Image provided by: City of Dayton; Dayton, OR
About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1925)
SAFETY CONTEST PRIZE Launching of “Speejacks,” Largest Sai’iig Y;«ch» fillowing Inuncblng of the yacht "Hpeejacka." owned by Albert Y. Gowan of Cleveland nnd Harvard Hun. at Neponset, Muns. Thres yenrs ago Mr. Gowun drove Idi motor bout of tbe name num« around the world. Ho expects t< cross the Atlantic lids summer. Tin vessel Is built of steel ami Is 121 feet over all Ellesmere ‘ Lost Land” of Arctic Island to Get Close Scrutiny by MacMillan. Norfolk Wall Safe Yield» Valued Relic» Norfolk, Va.—Two commis Washington.—“Ellesmere Island, the < second nearest known land to tbe . , sions engraver! on sheep-skin North pole, Is to g‘-t the closest < parchments, the first signed by scrutiny It bus ever bad by white men , Bresldent John Adams, and tbe ss om- result of tbe MacMillan Arctic • second by President Thomas making Jonathan expedition,' says a bulletin from tbe < Jefferson. Washington headquarters of tb® Na- ; ‘ Cowdery a surgeon’s mate and llonui Geographic society. “This land । < a full surgeon in the United Iles at the head of Baffin bay, the ‘ States navy, have been uncov broad water highway to the Arctic < ered by Dr. John C. Sleet of this which Is Inclosed oa one side by Grqen-- , city, who will make an attempt to have the documenta restored land and - n the other by Baffin island, to their lawful owners. The first contlnuea the bulletin. commission bears the date of “William Baffin, for whom the bay 1W“> und the second 1808. and Island are named, was tbe first ] Tbe documents Include a Ma- white man t< catch a glimpse of the sonic diploma from Washington unknown land which came later to be lodge No. 26, making Mr. Cow- railed Ellesmere Island. That was In dery a Master Mason, and sn- 1616; but It was only a glimpse, and other from the Hudson (N. Y.) other Arctic explorers were so long lodge, making him a Mark Ma»- In duplicating Baffin's furthest north ter. that there came to be serious doubt of The papers were found In a the existence of Ellesmere Island. steel case hidden In an old brick Existence Long Doubted. wall of ■ bouse under repairs. Preacher Fined Speed "The land wns not sighted again un “Sentinels of Safety" 1« the status Sermon for Violation til 1852. Tbe first white man to set designed and executed by Regal del New York.—The Rev. Arthur foot on |t was Doctor Hayea, a mem- Hatta for the Explosive Engineer, ■ Baggerly. who occupies the pul ber of Kane's exjiedltlon |n 1854. After Greely was the first to discover a publication for users of explosive* pit of the Methodist Episcopal Hayes explored an Isolated section of pass Inland Into Ellesmere _ __ - _ island In The trophy la to be placed In com- church at Quogue. L. 1.. on Sun the shore, the land gradually emerged 1882 whrn hlB expedition was sta- petttJoA as an award for national mine days, fulfilled the terms of an from the traditional Into the retd; but | tJo|lw1 at Fort c„nger on Lady Frank- and quarry safety In a coWest "betHt agreement whereby be obtained ss in other of the northern discoveries Un bay. He found a large fresh-water conducted under the auspices of tbs a suspended sentence on » different explorers discovered various lake, and west of It. over a small di United States bureau of mines. charge of speeding In the headlands and (lenlnrulas Idependent- i vide, a broad Ice-frefe valley leading to selves assist In trying to locate the [ ly and dubbed each a 'land.' Hayes’ ; the west. One of his party, following Seamen’s Institute Locate» whereabouts of members of their fra ! Yonkers city court. The clergyman was released portion, the east coast of the north : the trail which Greely had biased, when 18 of the 25 men died of starva ternlty. I; by Judge Gorfinkle on his prom * central section of the big Island, be- ! reached the west coast. In this valley tion. The site of this Arctic tragedy. From June to October,the Institute Ise that lu bls next sermon he J came 'Grinnell Land.’ The north end. and . other similar valleys are good across Smith sound from Etah. Is now New York. Every sejpoil town or gives a series of concerts und enter- ; would urge bls flock to obey ttie 4 along the Polar sea, became 'Grant growths of grass In tbe summer as marked by a bronze memorial tablet, city bus Its "port of missing men." It tulnmeuts and at these affairs the ■' speed laws. Doctor Baggerly did ♦ Land.' Othpr names which have stuck , well as a profusion of wild flowers. placed during the summer of 1924 by Is a common thing for seamen to drop names of mlMtng men are flashed upon ; not make speeding the text of 4 to localities of Ellesmere island are Herds of musk oxen graze In the val Cnmmflnrtpr Commander MacMillan on bebalf behalf of out of sight thereby causing anslety a screen. Since there are usually be ' ’ tils sermon, but be told of the J •North the leys and have furnished a welcome the National Geographic society." IJncoln,’—paradoxically to friends nnd relatives. This I» true tween 500 anil IKK) men wbo follow the : Yonkers Incident, nnd added ♦ southernmost portion—‘King Oscar food supply to explorers. In Grant especially of seamen who sail on rov sen for u livelihood at these entertain ' ' that “some people have to learn , Land,' 'Bear Cape Land.' and ‘Jesup Land are large herds of white caribou, Germany Needs Beds ing commissions, changing from vessel ments. the bulletins on the screen are : by experience." He said his ’ Land? wild cousins of the reindeer. to vessel und shipping anew from port read In tbe course of a mouth by many " lesson had been with his arrest . Berlin. Germany.—Sofia Goetz of Island lacks only about "Ellesmere "It is believed that large areas of seamen. on Central avenue. Yonkers, and ; to |H>rt. Yet few of these lost seamen fifty miles of being the northernmost Ellesmere Island, between the grass the German Welfare Institute be with their ships. A large ma At one of these concerts a man saw ’’ that In the future be would . known land In the world, that distinc covered valleys, are capped by per lieves that for hygienic, moral and « II — the tilt» speed snOTHl regu rPkiU * Jorlty of them are simply B’S* becauss his name flashed among the missing. ii carefully respect social reasons every man. woman and tion being held by the north point of ( petual Ice. being a happy go lu< ky lot they neg After the entertelnment he sought Mrs :; lotions. He asked tils congrega Greenland. Cape Morris Jesup, not far "Three hundred miles south of Lady child should have his own bed. She lect to keep their friends Informed of Roper and confided to her that his <> tlon to do likewise and then to the east Ellesmere Island's north Franklin bay Greeley's party suffered estimates that in Germany 9,000,000 brother might be looking for him. He J ; passed on to his religious dls- ernmost point. Cape Columbia, Is fa- 1 Its terrible privations In the winter beds are needed to bring about this So many Inquiries concerning I""1 said that 17 years ago he had said "' course. mous as the starting point of Peary on and spring of 1883-4 at Cape Sabine, condition. seamen came to the Seamen's Church good-by to his brother nt tiie Buttery his memorable dash to the North pole South street that In Jan He wns about to embark on a cruise Institute nt In 1909. From Cape Columbia. Elles unry, 1920. the Institute found It ad- nnd he liked the sea so well thnt he mere Island extends 500 miles to tbe inlMluiC inrn i had shipped on other cruises. When %I mm I j I u to estublllh tl they made an effort to find each othe> south, Its southernmost point being department,” and thè work of locatlng , he returned he was unable to find his still nearly 400 miles farther north but without success. Both of then sudi mrn lina been intruated to Mrv brother or any truce of hla where were seamen anil when the Institute than Point Barrow, Alaska, and 2.000 Jnnd Itoper, wbo 1» known to follow- abouts. Mrs. Roper finally located his wns appealed to It discovered that they miles farther north than the United missing brother In Oakland, Cal. had l>een living within four city blocks States-Cannda boundary. remote nnd small In the world. She When a letter Is received from an of each other. For some reason neither “Ellesmere Island Is 300 miles wide Is the house mother of the Institute anxious mother or relative the letter 1» had happened to encounter the other at the point of greatest width, but the and to hundreds of seamen of many i acknowledged. on tbe street. They were delighted land Is so cut Into by deep fiords that nationalities »he Is affectionately Found Hit Mother. at being brought together again. They in many places the waters of the east known as "Mother," ern and western sides lie only 50 to had been lost to each other for a year A youth appealed to the American turned Into the UrJted States treasury The Institute receives about 100 in- 75 miles apart, distances that can be Dead Letters Result of Care $55,523.96 In cash removed from mis Another Instance was that of a boy qulrles n month concerning seamen for consul In a foreign city to help him covered quickly by dog teams. These whom anxiety la felt. And these In find tils ' mother, • »-— — who »- - »-- had j ■ been • lost • to who was to enter a school. He bad a directed letters or found loose In ths less Mailing. flords, reaching toward each other mails. qulrles nrv gaining in number because him for four years. The Institute was secret yearning for the sea and be de from the opposite sides of the Island, the work of the missing department asked to help locate the mother. After cided that It. despite bls mother's op Postage stamps were taken from let Washington. — While it Is generally mark out the two or three routes that has been Increasing to such an extent mueb work the mother was found. She position, promised more lively adven accepted that this Is not tbe age of ters or found loose in the malls hav have been used so far by expeditions ture tbnn the somber schoolroom. He ing a value of $12,165.67, almost double that It has become international In wns In destitute circumstance» The crossing the Island. It follows, there miracles nevertheless there are thou Letters are received frequently youth, who wns earning a good liveli made up his mind to run away on tbe the »ntlre revenue of the postal serv sands of patrons of the United States fore, that Ellesmere Island Is ktiown from distant ports and Inlnnd villages hood. wns overjoyed at finding her. duy he was to begin his studies. He ice in 1789. mails who take It for granted that chiefly along three narrow bands: One of Europe asking for news of rovers of . other youths feel the urge of the sea was big for bls age and he managed Three-cent fees collected for the re He had no> between Grant Land and Grinnell Uncle Sam has many wonder workers the Seven Sena. Some of these com und run away from home, not realising to get a Job on a ship. turn to senders of letters which could near the middle of the on his pay roll. Land, one munications come from Holland and , the anxiety they cause tlielr parents. been at sea long when be wns found a third toward the south The very fact that there are wiz not be delivered totaled $92,007.54. Great Britain, nnd many from parents On becoming remorseful they write to by the Institute and returned to bls Island. and But this is not half the story. ards in the employ of the Post Office end. mother. He found more work than of American boys from country towns their parents, only to discover that Checks, drafts and money order», department — men and women who are “Despite the fact that Ellesmere they have moved from their former adventure on the sea nnd he was only and hamlets whose owners could not be located, home, without leaving a forwarding ad too glad to return to hla mother ami Island Is perhaps better known than uncanny, to say the least. In decipher Inquiries In Every Port. bls studies. His case Is typical of any of the other Arctic lands north of ing Illegible handwriting—has caused and amounting to $3,546.542.43. finally dress behind. As soon as these communications North America, knowledge of It Is con no end of trouble and expense to the found a resting place In tbe dead let The foregoing are some of the lea others. received the work of looking up the fined largely to the coasts and the government as well as to the tax ter office. Since it wns established the “ miss sons that cause seamen to lose trace absent ones begins. Euch month the For want of correct or complete ad fiord crossings. Extensive areas of the payer, along with Inconvenience In the Ing men's department" has located Institute publishes n bulletin of men of their families. Seamen forget to receipt and delivery of mall matter. dresses 21.000,000 letters were depos Interior are still unknown or Imper 1,905 men reported as missing. Among re|>ortcd us missing, und these bulletins write home. Others leave home In s Yet, with all this expert handling ited In the dead letter office, not to fectly mapped and no careful surveys this number were cuptalns. mates, en go to every port In the world, the pique Two brothers hnd a fulling out glneers. carpenters and ordinary sea have been made of any of the regions. and careful study of handwriting on speak of 800,000 parcels which had over the possession of a shirt and lost various foreign consulates In the city The planes of the MacMillan expedi the part of the postal clerks, the an been Improperly addressed or wrapped. men. They belonged to all nation which receive Inquiries requesting sight of each other during the lute tion will repeatedly cross Ellesmere nual revenue from dead mall matter Strange to say, this depositing of allties them to locate this or thnt mnn send war. At the conclusion of tbe war Island this summer In establishing the received by the government amounts letters and packages In the malls with such Inquiries to the Institute If the advanced base In Axel Heiberg Land, to approximately $300,000. Incomplete, Inadequate or Incorrect mnn 1s n seaman. And seamen them- and. equipped with map-making cam addresses and wrapping comes, In a Wealth in Dead Letters. eras. will make detailed records of the large majority of cases, from those Last year the dead letter office re- patrons who are the most liberal con terrain. Grant Land In particular, or- SHE ACCUSES SPAIN over which the direct air line from ceived $120.000 from the sale of tributors to this branch ot the United Etah to the Axel Heiberg base lies, pbaned packages which could neither States government. be forwarded to the addresses nor re should be as well known topographical Big Business Is Big Loser. Skunk, Too, Friendly but Not as anything but companions of tb. ly by next autumn as Maine or New turned to the senders because of Inad wilds. equate addresses. The same office It has been estimated by postal of foundland. Overwelcomed. “But that darned skunk I I Jus ficials that 300,000.000 pieces of mall couldn’t bring myself to fondle him are given “directory service" every Glacier Park, Mont —United States I although the poor devil almost wagge, year, which means that employees his tail ns friendly as a dog when hi Forest Ranger Lewis Hanson of the | must take time from the regular han- Two Medicine valley in Glacier Na approached me begging for the flap ' dling and dispatching of mall in the tional park fed flapjacks nil winter to Jacks which he had seen me feed t. endeavor to provide correct addresses a mink, a weasel, a skunk nnd two the other nnlmals. I had to laugh a for thti huge volume of misdirected gray squirrels. The mink, weasel and myself at times, when I was ahnos matter. In New York city alone the the squirrels got so tame they ate out convinced that he was sincerely cost of this service approximates $500 of his hand, but lie left the skunk to friendly In the wagging of that tail. every ¿ay in the year, and the total "Once I wns on the verge of giving wait on Itself "cafeteria fashion." amount through the country is stu Veteran troopers of the Rocky Moun him the hand offering Just to show pendous. tains say this Is the first time they that I hnd no partiality for the other While the revenue from the dead ever heard of a mink or a weasel get- i animals. letter office 1c sufficient to keep that ting tame enough to eat out of a mans । brunch of the postal service function ing. It Is not nearly enough to pay the hand. Read Bible Through in annual toll for support of the "nixie." The Incident came to official notice ' 69 Hours, 15 Minutes A "nixie” is a letter or parcel so im when Ranger Hanson kept reporting a Yucaipa. Calif.—The Bible can b< properly addressed thnt it enn neither shortage In flour rations. The chief be delivered to the addressee nor re ranger, when lie discovered w lint Rang read from cover to cover In 89 hours turned to the sender without special er Hanson was doing with the flour, I nnd 15 minutes by any ordinary treatment. This special treatment wns first Inclined to reprimand the | church congregation with u taste foi costs the Post Office department, or subordinate, but on looking over the the task. This was demonstrated by the taxpayer tn the final analysis, ap rules and regulations, he changed his tbe 130 members of the First Metb proximately $1,740.000 every year. mind nnd allowed the extra supply odist church of Yucaipa when they In Unde Sam’s manual, forest rang completed at 9:15 p. tn. Tuesday a ers are Instructed to be kind to ani Bible "marathon’’ begun at midnlgb Tames Jail Birds Saturday. mals. Los Angeles, Calif.—C. E. Jennings Though attendance lagged at time» Ranger Hanson's amiability has ex is no fake hypnotist, according to guards tended to more specie» than any other during the long relay reading. In nt the Los Angeles county JaU. Arrested has yet made pets of in the wilds of which one volunteer after another took on a check charge, Jennings was up the sacred text, there wns a throne the Rockies. placed In a cell. There were several of several hundred persons In tin “Of course, In the tourist season, Lady Drummond liny, British news •toughs’’ In JaU and Jailers soon no It's different, but during the lonely church as the marathon swung Into paper correspondent who makes grave ticed these had developed sweet dlspo months of the long winter a fellow has Its Inst lap—-the Book of Revelations charges against the Spanish In Moroc sltlons. Some even hopped and a friendly feeling for anything with All Joined the readers In pronouncing Mrx Mary A. Church and her son, James Church, who have been clnss- co, accusing them of outrages. She life In It," Ranger Hanson volun the final verses of the book, then con .... so. says the Spaniards have violated all teered. "These animals evidently felt eluded the long service by singing the the conventions and treaties affecting the same way about It, for they kept Doxology nnd adopting unanimously the Tangier neutral gone, and that as a resolution to make the Bible mara activities, Mrs. Church has kept up her home. a result Tangier Is overflowing with hanging around my cabin door all win- thon an annual event. _____ I ter, und I sure couldn't regard 'em starving nnd diseased refugees. Lost” Tars Found for Anxious Kin Bring Big Money, But Are Costly > MINK, WEASEL AND TWO GRAY SQUIRRELS TAMED BY RANGER Goes Through College With Son