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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1925)
WORLD HAPPENINGS SANTA BARBARA NEED OF SHIPPING OF CURRENT WEEK RAZED Bl QUAKE HERE CONSIDERED Ä j SCHOOL DA1JS Crater Lake. Crater Lake road was opened to the lake rim Sunday and the lodge hotel waa opened for th* summer season. Santa Barbara, ('al. — A aeriea of earthquakes, described by survivors as rocking and swaying the business cen Hillsboro. 8. At D. Meek, son of ter of Santa Barbara as if it were a Joe Meek, was re elected school clerk turbulent ocean, early Monday left the otMlstriet 21. Washington county, for the 34lh time last week. The school principal structures of the channel was started in the early days as the city a mass of debris and ruins. The Columbia academy. loss of life was not large, due to the Rockaway. A free elam bake will tremor occurring at 6:44 o'clock tn the be the feature of the program at Rock-j morning and also to the mass of ruins Head of Fleet Corporation Summar Events of Noted People, Governments away July 4, under auspices of the falling in the second earthquake some Commercial club. Special ovens are izes Situation as to Merchant and Pacific Northwest, and Other 15 minutes after the first tremor. being constructed and arrangements Marine Need» Apparent. Things Worth Knowing. made to accommodate record crowds Estimates of the loss vary from $3. for the holiday. 000,000. a "conservative" figure by the Astoria. A delegation of about 100 city manager, to $30,000,000, a figure Seattle, Wash.—Shipping, especially members of the National Asaoclhtion' Filipino seamen are being recruit-1 quote* by the city engineer. Indica ed in Manila and probably will be sent with reference to lumber and grain, of Letter Carriers and the Oregon Fed-' tions were that 12 lives were lost, al to China to take the places vacated by ( though this rested upon the recovery prime products of the Pacific north eration of Poetoffice Clerks arrived Chinese seamen. of several bodies asserted to be ill the west. received extensive discussion In hero Saturday from all parts of the the closing session here Friday of the state for the annual state gathering President Coolidge Saturday made a ruins. pilgrimage to an old graveyard nearj State street, the main thoroughfare, 12th annual convention of the National of the two organizations. Boston where three of his ancestors was left a ghastly avenue of ruin, por Foreign Trade council, which met Hood River When the wind sweep-' were burried more than two centuries tions of its most stately buildings hav Wednesday. ing up the Columbia Saturday reached Admiral Leigh C. Palmer, United, gate-like proportions. It overturned a J ago, and paid a fleeting visit to his ing been tumbled down, and cornices, toric points along the way. walls and fronts of pratcically all States navy, resigned, president ot^ boat occupied by young Portland and the emergency fleet corporation. In: local folk, guests of Mr. and Mrs. J.' principal structures shattered down. The federal government finished the The earthquakes continued through whose hands, at the instance of Presi-) R. Norton, whose home overlooks the fiscal year Tuesday with a surplus in out the day. They menaced the water dent Coolidge, negotiations for sale of river Just west of town. excess of $245,000,000, nearly $50,000.- supply by crashing out the dam of government vessels were placed, rais The Dalles An airplane piloted by 000 greater than any previous estimate Sheffield reservoir, but a by-pass has ed questions on which the convention and more than twice as large as was been established to a main reservoir general committee was expected to Lieutenant H. E. Jacobberger and carrying Vernon Bookwaiter as a pas calculated when the year began. back in the hills and waler provided announce opinions of the council. senger. was damaged at Mosier Frl Admiral Palmer recommended "pri Ardita Finch, 7, daughter of Mrs for the city. day when It struck a soft stmt In a vate ownership on terms Mint pro Rona Finch of Fortuna, Cal., was Kill- j The terror-stricken 30,000 inhabi tect the government intersts.” "opera wheat field In landing The plan was ed at Garberville, where she was visit-( tants in most cases settled down to tion of government lines on trade taken to Vancouver Wash., by truck. | SARAH BACHE ing, when a gas tank, being used to ( an emergency existence by noon, many routes economically essential to the Salem More than 60 persons will charge a barrel of root beer, exploded of them living on the lawns. national Interests” and “where sales write in the bar examinations to be ARAH BACHE wns the only on the back porch of a soft drink par daughter of Benjamin Franklin. Washington. D. C.—Facilities of the are impossible charter of lines to re held In Sklem starting July S, accord lor. ing to announcement made at the of She wai born tn Philadelphia, Sep army and navy as well as the na sponsible private parties." Of her early life, Jugo-Slovia will institute negotia tional headquarters of the American “To summarize," Admiral Palmer fices of the supreme court. The ex- tember 11, 1744 tions for funding its debt to the United Red Cross were available Monday- continued, “our country faces three direction of the state board of bar, there Is very little known; but con States as soon as its economic posi-| night to assist in relief in the Santa alternatives in respect to the mer direction of the stae board of bar sidering her father's sound sense und l>ls appreciating of education, she tion justifies such a step. Minister 1 Barbara earthquake aaea. chant marine in foreign trade: First, examiners. must have been well trained, anil must Pavichich said Sunday in explanation continued government operation cost The Red Cross announced that an Grants Pass.—One hundred business have been rather more Intelligent than of his visit Saturday to the state de initial appropriation on relief work in ing ultimately around $40,000,000 a the average woman of her time, For men of Grants Pass and farmers of partment. In those days It wasn't considered the affected sections had been auth year; second, government aid to pri the vicinity joined Tuesday In a tour ladylike to know too much I Some earthquakes are due to large orized, the amount to be determined vate shipping amounting to about $15,- of the Grants Pass Irrigation district 'Ihe fact that she waa twenty-three landslides and to violent volcanic when reports disclose the require 000.000 a year; or third, the gradual to vlaw the development made on lr- before she married, seems to bear this but certain disappearance of our flag eruptions, but most of them are un ments. rigated farms within the last year. out, for then young and Immature ' The war and navy department heads from the international trade routes doubtedly caused by slipping of great An Inspection was made of more than girls were rushed Into matrimony. Her and a return to our pre-war condition faults or fractures in the earth's crust, received a message from President a dozen farms, a full day being taken. husband was an English merchant who when less than 10 per cent of our C. P. Clapp, president of the Univer Coolidge directing that their forces lived In Philadelphia. There were give all possible aid to the stricken foreign commerce was carried in Tillamook. — Lucia Wiley of Tilla eight children by the marriage. sity of Montana, said. section. Special instructions were im American vessels." mook. graduate of the Tillamook high Whether Richard Um tie waa loyal Miss Helen Clark, 22. Socaucus, N. mediately dispatched by Acting Secre J. H. Bloedel. Seattle lumberman, school won the George H. Partridge to the States during he revolution, J., school teacher, who insists on her| tary Davis to Major-General Charles P. reported that “The Panama canal has, scholarship of $100 for the year 1925- the biography dm-“ t.ot state; but right to smoke cigarettes, will have Menoher. commander of the ninth brought low rates and opened a very 26 at the University of Minnesota. Sarah Bache certa'i > was. She or an opportunity to defend her convic corps area at San Francisco, ordering large territory on the Atlantic sea This award is given annually without ganized relief wor among wounded tions before the board of education, “all possible assistance to Santa Bar board” for lumber from the Pacific und destitute Am- can soldiers, got application to a woman student of the the -women togetl r to provide food which has refused to sign her con bara in the present emergency." northwest. university for high scholarship and nnd clothes and money for them, ar- Cary W. Cook, San Francisco tract for another year. fine character. Hinged hospitals und visited the sick, Bozeman. Mont. — Many Bozeman steamship operator, discussed the The British schooner Marion Adams Pendleton.—Pendleton’s water sup performing actual nursing duties and American merchant marine, and and six motorboats have been seized residents were driven from their dressing wounds. And all the while Father S. J. Walsh of Georgetown ply has proved adequate to care for she kept nt the women to supply warm in the Gulf of Mexico off Mobile by homes again Monday night when the heavy requirements which develop university world trade. Raphael M. coast guard vessels, according to in earthquake shocks were felt. The tem Semmes. Seattle, advocated establish ed as a result of the hot weather, ac- ■ clothes anil get food to the suffering armies. She even made speeches and formation received by federal author!- ( blors were slight, but of sufficient ment here of a grain futures market. I cording to D. D. Phelps, superintend persuaded those of the Quakers who ties, together with 6000 cases of strength to warn citizens not to sleep “We are particularly interested,” ent. The supply will lie even greater thought they hud to be pacifists, even indoors. Earth tremors have been whisky and 23 prisoners. he stated, “because 70 per cent of the when the Squaw creek extension is then, to undertake relief work. All felt in the Gallatin valley all day. wheat grown in Washington. Montana, connected with the present source for this Is noteworthy, chiefly because Colonel Coolidge, 82-year-old father there had never been any public work Idaho and Oregon is exported to other the municipal system, he said. of the president, was reported in a Helena. Mont. — While stricken done by women and because none of countries. ” serious condition Saturday night by Santa Barbara prepared to take inven Prineville.—Mr. E. B. Stewart of Frank L. Shull, flour miller of Roseburg was’ the unanimous choice them were used to organizing or car his personal physician, Dr. A. W. Cram tory of its disaster, the task of check rying on public services nt nil. of Bridgewater. The doctor said there ing up damage done by earthquakes Portland, Or., speaking for grain grow of the state convention here Saturday After the war she visited England was “no immediate danger" of a fatal throughout Montana over the last ers and manufacturers of the Pacific as department commander of the with her husband, und died In Phila northwest, declared for a subsidy to termination of the illness. American Legion. His enviable record delphia In 1HUS. three days proceeded Monday with in build up the American merchant ma as commander of hlk local post for the <£ “V? G«or<» Matthew Adama.) dications that total property damage The entire crew of nine men of the rine under private ownership. __O------------ last two years and as national execu would not exceed $500,000. tug Ocean King was drowned Friday. “We of the northwest have a com tive committeeman from Oregon won Although shocks were reported night when the tug was rammed by j mon interest in promoting enactment him the honor without a contest. the Canadian Pacific liner Marloch. from Helena. Great Falls, Billings, of a shipping law that will take the which it had gone to bring to its pier Bozeman, Logan, Three Forks and government out of the shipping busi Salem. The city of Silverton won at Quebec. The tug was struck amid Manhattan, none was severe enough ness,” declared Mr. Shull, "and en the second round in its legal battle in ships and almost cut in two by the to cause additionad damage. the Marion county circuit court Satur Discovery was made that large courage investment in ships under impact. . day when Judge Mahan sustained de American ownership and operated un cracks had appeared in the county jail murrers of the municipality and L. O. der American law. John W. Mahan of Helena, Mont.,1 at Missoula and that the building had Herrold, contractor and codefendant, was elected national commander, and listed seven inches. Reports from IS IT BURKE? against the complaint of Otto Patten- Dr. R. A. Spaeth Dead. Atlanta, Ga., was selected for the 1926 white Sulphur Springs declared that ger. and dissolved the injunction convention city by the Disabled Amer- ' $10,000 would cover the damage caus- Baltimore. — Dr. Reynold Albrecht HERE Is no doubt at nil but that Spaeth, scientist, died Friday in1 which previously had been issued ican Veterans of the World War at ed there. the name Burke 1s derived from against them. Bourg or Burgh, meaning stronghold the concluding session of their fifth Bangkok, according to a cable dispatch annual meeting in Omaha, Neb., late New Earth Slide Feared. received by a friend of the famly here. Salem. — A dozen patients at the and eventually city. The mime was first written "de Burgh" or "de Burke." Saturday. Jackson, Wyo —The north end of . Dr. Spaeth’s death was ascribed to Oregon state hospital will be sent to septicemia, according to the cable. similar institutions in the eastern und so Willbun or John de Burke were An avalanche in the high Sierras, 20 Chief mountain in the Teton national He was 39 years old. Late last sum states on July 7, according to an simply William or John of the strong miles’ above Kernville, Cal., in Kern forest near here is cracking, probably hold. county, killed two Los Angeles mem- as a result of the earth tremors wh ch mer Dr. Spaeth accepted a call from nouncement made here Sunday by Dr. Since the days of Henry HI and Ed bers of a week end fishing party late rocked four Rocky mountain states the Rockefeller foundation to assist R. K. Lee Steiner, superintendent. The ward I the Burkes were esteemed in the reorganization of the University patients to be deported were said to among the most powerful Anglo Nor Saturday, reports said. Meager ad- Saturday night and another avalanche, vances telling of the tragedy did not greater than that of last Tuesday, into of Bangkok medical school according have formerly lived in the east and man settlers In Ireland, whither they mention any earth tremors connected, the Gros Ventre river is feared, forest- to Dr. William H. Howell, head of were committed to the Oregon hos-j went with Strongbow. the school of hygene and public pital before they hail gained a legal The Burkes are ulmoat always of with the slide, but spoke of a heavy ry officials reported Monday. Irish birth or extraction, but they seem The north end of the mountain on health at Johns Hopkins university, residence in this state. rainstorm preceding it. proud of the fact that they tire really a front of several miles is cracking. (chore Dr. Spaeth served for many Salem - Even though the state su Anglo-Norman und do not belong to the Although dejected from his first advices stated, and it is slipping years as associate professor of phy preme court should hold that Gover same stock as “real Irishmen." day’s imprisonment, Russell Crawford,1 ,jown jnt0 the r|Ver almost perceptibly, siological research. nor Pierce had no authority to veto a Thomas Burke, who was colonial gov law student, was still proud Sunday j indications are that, when the land law enacted by the last legislature ernor of North Carolina, was born In Wild Gunman Arrested. night of the plan to extort $50,000 8]jde joes occur, a lake which will be calling a special election in Septem-, Ireland In 1747. He was a son of from Colonel D. C. Jackllng, wealthy formed by damming of the river, will San Francisco. Paul Minini, 32, ex | her of this year, the question was ( Ulrick Burke of Gal way. Thomas mining man of Utah and San Fran- i,e considerably larger than the basin mechanic in the Italian army, barri । raised here Saturday as to whether ( studied medicine, completing his cisco, under threats to kidnap and tor- created by last Tuesday’s slide. caded himself in his home in an out । proponents and opponents of the aev-j studies at the tender age of seventeen ture Mrs. Jackling, police said. Hei A recent, survey by the forestry of- lying residence district here Sunday, However, this does not seetn to have made known also that he was disap-' ficials shows that, if this avalanche began shooting at passing automobiles I eral measures to be referred to the been remarkable for those days, and It | voters would have time to prepare, probably reflects more on the meager pointed in the failure of the scheme to occurs, the forest ranger station near and was overpowered by police who | their arguments for publication in the ness of medical knowledge of the day test the machinery of the law. the Gros Ventre river in the vicinity were prepared to use tear bombs to official pamphlet. than on Hie precocity of those who rill be under water. capture him. He was placed in a Encouragement by the federal gov Toledo.-—A week’s hot weather has were doctors nt an age when most boys straight jacket after he had struck ohe ernment of the American business of today are only lenvlng high school. Lakeport, Cal-, Has Fire. policeman with the butt of his gun matured the meadow hay to such ex Thomas Burke, having become u phy- men abroad and of the American farm Lakeport, Cal. — Fire Monday des end had aimed it another but had tent that the cutting, generally de siclnn. came to Accomac county, Vir er formed the central themes of an layed until after the Fourth of July, ginia. There he studied law and prac other statement issued Sunday night troyed stores and other property in been prevented from firing. Is In full sway In Lincoln county. ticed with Thomas Jefferson. He mar by Chairman Jones of the senate com the business district, causing approxi Bloomington, Ill.—Six members of fields will be excellent and with con ried in 1770 May Freeman of Norfolk mately $35,000 damage before it could mittee on his recent visit to South one family were killed, another was tinuing good weather the quality will und two years later settled In North America. “High-class, honest, up be brought under control. Help in believed fatally Injured and several be the best in years. More legumes Carolina. He was n strong patriot nnd fighting the flames was sent from Up standing American business men are passengers of an Interurban were in-'were planted last year than ever be led agitation against the stump act. the best recommendation we can have per Lake, Lower Lake, Middleton and Jured when an automobile was struck fore and it Is expected that these milk He was colonial governor of North in South America,” he said, adding other nearby points when it was re by an Illinois traction system car (producers will appreciably increase Carolina. It Is sold Hint Gov. Thomas that the men who leave their country ported that a block in the business Burke was a distant relative of seven milts west of here Sunday. All milk flow next winter. Berries and and go elsewhere to engage in busi section had been destroyed and that of the dead resided in Bloomington. [the fruit crop are progressing nicely Aednmus Burke, n judge of South ness are real pioneers in business ex the flames were spreading rapidly be Carolina. ton. . 1 also. <& by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) fore a high wind. pansion. Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Item?. Lumber and Grain Trade Are Council Topics. COMPILED FOR YOU EXPORTS GROWING fl 4 | S words are characteristic of T HESE the religion of the man who ut tered them. William Penn, for whom Pennsylvania Penn's Woods — la named, was u Quaker. I.Ike many of these sterling pioneers of that sect who came to the New world. I’enn was bountiful and gen erous to the extreme No one In want ever suffered when Penn could allevi ate their suffering, hut ut the asms time William Penn waa a man of thrift a man who was not “expenslve" In his habits. William Penn waa born In London. October 13. 1644 He became n Quaker the name of this sect originated In derision of their statement that man should "fear and quake before the Lord"- and wns sent to prison for Ids preaching. Through the Intercewslon of Ids father the young man was re leased. only to be sent later to the *Power for the publication of a book — "No Cross. No Crown.” Tide work was destined to show the necessity for suffering In the world and to show the benefit that came from It spiritually. Naturally such a work was not popular with the pleas- ure loving class of nobles. on Penn s release he wns again arrested for preaching, but the Jury repeatedly re fused to find him und Ids co defend ants guilty. It Is n significant fact Hint for this refusal the Jury was fined for acting contrary to the Instructions of the Judge! In 1<W1 Penn received n grunt of land In North America In lieu of some arrears that were due Ids father from the king, and September fi. BW2. with n party of emigrants, Penn sailed from Deal. Penn und Ids party landed In what Is now Delaware and Inter nt what Is now Chester, Pa. They began n colony where religious freedom prevailed timi which Is now the Keystone state.— Wayne D. McMurray. br Users« M«ilh»w Aitarne.» ----- O------------- OUR Last Name T Notì^CÓ^Book You don't bearudge the labor when tha rosso »tart to bloom. You don’t recall tha dreary days that won you their perfume. You don't recall a atniclr rare You Spent upon the aarden there; And all the toll Of tilling noil la quite forgot the day the flret Pink roaebude Into beauty buret. — Kdwar A Guest. SEASONABLE FOODS liELlt'IOI'S sauce to serve with cold roust beef or Inmb chops Is: Spanish Sauce. Put Into n saucepan two tablespoon- fills of butter, one of olive oil. a few dashes of suit, one onion, n clove of garlic, half n green pepper or red pep per nil finely chopped. When this Is brown mid n pint of tomatoes nnd sim mer twenty minutes. Season with paprika nnd salt und a few drops of tabasco, with it tnblespoonful of Wor cestershire sauce. A Baked Bananas. Take one bnminn for each person, cut In half lengthwise, after removing nil the threads; melt a little butter, roll the bnnanns In It, lay In n baking dish and baste while linking until soft. Serve with broiled beefsteak. Mint Sauce for Lamb. Wash a bunch of mint, shako off the water, strip the leaves from the stems, chop the leaves fine. Pour over one- fourth of a cupful of boiling water, mid two tnblospoonfuls of sugar, cover closely nnd let stand half an hour; then mid four tiildespoonfuls of vine gar or the Juice of n large lemon. <©. Oil. Western Newepeper Union) f