,000 bail, but tonight the former chief dofender of the Mo Natnaras said he was glad tbo sus pense wa over and that he farces his arraignment Thursday In the Super ior Court with an equanimity born of a knowledge of his own Innocence. "Guiltless of crime I could hardly expect anything elso than acquittal," he said smiling. ADMITS HFS GUILTY PORTLAND, Jan. 29. Completely dispirited and with worry depicted In every line of his countenance, W. Cooper Morris turned state's evidence today and became a witness for the prosecution against Louis J. Wilde, with whom he was Jointly Indicted for the embozzloment of $90,000 of the funds of the Oregon Trust & Savings Bank. Morris appeared before Judge Kav- anaugh shortly before 2 O'clock and entered a plea of guilty. Two hours later he became tho star witness for the state and gave tostimony on which the prosecution relies to convict Wilde. The Indictments against Mor ris will be dismissed. AERIAL ATTACK UPON PEKIN BEING PLANNED. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 20. Six Anierlcau-hullt blplaneB are carried by the revolutionary army advancing on pckln, according to a cablegram received here today. The aeroplane were built In Cleveland, by American manufacturers, and will be manned by Chinese aviators, who have spent months in the practice of aerial war fare. The revolutionary troop In com mand of General Lum Shood Hing, were massed at Nanking, and the march was begun Wednesday. Ac cording to the dispatch, an attack upon Pekln Is looked upon by the revolutionary chiefs as unavoidable. OWEN G. THOMAS BLACKSMITH INQ AND REPAIR WOflK. Best of work and satisfaction guar anteed. Hav your horaes shod by an expert; It pays. All kinds of repair work and smithy work. Prompt service; greater por tion of your work can be done while you do your trading. Give me a trial job and see If I cant please you. OWEN G. THOMAS Cor. Main and Fourth Bts. Oregon City BRIBER NDICTED