I IMS NOTES OF CURRENT WEEK Resume of World's Important Events Told in Brief! COAL MINING COSTS LIVES. The railway merger begin iu diaso ution by electing new directors for the Southern Pacific. Wilson aaya he wilt form his cabi net from the progressive, element of the Democratic party. President Taft has abandoned his plan for a world peace tour and will take up his duties as profsesor of law at Yale. The Treasury department plans a re organization of the custom service, under which many employes will be dispensed with. The rivers and harbors bill intro duced in congress provides for a mil lion dollars for improvements at the mouth of the Columbia river. Florence, Or., having been cutoff from water communication by storms, the people are getting supplies of ba con and other commodities from Port land by parcels post. At the first general election held in the town of Clatsop. Oregon, in ten years, blank paper was used for bal lots, the names . of candidates being written by the voters. Under a new law every emit! born in the Kingdom of Great Britain here after to parents insured under the na tional insurance act will bring the parents a bounty of SO shillings, or bout $7.50. Farmers near Seattle, Wash., have made arrangements with the Women's Federation of that city to supply fresh eggs and other produce direct to the consumers in the city, cutting out all middlemen. Robert W. Archbald. Federal Dis trict Judge of Pennsylvania and a One Miner Killed for Every 1 S3, 000 Tons Produced. Washngton, D. C. One miner's life is snuffed out with every 183,000 tons of coal mined in the United States. In 1907, when the Federal bureau of mines was beginning its work, this ratio was greater. Then one life was given with every 144,000 tons. D' Joseph A. Holmes, director of the United Statea bureau of mines, in his annual report to Secretary Fisher, at tributes the decrease in mortality to the Federal government's work in the mining fields, and points out how the enormous death list may be still fur ther reduced. i ne aeam rate in the metal mines of the country is nearly as high, he declares, as in the coal fields, averag ing more that three men per thousand employed; the death rate in the quar ries is larger than it should be, aver aging far more than that in foreign countries; and the same is true in metallurgical plants. He recommends. therefore, that money be given the bureau to carry its mine-accident in vestigation into these other fields in larger measure than the limited ap propriations so far granted have al lowed. the enormous annual loss in mining and preparing coal for market, the huge waste of natural gas, -as well as lack of efficiency and waste in the metal mining industries, are men tioned by Dr. Holmes. This extrava gance of natural resources, he asserts. should be checked. Pioneer educational work, tempor ary in character." is the way in which the director, refers to the mine rescue and first-aid work among the more than 700.000 miners in the 15,000 mines of the country. Ultimately this must be taken care of, he says, by the coal mining companies through the training and organization of miners at each of the larger mines or groups of mines. He says that already several companies maintain rescue stations at their own expense. The chief purpose of the bureau of mines is to train OREGON STATE ITEMS OF INTEREST General News of the Industrial and Educational Development and Progress of Rural Communities, Public Institutions, Etc. judge of the Commerce court of the ! miners in first aid, mine rescue and United States, was adjudged guilty of "high crimes and misdemeanors." ex pelled from office and forever disqual ified from holding positions of public honor or trust. The Indian appropriation bill carry ing $3,000,000 has been passed by the house. Roosevelt rejects a proposal to try to bring the Republican and Progres sive factions together. Survivors of the steamer Rosecrans say 33 men perished when the vessel was lost on Peacock spit. Robbers using a motorcycle held up an expressman on the outskirts of Portland, making their escape easily. Governor Marshall of Indiana, op poses free school books. Suffragettes announce their inten tion of marching from New York to Washington to present their demands to congress. The accounts of the sheriff of Mult nomath county. Or., balanced to a cent when the books were turned over to his successor. Two desperadoes in an automobile threw a brick through a Chicago jew elry store window, seized gems worth $$00 and escaped. Witnesses testified that "profits" of more than $30,000,000 have been made by the First National bank of New Y'ork City, since its organization with a capital "of $500,000 in 1S63. A 15-year-old girl was rescued from a band of gypsies at Los Angeles. ; She claimed to have been bought by j the leader of the band from an orphan I asylum in Montana eight years ago. Mexican rebels exterminated the j garrison and captured the town of Ayotcingo. only 25 miles from Mexico , ..revoIation jn the City, afterwards annihilating the fed- ,5wi . mini .. and erai re-eniorcemenuu f" 1X)RTLAXD MARKETS fire-fighting methods; and he adds that "during the year more than 30, 000 miners have attended the lectures and demonstrations given from the mine-safety cars; more than 1000 ad ditional miners received training suffi cient to enable them to participate in actual mine rescue work and more than twice that number have been added to the list of miners trained in first-aid practice." Health conditions in and about mines should be investigated, in the opinion of Dr. Holmes. Preliminary inquiries, he says, "have indicated the prevalence of tuberculosis and the presence of hookworm as miners' dis eases in several different localities in the United States. It is important that this work should be extended rap idly, because of the fact that the health conditions as well as the risk of accidents, may be influenced by con ditions susceptible of easy improve- I ment. "The large and continual influx of . foreigners into the mining regions of i the United States may bring to an in creasing extent the hookworm and other diseases that exist in mines in parts of certain European countries. Various questions that concern the health of workers in mines, quarries and metallurgical plants cannot be an swered finally without investigations and inquiries that are national in scope. Among such questions are the most efficient methods of preventing the diseases peculiar to mining and metallurgical industries, and the most effective sanitary precautions to be observed in and about mines and in the various metallurgical occupa tions." The director dwells upon the neces sity of trying to prevent explosions rather than check them after they are started. In this connection he calls attention to the fact that there has se of explo it, and the work or the bureau "in investigating explo sives has alone a value far greater than the entire cost of maintaining the bureau since its establishment." TAX APPORTIONMENT IS OCT State Levy Among Various Oregon Counties Made Public. fcalem The apportionment of the state levy among the various counties was completed by the state board o tax commissioners. The division among the counties is as follows : t Bk Hntoti Chh'kimu . OlStJlMft CWumbta. . . Owfc Curry IVuelaa tiilluum Gram Harney . . . . H. ..I Rivtt Jac kflon . . . . JiMvphtn . . Klamath . . . lax. Iaim I. ineuln I. inn Malheur... Manua Morrow Multnomah IVIk Sherman .., Ttllamwfc... tTmatUla t'nion W allowa ... WM W aahtrtffUMl Whwler... Yamhill Total.... Tf7T.7 u m a 4U.SM.lft Si.i.Vi.W Z4.Ml.0U 14.s7S.iS 4. .Hi.(l SS.;lH ln.itT.0l li.7fi..yi 1S.71S.IW lX.hQ.0U ..." 44.'1 110 StittoOUl li..i.. I2.zis.ai 4KM 4)1 2ll SS4.00 le.sjs.j IS. 2.11.50 4S.MiS.Al 1S.IW.V 1.SS ZS.4U.M VOW.iS 14.776 SI. 1211 4. 48 WANT MORE EGGS PER HEN Wheat Track prices: Club, $2i 83c; bluestem. srWSSe: forty-fold, 83c; red Russian. 80c: valley, 83c Barley Feed. $23d2 per ton; brewing, nominal; rolled. $23.50..: 26. SO. Corn Whole. $27; cracked. $2 ton. Hay Timothy, choice. $16-: 17 per ton: mixed. Eastern Oregon timothy, $12:13; oat and vetch. $12: alfalfa. $11.5"; clover, $10; straw, $6.i7. MillstufTs Bran. $22 ton; shorts, $24; middlings. $30. Oats No. 1 white. $26.j27. Fresh Fruits Apples, 50cm $1.50 I per box; pears. $1.50ii2. Potatoes Jobbing prices: Bur- Plans to Raise Wages. Washington, D. C. The metal schedule of the traiff law again was under fire before the house committee on ways and means. Several steel 'manufacturing interests contended for retention of the present duties. S. P. Ker. president of the Sharon. Pa.. Steel Hoop company, advocated chang es in the t hraseologv of the law to prevent importers from taking advan tage of its ferraj. Mr. Ker told of plans now under way to advance the wages of its common laborers, artisans and mechanics 10 per cent February 1. Agricultural College Regents to Urge State Chicken Farm. Salem To bring the standard of the laying hen in Oregon far beyond its present average is the intention of the board of regents of the Oregon Agri cultural college. The board has de cided to recommend to the legislature passage of an appropriation of $12,000 for the purchase of 70 acres of land near Corvallis to establish a poultry farm. The average hen in Oregon now lays 50 eggs each year, while there are some at the college which go far past the 200 mark. It is for the purpose of developing choice layers and selling them and their eggs at a nominal price to the farmers of the state that the regents desire to secure this land and establish a "chickery." GRAZING LAW IS UNPOPULAR People In Rural Districts Object to Stock-Fencing Regulations. Salem Enactment of the law at the last election prohibiting stock, includ ing cattle, horses and hogs, from be- ng pastured outside of fences in por tions of Eastern Multnomah and Clackamas counties, is proving objec tionable in many localities, and al ready petitions are being circulated asking the legislature to take some action to provide relief. E." Lacy, of Springwater, has charge of circulating the petitions there, which will be placed in the hands of F. M. Gill, rep resentative. At Cherryville, on the Mount Hood automobile road, some of the farmers have obtained the opinion of a Port land attorney that the law is not effective and might be ignored, but they are in doubt and are not taking any chancs. They are anxious to have the law repealed or modified. Mail Has Shellac Finish. Gold Hill The woes of other post masters since the establishment of the parcel post are lost upon Postmaster Hammersley, of this city, who de clines to admit that even a dozen scrambled eggs in a mail sack can compete for official discomfort with three quarts of very "gooey" varrish mixed thoroughly throughout a sack of second-class mail. The sack in ques tion arrived from the South, and the first dip into its recesses brought forth a sticky fistful of a certain famous brand of floor varnish. Three one quart cans, unboxed, had lost their lids in transit and mixed freely with the contents of the sack, in direct de fiance of the regulations. 1 i r v I. . n, ""If' " Wotherspoon Wins Fight. Onion. Orr-nMi. It rr rV. Washington. D. C William W. Vf.hla Artirhr.ko si 5.1 r-r Wothersnoon was confirmed by the dozen; cabbage, lc per pound; cauli-! n" 85 Major-General of the United flr i r-,, t. 5,i I States Army by a vote of 35 to 14. crate: cucumbers, ..cr2 per dozen eggplant. 10c pound; head lettuce, $2.50 per crate; peppers, 10c pound: radishes, 85c per dozen; sprouts. 10c; tomatoes. $2r2.2.i per box; gar lie, 5;i flc pound ; turnips, 75c sack; carrots, 75c; beets, 75c; parsnips, 75c. Eggs Fresh locals, candled, 3i.i31c per doien. Butter Oregon creamery butter, cubes, 37 c per pound; prints, 3?f-i 39v foul try Hens. 13: 14c, broilers. 13fl4e: turkeys, live. 20c; dressed. choice. 23c; ducks, 14m 15c; geese, 12.il Sc. Pork Fancy, llVilOJc per pound. Veal Fancy, l-lji.i 15c per poifnd. Hops 1912 crop, prime and choice. 1Si20c per pound; 1913 contracts, 15 il6e. Wool Eastern Oregon. 1-l.ilSeper pound; valley. 21.i22fc; mohair, choice. 32c. Cattle Choice steers, $7..;7.85; good. f6.50.T7; medium. $V.;6.50; choice coa", $(.;7; good. $5.5( :6; wierfiam. 4-5t,i5.25; choice calves. 9T.KOt.i9) rumi bmrj r aires. $Af 7 . . --. 97.i4kjtr.ro ; ktirr The confirmation of the appointment. which was sent to the senate by Presi dent Taft last August and again in December, ends a long fight against the promotion of General Wother- spoon. which was led by Senator Bris tow, of Kansas, who declared Wother spnon had not sufficient field experience and that other generals were entitled to the promotion ahead of him. Archbald to Resume Law. Philadelphia Ex-Judge Archbald, who was stripped of his office as Dis trict court judge of the United States by the United States senate, left for his home in Scranton. Pa. The ex judge declined to be interviewed, but his son spoke for him. "My father's conscience is clear. He is going home to practice law. My father has been a courteous, diligent and good judge. Perhaps his kindness of heart accounts for many of his difficulties. " Aid for Project Wanted. Bend Bend's first representative in the Oregon legislature, Vernon A. Forbes, is to be a speaker at the irri gation congress in Portland. The sub ject of Mr. Forbes' discussion will concern the Columbia Southern irriga tion segregation adjacent to Laidlaw. Together wit) J. E. Sawhill, secretary of the Central Oregon Development league, he will go before the congress, and later before the legislature, urg ing the adoption of plans whereby the state will lend its financial aid to the completion of the project. Cherryville May Get Railway. CherryviUe The Cherryville Com mercial club held a meeting Saturday night and elected officers for the year. It was reported at the meeting that the Multnomah & Eastern railway has made arrangements to clear the right LAWMAKERS ARE IN SESSION Strictly Business Program Urged and Start Is Made. OKFH'KKS Or 17TH ASMKMBI.Y. President, Dan J. Malarkey, Mult nomah ; Chief clerk, John W. Cochran Multnomah; Reading clerk. Ben Hunt ing ton, Douglas; Calendar clerk. Eu gene Foster. Polk ; Sergeant-at-arms, Colonel W. G. D. Mercer, Lane; Door keeper, George Crane, Douglas; Mail ing clerk, J. I. Moreland, Hood River, Speaker, C. A. McArthur. Mult nomah; Chief clerk, W. F. Drager, Marion; Assistant chief clerk, Harry Met lellan, Douglas; Reading clerk Dudley Clarke. Multnomah; Calendar clerk, W. B. Burner, Wheeler: Mail ing clerk, W. F. McAdams, Polk; Ser geant-at-arms, J. D. Woodman, Yam hill ; Doorkeeper, R. R. Corey, Baker State Capitol, Salem In a rush both houses of the 27th Legislative assembly started work Monday and by 3:05 o'clock in the afternoon the house reported itself as fully organ ized, and the senate followed within 25 minutes. Dan J. Malarkey was elected presi dent of the senate, and Clifton N. Mc Arthur speaker of the house, as ached uieu. rractically the only right was carried on against Malarkey. although that developed into a "tempest in a teapot, and when the votes were counted he had 25 out of the possible 30 in the senate. Both Malarkey and McArthur reit erated their desire for a business ses sion of the legislature. Malarkey, who sat in his seat on the floor, as he beard himself condemned in strong terms by Joseph and Kellaher, fol lowing his being conducted to the chair, made a definite statement in re sponse to charges that he had ac quired the place through barter" and trading of committeeships for votes. repudiating the assertions in strong terms, and in this he was backed by his colleagues. The senate was called to order 16:12 o'clock by Miller, of Linn, the dean of that body. Briefly he ex pressed his thanks for the honor ex tended and declared that the legisla ture is meeting under the most favor able circumstances, living in a great time, under a great government and in a great state. "It is much better that We should pass a few good laws, well considered and well digested, than that we should pass many laws which are not, said the senator. The temporary organization plan went off like well-oiled machinery as arranged for in caucus. Senator Calkins was nominated for temporary chairman and was eseortd to the chair by Dimick and Hoskins. John P. Hunt, of Marion, was nominated as chief clerk. As a committee on per manent organization Burgess, Barrett and Hawley were named, and on cre dentials the committee which was pre dicted, Dimick, Dean and Carson, was selected. Kellaher, upon the appointment of this committee, injected a little humor nto the proceedings by asking leave to make a motion to adjourn, in event t had not already been planned that someone shoulc otter that motion. Caklins suggested that it might be better to make a motion for a recess. which was taken for 30 minutes. Although only a 30-minute recess was taken it dragged away into prac- ically an hour. The credentials com mittee consumed considerable time in considering the contest which devel oped between Kiddle and Hodgin over who should be seated for the joint sen atorship from Union anil Wallowa counties. Kiddle apparently received he election from that district, and it waf so certified, but a recount indi cated that Hodgin was leading by a small margin. Dimick and Bean, on the credentials committee, represented the organiza tion forces, while Carson has been considered a candidate opposing Ma larkev for the presidency. Carson was inclined to favor Hodgin in the committee, but no minority report was filed. The committee reached a de ion to recommend that Kiddle be seated until such time as the senate had decided the contest. L'nder the constitution each house is made judge of the qualifications of its own members. Ranger Sets Windbreak. Florence C. H. Young, forest rang er, says the planting of willow cut tings in the sandniils along the ocean beach will be continued during the coming spring in this locality. It is Mr. Young's present plan to obtain some 25.0OO willow cuttings at once and to bury them part way in the and until the middle of March. Thev then will be planted along the sand dunes. to form a wind break for a varietv of RESUME WAR WITHIN WEEK Balkan Allies Will No Longer Tol erate lVlays of Turku. unforeseen events hould change the current of affairs. war in the Near East will be resumed within a week. The allies, convinced that the Turks merely are drifting, without a fixed policy, have determine 1 to end the seemingly fruitless debutes and wire pulling by resuming military oera tions where thev were left off more than a month ago. The Balkan kingdoms, moreover, are anxious to obtain relief from the heavy burden of maintaining armies n air fmilinir indefinitely. Wish ing, however, to observe all diplo matic courtesies, they have given the powers a reasonable time to agree on the note regarding Adrianople, frame it and present it to Turkey. If Tur key, as seems probable, fails to yield to the note, the Balkan kingdoms have agreed that they will call another sit ting of the conference through Sir Ed ward Grey or Rechad Pasha, who, ac cording to the rotation followtni. would be the next presiding oiticer. and announce definitely their decision to break off negotiations. Immediately afterward the Servian, Bulgarian and Montenegrin command ers will notify Turkish headquarters that hostilities will be resumed within 96 hours. The allies have no faith in the effi ciency of the aote the powers will present to Constantinople. The Otto man government has failed to convene the grand council, and apparently has no intention of meeting the allies' ul timatum on Adrianople. The allies feel that the note of the powers is couched in too mild terms to be effec tive, and that Turkey will know that it means nothing, because the powers will be unable to agree on coercive measures. WOMAN INTRODUCES FIRST BILL IN LEGISLATURE Olympia, Wash. The first bill ever introduced in a Washington legis- ature by a woman was house bill No. 1, introduced by Mrs. N. Jolin Croake, of T acorn a, providing a minimum wage scale for girls and women in Washington. Mrs. Croake had her measure all prepared and the instant it was in or der to introduce bills she presented hers, which received the first place in a shower of 17 bills of all descriptions and from all parts of the state. Mrs. Croake's bill provides a minimum wage for women and girls in any line at $1.25 a day. or IS cents an hour where engaged in piecework. FISHER FAVORS RECEPTION Secretary Would Have Affair in Ro tunda Displace Inaugural Rail. Washington, D. C. President-elect Wilson's inauguration, according to Secretary of the Interior Fisher, should be celebrated by a "ptpular re ception in the rotunda of the cnpitol, with no charge for admission," rather than by an inaugural ball in the pen sion building. Mr. Fisher expressed his views in a letter to Senator Sutherland and Representative Shep pard. chairmen, respectively, of the senate and house committees on public building and grounds. Mr. Fisher suggested that congress take charge of the inauguration celebration and make the necessary appropriations therefor. IRRIGATIONISTS SCORECAREY ACT Demand iMii'f for Settlers and Show State's Negligence. FINDS SECRETS SPHINX I rge Slate Power Plant at (Vlilo Rapid and Recommend ( oun ty (Jootl Road Measure. President. William llanley. Hums; first vice president. A. . Tho....H..n. Echo; second vice president, I. y. Ihapman. Portland; third vice presi dent. M. J. l-ee. I'""''?: Ury treasurer. J. T. Hinkle, H.rm.sU.n. Portland - Unqualified declaration that the Carey act has not operntc.l successfully and presentation of a sub stitute plan whereby the settler cun give a first mortgage and secure imme diate title to his land were contained in resolutions ununimously adopted by the Oregon Irrigation congress. Further resolutions urge the state legislature to provide funds for the immediate relief of settlers on the ( o lumbia Southern project in Crook county; to pass a county bonding act for the construction of good roads, and to appropriate money for the thorough investigation of the Columbia river power project was advocated by John H. Lewis, state engineer. One of the most important - and the shortest -resolutions provides that no reclamation project be opened for set tlement until the water is ready for distribution. This would prevent such disastrous results as those experienced by the Columbia Southern settlers. Residence requirements on irriga tion projects constructed by the Rec lamation service were declared unjust and unreasonable and art ion whs urged that will allow water-users 25 years in which to rcnav the government lor construction exiwrses. President-elect Wilson was asked to ap)int a "Western, and preferably an Oregon man, possessing legal learn ing, knowledge of actual conditions existing in the West, and the judicial temperament essential to the proper discharge of the duties of the office fr seeretaiy of the interior. No nu n tion of either Joseph N. Teal or Wil K. King was made. Adjudication of the water rights under the Central Oregon Irrigation company's project, which was made the subject of an address by A. O. Walker, of Alfalfa, was Bsked in a sepiwate set of resolutions. Legislative appropriation of $50,01)0 to he used with a like amount already promised by Secretary Fisher, of the Federal Interior department, in in vestigating irrigation and power proj ects as outlined by J. N. Teal before the congress, w hs advised. The State Board of Control was com mended for its work in the adjudica tion of the waters of the Silvies river in Harney county and the early com pletion of the project whs recom mended. Hearty indorsement was given the state forest work and attention of the legislature was called to the necessity of maintaining nd provding fur it. The benelicial influence of forest cover for the run-off streams and the hazard f denuded watersheds through fires were pointed out. Hold Funeral for Horse Omnibus. Paris The funeral of the horse omnibus of Paris took place Saturday the last in the lines was sun- old Ve- w hen pressed. At noon, when the hide was to start on its final journey, a great crowd gathered and with mock An appropriation of $100,000 would j solemnity hung wreaths inscribed w ith involve far less loss to the taxpayer, the virtues and past glories of the he said, "than is incurred directly and , ramshackle conveyance round tin. Harvard Savant Finds Great Imact Tomb of King. Hoston -That he has discovered the secrets of the Sphin has keen made known to the authorities of the Har vard Scientific Museum and the lloston Museum of Fine Arts, by Professor G. A. Keisner, the Harvard Egyptologist. Inside the Sphinx he found a temple dedicated to the sun. It is older than any of the pyramids, ami It date is aomewhore around 6000 II. C, the moat ancient in Egyptian history. The tomb of Mens, the king, who posed as a giwl aim - - is also w muo w -.- leading olf Into caverns which have not yet been eiiet rated, for the work has been going on only six months. The Sphinx is carved out of natural rock, but within are caves and build ings of a city of gold, which was per ha once o n to the air. At present Iho excavations are con lined to a chamber. The head of this chamber is ' feet long by 14 wide. It is connected by tunnel with the temple of the aun. which real within the paws of the Sphinx. Such relics as the "Crux Anaatea" (looped crow), symbol of the sun, are found by the hundred. Irfaide th Sphinx are also tiny pyramid, al though the Sphinx built long be fore the resl pyramid. According to Professor Keisner, the F.gypt of today covers one vast city, the edge of which has been scratched, ami the interior of which probably never will be disclosed. WATCH TARIFF IS IN LINE Aluminum Declared to Be in Hands of Monopoly. Washington. D. C. Democratic members of the house committee on ways and means are planning to exam ine closely the atTairs of the Alumi num Company of America and the Wattham Watch company, w hen their represents! ivea testify in an adjourned hearing on the metal tariff schedule. Kach company haa leen charged with being a trust. One day w ill be devoted to the tariff schedule covering wd and it manu factures, and silks and ailk good. Neither of these schedules was affect ed by Democratic revision attempted in the last session of congress. John P. Ilarlew, of New York, rep resenting clients interested in the aluminum duty, haa tiled with the com mittee a brief alleging that the alum inum industry practically is in the hands of the one concern, the Alumi num Company of America, controlling substantially all the sourer of alumi num in the country. Arthur V. Davis, of Pittsburg, rep resenting the Aluminum company, has been urged by the committee to apM-ar at the hearing. F.. C. Fitch, of Waltham, (a expect ed to represent the watch concern. The American watch manufacturer want a specific duty basia instead of the Democratic plan of 30 per cent ad valorem on watch movement. RADIO WILL SERVE ALASKA indirectly in the existing practice." To meet the expenses of inaugural balls a charge of $." has been made for Sliles. A line of new automobile omnibuses ; were ilrawn up round the s iuare km,! tickets, with an additional charge for the motormen of these modern vehicles the subsequent concerts, supper, seats sat w ith their caps in their hands and in the grandstand and so on. Presi-1 played the lugubrious fanf.ire on their 1MT. Indian Inquiry Advised. Washington. D. C. An investiga tion of the aairs of the Crow Indians of Montana by the Department of jus tice will be recommended to the senate by the senate committee on Indian affairs. Secretary of the Interior of wav between Sandv and Welch's re- Pine which thrives wherever the sand sort. ' Dr. Botkin. who made the trin can be kept from blowing away until to Portland, said that he had been in- I growth haa begun. route had been let. The commercial club will lend its assistance in every way possible to get an electric railway through here. Withycombe Visits Union Farm. Union Professor James Withy combe. of Corvallis, stopped here en route home from the meeting of wool growers at Vale and inspected the state farm at this place. He outlined the plan of the board of regents, which constructed here, contemplates many things to the ad vantage of the farm, including the utilization of the entire tract in exper iments, general farming, stock rais ing, dairying, etc. Coast Highway Is Sought. Salem To convert the ocean beach along the shore of Oregon into a pub lic highway is one of the pieces of legislation which Corvernor West is contemplating giving hi sanction be- I I. W. W. Organizers Active. MarshheM I. . Y. organizers have been busy in the logging camps in this vicinity, and it is with appre hension that the different contractors view the situation, one of them said. hile there have neen no open rup tures yet. it is said that the men are rapidly joining the organization, which has already lined up the railroad la borers on different branches being and are ready to walk out at the slightest pretext. There have been no demands present ed as yet. Klamath Has Hay Surfeit. Klamath Fall Last year was fa vorable to the hay crop, and as a con sequence the Klamath valley ha more hay than can be used locally. Through the Klamath Falls Chamber of Com merce an attempt ha been made to have the rate to San Francisco reduced ton. The officials of fore the next legislative assembly. In from $7 to $5 each I the Southern it J the rate, but have requested more spe cific information. I i-. . i 1 k. t i r I . i - -l , l I . i c r r . - . . j ., if mr Hi pwni i urn ia amy I many place aiorg in cnani me oracn i iw jnoinem I acme Dirt m rei jstra " -4CT, lf.ZMf MMWrti OF IHIiUlIM 111 (Alk. nl lii'.l,., IM AtkM ri: I - - -' t rare ligation. 'is cat off. dent Taf-"s inaugural ball made mon ey. A guarantee fund of $r.7i0 was raised, and the receipts were $5)5, 2.1. horns as the driver of the horse on bus drove otf on his final run. er pets idiips at Borah Rill Is Favored. Washington, D. C. The senate ir rigation committee has ordered a fa vorable report on Senator Borah's bill uuriiHiliK Mil Buiiiiinuai ioaii ui f.v.f,-. UdlllMII'il II lew IlitVS ac ooo.OOO to the reclamation fund from I port sail, Hoar-Admiral toe rnji-rm iren.iirj, coi 1 1 lonetl tiffin j I'UUl-l liy a goal, oil the (JUarterd securing the consent of Senator New- the battleship New Hmnpshirt . ' . , . ' ' Jin-Hies. I Here is tif ed the committee that in the next Joy in the fleet again. Assistant Sec congress he w ill advocate a change in I retary Winthrup, of the navv .I,.,,,.. provide that, ment, let it be known the rlei,rti. t rVlmir- Navy's Han on Pels OfT. Norfolk, Va. The goats, monkeys. cats, dogs, parrots and nth almanl 1'ncle Sum's fighting 1 a ...1.. U ........ I ... 1 ;,r". winch were banished a few days ago. when r... sai I, Hoar-Admiral fiovl.. k of pshire. will the reclamation law to settlers shall be relievo! of repaying , did not approve their removal. to the government the cost of building the irrigation projects Chief of Scouts Is Dead. Seattle. Wah. Captain John Dar raeh. chief of the scouts under Gen eral Crook and General Waller during the Indian campaigns, and formerly a prominent contniction engineer of New York Citv. died at his home at Flmonds, 20 miles north of here, ages) S3 vears. Mr. Darrsgh was born in Enfield, N. V, and came west in l"il. In lai4 he returned to New York and engaged with his brother in construc tion work, building the first skyscrap er in New York City. He returned to the Coast in 1902. Freight Rates Increased. Washington, D. C. Cancellation of through route on class and commod ity freight. Including lumber and fruit, from points west of Huntington, Or., by wav of the Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation company to destinations in the East was suspended by the Interstate Commerce commis sion until April 30. The effect would be to increase the transcontinental rate or to force shippers to semi their freight by a more circuitous route. Misquoting May Be Made Illegal. Columbia. S. C. Enactment of a law making it a misdemeanor for a newspaper r?porter to misquote a pub lic speaker was urged by Governor filease in his message to the South Carolina legislature. The governor recommended the passage of a 2 -cent railway fare bill. 1 al Doyle denies the goat butt.Ml him. Convicts Flee in Automobile. Joliet, Ii!.- Three eonvicts escaped from the stiite enitentiarv here Slln. day and are thought to 'have made their way to Chicago jn a stolen auto, mobile. Two of the men were serving sentences for murder. TlTey were seen two hours after their escape in the stolen car, seeding along the road eight miles from J, t. The convicts were in their prison gnrb. The farm er who saw them and telephoned the nrijin s.fTir.; -il., t at. ' ; 1 "" "e men had st pei me car and were standing disputing alout the route. up. in it. Five Bankers Seek Parole .Jif.- h."n-0" hundred ..... ,., , miners in me r edcra Herniary nere, among thern fiv era, will apply f,,r rclen pen- bHt,k- r'e se at it,. - terly meeting of the Federal U,li ..'t .anqe.t the pr,n nt , The bankers are from Indiana,!, I ittsburg, Guthrie. OkU.. and Paris' went into rfTWt mora than O.ui oner have been release,! through iu """ Q"iy tour returned. Kills $1200 Silver Fot r"Tr- l umbering ...... j .t mis place, killed a ma.e silver gray fx. shooting the imal from an open window on the h " u"''"J"rcd by ' ortn irom ll:oo n.-,, ' -'cci acconW " . ft urry. 24 re.r. .rprn nere. ,kfJW bw f- Secretary Meyer Approve Regula tions for Commercial Use. Washington, D. C. Six naval radio stations in Alaska w ill be opened for commercial business before February 1. Secretary Meyer has approved regulations for rates, method of handling messages and other question relating to the new service. The sta tions are at St. Paul. Dutch Harbor, I'nalaga, Kodiak, Cordova and Sitka. Messages from St. Paul, Dutch I labor, I'milaga and Kodiak to all (mints in the I'nit.-d States except California, via the North Head, Wash., radio sta tion, w ill cost 2-1 cents a word, plus the commercial rate to deti nation. From St. Paul, Dutch Harlair, I'nalaga and Kinliak to points in California, via the l.ur. Ka radio station, message will be sent at the rate of :iu cents a won!, plus the commercial rate to destina tion. Fully prepaid message addressed to ships in Alaskan waters or to Alaskan Hiints will be acivpt.-d at North Head and Kureka from the public or by land wire for transmission by radio. Seek Peace With Yaqui Indian. Wahhington, D. C. -- John Way Hammond, the mining exiert who was President Taft's siH-cial ambassador at the coronation of King I. urge of Eng land, has requested iermision from the Mexran government, through Am lias,r Calero, now in Mexico City, to go mto the stronghold of tho Yaqui Indians in S.mora to try to pacify them. Mr. Hammond is desimu of establishing peace among the Yaqui. to carry out n extensive irrigation project along the Yaqui river in the territory occupied by the Indiana. Kobber Return Key. Pittsburg A robber wnlkod into the office of C. (). ). WllaIt- ,j.-Mtr,f he I.Kiral.., I!che,ter Pittsburg railroad, and held IWualt and Ticket Agent Claj ton Hran.lt. at bay with a revolver, compelling the two men to han-l over the contents f the safe and cash drawer. $:,.2r,. A, he w ing the olli.-e, he l.,ed a bunch of k'ys to IWualt. saying: "Here's ,., V"r. h n'ity ticket office " - ieveian.1. 1 stuck ld th.-m I would keys." hem up and return their Edmonton Ha Bad Fire r1italpTn:.AIU,-Fiw- hirh ,Urt- H in bed . ,r fr-tim. thrr,t. bus nras district here early Sunday. ZV" l"n ter main. ,h. firemen were unable to get a stream n. ' r,r" "! a number of small o",:,:",,wi,e..,''"' Th" 'i' r " name ."ecKci. The U, ne tnermomctor grees below zero. could be was $100,000. registered 30 de- big Effort to Save Pet Doe; Fatal TIC III 111 - - I rr "P.