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About St. Helens mist. (St. Helens, Or.) 1913-1933 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1914)
hURT PROCEEDINGS MHHiI"r ,p' f,tinu-J fro n VaKo 6 n r, llurthiild Hunt Co. Hup to Koiul Mauler li.lj .4 0 . Klllium Hlu. & PrliiUm: Co. Bun "irtHWOrth. Hurvoyow Rx ' to Road Muster . 17 31 1 1H.7C Prliiglu. Wm. Komi Viewer . ."8 OU Ciunly Rank, It Ii;It of ! Boiilluinl, II. J. ltoi.il Viewer 21 CO ,M r,0 00 ; KcilloRK, llnswin, Aas't Viewer Ki.dO l i Ciller. I'uli. Ilnul j KuIIokk. Itoscoii, mmuu COO ,k;" A (in rilllnril Wnlili.n le.mn '. nil . i; Rurvnvnr 1 0il 00 ' Iillllir"'. Wnlden. iiullio 2 r.U .,Wiirl". ' ! ..ill , ,..,., , " ' 34. ill ItiiMri, Civil, Knm " 5 00 Announcement - i To the People or ot. Helen is and All Way Towns ST. HELENS -PORTLAND AUTO CO. luis established Portlnncl Oflitc For Panacngcr Auto at Meier Frank's Store 6l1i and Alder Streets, l'onla'iid Pass n:.;er auto will receive ai.d deliver p.isseiiRcrs :il this location lireinuin MAY 41 li ;;.s7' itnavs-Fj; :: chuck uoom vuiiuv n:u-:rno.YKs ami every lottvenii lice is t.flVrcd to you MEIER & FRANK'S Vun Orshoven, L. . Hurvoyor "22 1.0 Ki'IIiikk. Roscoe, same 2.00 KvIIokk. Rubcoo, same 1.0r, Vun OrHliovnn, L. J. mono 82 00 Van Orshoveii, L. J. samo H.flO Vun Orshoven, L. J. snmn- 1 1.20 Van Orshovmi, L. J. snmo " I 7.ii0 Vim Onihoven, I.. J. samo 04 30 Dlllard, Witltlen, munn ' 2. HO Deavurs, H. L. same ' 5 20 Delivers, U. I... saiun 2 fil rrlni;lo, Ceo. mimn ;0 00 Prlngln, John same lb. 00 Clatskunln Chief, Cub. Ito.ul Notices J3.S0 Hull, W. L. Hall for Election .1 00 School Dint No. 10, panto i '0 lluxsn, TIioh., mi rim (i.no Erlckson, J. & Son, name 3 00 Prichnrd. D. Clerk of Kindlon fi f.O ! Nutt, II. W. Deliver llitllot Dux C 00 Jolin, C. II. SherllT's Kxpnnan 12 15 Duvles, W. II. Llvnry for Sheriff , . 11.00 Liikn. A. II. Sheriff's KxpenM 40 TO Kt. Helens Tel Co. Telephone.-. ?:i.4 5 John, C. II. Pontage nml Suppllni for Sheriff :l 15 Klllium Sta. tk Prliillng Co. Sup plies for Sheriff :i.33 Columbia Co. Alint. Co. Premium on Honda i (Continued Next Wn-t ) BRIEF NEWS OF OREGON HORACE H. LURT0N TKIiMIOI.M SV.WH Horace H. Lurton, Associate Juitlce of the United State Supreme Court, who died suddenly it Atlantic City. Livery, Feed and Sale Stable D RAYING AND TRANSFER All BiiimcM Promptly Attended To PHONE 13 OR 12 Mm. Kid ridge Crouto of fit. Hel ens Is viiiltlntc Mm. Samuel Churchill. Mm. J. I.umberson nrrlved at Tren liolm, Monday mid will reside on thn lien rinrce r.".niplnK RroundH. Mr. unit Mm. Cluudi Hutlihun hnv nRiiln tuken up their reKldene.o it Trnnholni. They are camoln? on I he old Ayer'a Hunch. The loEfjed o(f land around Tren holm In pretty well dotted Willi lil.i-kherry Dliikers thono d.iy. ThO Idaekherrles etPin to bo qulto plnntl ful thin year. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Slater of Yank ton punned throiiuh town Tuesday on their return from Voinonl.i where they have been vIsltiiiB the paBt week. O. T. FoHter made n buslnei-.s trip to Portland Wednesday. J. Chrlateniien vlsWed Trenholra Tuenday III the lntorests of the West ern Cdoi.hnikq Co. Wo notli.ed tbat ho wan drlvliiK a new Saxon Auto mnhlio. Mm. Ceo. Wilson and mm Mai iiiadn u trip to the County fiirit Wed- noKilay For Sale and Want Ad Ad. in Theio C .iumiu Erin? Rciulla WM. H. DAVIES ST. HELENS. OREGON Prop. CHASE & SON PROPRIETORS OF Central Grocery Iluvo mu.lo arranRcinrnta toluuille R. & H. C.roon Truilinjf Slan.pt In H.Mition to Kettinir the l"-t ttrowrios at the lowest prioea our ctiHtnmcra Ret vnluul.lo trwlmfr Btainps. It will pay you to beeome our customer lIKi:! Illtl)! IlltH! luiri Dry weather Is oomliiK on see K. K. Ouli'k In St. Helens nnd Insure your property In tlio Oregon Fire j ICOIiei yiHHOClllllUH Ul muiiiiiiiiw. iii OreKon. Don't put It off. W. U WAHKKX, AKt. A pood house with three c'.ioice loU in koim! loeution in St. Helens for sale. Iniiiiire for prices ami terms at the Mist ollice. I 1IEWAHD For tho return of ladles blue button front sweater, lout at lloulton or on tho path between Houlton and South St. Helens about n week sko. Apply 0. v. 11. Ilox 10. St. Helens. Hp. j r.ii.vrs , n.a:. ess DEALERS IN II.UU) II W.'v S. IS II 0 1 L S noons i l'Olt SALE 4 lots In lllock 9.1 und C lots In lllock 9C. Price C00.00 for tho wholo 10 lots I HANK WILKI.NS o. St. Helens, tiro. ,,,, , win .scmrv sr. iiele' s, oregon W-X! ar -CtX4 -3- - StHelensMillCo. I'OIt SALE Team, weight nbout 2000. 3U Mitchell uf:on and pood set of work harness. Team ran bo seen at Miller's camp at Houbon, Oregon. J. K. MEKH.W AM prepared to bn'o hay at once at $2.00 per ton. A. L. LARSON 4tp warrm, Uro. FOR SALE Timothy Hay, In shock. mow or will deliver. O. J. LARSON , jtp Wnrren. ore. m. w ir Electric Lighting (SaveYour Eye) Steam Heating (Prolong! Your Lives) Lath Wood Lumber 'OU SALE Two good box ball al loys, 40 feot loniT, Willi balls and fixture rompleto. tent Included. If taken at onco ean be hnd at a barRiiln. Located In St. Helens. . V. S. WALTON St. Helens FOR SALE A standard' player plnno.iilmost new as good ns new and a real bargain. Annlv nt tho Mist offlco. Aay one In need of a good Mater- j nlty Nurse, correspond .with Mrs. E. U. Engjort, 8cappoo80, Oreson. j I FOR SALE Two lots and Hew four room house with electric lights and basement, nonr business part of town. Two good chicken hous es, fruit trees and pmnll fruit. ! For price and terms' enquire of TEDDY BERO, j 1 mo St. Helens I Josephine, Douglas, Klamath anil Jackison counties will CQOperate In In stalling a dispkiy at the Panama-Pa-ciric exposition, at San Francisco. Outlook for the walnut cron in tho McMlnnvllle dltttrtct Is exceptionally ! good this year, one tree which Is 14 , years old having a crop which will ' produce $40. Attorney General Crawford, la an I (ip'nloa, bohls that delinquency certl llcaleM could not bo Issued by county tt.x collectors until tho expiration of six months after taxes became delinquent. Manacled and chained, H. A. Miller, mayor of Head, was marched through the streets and luter escorted to tho stvc of a moving picture theater and there exhibited to a crowded house as a prospective bridegroom. Stute Forester Elliott announces tho privately-owned stumpage of the stato is 9,54.:,ii45 acres and that 4,300,130 ai res are owned by non-residents. Ho said that 94 per cent of the timber owners have holding of about 640 acres cai'a and that they amount to 211 per cent of the total privately-owned forest acreage of the state. The poultry department of the Ore gon Agricultural College shipped to tha poultry department ot the State 1 Insane asylum 100 pullets of the fa 1 nious egg strain to bo UBed partly for j demonstration work In poultry breed , lug. These pullets have a pedigree ' declared to be better than that of any ! other flock of pullets In the world. I A. M. Gooch. a Hood River' orchard 1st, has obtained record returns from his strawberry crop this yeur and heads the list for production among thoso shipping through the Apple Grjwer.V association. From a five- acre tract, with berries planted be tween apple rows, Mr. Gooch shipped 1117 crates, receiving $1500. Slate Forester Elliott has an uounced that the federal government would cooperate thrs 'year with his de partment by appropriating $10,00 for use In patrollng timber lands at the headwaters of navigable streams. The fornhter said that the money would be used when the dunger from fire hMH-ured to be greatest. It will pro- 1 vide about 0 ftre-fiiihlcra. j Frank Meredith, secretary of the j Oregon State Fair, anomices thut the BPtclal prices for the dairy exhibits 1 thi.i your would bo much more costly j und 4U!meroi: than ever before in the l.b.tory e:f the association. The prlzee ! wet.; oiitained by A. II. Lea, superlu teuuent of the department, who has written to Mr. Meredith that he ex perts to add more prizes to the list which already has been forwarded to him. Tlio postofficq department haa ac cepted the proposal of tho Southern Pacific company to carry parcel post by boat between Portland by 'North Rend to Marshfield nnd back as often na tho rnntructor may operate the bonU at the rate of 2 cents per pound. Tho proposal of Oscar F. Jacobsen to transport mall by boat between New port and Yaquina stution has been ac cepted. The Renton county court has au thorized S.im H. Moore, of Corvallls, to ropieseat the county at the Good Roads convention at Medford the last of this month. Mr. Moore Is the orig inator of a plan to use convict labor in the manufacture of road materials, st:ite roads also to receive state aid In materials and convict labor, so far ns available. He advocates the pur chase by the state of a shale and rock or cement deposit, the building of a content plant nnd the operation of the plant with convict labor. He believes that the convicts will be doing labor not likely to bo done by paid labor. In addition to Increasing by $60,000 the cost limit of the Pendleton post- office building, the senate has passed the bill appropriating $100,000 for two fish culture stations on the Columbia river In Oreson. The senate also patted the bill appropriating $50,000 to establish a fishery experiment eta tlon at some point on the Pacific const to be designated by the secre tary of commerce, and the bill appro priating $1200 for Thomas Coyle on nccount of the death ot his child Mar. 10. 1887, caused by a blast of powder ut the Cascade Locks, Incident to the construction of thr canal. A bill was passed authorizing officials of the Olalla diking district in Olulla Slough, Lincoln county, Oregon. I All efforts of the general assembly i of the Presbyterian church to wage a fight for prohibition In the northwest I will be centered In Oregon next fall, ' if nlans embodied In two seta of reso- 1 it'.ons adopted by the synod of the Presbylorinn -church of Oregon at Eu eene are carried out. ' That body In dorsed the Anti-Saloon League, the Woman's Christian Temperance Union and the Presbyterian prohibition or gnnization, but refused its support to the urohibltlon party and instead re quested that the National temperance ccmmlttee of the general assembly plate In the hands of a local commit tee the greater part of $50,000 at the disposal of that assembly committee for tho fight on the ciast. for use In this stato alone. tJ-K t. ... - y. : - COLLIER CAUSE OF WRECK Change in Storstad's Course Blamed For Collision With Liner. Quebec. Alfred Tuftenes, third of ficer of the Danish collier Storstad, was held by the wreck commission to be directly to blame for the collision with the Empress of Ireland in the St. Lawrence river that caused the loss of more than 1,000 les. The commission finds the young inato was "wrong and negligent In keeping the navigation of the vessel in his own hands and failing to call the captain when he saw the tog com ing on." The report Bays the disaster was not due to any special characteristics of the St Lawrence. It was a disaster which might have occurred in any river in similar circumstances. It Is held that the dominant cause of the collision was the Storstad's change of course, which the third officer ordered without consulting his superior, the first officer, who was In charge of the fhip at the time. HUERTA TO RESIGN AND LEAVE MEXICO Will Surrender Government to Present Minister Foreign Affairs Carbajal. Vera Cruz. To save his country from the further horrors of continued civil war and his capital from capture and perhaps sack by a victorious army General Huerta Intends to resign the provisional presidency and leave Mex ico. This statement was made by Ro berto Esteva-Rulz, Mexican Sub-Sec retary of foreign affairs, who reached Vera Cruz from Mexico city on his way to Europe. Huerta, he said, surrender the government to Francis; co Carbajal, the new minister ot for eign affairs, who, In turn, will 1. aside, when the time comes, for soma other provisional president wholly ac ceptable to the constitutionalists. Carbajal, be added, was suggested as provisional president by the Ameri can delegation at the Niagara Falls mediation conference and agreed to by Huerta'i delegates and the Boutn American mediators, while the const! tutlonallsts Indirectly bad conveyed the idea that he would be acceptable to Cararnza. Stand Made at 8an Luis Potosl. Saltlllo. Fighting already has be gun at San Luis Potosl. Engagements of outposts, designed by the constitu tionalists to establish the federal strength and position, are of dally oc currence, according to reports receiv ed here by General Carranza. The federals have concentrated ey ery available man at Ban Luis Potosl, sending remnants of the garrisons of Guadalajara and Zacatecaa and a part of the garrison of Mexico City, as well as 5000 recruits to oppose General Gonzales. Naval Militiamen on Homeward Trip. Honolulu. The Oregon and Wash ington naval militia started for Port Angeles, Wash., Saturday, on the homeward bound trip aboard the cruiser Milwaukee. The vesBel Is due to reach its destination July 18. New Plague Case Found. New Orleans. Another case of bu bonlc plague, the fifth since the dis ease appeared two weeks ago, was found here by Dr. W. C. Rucker,' as sistant, surgeon-general of the United States health service. The victim, the first woman to be stricken, la a negress who was em ployed in a restaurant within two blocks of where the first case was found. Real Estate Men Pick Los Angeles. Pittsburg. Los Angeles defeated Seattle for the honor of entertaining next year's convention of the National Association of Real Estate Exchanges The association elected Thomas Shall- cross, Philadelphia, president I BUSINESS MEN VOTE ON ANTI-TRUST BILLS GUILT DENIED BY ACCUSED Magazine Staff Say Qoethala Approved Isthmian Canal Pictures. San Francisco. The defense 4 Charles K. Field, editor of Sunset Magazine, and of the three others ac cused with him ot having disclosed military secrets ot the United States by the publication ot an Illustrated ar ticle, will be that the pictures were taken and the aeroplane flight across the Isthmus of Panama was made with the permission of Colonel George W. Goethals, in command ot the Panama zone. Mr. Field, Robert Fowler, an avia tor; Riley E. Scott, author of the artlt cle, and Ray Duhem, a moving picture man, were arrested at the Instance of the war department, acting through John W. Preston, Unltad States dis trict attorney here. No ball was re quired and they were released on their own recognizance. Washington. Nou-lnterference with business in its general details was fa vored by the business men of the United States, who voted in 36 states, under the referendum called for by the Chamber of Commerce 'of the United States, on the pending trust bills. The vote against attempt by Btatute to forbid discriminations in prices of commodities was 531 to 22. That a proposal to compel persons controlling the product of mines to sell to all applicants who may be re snonsible. is wrong In principle and unworkable in practice, was voted 627 to 32. That there should be no statutory prohibition of conditions accompany' Ing sales and leases to the effect that buyers vor lesseeea cannot handle or use the products of competitors, was voted 514 to 35. - 1 That a final decree In an equity suit brought by the government which es tablishes the existence or the non-existence of restraint of trade or of a monopoly should be conclusive evl dence as to the same general fact in nrtvate actions brought against the snme defendants under tho anti-trust laws, was voted 484 to 62. Ship's Officers Accused. , San Francisco. A federal grand jury returned indictments against Cap tain Harry Stremmel, ot the steam ship Harvard, Robert Hill, mate, Eric Froberg, second, mate, and Robert C. Pitt, purser, charging them wltn an assault on the high seas against Louis Lull, a sailor. Man Is Frozen In Car. Pittsburg. With hands and feet frozen, Daniel Smith, aged 25, a print er, of Sacramento, Cal., was taken to the Presbyterian hospital here. He was found in a refrigerator car that arrived from the west. Smith says be entered the car in Chicago and that the door slammed shut, holding him prisoner. T. R. Uurged Not To Run. Oyster Bay, N. Y. Protests from progressive leaders from all parts of the country against the proposal that Colonel Roosevelt run for governor of New York poured In on the ex presi dent by mail and wire. Justice Lurton Dies Suddenly. Atlantic City, N. J. Associate Jus tice Horace Harmon Lurton, of the United States Supreme Court, died suddenly at a hotel here from heart failure superinduced by cardiac asth ma. He was 70 years old. THE MARKETS . Portland. Wheat Club, 79c; bluestem, 83c; red Russian, 77c' Hay Timothy, $16, alfalfa, $11. Butter Creamery, 270. Eggs Ranch, 23c. . Seattle. Wheat Bluestem, 82cj club, 79c; red Russian, 77c. Hay Timothy, $17 per ton; alfalfa. $14 per ton. Butter Crcumery, 26c Eggs 24o. New Heat Record Made In St Louis. St Louis. The record high temper ature for 1914 was recorded here when the mercury reached 102 degrees. Three deaths and one prostration were the toll of the torrid wave which haa gripped the city for 24 hours. Melville E. Inoalls Dies. Hot Springs, Va. Melville E. In gaJls, until two years ago chairman ot the board of directors of the Big Four railroad, and long identified with the Vanderbllt railroad Interests, died here from heart failure.