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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1912)
BETTER HO A LARGE delegation : ATTENDS MEETING LAST NIGHT ARjUdi'JOX OF DISTRICT supervisor recommended .'Union. County Automobile Association Meets to Discuss Methods of 'Oh- tulnii.ig Jieltir -Roads ticm-fai I'ruu ; lew rt'ifbllcU,: Until late Hour ! Kiddle Ohms 'Ufa Aid. V $ 'S' ' TA11LOJD OF Al'IO C1LK recommendations. Abolition of district .'road sup ervisor system and Institution of one general road supervisor to build roads. Support convict labor and urge experiment with 30 or 10 convicts the coming summer. . Petition county court to adopt Kiddle proposition on Island City road. Point out fallacy of spending $42,500 on', roads this year with out better generalship. ' Want abolition of present au tomobile tax law and introduc tion of a revised law. Union county's automobile associa tion last night wrestled with road building problems, and before the ad journment was taken several well-defined plans of campaign for the club members to work along had been laid down. The attendance was good and President M. K. Hall's office was crowded with auto owners of this city and county who are desirous of dolns something for the betterment of coun ty roads and to secure the best meth od to pursue in so doing. Present Levy Discussed. The present '1 levy of 2.6 mills on an assessed valuation of $17,000,000 will bring out approximately $42,500 for road building this year and the auto owners discussed this as corn court to have this done. Many men agree that the worst piece of road in SUFFERS ATTACK COLLAPSES WHEN ABOUT XO BE SUSIE COURT. Orders Adjournment and Is Hnried to His Homo In Ante. Sickness halted the machinery of circuit court this morning when Cir cuit Judge, J. W. Knowles collapsed and was hurried to his home in an au tomobile suffering with acute stomach trouble. He was Indisposed yesterday but was able to reach the court house thlB morning, though In poor health. Soon after reaching his chambers he ocllapsed and medical aid was sum moned quickly. The Judge was barely jihle tn take hin bench Ion it enough to adjourn court until Friday and wa1 then hurried to his home under the 'direction of Dr. M. K. Hall. " vWhen the final breakdown came tho Judge had a Blight hemorrhage but ; this 1b not deemed serious., This afternoon the Judge is, reported resting and hopes for bis speedy, re- ' corery are enteitoined, . though. ter- worn mar hate run a system aown to such a joint that It will require arrtral days to build It up again. JUDGE -WHS l.ared with what the outluy would be to under a bonding proposition whom the money spent would have a lasting effect rather than under the present system of nap-hazard . . expenditure The association favored tho elimina tion, of the present district supervisor systora "and institute in Its stead a system of general supervision undor one man who, they believed, would attain results far better than 25 or 30 working without a general. Taylor Plan Discussed. ;'.' Always welcoming 'any' experiment with roads, the individual members today expressed themselves as hop Ins that Mr. Taylor of Red Oak, '.. Iowa, will experiment . with -a half mile of dirt road in the mud section rather than on the Sandridge where roads are never seriously cut . up . as , they are In the murk-dirt section, as be tween La Grande aod' Cove, ' Union and liot Lu ' .." .'')"' i (-; ; ' ; Kiddle Hakes' Offer. ' ', s Fred Kidlde' of "island City .offered to raise bonds. t; niske-'good-'a' propo sition which he 'presented to tho club for ' consideration..-' Ha 'guaranteed, to supply all the gravel luicesB.'iry to Im prove and ijriivi.'! , rond from . La Grande's itv limits, to Island .City,,' li- tho county would roll, the gravel and supply-' drilnage along the road. . Mr. Kiddle wants the road built as nar row as Is consistent and Is anxious to have the county promise to do the rol ling and draining. The auto owneri will as a body apply to the county (Continued" on Page" Four.) ALIGNS WITH PROMISES THE FIRST SPEECH IN SEVERAL MONTHS DELIVERED TODAY. tomes Out in Modified 3Inuner for Recall of Judges. Columbus, O., Feb. :. 21. Pledging himself Jlatly 'for. the initiative and referendum, the short ballot, the di rect nominations by tile people; the presidential preference primary; the election of senators by direct vote, and In a measure the recall, Theo dore Roosevelt today addressed the Ohio constitutional convention. He outlined Just where he stands on pro gressive policies 'on which it Is be lieved he may again run for the pres idency. .- He was welcomed enthusias tically. It Is estimated 1,000 heard his speech and as it Is his first pub lic appearance in some time, great In terest was attached. Roosevelt arrived this morning and was greeted enthusiastically by 1,000 at the. station. Ho wont to the home of Dr. Gladden, his host. ' He wasted no time. After shaking hands with a couple of hundred peo ple he plunged Into his speech. schmitz trial starts. Abe Rnef, Convict, Is Interested Spec tntor to the Proceedings. . Sart Francisco, Feb. 21. Recalling vividly the circumstances of the fam ous graft prosecution of former years the trial of former Mayor Schmldtz was begun today before the Jury with Judge La wler of Chicago in charge. He Ib charged with complicity, with former Supervisor Wilson in the gas .afa crrnffr ' Abe Rnef, the former boss, who will testify for the state, was an Interested onlooker. He paid close attention to the proceedings. . . . . ; Physicians of -Three States Columbia, 8. C, Feb. 21: The Tri State Medical society, embracing; North and South Carolina and Virgin ia; met in this city today and was called to order by the president Dr. j. Howell Way ofWaynesville,. N. O. The two days 'program? provides tpt more than one hundred papers and addresses dealing with -subjects of In? tereat to the medical profession. ROOSEVELT InrnrtH nnmn I i HI I nrh SI TTM SOUTH: SIl'J SH8 BI ITS HLL IS HEAVY M PEOPLE TEXAS ALONE ESCAPES ; .'Severe.' snowstorm j : ' IN SOUTH A , . MILLIONS LOST XO THE . RANCHMEN AND RESIDENCES; 1'eniilq tiuio and plizzard Swooping) Om- "itxiis HuHtucsji St'ipiiiid.. In! Juin.-tntj City anil &U Louis fenow'j Fiillibs- lu Kansas City This Af tor- ". ucon--is One, iii Vt'OiSt BllwaifdS. ''. Su LcluTs;.Fr.'b,"'' 21.'f-T he entire mill--; flit-southwest liiiiU'l'.n, cowpi'lsUis tbo tit'iHoti ot Ml-.itiourl, Kaimau, OUliiiiuina ' aii'd' Texas, are shivering In one of iha j worst, blizzards of the west.' A foot j of snow has fallen iu all above enuru-j crated states' but Texas and is still j falling in Kansas City and St. Louis. Business Is practically at a standstill, and traffic Is demoralized. . In cattle and country ' stock, . the loss Is heavy. ' ' ' ; , Blizzard and Galo rrevnil. . Austin, Tex., Feb. 21. More than $2,000,000 damage is estimated done as the result of a terrific gale sweep ing Texas today. Hundreds of ,small buildings are wrecked and further re ports are expected to show heavy los ses among ranchmen. , Chicago Feels Storm. Chicago, Feb. 21. Gripped in a se vero snowstorm which Is general, the district' around Ohio towns and the Mississippi valley point are suffering today. South Dakota vGrnlu Dcnlers MIMtchell, S, D.,; Feb. 21: Evi dence of the success of the farmers' co-operative movement in this state was furnished by the large represen tative attendance at the opening here today of the annual convention of the South Dakota Farmer Grain Dealers' Association. The roll ca'l showed an attendance of more than 1,000 farm ers who are interested as stock hold ers in the co-operative grain elevators The three days' program calls for a discussion of all phases of the co operative movement, with adresses by Charles Adkins,. speaker of the Illi nois house of representatives, E. G. Dunn of Mason City, Iowa, a leading factor in the co-operative work In Iowa, and several other , prominent men . ' . South Carolina Mill Merger Aiken, S. C, Feb. 21: The initial steps looking to the merger of three of the largest . cotton taiills in the south were taken today at a meeting of the stockholders of the Langley Manufacturing company at Langley. The three 'concerns which it is pro posed to . combine are the Langley Manufacturing company, the Aiken Manufacturing company and the Sem inole Manufacturing company. The mills have a total valuation of $1,069, 00. The combined textile enterprise will have 'a spindleage a little in ex cess of 100,000. WATTERSON AIDS WILSON. Editor Again Takes Slap Editorially . at' Democratic Candidate. .Louisville, Feb. 21. Wilson today is believed to be kicked up another step toward the nomination by addition al utterances of Colonel Watterson. The colonel now says that Wilson Is rude In his refusal to take campaign contributions from Thomas Ryan, the financier when Watterson suggested it, ."Marse" Henry also says' that Wilson, was corresponding to the col oneL's political enemies at the tlmel the colonel -was" Boostini fchsf;- 1 THE qONFLAGRATION iis serious and. the V LOSS ENORMOUS UX1ZEXS SAVE FURTHER , . DESTRUCTION OF 1'ROl'ERTX JUj namllo.Ubc'd (o Stop RaTagcs t the ! liia:c Cititni.s, tiiinl) to Roofs and' v VVith Vct Blaufeots Chock Buniiuir . :Eiu tiers CoMilug From llui'iiinjf Area! . -Lerge-'sectlou i Cily Uone.' -.-..' . j ':', iioii.-it-.n, T Ft!). 21. -- Uoystou tac'wl ili.'fnivion' . uy? lire- today. At : 11 A-Ioi;lc u rvjl ljou'tiC, tiio resldoutlal district, ii'eyfeublocka !-wldo and ,18 ' blocks lougaio8troyed..-It is con-, ser.Vatively esUmii.ted that "the loss. is! already '$6,000,'j'oi' but though' the wind j blew o& mile an "hour and' the-flames Were seeming lteloud control, the up per hand-was;' gained.'at 11 o'clock. The lire Ktr.rfetl early today in a hotel.'.-f;. Half' a hundred dwellings, a number, of churches, school houses, warehouses and cotton compresses "were consumed and hundreds are now homeless. : Dynamite is being used to check the flames and' thousands of citizens are aiding the firemen. ": ' ., Upper Hand Guinea. ; A i Shortly before noon the fire, was controlled. ' A block' of dynamited building..?uudenly stopped the fire's progress. ' -. Citizens undeniably 'saved the city from destruction by 'co-operating-They' climbed qn the roofs .with wet blanket, extinguishing firebrands the great conflagration was shooting , to the skies and then settled on the roofs The heaviest Individual losses arc: McFadden & 'Cleveland, compressors' and the plant of the E. D. Harre-ll Lumber company. Sixty . thousand bales of cotton were destroyed and the loss to the cotton alone exceeds $2,000,000. . -, ' '' The park's are Jammed with the homeless and relief work has already started. Aid from outside cities will probably not be needed, however. Northwestern Immigration Congress I Tacoma, Wash., Feb, 21: Underj the title of the Pacific Northwestern Immigration convention there was opened In this city today the first im portant conference that has been held, to consider the effects of the opening of the Panama canal upon the future development of this section of the United States and the Pacific coast section 'of Canada. The conference will be In session two days and is be lug held under the Joint auspices of j the commercial bodies of Tacoma and . the industrial department of the Y. M. C. A. The conference is baBed on I the assumption that, with the com pletltno of canal across the isthmus; the flood of European immigration to the Pacific coaet will equal the pres ent volume at Atlantic ports. The prob lem of how best to take care of thiB prospective influx of foreign settlers with a view to the wellfare of both the heWBcomers and the country is regarded as a serious one. Lacking the great Industrial centers which the Eastern states readily absorb the im migrants .it Is believed that the beBt solution of the problem for the Pacific Northwest will be to devise ways and means for. locating the newcomers In the agricultural communities. ENGINEER IS HERO. Prevent Rubbers From Looting Ex . press TaJoables Hurt In Arm neer Mansfield was wounded In tho, arm today wfcen . he frustrated an at- tempt of nte bandits, near. Bertram, this morntt, whe attempted lipid up a passenger train on the Chicagj & Northwestern. Tbey shot whon ho refused to stop the tvaiil. . . Mansfield was sent' to a hospital. It Is believed that the bandits wore tip pod off that the express car carried au unusually largo sum In currency, The messenger had Jn his charge $ 100,000 : In registered packages,, gold and silver 'shipments, WOMEX SEXT TO SAFETI Condition jn Xorthern Mexico War. ranis Deportation uf Woinen. ' - El l'aso, Feb, 21.-Amorii;nn women nnfl children are being deported from northern Mexico to places ot safety In Texas. The northbound trains are crowded. ; - . The rebels are permitting the- re pairing of dynamited bridges for this piirpnso.'. Manyfederal, office holders 'Olsgtilrtcd "as "civilians are entering Juroz. Anns" and ammunition ore ferine, sent 'from BI JViso. Clit'liileal Rill Passes .House, l : , Washington, I. C, Feb. 21. By a vote of 15S to 127 , tho house today, 'pn.i'wbd.' tho Underwood bill. revlwiiUr the chemical soheduto upward. renltoonllnl Curtn'u Fnll, ....':,','.'. I" ' " , , New York, lOeli. 21. The Lenten season was ushered in today with the customary special religious services la all Catholic churches In observ ance of Ash Wednesday. ' INFORMAL AXXOUXt FillFXT MARK AT PORTLAND THIS MORNING. Selling .tVlM Retire From Hend of the . t inft' CdiilMlltotit Once. . Portland,. Feb. ,21.-Followlng his Informal announcement that he will seek the republican senatorial . nomi nation against Bourne at tho primar ies In April,: B. F. Selling, of Port land, said today he would make a for mal statement of his principles In a few days. He will resign Immediate ly as chairman of the Taft campaign committee for the purpose of devoting his time to his own candidacy, Sel ling has decided : to make the race definitely, after ex-Senator Fulton an nounced his refusal to run. La Follelle Boom Continues. The work of securing signatures to tho petitions putting La ' ; Follette's name on the presidential preference primary ballot was resumed in Ore gon following 'a telegram from La Follette that he is still In the race and is not going to retire.; ThomnB Mc Cusker, the Oregon campaign mana ger, had stopped work when the news dispatches said the senator was so slrk that his retirement was neces ary, .-'.,'.. ' . ' ' Clark or Wilson. , Oklahoma City, Okln., Feb. 21. On the eve of the assembling of the Democratic State convention, which will meet here tomorrow to select the delegates-at-large to the Baltimore convention all signs point to a spirit ed contest for the control between the supporters of Champ Clark and Wood row Wilson. The name of no other candidate for the democratic presi dential nomination Is likely to figure in the proceedings. Wisconsin Library Workers. '" Janesvllle, Wis., Feb. 21.-nJanes vllle is entertaining for three days the annual meeting of the Wisconsin Library association. It Is the twenty first annual meeting of the organiza tion! and the largest In point of at tendance In the history of the assoot atlon. Cities, towns and colleges CDMSENTS TO SEEK FOR TOGA throughout the state are represented."gun." EOIEMMT- KF! Ill STANFIELD IS NOT TO SUFFER FROM WEST EXTENSION CONTL'NIS Or RECLUIA- TIOX BOARD DLCISION OUT West Lxti iihiuu of Uermlstyn Project lnvoicd by -Hoard Which l'rotiilsea No H-ini UU Ho Done Stanfiold; mid Assures Northern UiiiatllLi tuui'ty UitiK'ticrs All 11 tiler Needed .. Foi-Ua.'Jd. Or.f.. Feb.: 21. Upon tele- '. graphic ."ponultisicifi .of 'tho Secretary ' of the. tntvrlor,: Supurvjuluij, Knglnoor : IIopsoii. of tlia; fodural reclamation ser". vice, aunouncod before th(5 Oregon Ir rigation congress today the substance -of a favorable report of the board which investigated the west extension of the Umatilla project near Hermit-: ton. l Xi V.; :'.-'-':";;:' : It favors construction of a project along the lines which solves the much vexed problem, as It gives Stan.fleld home owners the assurance that their lands will be satisfactorily drained, and promises the people on the upper reaches of the Umatilla and Its tribu taries an abundance of wator for Irri gation.' . V--.,. ... ' Hopson said It would satisfy all the -, protestors, .and he - said ho did not know what actipn the government will take. :--,;-y:.; :. ' ' ''.,': V'": '' ', As a, result of the report the con gress' .this ,! afternoon" will' probably adopt a resolution favoring the west extension whlcl will cost three mil lions, anil. Irrigate 30,000 acres. ; .. Y. M. C. A. Trospcrs. New York, Feb. 21: One ' of the most Interesting features of the bi ennial convention of the Young Men's Christian Association In New York state, which met at the local head quarters here today for a two days' session, consists of the reports of. of ficers and committees showing the ro inarkable growth and prosperity of the organization. Acording to , these reports the total membership in this state now" exceeds 60,000, while the association owns 86 buildings, with an aggregate value exceeding $10,000,000. 11 CAPTURES SEATTLE VOTE HE AND COTTF.RILL LEAD IN THE PRIMARY RACE. Former Mayor, Who Was Recalled, Is ' Heading Candidates for Mayor. Seattle, Feb. 21. Yesterday's pri mary election resulted in the nomina tion of former Mayor Gill, who was recalled and George Cotterlll, a pro gressive. Gill, got about 22,000, Cot terlll 16,000; Thomas Parish, 12,000; and Wells, a socialist, 10,000. The returns are not all In but at noon there was no change. : The two high est will fight at out at the regular election. . Cement Show lOgiens In Chicago. Chicago, 111., Feb. 21. Chicago's fifth annual cement show opened In the. Coliseum today and will continue for one week, The principal attract ion this year Is an exhibition o Thos. A. Edison's concrete furniture Be iMm ha KMinnn. nhlhltlon tlieM are nnmerous other hew features', ' from the "poured house" , to '; the,,:.ceme'nt '