Jacksonville post. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1906-19??, July 07, 1917, Image 1

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    » •
Oregon Historical Society
Cifr IM
N 4.10
JACKSONVILLE, JACKSON CCI MY
VOL. XL
INDUSTRIAL R241LM____
PENDLETON FIRST TO U. S. PROHIBITION LAW TO INSURE SOLDIERS
GET. NEW ROADS
Makes 23 States Bone Dry. McAdoo and Companies to
Consider System Which
Severe Penalties Are
Hard Surfacing Under Six
Would Eliminate
Provided
Million Bond Issue Be-
Pensions
gins in Umatilla
County.
Hot stuff will be laid tomorrow, the
first square yard of hard surface pave­
ment under the $6,000,000 road bond is­
sue. The road bonds were approved
by the people June 4, the state high­
way commission let the contract for 10
miles out of Pendleton Friday after­
noon, and July 3 the actual start will
be made.
“We are going to rush things as fast
ni labor conditions will permit.” said
Chairman S. Benson, today, “and labor
is the ore uncertainty. The 10 mile»
out ot Pendleton, toward the Washing-
ton state line, on the road to Walla
Walla, will be completed in seven
weeks. It will be finished in time for
the Roundup. The base on this road
is ready and there is a paving plant
now operating in Pendleton, the con­
tractors are able to begin tomorrow
morning. Weather conditions in Eas­
tern Oregon are such that there is vir­
tually no danger of delay from rains,
and the work will proceed with all
speed.”
Other road work is to be expedited,
whether grading or hardsurfacing.
“There will be a hardsurface pave­
ment from Portland to Newberg this
year,” predicts Benson. “This road
to he paved is the Rex-Tigard route.
By placing plants at two or three points
on the road, the hardsurfacing can be
finished in a few months from the
Multnomah county line into Yamhill
county, passing through Washington
county. I hope to see hardsurface be­
tween Evenson and Astoria this year,
but doubt whether the entire distance
can be covered before the rains set
in.
-
..........
Many Seek
Admission
Officers’ Camps.
--------------------
Submarines Barred Troni
Spanish
Washington, July 2—Twenty-three
states became bone-dry Saturday mid­
night, the effective hour of the Reed
amendment prohibiting shipment of li­
quor into any territory where its man­
ufacture or sale is prohibited. Eleven
other states are partially affected by
the legislation, which has been hailed
by temperance advocates as the great­
est single step toward abolition of
the liquor traffic in the nation’s histo­
ry.
The law bars from prohibition areas
all mail matter containing advertise­
ments or solicitations for orders for in­
toxicants.
Justice anci postoffice department of­
ficials have made extensive prepara­
tions for enforcement of the statute.
No ruling has been made regarding the
status of medicines containing alcohol
and that question may be among the
first to be passed on by the courts un­
der the legislation.
The language of the anti-shipment
section is very comprehensive, impos­
ing a fine of $1009 and imprisonment
for six months, or both, on any person
who shall “order, purchase or cause in­
toxicating liquors to be transporte 1 in
interstate commerce except for sci-
entific, sacramental or mechanical pu>-
noses into any state or territory, the
laws of which sta'e or territosy pro-
hibit the manufacture or sale therein
of intoxicating liquors for beverage
purposes.”
The same penalties are prescribed for
violations of the anti-advertising sec­
tion. For a second offense in either
case the penalty is made one year’s
imprisonment.
Waters
Madrid, July 2—King Alfonso ha»
signed a decree declaring that the sub­
marines of all the belligerent powers
are forbidden to navigate within Span­
ish territorial waters or to enter Span­
ish ports.
All such submarines which enter the
Spanish zone for whatever reason
will be interned until the end of the
war.
To
____ _
Payrolls and Proma!-
ing Davelopnienf '
of
f ~ It AT Is the song Old (¡lory sings
When the wind goes roaring by
And the banner born of valor flings
Itself against the hliy!
Know you the song it rustles out
To the time beat of the breeze!
"Tis the blended ehurdiof <i battle shout
Caught up between the seas.
Herds Al Low Price.
Roseburg, Or., July 2—Tom Dixon
an 1 Rafe Dixon, living near this city,
have sold 10"0 sheep, 500 each, to a for­
eign buyer, at $9 a head. Most of the
sheep were wethers. The owners did
not want to sell but were unable to
find herders to take the sheep to the
green pastures, in the mountains. Men
do not like to herd sheep as a rule, and
as there is a shortage of farm labor,
the flock owners were obliged to sell
their sheen at lower prices than they
have been selling here recently.
Most of the other sales here have been
made on a basis of $10. Shearers es-
timate that the number of sheep
in this county has decreased one
half.
A
MIO the smoke it rime and ( lung
Ta the blaring Stripes and Start,
And it is the eull the flay gave tongue
ll/ica rent by shrapnel sears.
It ripples out when the wind it high
.4» it did in day* long gone.
The flag vareent to the bending sky
With its valiant shout "Come on!"
r
•'llAT is the song Old (¡lory sings
In the battle glare of noon.
And the breath of wild war trumpets rings
this defiant lune,
hoarse hurrah, the. vibrant eheer,
llare been woven in its folds.
And the pierring fife note, shrill and clear.
Is in the song it holds.
Washington, June 30—Too many have
already applied for admission for the Loans Pass Billion Dollar Mark
second series of officers’ training camps
opening in August, that war depart­
ment officials expect total applications
Washington, June30—American loan
to be vastly greater than' 16,000, the to the allies passed the billion dollar
number to be admitted.
mark yesterday when the treasury
A statement issued through the pub­ placed S15.090.000 to the credit of Great
lic informaticn bureau points out that Britain and $10,090,000 to France’s ac­
fitness alone will connt in the selection count.
of those to be accepted, and later in
Credits to all the allies to meet their
the choice of those to be commissioned. expenditures in this country now total I
Nobody accepted for training, it is de­ $1,0. 8,090,000, of which Great Britain!
clared, “has a vested right to a com­ I has received $550,000,000 and France I
mission
$210,000,000.
fHAT M
«on// Old Glory .tiny»
W inn the betczc. is soft and slou
And the haunt r curve» and sways and awing»,
All slatrlif, to and fro?
Know pou that »out/. till gentleness,
II ilh its ntcii >: h res street anti smooth,
}\ in n the old jltiti irart s with a mild cares»
In cadence imide to soothet
A
///.< in thè song ititi (Horg sings
Il ben its rippte slowly runa:
"T ìk a song of piare un grulle wingi,
.4 -soi<y o/ sili ut guns.
All jogful, too. Ihat thè stress is dune
Ami ilo: I li ruhliiiig drumlnuls evase;
’Tis il ehant of rieloi i s long won,
.4 woudrous strabi of prave.
—Chicago Daily News.
Some Recent Happenings
In Various Parts
of Oregon
will find our stock of Canned
Pioneer Is Dead After Living
60 Years In State.
Goods and Fresh Fruits most
complete.
Corvallis, Or., July 2—Joseph M.
Gray died in Uie Beaver creek neigh­
borhood on Saturday night, aged 75
years. He had been a resident of Ben­
ton county for the past 48 years. He
was a native of Knoxville Tenn , and
came to Oregon when 15 years old,
driving an ox team across the plains, I
and locating at La Grande nearly 60
years ago. The funeral will be held
here..
.
We need your busines
II
u
II
HI
You need our service.
Coos Pay Lumber Is Pur-
Cottage Grove, Or., July 2- Word
has reached here from London, 12 mile»
south of here, that Ott Tlmn, an em­
ploye in a logging camp, was killed on
Friday when struck by a falling snag.
He leaves a wife and several chil­
dren.
-------------- —•'JL ♦-------------------
I } T
Fleet ot 87 German
In
Ships
(J. S. Service.
Washington, July 2 Eighty-seven of
the German merchant, ships seized in
American ports at the outbreak of the
war were turned over to the shipping
board Saturday by President Wilson
for operation. The other 14 already
are in possession of the navy depart­
ment.
The total tonnage of the 87 ships ex­
ceeds 500,000.
Three British Airmen De-
Lewis Ulrich
Jacksonville
Phone 74
Oregon
ìi
Auto Delivery
%
Employe In Logging Camp Kill­
ed by Falling Snag.
chaseg tor Ships.
Pioneer Merchant,
III IÍ
si
ÍI
♦
T
OUR OWN STATE
M
nil
Ml
Courteous Attention
ii
H
II
ït
h
ill
’T'r?
Improvamenfs.
O.viers Sell
Picnic parties
1
Mar.ufaclutes, Eiiterprij.s aid.
Washington, July 2— Representatives
of virtually all the great life insurance
companies in the country are expected
to meet Secretary McAdoo and other
cabinet members here today to consid-
er plans for insuring the lives of men
in the naval and military service.
Under the proposal the government
would insure the men in service for
limited amounts in case of death, inju­
ry or capture, a system similar to that
imposed upon owners in the merchant
marine. In addition to this men would
be perinittei to take further insur­
ance.
Such a p'an, if accepted, probably
would sound the knell of the pension
system. In the plans submitted to the
defense council the extreme liability of
$4000 was suggested. In the merchant
marine, death benefits range from $1500
to $5000.
Roseburg Sheep
■ I
Washington, July 2 Purt-hnre r.f the
first installment of a . onMgntm nt of
fir lumber to build 3'1 wooden ships, ob­
tained by the Emergency Fleet corpor­
ation, at $30 a thousand, has been an­
nounced by Chairman Denman. The
lumber was bought from the Coos Ray
Lumber comoany of Oregon and the
contract calls for delivery at aba-
board.
The purchase wa.imadeat $5 athbus
and b< low the pri e igrced on by fir
producers and the d' tense council’s
lumber committee. The $•>•’> price, too
was for lumber at the mills.
The Coos Bay conrem’s prices, It
was said, were made voluntarily by the
company in J might result in a general
reduction of lumber prices to the fleet
' corporation.
feat
Ten
Germans
Ore-'i".
Portland—Hofin*. —Bros., Tacoma,
lease block to build logging tackle fug-
tory.
■
‘..i
Silverton - Fischqr's flaqring
ding large brick warehouse. 7 .. >
Myrtle Point-Work stai'ling bn IlWv
steel bridge here.
■' ■ ■ t,-n.'» i-j
Rend- 17 miles highway tb'■ Ltt BiU»:
to be covered with'einder. ! ' ■ ■ -!-•• •
Oswego Iron Worlj.» bought IiyPiiVP-
tic Coast Co. Seattlej tp'niAk'e
Canyun City -150,990 .i^aily,,
sawmill building lieve urakos labotj ÿjfÎ’/q
scarce Railroad construction to '»iijt fj
down middle fork.
. .7/
Salem—Harvest labor for .Eqst^fq,,
Oregon being conlractqd at $1 a day,
board and in.rrspottnttoiu
,■ -, - -:.jj
Corvallis carried bond idsbo- ntmlees'
tion to refund cost rtf JmVing tstersec-l
tions to property o'* nors.i
Supreme court uphtiliM liiw •juflffWr-’
ing state bond issue to eq i d ahvilh-vf
of federal road flin'fl tinder SksdilJftfrd
bill.
. : il
Pilot Roek .300,0^0 .‘l^s. \vpoi (sokr
here pt 61 cl».
. ,
1 , .'I
Oregon editors hold oonvpi>tii|n,.y.tf
Pendleton July 13-15.. -r-. ; I
r . ,'1
Mosier Contrar-i» let fir three stan­
dard lookoqt' houses)
\
7*J-V V.V
La Grande Observer: The productive­
ness of this ■ vb'll'ev
i\FM ased
500,<'9l) bushels by a proper drainage
system.
Pendleton — Contract hfi» been fi,t"f'>r
$60,000 mausoleum.'
.. to
Medford to have a $6t;,09t| . colij,¡jar­
age fruit warehouse.
Mehama-$7000 clam and fish hatch­
ery te be built hgrç.,, ^. ^
..
The Dalles Food 'contract bill 'in
Congriss to contain $20?000.4HMk\iji'm
lor Oregon reclamation project.
Coos Bay sawmills continue to oper­
ate in spite of efl'nft to tie. them Up
with a general strike.
Roseburg Demand for ‘¿flb/Ono fruit
boxes may locate box factory boro.
Hood River—New Mitchell Poinf
sawmill 6 mile» east employes sixty
‘ o ".1: 1
f t u.p
men.
Pendleton will add 20 blocks biÇulHh-
ic paving this year.
Toledo votes Aug. 12 on $20,090 bonds
to rebuild water supply.
Sawmill owners who- fought tiovVn
lumber rateg in the |ui«t am* favoring
the fifteen ' per cent freight increase
since common lumber has gone up from
$7 to $17 a thousand,
1
vf’’ ’ a new
McMinnville has {lexicated,
Christian Sciencp churclj.
Home Telephone Co. ha», gpnu into
hand» erf receiver.
,,,
Eist Portland-SatkOtllHvill - be apont
enlarging • bld Fellow» home.
Klamath Fall* -1 4lrt wilt be
thrown here July 4 on’ SiKiftorii rnithia'd
for which $300,00tf tfcVaised iii cash and
,2
Ic
i . m
•'
Mexico Puls Embargo
On
<•
> ' »IT J
Exports Of Food.
i 1
'“
f - ,9
Mexico City, July 2--Beginning yes­
terday the exportation from- Mexico of
corn,'wheat, ride. Plaids benliiawl flour
is prohibited. The exportation of peat
onion.«, Spanish beans, lima beans, len­
tils, bran and sugnq will be nitowqil on­
ly on special permit from the treasury
department.
•»*
•A.
unis?
5000 ( upper Muuw Strike
In
Arizona.
. . . i'. .’ .1:.
i . . it) mola?
.
I
id
{’{!''> 1
■’ ’
Clifton, Ariz... .July J -yTW J’iWP
allons iu the Lhfloii-Morenei M^tiptlJ
eppper «mning (d^tricC.
when, more than 5009 rnmer.s,
ics and laborers quit work. The tivy
up of the mines was said to be com­
plete.
London, June So—Three British nav
al airplanes fought a battle with >'•
German machines over Flanders on
Monday.. An official account of the
fight says one and probably three of
the Germans were driven down. All
i r-
the British airmen returned safely, the
announcement follows:
Hawley Asked To Fill Bex/
"In the course of a patrol on Mon­
Point
Vacancy.
day tin co naval airplane! piiyoiyitired
and engaged U) enemy machines in 4he
' __ '■_!__ C'ait ntjJ.'tnhffiH
vicinity of Koulers. They fought for
A
' r, sirup n.i lud "Ja 'N
16 minutes and brought down one ene­
Washington,. July 2 •/jH'gl'.'Pf A:‘>'
my io flames. It is believed two oth­ Hawlev bwplmaij i»itifi»4 thfl|t
ers were driven down out of control, W. st Point vaea.nc^af h|j d^r'^-Jor
'f/iyit
( *» “• ■’Tu
clouds interupted the view. Our ma­ which he will ylecla P«n^l|aJ
chines returned safely.”
d j
’•o.l j " bud-,(')i ot v«!i jjitr/i^