The Oregon mist. (St. Helens, Columbia County, Or.) 188?-1913, November 10, 1911, Image 6

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    CURRENT EVENTS
OF THE WEEK
Doings of the World at Large
Told in Brief.
General Resume of Important Event!
Presented In Condensed Form
for Our Busy Readers.
Government officers are investigat
ing an alleged corner in wheat.
Kyrle Bellew, once famous actor
died of pneumonia at Salt Lake City.
Excesses by victorious Chinese
troops have temporarily checked peace
overtures.
Temperance union workers have
started an anti-cigarette crusade in
Milwaukee.
Roosevelt says the wars now in pro
gress show the folly of peace treaties
on vital questions.
Five of the unidentified girl victims
of the Chehalis powder explosion were
buried in one grave.
A striking machinist at Portland
was shot and killed in a street fight
by a machine shop proprietor.
Aviator Rodgers ran out of gasoline
and was forced to land at a lonely sid
ing in the Arizona desert, where the
only inhabitant was a telegraph oper
ator. A special train brought him a
new supply from Yuma, 60 miles
west.
A jury investigated the Chehalis
powder mill fire and reports that
they were unable to determine the
cause of the fire, but held the company
blameless, as every precaution was
taken and all rules of safety fully
complied with.
ELK THRIVING ON RANCH.
Plan Made to Save Species from
Extermination.
Santa Barbara, Cal. A herd of elk,
now numbering nine, is the nucleus of
a game preserve started on Santa Rosa
island, under the management of
Frank Pepper, superintendent of the
big ranch across the channel. Pepper
secured two elk from the Sierras
about two years ago and transported
them to the island, where they have
become acclimated and have thrived,
the number increasing each year.
It is an ideal range for them and
Pepper looks forward to the day when
the island will be well stocked with
elk, which are now becoming extinct
in other portions of the continent.
PORTLAND MARKETS.
Wheat Export basis: Bluestem,
84ro,85c; club, 80(i81c; red Russian,
79c; valley, 81c; forty-fold, 82c.
Millstuffs Bran, $23.50 per ton;
middlings, S31; shorts, (24.50; rolled
barley, $343 35.
Corn Whole, $33; cracked. $34 ton.
Oats No. 1 white, $30.5031 ton.
Hay No. 1 Eastern Oregon, timo
thy, $17rti,18; clover. No. 1 valley,
tlota 16; alfalfa, $13 a 14; clover, $11
12; grain hay, $11(12.
Barley Feed, $31 per ton; brew
ing, nominal.
Fresh Fruits Peaches, 35tfi 65c per
box; pears, 75cfrr$1.75 per box;
grapes, 75(f90c per box; apples. $1.15
(q 2.25 per box; cranberries, $9.25fy
9.50 per barrel ; casabas 1.75''Z per
doz. ; huckleberries, &i 7c per pound,
Potatoes Oregon, lie per pound;
sweet potatoes, 2c per pound.
Onions Oregon, $1.25 per hundred.
Vegetables Artichokes, 75c per
dozen; beans, SftilOc; cabbages, i" c
per pound; cauliflower, 50fr75c per
dozen ; corn, 2hoi 30c per dozen ; cu
cumbers, $1V1.25 per sack; egg
plant, 5v8c per pound; garlic, 10oil2c
per pound ; lettuce, 40('i 85c per dozen ;
hot house lettuce, $1 per box; pep
pers, hoi 6c per pound; pumpkins, (i
lie; radishes, 12Jc dozen; sprouts,
8c per pound; squash, liljc per
pound; tomatoes, 50C$1 per box;
carrots, $1.25 per sack ;' turnips, $1 ;
beets, $1.75; parsnips, $1.25.
Poultry Hens, HOine; springs,
13(V 13Jc; ducks, young, 16'al6c;
geese, 11 lr 12c; turkeys, alive, 20c;
dressed, choice, 26c.
Eggs Fresh Oregon ranch, candled,
35f" 36c per dozen.
Pork Fancy, 9 10c per pound.
Veal Fancy, 131, 13 Jc per pound.
Hops 1911 crop, 41ift,42c; olds,
nominal.
Wool tan tern Uregon, yrn,lGc per
pound, according to shrinkage; val
ley, 15Vil7e per pound; mohair,
choice, 35(U37c.
Cattle Choice steers, $5.40 5.75;
good, $5.25ftf 5.40; fair, $51.5.25;
medium, $4.75fti5; poor, $3. Toi 1.50;
choice cows, $I.50'4.75; fair, $l'i
4.25; common, $2.50r3.60; extra
choice spayed heifers, $4.7.W5;
choice heifers, $4.50o7.4.60; choice
bulls, $3.603.75; good, $2.753;
common, $2w2.60; choice calves,
$7.25r7.50; good, $7f,7.15; common,
$4'i6; choice stags, $4.60fii,4.75;
good, $4.251,4.60.
Hogs Choice ligght hogs, $7.35w
7.40; good to choice, $7r7.25; fir,
$6. 75ft 7; common, $6ft6.50.
Sheep Choice yearling wethers,
coarse wool, $3. 60ft 3.85; choice
yearling wethers, east of mountains,
$3.25Y3.40; choice twos and threes,
$3.15ft3.2o; choice lambs, $4ft4.35;
good to choice, $4.4.15; valley
lambs, $3.75(34; culls, $33.60
MEN WILL NOT YIELD.
Shop Employes of Railroads Will
Continue Struggle.
San Francisco At the end of the
first month of the strike of the shop
employes of the Harriman lines, both
sides in the Pacific Coast division are
declaring their forces unimpaired and
that they are ready to continue the
fight. Officials of the railroad point
to the fact that traffic has continued
uninterrupted and that the shops at
Sacramento, Los Angeles, Dunsmuir,
Oakland and San Francisco have been
kept in operation with almost full
forces at work.
Leaders among the strikers point to
the fact that there has been almost an
entire absence of violence and declare
it is their intention to continue the
strike peaceably. E. L. Reguin, pres
ident of the San Francisco local of the
Shop Employes' Federation, is hopeful
of a victory for the strikers.
"We were prepared for the strike
when we began," he said, "and we
are prepared to continue it. We
knew it would be a long, hard fight,
and test all our resources, but we have
something to fight for and we will
fight it out. Our men have refrained
from violence and I am sure will con
tinue to do so."
Officials of the Southern Pacific"road
would make no statement other than
that the strike has not seriously inter
fered with the business of the board
and that the shops will be kept in
operation. Rumors of elaborate pre
paration against attack by strikers in
the building of stockades and the em
ployment of hundreds of private watch
men were denied.
PIONEER AVIATOR KILLED.
California Air Expert Victim of Acci
dent With Glider.
San Jose, Cal. Professor John J.
Montgomery, of Santa Clara college.
is dead from the effects of a terrible
fall from an aeroplane glider he was
experimenting with in the foothills
about two miles east of Evergreen.
He apparently lost control of the
machine, according to eye witnesses,
and fell 20 feet, sustaining injuries
to the back and base of the brain,
which resulted in death a little more
than an hour and a half after he was
brought back to Santa Clara in the
automobile of Dr. J. L. Beattie, who
was summoned immediately.
Professor Montgomery had been an
authority on aerial navigation ever
since the first elements of the science
developed into practical result. He
won international fame as the in
ventor of an electrical rectifier and of
several patent appliances to facilitate
aerial navigation.
Recently he sold for 1,700,000 his
rights to certain aeroplane improve
ments, the payment of this sum being
contingent on the winning of a suit
against the Wright Brothers for al
leged infringement. His electrical
rectifier was the subject of extensive
litigation for two or three years,
which resulted in the complete vindi
cation of his right to the exclusive
title.
AVIATOR WHO HAS COMPLETED FIRST CROSS CONTINENT r LIGHT
EVER MADE.
' t Via' :
-l ..." v ' f 4 vA
l; fry, ijj. '
OCEAN TO OCEAN
FLIGHT IS ENDED
Aviator Rodgers Lands at Pas
adena Safe and Sound.
Almost Mobbed by Enthusiastic Spec
tatorsDeclares Mechanism Must
Be Revolutionized,
Statistics of Rodgers' Flight. j
Total distance traveled, 4,231
miles. i
Actual flying time, 4,924 min- j
utes, or 3 days, 10 hours, 4 minutes.
Elapsed time of journey, 49 days, j
Average speed when flying, 51.72
miles an hour.
JAPS BATTLE RUSSIANS.
One Slain When Czar's Patrol Cruiser
Traps Poacher.
Victoria, B. C. News of a fatal
sealing raid at the Copper islands by
Japanese sealers has been received
here. The Japanese schooners Boso
Mara, Chitose Maru and Toyei Maru
anchored off the seal rookeries in a
mist. The Russian patrol cruiser ar
rived and they all weighed anchor and
ran, leaving their small boats.
There were five boat crews ashore
from the three ships and when the
Russian guards came to arrest them
some of the raiders opened fire on the
Russians with rifles.
The sealers took shelter behind
rocks and endeavored to keep ofT the
guards. One Russian was killed and
several wounded. Fifteen Japanese
were captured.
The captives were taken to Vladi
vostok and members of the crew of
the schooner Boso Maru, which has
returned to Japan, say that one of the
number is expected to be sentenced to
death.
Post Cards Are Censored.
Chicago Censors will be appointed
in every Chicago sub-postal station,
the superintendents of which Postmas
ter Daniel A. Campbell has given 30
days in which to stamp out the dis
tribution of objectionable postcards.
The superintendents' salaries will be
reduced and they will ultimately be
discharged if objectionable cards pass
through their offices. The chief pic
tures ordered barred from distribution
are those of men and women fondling
each other, women in abbreviated cos
tumes and animal pictures.
Nature Numbers Peak.
Husum, Wash. Mount Adams has
a number of its own standing out in
bold figures. The number 167 is
clearly discernible on the southeast
ern slope near the top of the moun
tain, by ranchers living in the Camas
Prairie and Glenwwod sections. The
figures, which appeared thil fall for
the first time, are open ground or
rocky spots on the mountain side,
where melting snow has left a stamp
ed number for the famous peak.
Pasadena In a flying machine that
held together only through the good
will of Providence. Calbraith P. Rcxl-
gers, the transcontinental aviator,
glimpsed the Pacific ocean Saturday,
as he soared over the gray top of
Mount Wilson and settled down in
Tournament Park, amidst a clamorous
multitude, waiting to welcome him at
what was virtually the finish of his
flight from Sheepshead Bay. N. Y.
Rodgers landed at 4:10 o clock in the
afternoon.
Rodgers appeared on the sky line
shortly after 3 o'clock, a few moments
after he had risen at Pomona, 20
miles away. He was sighted first by
telescopes levelled at him from the
solar observatory on Mount Wilson,
and word flashed down the mountain
by telephone caused a swarming of
20,000 people to Tournament Park.
The aviator, flying at a height of
5,000 feet, hovered over the city for a
few minutes, then warping the planes
that previously had been as motionless
as the spreading pinions of a soaring
eagle, he sailed in a wide spiral and
volplaned down to the greensward In
the middle of the park.
Rodgers literally was mobbed. He
was borne hither and thither by the
surging crowd. Eager hands clutched
and scratched him, but his leather
clothing was strong enough to resist
attack, although afterwards the avia
tor declared his ribs would surely
manifest black and blue marks of an
over-enthusiastic greeting.
Rodgers started on the last dash of
his flight from Banning, a little town
out in the desert, where his arrival
had interrupted the only diversion of
the year the funeral dance of the
Mojave Indians. The aviator saw a
squaw, 101 years old, who had danced
all night and day, fall in a swoon.
Then he took the air at noon.
EMPEROR MUST ABDICATE.
Glacial Ice Uncovered.
Klamath Falls, Or. While William
McCully was digging gravel in Bul-
lard'a canyon recently he was sur-
Rebels Insist on Absolute Surrender
of Manchus.
Shanghai The central machine of
the revolutionary government does not
trust the throne, nor does it agree
with the throne's terms. It is, there
fore, proceeding to arrange to control
the nation's affairs in expectation of
the sucess which it rcg.irds as certain.
The retirement of the machine dynasty
will be demanded.
The official list drawn up includes
Dr. Wu Ting Fang, at one time minis
ter at Washington, who has accepted
the post of socretury of foreign af
fairs; Wen Tsong Yao, at one time
Chinese resident in Thibet, to whom
the post of under secretary has been
offered; Ehr Tang, atone time direc
tor of the American council of Canton,
who has accepted the military gover
norship of Che Kiang and Kiang Su
provinces; I.i Ping Shui, head of the
Shanghai gentry, who has accepted the
civil governorship of those provinces,
and Yu Ya Ching, a leading merchant,
who has accepted the mayoralty of
Shanghai.
The Chinese chamber of commerce
has declared for the rebels and urged
the consular body to prevent the im
perial fleet from entering the Whang
Po river. The populace fear a repeti
tion of the Hankow brutalities.
Perfect order was maintained in
Shanghai and the outlying districts
the first night after the capitulation
of the city to the revolutionists.
I.i Ping Shui, responsible head of
the new administration in the native
city and suburbs, is completing his
organisation. He informed the cor
respondent that he recognized only the
republic and would guarantee onler.
The only disorderly elements now in
China, he said, are the ex-ofliciuls,
their supporters and the Manchu
troops, who never again would be per
mitted to control.
There is reason to believe that the
revolutionary sentiment throughout
the South strongly favors the uncon
ditional abdication of the emperor and
the establishment of an entirely new
regime.
Colored Oranges Barred.
San Bernardino, Cal. Because th
artificial coloring of oranges is no lon
ger permitted, by order of the bureau
of food and drug inspection. Eastern
tables this Thanksgiving will he
without oranges as far as Southern
California is concerned. Prominent
orange shippers estimate that this sea
son s crop i ue irom two to lour
weeks late because of the order.
Heretofore, by use of the coloring de
vice, the first of the crop have been in
New York in time for the country's
annual least day.
Fowler Decends Suddenly,
El Paso, Tex. R. G. Fowler,
eastbound coast-to-coast aviator.
the
ar
orised to encounter a laree body of rived here at 3 :10 Monday afternoon
glacial ice several feet below the sur- on an '-l r,8 bouthwestern passen
face of the gravel bed. He took ; "Bin, unnuri arier an accident
. . i. : ..u ii i l : . .. i i , t
some of the cakes into the town or , which t""ireiicj mm w leave nis oi-
Merrill, where it was judged to be of P'n8 on mil '""n Mastodon, N. M.,
good quality. Thirteen years ago bout 14 miles west of El Paso,
what is supposed to be the same body Fowler had made 400 miles since leav-
of ice was uncovered, but it became i UouglM, Ariz., in the morning,
covered and not until the late dis
covery was it supposed to be still in
existence.
in the
when one of the sparkers on his en
gine failed to work.
Witnesses Confirm Atrocities,
Malta Steamer passengers arriv
ing irom iripou describe the scene as
a reign of terror. Strong military
Turksy Grows for Taft.
Newport, R. I. Horace Vose, the
Westerly turkey fancier, is preparing
his annual Thanksgiving gift for the patrols are continually conducting rig-
president's table. The Taft turkey, orous house-to-house searches and on
this year is a fine bronze gobbler, j the smallest pretext summary punish
which is gaining weight every minute mcnt is meted out. Many victims
on a diet of chestnuts, which produces have been shot in their own houses,
a fine quality of white meat. "I shall In the absence of any attempt to
send President Taft the finest tur-, discriminate between friend and foe
key I ever gave to any President since
the one I sent to President Grant,"
says Vose.
Dowager May Be in Flight.
San Francisco The Chinese news
paper Sal Dai Yat Po, of this city, re
ceived a dispatch from Pekin saying
that Lung Yu, the dowager empress,
had fled from the capital, taking with
her the young emperor, and that all
trace of them had been lost.
Trans-Atlantic Dirigible Fails.
Atlantic City. N. J. Lack of suffi
cient gas to keep the big dirigible in
the air brought to a sudden end the
trial flight of the airship Akron,
which is scheduled to make an at
tempt to cross the Atlantic ocean from
this city some time this month. A
propeller blade broken and a guy wire
snapped were the only parts dam
aged in the landing, and these can be
"repaired easily.
many foreigners have taken refuge in
their respective consulates.
Taft Off for Cincinnati.
Hot Springs, Va. After three days'
rest here, President Taft left for Cin
cinnati, accompanied by Mrs. Taft,
Miss Helen Taft and Mrs. Thomas M.'
Laughlin, of Pittsburg. Secretary
Hilles and Major Thomas L. Rhodes,
the president's physician, will meet
him in Cincinnati. President Taft
expects to appear before the election
board in Cincinnati and qualify so he
can vote at the city and county election.
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AND
PROGRESS OF OUR HOME STATi
WATER TO FLOW FAR.
Gigantic Irrigation Scheme Proposed
for Lake County.
Lakeview A gigsntic irrigation
project to over aU.ut 400,000 acres
and to reclaim two of the largest val
leys in Northern Luke county is ex
pected here from a group of Minneap
olis capitalists.
It is asserted on reliable authority
that $ltf,000:000 will bo spent by a
company close in touch with Hill in
terests to tuke water from I ake Odell
and convey it through canals a dis
tance of from no to Mi miles into
Christmas and Silver Lake valleys.
Owing to the character of the soil this
main canal will traverse there is
little doubt that many miles will have
to be cement lined to prevent exces
sive seepage.
The magnitude of the undertaking
is made evident in the fact that the
United States reclamation service
withdrew thousands of acres from all
forms of entry, including the lake
which is the natural reservoir, but
after finding that the cost would be
greater than could be sent by the
government on any one project within
the state at this time, the land wus
restored to entry.
A lurge, corps of men has been mak
ing surveys and estimates recently of
the cost of constructing such a plant
and it is now believed that the data is
in such form that there will be little
delay in handling the project.
Ten million dollars sitent on this
water will develop one of the best val
leys in the state lying in one county
and will pay the capitalists large divi
dends and make a reasonable rate mt
acre for water placed on the land;
water power for lighting und manu
facturing purpose will be developed,
and as the surveys pass through some
of the finest timber lands in Klamath
and Lake counties and are close to
the Oregon Eastern and Oregon Trunk
surveys, the ultimate me of other
millions in manufacturing. New
towns will be founded and Northern
Lake county will become a large fac
tor in the growth of the state.
; FRUIT FUMIGATION
L.
FARM LAND SALES BRISK.
Tract of 410 Acres Near Springfield
Is Sold to Promoter.
Springfield - One of the largest real
estate deals ever made in Springlield
was consummated this week when
Clark & Washburn sold a large traet,
known as Douglas Gardens, consisting
of 4 10 acres of fine farming land ad
joining the city on the east, to F. E.
McCroskey, of Washington, and II. W.
Cousins of San Francisco. The con
sideration is not given out. Clark &
Washburn paid over $o,0i)0 for the
tract a year ago and it is known that
they made a good profit on the deal.
Clark & Washburn, after they pur
chased the tract, sub divided it into
five and 10-acre tracts ami at least 2"
houses have been built on it since.
The Southern Pacific Natron exten
sion, which will in time become the
main line between Oregon and Cali
fornia, passes through the renter of
the traet and a passenger and freight
depot is promised.
The new owners say they will irri
gate the entire tract by a system of
pumps. The plant they intend to in
stall will have a capacity to irrigate
from K00 to 1,000 acres of land, which
means that they intend to add to their
holdings in that vicinity.
CATTLE PRICES SOARING.
Buyers
$30
county inspector Desires Our..J
Kl.ll.n. r. l.it.. . "
IHarsttllelJ io install fmit
gating room at the dilT-rent fe.
of the county is the lastest plan ,
ni. nan iwii, county irmi imp.
Mr. Hall lwit has been mking ,
on the sale ami trans.rtuton of
eased fruit, and he has apphc (. ''
state fruit commissioner, t-kin. l
to designate Mamhtleld aa the n",
tine station for this section and I
.1 1' III. ...I n..- " bj
mm, volume iiu uijrue lulntug,
stations.
The plan is to have the fumlne,
"""I- -,.,.-. "inr---4 ITUIl :
fumigated so that the scale or oil.,
oiseasrn win noi on narmtul and &
not he transmitted to other fruit i
Hail Lewis has asked to lie m,H .
thority to appoint quarantine wink
who will receive & cent a boi for
piea wmt-fi io) iuiiuaieii.
Tl... I.... L
iiu iwuui iiinK!ruir nSS (tgfc.
many arrests of person Woo
broken the law reKiinling ti-L
aiei iraii"iriaiion. ui uiscane -
The result has been the n!fVrin
much trtgner grade. I'ntil th jJ
lew years nine aiieniion w f-a
apple in i oos county, nhmittj
discovered mat me (iravrtultiM
tins locality were or a line yratte
that they commanded a good pro
the interest in applp growinr
stirred and new orchard htb
plan till. Fruitgrower' amwii!,
in both sections of the county to
taken charge of the marketing f
crop oi many or the growers,
;COAL DISCOVERY STIRS,
Sams Valley District Product Com!
Grade of Black Ligniu.'
(.old Hill -That thn entire Sr
valley and Meadows districts ud
tervening territory are umiri
with coal is indicated by th iter
toM ty ohl residents since thtrto
discovery of black lignite in Scjt!
ley at a point seven mile from
place. It seems highly prubtbl tt
a belt of country over 30 nil i
length, extending from I'pper Mt
ows to Koxy Ann mountain, tttt i
Medford, where true bituminog si
just been found, is cotlbrariat
A big vein of black lignite il opni
the Cpper Meadows district, mdn
been worked desultorily for jrn-v
The ncent discovery on the Sbip-f
Miller place shows the continuity
the belt under an intervrmr. in
range of hills into Sams vallry. lb
discovery is In the northern end of
little valley, and that coal eiiiti
the southern section, several mileib
tnnt, and perhaps underlying tbt br
of line farming land between, ii iti
ratisl by a discovery m'l in 17J. I
well went dry on the McClendonplm
and in deejM-ning it a two-ioca w
was cut at a deiit from the surfw
1H feet. This coal ws of MteL'
quality, being termed "cmila
at the time, because a mnsll pit i
it when lighted would bum wilt
clear, steady flame until nothing n
left but a light ash residue.
AITCHISON 13 FEARF0X.
Danger Seen In Curtailment of Stt
Powers By Supreme Court.
Salem Crave possibilities rtfeH
seen by t Ivde Aitchison. chirm
the state railroad comniiin,
the U.S. suiireme court uphold tbeS'
Isirn decision in the Minnesota. H
iron, et al.. rate cases, which sr w
fore that tribunal, coupled with
decision given recently in the &
em railway case, when the fouft 4
rided that the Interstato Comm'
commission has control of Wf
Plisnces on nurrlv intrastate rosoM
Well m InlerMtwtrt mails.
"What may be contained in uV
cussion of the oninion I do not
comment upon until 1 have had "
nortunitv to see tho opinion," i
Chairman Atitchison. "It il wrW
that the opinion will invalidate W
of the Inspection laws in W
states, although Oregon hs no "
laws"
V.klll n.lkarl Exhibit
McMinnvllle Through the efforti
the McMinnville Commercial o'
Yamhill county la to be rrprew
.t Ik. T .-.I A f..l,..ti.n imiliti
- v in, i, nun at. hi inn,.",, --r
I.. K..I.I . M.,ii.n Sonars Gin
Now VnrL nu In November. I!
nlna mrl.llu nf Drains have be
. . . . " .u. 1011 WW
semniea. nampiee oi
croD are belnir nrepared by
Cooper. A laree exhibit of sppW '
at Pendleton Offering
Head for Yearlings.
Tendleton -- With CHttle buyers
offering $:ti) a head for "yearlings"
and with stockmen refusing to sell
even at this record price, the predict
ed beef famine seems in a fair way to
nerome a reality.
"it looks like I will be compelled to
go to rortiand to buy my 'feeders,' "
declared I!. I). Sherry, a local grower.
"I can buy that class of cattle cheaper
at the Portland stockyards than I can
on the ranges of Eastern Oregon.
Stock cattle actually are higher here
now than beeves." While admitting
he had never received $30 for a year
ling, Mr. Sherry said he refused that
price Saturday. He explained that
the few yearlings he possessed were
not for sale at any price, for the reas
on that they could not be replaced.
Settlers tor Malheur Lands,
Vale Plans for Hhe colonization of
200,000 acres of rich arid Innd in the
Malheur valley are under wav bv
Colonel II. K. IVarce and If W ti....
man of Caldwell, Idaho, who are said
to have an option on this land, which
at present is owned by the Oregon
Washington Colonization company' of
St. Paul. Promoters nf this
mi'nt hnv li.-. n in Vi i
, . . " inn inn i.
week seeking the stuns. rt f -;.!,...
now located in nnd around Vule. The
new corn pan v is to I in LlW.l.r.i .. .. . I.
Vale-Oregon Land company.
Vouchers Tell Growth.
Salem -Growth of the m
gon is indicated by the fact that 1.700
vouchers will have been r-...l I l...
tho secretary of .t-i..'. .. i 1
the month of October closes, the hiih
watermark In the history of the state,
liefore Secretary file.. ......
,i(t- "Kin inio
Ollico the avermrn ,,...i.... .
was 1,000 and th. r . i "
for one month. JuIw L I " "7"L ,7 Institute
iiMiiiiiiT ! t7lrfrltn fill Oi .Hi3 tlli. ill T
rnur hoi l it i .... i .
mr.Hl, .U.. . "l llllS
....v., inerc will be
that.
be made, and numerous pho"
1
-I
Yamhill county pastoral scene" 1
- . l. . I..... ttmrtUCW
a'fomnny lim vriiu e'
forwarded to the exposition.
Trees for Big Orchard.
Full. riiuTro.. are srrivinR
for the Kalis City Orchard com p'
bo planted on tho 60 sere fv ,
miles from this city. A . 10 T H.!
iiipa.
It, 000 tree.
Vnn Zanah,
: it 1.- ui
Will I" ,h,
i ...miimT OlH
genera. ...o..-
I iw '
concern. Is actively engsg'
intending tneir rem""' j
farm. C. A. Snyder will b- P'K
. . i ..i,.niinaT aim
general charge or ine p" - id
men and al learns will be emP .J
once to tiretinre tho land fr P'n
r i
Bed"
Salem -Kighteen teams have
work on the boulevard bw"
asylum farm and the peniw '-' f.
300 more than
r..ui ii.l i u. iiilnvsnl w
I, alate I
Convicts ami asylum PtT'J J
Ik. ,,..1, Th. ni-aaont ill)
will be about three miles in