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About The Medford mail. (Medford, Or.) 1893-1909 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1908)
THE MEDFORD MAIL . Olves All the News All the Tim 'It Ooet to Every Hois la Jackson County. OCR ADVERTISERS ' ! . Are Always Satisfied Because ' THE MEDFORD MAIL Reaches the People Who Buy VOL. XX MEDFORD. JACKSON COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER It. 1908, NO. 37 II MEETING HELD Rogue River Horticultural Society Held It in Medford There wu a Urge attendance at the regular meeting of the Roaae River Horticultural society, held la the rooms of the Medford Commer cial club yesterday afternoon. The chair wu occupied by President J. E. Watt. After reading of the men utea and a number of communica tion! the prealdent announced that before the important business was considered that he wished to have the secretary of the commercial club read the statement of the club's work. According to this report, the Com mercial club has spent for advertis ing alone during part of 190S, the whole of 1907 and part of 1908 the sum of 111, 770. 95. This was en tirely aside from the secretary's sal ary and all other expenses In the way of keeping up the organization. J. A. Perry and J. D. Olwell spoke strongly about the splendid work the Commercial club was doing and urged all the fruitmen and farmers present to do something toward helping the work along by contrib uting something In a financial way. An Intermission was announced of ten minutes so as those present could go to the desk of the secretary of the club and give their names and the amount they would contribute. After the Intermission the business of irrigation was considered and a number of those present took part In the discussion, all agreeing that It was very necessary that water be secured for irrigation purposes on a large scale. F. J. Blakeley stated that he expected that the company he represented would soon be In a position to furnish a large quantity of. water for the use of the farmers of the valley. The meeting was brought to a close by the appointing of a commit tee to look Into different irrigation propositions, and the committee wilt do so and make a full report at the next meeting of the society. The fol lowing is the committee: J. A. Peary, W. I. Vawter, J. D. Olwell. H. T. Flnley, S. A. Nye. M. B. Slns, J. E. Watt. DEVELOPING WATER IWKR. The Rogue River Electrical com pany, formerly the Condor Water A Power company. Is right now gllng considerable attention to .prepara tions for the development of power on Rogue river near Prospect. For several weeks the company has had ten or a dozen men at work up there putting In a headgate and repairing and enlarging their water ditch. This is a tremendous proposition the matter of development of power from the' waters of this river. The headgates are being put In about one mile above the 'bridge, from which point three miles of ditch extends to the canyon below where the water from the ditch fulls over a perpen dlcular rock a distance of 5f3 feet. The water which this ditch Is ca pable of carrying will develop over 100,000 horsepower. It Is the in' tentfon of the company to put In a power house capable of accommodat 1ng all this Immense amount'' of power, but It Is not expected that electrical machinery of a greater ca pacity than 10,000 horsepower will be Installed at this tlnie. However, all plans will be so laid that at any time needed additional machinery may be added. It Is not the Intention of the com pany to abandon Its plant at Gold Ray, still, should they be successful In Inaugurating the Irrigating sys tem which is looked forward to, this plant may be abandoned and the en tire operation of the plant be cen tered at Prospect. Prospect Is situ ated nearly equal distance from this valley. Klamath Falls, Roseburg snd Dunsmulr. That Is as far as a representative of the company would commit himself, but the Inference to be drawn would be that some time In the not distant future the falls of the Rogue might be made to furnish power and lights for these points. TELEPHONE SERVICE BETTER. Since W. K. Merrill has been look ing after the Pacific Telephone com pany's business In Medford there has been msde a great number of Im provements In the service and there was need of It New batteries have been placed In nearly all the phones In the ;lty, and those not so supplied will be within the next few days. Much new wiring has been done, and the entire system has been gone owr systematically and placed In as good shape as Is possible. With all those Improvement Added, the possibility of a mtxup of Hues will be avoided. Another switchboard has been In stalled and many of the phones n umbered and placed on new Unfit. Another long-distance booth has been- pjit la and the Hotel Nash baa been made a "pay station." Aside from, the Improvements al ready named, there are to be some changes made as to office arrange ments. A manager's office 9x17 fee; la site, with a wood and glass parti tion, with wickets for transaction or business, will be bnllt In the main room, near the front, while other similar partitions will be placed, set ting' the operators' room off from the general public. This will give the office a better and more busi nesslike appearance and will do away with the seeming vacant and barren look of the office as hereto- A few weeks ago these columns said a free switching system with Central Point would be established. This It haa been decided not to es tablish. TO KILL PKKMIIIKVr. OYSTER BAY. L. I. 8ept. 7. A crank armed with an antiquated bulldog revolver was caught near the president's house today by the secret service guards. The man de scribed himself as John Coughlin, a detective, and when stopped by the secret service men he presented a card upon which was Inscribed his name and word "officer. He said he had come to ask the president to order 10.000 troops to catch "yeggmen" who had been ter rorising Boston. The secret service men stopped him and asked his business. They tried to put hlra off on the plea that the president was busy and was not seeing visitors. Coughlin hesitated a moment and slid his hand toward his back pocket. Secret Service Agent Adams grabbed him. Coughlin Is a slight man and made but little resistance. In his back pocket was a revolver. He was tak en In an automobile to the town hall, charged with carrying concealed weapons, and was committed to the jail at Mlneola. He will be examined as to his san ity. Coughlin admitted he had been confined In an asylum three years. The president was not Informed of the occurrence till this evening. The rumor was Btarted that a shot was fired at the president while rid- Ing with his cousin. W. Emjln. while Roosevelt was riding along the Cove road Saturday, which has been de nied by those In position to know. James Sloan, Jr., the chief of the president's guard of secret service men. emphatically denied the story of the ambush. Sl IT Itl-XU X AUAIXST 8. I. A dispatch from Portland states that a suit to recover lands granted the Oregon California railroad company (now the Southern Pacific company), and valued at more than $40,000,000, began yesterday, when B. D. Townsend. special assistant to the attorney-general, filed a com plaint with the federal court. This action, which has been In contem plation for several years, and which received an Impetus when the Ore gon legislature of 1907 sent a me morial to congress, will be the most Important legal battle ever precipi tated In the Pacific northwest. More than a year of preliminary prepara tion has been consumed, and with the filing of the complaint the gov ernment has fortified Its case to the smallest detail. The case will be bitterly fought by the railroad corporation, for the lands Involved represent some of the best timber country on the Pacific coast, if not In the world. While a conservative estimate places the am ount involved at $40,000,000, the ac tual value of the land and timber Is much greater. The suit will event ually go to the United States Su preme court before the railroads will stop fighting for this Midas ter ritory. Eastern people cannot con ceive the vast natural resources of the land which the government Is now trying to wrest from the clutches of the railroad corporation. It embraces millions of acres and billions upon billions of feet of the choicest timber, not to mention the water rights, the mineral resources and agricultural possibilities of the land after the timber has been re moved. These lands are now controlled by the Harrlman system, which has re fused to sell to actual settlers ac cording to the terms of the land grant, and this refusal to part with the land has retarded the develop ment of the southern part of Ore gon, prevented other railroads from entering the territory to compete and has made the system immensely rich. Each succeeding year sees the land Increase In value, and Harrl man will marshal his best legal tal ent to contest the suit with the gov ernment. The grants, for there were two, provided that the railroad should sell to actual settlers not more than one-quarter section and at the rate of $2.R0 an acre. GOVERNMENT TAKING ACCOUNT It Is Making an Inventory Of Our Natural Resources . WASHINGTON. Sept. . The first returns to the ' national con- serration commission show that Uncle Sam is making fine headway with hla Inventory of natural re sources. It Is perhaps a bigger Job than he at first suspected, but indi cations are that he Is going to get through It in good time. Very like ly It has cut short the vacation plans of some of his best helpers, but there bss been no complaint. His corps of investigators, statisticians, experts and scientists have buckled down closely to the work all sum mer. Inquiries have been going out from this and that government of fice by the thousand. They have gone to special agents In the field, to the government stations here and there, to bureaus of statistics all over the country, to county clerks, to township assessors, to manufac turers, to lumber dealers, to rail road and steamboat companies and to farmers. The chiefs of the gov ernment bureaus have been wanting to know about lands farm lands, timber lands, mineral lands, about crops and crop production; about Bwamp and overflow lands; about Ir rigation; about navigation how far the use of our Inland waterways has decreased and the reason tor the de crease; the cost of water traffic as compared with railroad rates; the use of water power and Its posaibll Ities; about all phases of the forests and of timber and lumber; about how much of minerals we have left and the probable duration of the mineral supply, and about livestock and game and fish. This is only the most hurried kind of general sum-up of the "schedule of Inquiries" of the national conser vatlon commission. Just what It really Is can he seen only by study' Ing a ropy of this most unusual doc ument, the "schedule." on which I'ncle Sum is basing the first Inven lory he ever attempted lo make of his natural wealth. It can be ob tained by writing a letter to Thomas R. Shlpp, secretary of the national conservation commission, forest ser vice, Washington, D. C. The con serration commission also gets out "tliilletins of Progress," which show Just how rapidly the conservation movement, started at the White House conference of governors, is going forward. These also may be obtained from the secretary. Since the governors and the great national organizations have shown so great an interest In the conser vation of resources the movement has spread all over the United States. New state conservation com missions are reported to the nation al conservation commission at the rate of three or four a week, and large national organisations are rapidly coming forward with conser vation committees or their own. The conservation movement may be said now to be firmly established. All the government bureaus are rapidly pushing work on the Inventory of resources In order that a preliminary report may be made to the national conservation commission at its meeting In Washington, Tuesday, December 1. One week later, Tues day, December 8, the governors of the states and territories, or their representatives, will meet in Wash ington with the commission. Al ready, although the Invitation has not yet been issued, the governors of some 12 or 15 states and terri tories have announced their inten tion to be present at the meeting. Among these are Governor Frear cf Hawaii and Governor Hoggatt of Alaska. . That the conservation movement Is absolutely nonpartisan Is shown in the vigorous declarations In the platforms of both leading poll'.lcal parties In favor of conservation of natural resources. Mr. Bryan, who spoke at the governors' conference, has declared himself strongly In fa vor of conservation, and Mr. Taft, In his speech of acceptance, went on record as an advocate of the move ment. It Is a question on which tl.e American Federation of Labor and the National Association of Manu- factnrers agree. Justices of th4 ,u- preme court of the United St-ites have written President Roosevelt expressing unqualified approval of the movement to save the nation's natural wealth, and Cardinal 'lib- bons. Just before leaving to be pre.. ent at the pope's Jubilee In Rome, t gave out a strong statement as to the duty Involved In making provjv Ion for future generations by taking care of the resources of the eonnt-y. Tho work of compiling the great mass of material resulting from 'hu Inquiries sent out by the dirfereu government bureaus will undoubted ly be one of great responsibility and one requiring expert knowledge auJ peculiar ability. For tbia Uii, President Roosevelt has selniu-J Henry Garrett of Washington. V. C, asslatant director of the Cuban cen sus. Mr. Garrett, who is one of the best-known men in the gov.trru.ient work at Washington, is Just now finishing the compilation of the con sul of Cuba. At the concl'ialua cf that, by direction of the '.iresldent, he will devote all of his time u the compilation of the material which. when completed, will make up the first Inventory of natural resources ver attempted In the United States. HILL AXD H ARB I MAX. PORTLAND Or., Sept. 5. The the war la over between E. If. Har rlman and James H. HIU was stated in so many words by the Union Pa cific magnate tonight at a reception by the Commercial club. Rivalry for railroad business will go on, he said, but they meet hereafter as neighbors. That all Harrlman lines projected In this state will go forward to com pletion as soon as practicable was the statement he made to the as sembled business men. He assured the audience that the outlook for railroad building In this country Is excellent and that the work just or dered to be resumed In Oregon will be followed with the resumption of other delayed projects until all shall have been completed. Harrlman left tonight for San Francisco. He will stop at Medford and Ashland and will meet Mrs. Har rlman and party at Weed. CHAFIX IX MKDKOIlll. Eugene W. Charin, the Prohibi tion candidate for president of the United States, arrived In Medford yesterday morning at 10:30 o'clock and spoke for five minutes from a truck at the depot platform to a crowd of several hundred people. On alighting from the train Mr. Chafln was escorted to the truck and introduced to the audience by L. F. Lozier In a few w, ell-chosen words. Mr. Chafln's speech was as follows: "Ladles and Gentlemen: I am sorry that my time Is so limited, but I could not make It longer on ac count of my California engage ments. "Ever single effort made so far to stop the liquor traffic has failed. and I want to say to you that the only way to stop it Is to stop the manufacture and sale of liquor. The main plank In our platform Is to stop It. You say that Is a good thing, but you can't do It. I say that it can. "You elect me on the 3d of No vember. This Is getting to be a se rious question with you, and I may say that It Is getting to be a serious question with me. (laughter.) "If every Republican and every Democrat in the state of Oregon who believes In prohibition votes for me I will carry the state of Oregon, and If every Republican and every Dem ocrat In the United States who be lieves In prohibition votes for me I will carry every state in the Union. "Now, I see quite a few Democrats here, and I want to say a few words to you. You vote for me this time, as It will be the last chance you will have to do so. You can vote for Bryan any old time. (Laughter.) "If we are defeated on the third day of November It will not be by the saloonkeepers, the breweries or the distillers it will be by the tem perance people who vote for the parties and their candidates." Just then the locomotive whistle blew and Mr. Chafln asked all who wanted to shake hands with htm to raise their hands and nearly every one present did so. The Prohibition candidate last year made 555 addresses In the cause of prohibition, and at that time he had no Idea of being a can didate for the presidency. He Is now whlrlwlnding over the country and says he thinks he "can make as many speeches as Mr. Bryan, with out as much effort or exhaustion." He has already made five speeches In Nebraska, and has emphasized the political side of the Prohibition party In an effort to wake up the home state of the Democratic candi date. Mr. Charin Is well known as the author of "Lincoln, the Man of Sor rows," and derives much of his pleasure from a study of the lives of Lincoln and Washington. Judge Polnrievler Wins. SPOKANE, Wash., Sept. . Judge Miles Polndexter of Spokane has won the Republican congressional over a field of six candidates. The returns from nearly all the counties In this district show outside of Spo kane Polndexter Is running neck and neck with Johnson of North Yak' Ima, his strongest rival. As Poin devtcr will carry Spokane county by from S.'.OO to 3000, his election Is assured. B. H. HARRIS' PROPOSITION He Offers to Give Water Rights to the City Free of Cost In The Morning Mail at the issue of September 4, mention was made of a water proposition by B. II. Har ris, who aald he would agree to fur nish the city of Medford with f.00 Inches of water from Big Butt), to be taken out Just below the Butte Falls Lumber company', dam at Butte Falls. Mr. Harris also said that he hud a survey made for a distance of its miles, that he will furniih this fo the city tor Just what it cost him to have It prepared. He also agreed to sell any and all of the lumber needed at the market price. He now submits the figures for the estimat ed cost. They are as follows: Material for flume 3x3, 30 mites: Lumber, 1,782.000 feet, at $15 per 1000 $ 26,730 Cover for flume, 540,000 feet at $15 per 1000. .. . 8,100 Nails and spikes, 3c per lin eal foot 4,75? Work at 110 per 100 lineal feet 16,000 Trestle work snd material. 5,000 Surveying 3,000 Total $ 63,582 Two miles 18-Inch steel pipe at BrownBboro $ 40,000 Eleven miles wood pipe, 18 Inch, to Medford 110,000 Total $213,582 Reservoir and flume at Medford $ 20,000 Total $233,582 This flume, 3 feet wide by 2 feet 8 Inches deep, will carry about 1000 miners' Inches, less 100 Inches for leakage. This estimate contemplatea the lumber and braces all cut to the right length at the mill. Mr. Harris w.ill not charge any thing for the water right. He says he expects to make the money by the growth and development of the country. Mil. HAKKIt OIUKtTS. We all have our troubles and then some of us have more troubles. but It is up to the Medford council- men to have most troubles. This body of men haven't gotten "squared away" on city water mat ters yet; as a matter of fact, they are not fairly started, but here comes another brew of trouble. However, there is some little satisfaction In variety and the councilmen have nil kinds. Yesterday morning Engineer Os good brought a gang of city work men over from the quarries at aJck sonville and was making ready to put them to work erecting the rock bins In which It was Intended to dump the crushed rock when brought from the quarries, when, biff! went something, and there wasn't a thing doing. The bins were to have been put In on the Sontherr Pacific right of way, near the Iowa Lumber com pany's lumber yard, and near the stock yards. Permission had been secured from the Southern Pacific for this purpose, but Manager Hafer, who Is also a councilman. Inter posed objections, alleging that the dust from this crushed rock would Injure his lumber, and the sparks from the engine pushing the cars up the Incline to these bins would en danger his company's lumber and buildings. Some telegraph messages passed between Mr. Hafer and Su perintendent Fields In Portland and it terminated In Mr. Fields ask ing the councilman to look elsewhere for their bin site and then It Is said Ihere was an exchange of cour tesies between Mr. Hafer and other members of the council which were more emphatic than complimentary. and the councilmen started out to find another bin site which they didn't find by a ding sight, or by any other site. They endeavored to figure out, with the assistance of Engineer Os good, whether or not these bins could be put In south of the Barnum depot. Here they encountered MY. Osenbriigge's machinery shed, and it would be necessary to crop off about .10 feet of the west end of this build ing, and this cropping process would set the taxpayers bars. $250 a crop this The Morning Mall understands was the price placed on the damage to Mr. Oaenhriigge by Mr. Hafer. Other persons further down the line Interposed objections to putting In the track and bins here because that they would narrow the street too much, which was already too nar row for nae In their business. And that Is where the matter of paving Seventh street stood at 6 o'clock last night. The work on this street could be gin within ten days from now, but it Is right here blocked because that no alte for the track and rock bins can be found. My, but we are hav ing an awful time at our house and the improvements go ahead with a velocity calculated to make one forget where he's at or If he's anywhere. Dr. Ray haa offered to sell a tract of land out west of the city for the use of this track and blna at 1500 per acre, hut It would be a big ex pense hauling the rock to town from thta point. OTHKHH' LOMf OI'R AIX. It waa 8unday morning that this paper told of the good work C. L. Haielrlgg was doing in the way of encouraging immigration from Indi ana to Oregon. The two clippings following, from the Greensburg Ond.) Review, Is conclusive evident that Mr. Hatelrlgg la "making good": "Clyde Haselrigg. with his wife and son, Worth, and Mr. and Mrs Everett Marsh broke home ties and started today tor Medford, Or., which has been selected for their future home. An expression of lc gret carries with It sincerity, slid tie Review, looking on the 'criuhl side, trusts that the new hoini on thf, far-away Pacific coast utuy be blessed with health, happiness at.d business prosperity." 'Next Tuesday another contlnwit of the Greensburg colony ttntc Is centralising at Medford, Or , '.. Hi leuve for their far-away homo. U will ci.islst of Thomas Edmt-c les and wife and Forrest EdinenliM. site and daughter, Catherine. They will be followed on the 18th by Richard Edmeades and family and a little later the colony will be fur ther augmented by Mrs. Sarah Klrby and little son, Monroe Marsh, Mrs. Mary Haselrigg and Mlsa Florence and Arthur and Grandma Conner. There are all excellent citizens, and Greensburg will be the poorer by their going." GAXS LOST TO .XKI.SOX COLMA ARENA, San Francisco, Cal., Sept. 9. Battling NelBon clinched hla claim to the lightweight pugilistic championship by defeating Joe Clans for the second time this afternoon. The fight ended In the 21st round, when Gans was beaten down by a succession of blows and failed to get upon his feet at the count of ten. The veteran colored fighter was severely punished, but the champion, too, has many marks of the battle. From the first clang of the gong Nelson forced the fighting, never giving ground, and he gradually battered down his older and less vig orous opponent. In the final round Nelson rained in right and left smashes to the Jaw and body and soon beat htm Into a helpless state. Gans sank to the floor and the ref eree began counting. Mechanically the defeated man watched Referee Smith wave his hands, apparently too far gone to hear him count off. It was then that Gans, ashen gray, nis race terribly cut, with eyes glassy, sought to rise. The fight waa most spectacular and at no time did It appear as If Gans had a chance to win. Time and again he would shoot his wicked punches to the Battler's face, but the latter never for an Instant wav ered. Referee Smith said after the flghl that Gans was all In after the ninth. In the 21st both Smith and the time keeper counted ten, therefore mak' Ing Nelson the winner. Smith ad ded that he did not believe Gans knew he was counted out, hut it did not make any difference as Nelson had Gans completely at his mercy. In the dressing room Gans with one eye closed and the other parti ally so, his nose and Hps badly lac erated and swollen, mumbled out a statement as follows: "I made one fight too many. Nel son is a tough boy, and beat me fair ly. I will never fight again. I will return to Baltimore Immediately and attend to my hotel business there. This is no Patti farewell, but It la In dead earnest." Nelson aald: "Gans was tougher than before. He was In good condi tion and fought a different kind of a fight, but I proved conclusively that I am his master In any kind of a fight. From now on I will never fight a colored man again. I ahook hands with Billy Papke today and we both made this compact." Nelson appeared as strong at the finish as in the beginning. One of his teeth was knocked nut In the 1 4th and blood flowed freely as a result. The sight of blood spouting freely from Nelson's mouth caused the short-enders to mount In their seats and shout encouragingly to the fast dying colored lad. Ho respond ed gamely and In the following round made what was probably the moat fu rious round of the fight. THE MAIL rOR NEWS HARRIMAN IN MEDFORO He and His Party Arrived on a Special Train Sunday a. m. E. H. Harrlman. atlas The Rail road Magnate, The Railroad King. The Master of Finance, etc.,. etc;, ar rived in Medford at 11:13 Sunday morning on bis special train made up of five coaches. The train glided Into the city very quietly and at 13:32 it glided out again, without the slightest jar or noise, on Its way to California. Mr. Harrlman'a party accompany ing him consisted of E. E. Calvin, general manager of the Southern Pacific railway; John Mulr, the dot ed geologist, and a particular friend of Mr. Harrlman: J. D. Farrell of Seattle; J. E. O'Brien, manager of the Harrlman lines In Oregon, and Mr. Harrlman'a secretaries, Messrs. Hill and Price. Mr. Harrlman waa met on hla ar rival by a deputation of some of the leading citiiens, headed by May or Reddy, and at once taken in hand and escorted to the mayor's automo bile for a ride out In the country and through the city. With him In the automobile were Mayor Reddy, John Mulr, J. E. O'Brien and J. M. Keene. They went through the or- clty, making altogether a distance of chard section south and west of' the between twelve and fifteen miles. The parly returned to the- depot shortly after 12 o'clock and then they were taken to the exhibition building opposite the depot. Here Mr. Harrlman waa very much Inter ested in the exhibits In general, while Mr. Mulr naturally took to the specimens of rock and ore like a duck to water. Here Mr. Harrl man held an Informal reception, which was continued at the train when the party returned lo the de pot. - The Morning Mall representative was Introduced to Mr. Harrlman by Manager O'Brien and In the same genial manner he displayed toward all he met here, Mr. Harrlman shoo' hands and consented to an Interview. He said: "You have a very fine . orchard country around here, but It Is a. - gether too bad that so miitu of the land is owned by outside people. What you want is to have the land owned by those who will live on It and work It. This Is a bad feature. "Yes, of course Medford Is grow ing, and I notice considerable of a change since I waa here last time. Yon see It, too." "Don't you think, Mr. Harrlman, that there Is room for a good-alied city between Portland and Sicra mento, and that Medford has a t,.iod entree of being that city;" he was a3ked. "Yes, sir; I do." nesldes saying so to several peo I'iu he met, Mr. Harrlman showed In severs! ways that he was Interested and thought very highly of Medford. Still he could not get over the fact that so much of the fruit land around here was owned and held by outside parties. Owing to the lateness or the hour that the local rallrond officials re ceived notice when the train 'Would leave Portland and arrive at Med ford, the only public notice given was in Sunday morning's Mail, and a crowd of between 500 and 600 was on hand when the train arrived here. Mr. Harrlman'a private car Is named "Arden." after the ., town where his home Is In Orange county. New York. After leaving here the party spent an hour at Ashland, and when Weed was reached Mr. Harrl man was Joined by his wife and fam ily. After a day or two stay at San Francisco the special will proceed east to New York. Vol'Ntl (WI'I,K MAItltlKI). Tuesday evening. September 8, at the Christian parsonage, Elbert E. Robinson and Miss Lettle A. Grid ley were united in marriage, M. F, Horn, minister of the Christian church, performing the ceremony. Mr. and Mra. Koblnson are prominent young people of Medford, .Mr. Rob inson being a popular clerk In Deuel A Kentner'a store. They will reside In East Medford, where they will soon be at home to their many friends. A host of friends wish them a happy wedded life. Taken lo Cnrvallla. J. H. Krneger. the Portland man who was arrested here the other night on a telephone message from the sheriff of Benton county, waa taken to Corvallls last evening by Deputy Sheriff C. T. McDevltt. of that place. The charge against Kr lienor was for beating a board bill at a hotel In Corvallls.