Mt. Scott herald. (Lents, Multnomah Co., Or.) 1914-1923, May 21, 1914, Image 2

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    Troops to Stan
NEWS NOTES OF Federal
In Colorado Strike Zone Oregon Dairy Records
CURRENT WEEK
Are Relatively High
Resume of World’s Important
Events Told in Brief.
Sentiment in favor of arbitrating the
Canal toll» question is growing.
Portland is made headquarters for
the Northwest Fruit Distributors.
Mobs in Vera Cruz hoot and hiss
Huerta's ex-minister of the interior.
The Northwestern prune crop is
estimate«! at from six to nine million
pounds.
Jacques Suzzanna. a French artist
ami explorer, started on a trip to the
North Pole.
J. K. Pardee, a defeated candidate
at the recent primaries in Gladstone,
Or., committed suicide.
A bureau for recovering lost people,
both children and adults, will be main­
tained at the San Francisco 1915 ex­
position.
The steamer Santa Clara is loading
lumber in Portland for Atlantic ports
and expects to pass through the Pan­
ama canal.
John R. Early, a leper patient, es­
caped from the quarantine station at
Diamond Head. Washington, and is
still at large.
United States delegates to the Niag­
ara peace conference are told that
American troops will remain in Mex­
ico until peace is restored.
Miss Thelma Hollingsworth, candi­
date of the Harriman club and the
Transportation club, has been chosen
queen of the coming Rose Festival in
Portland.
Five loaded barges were towed
through the Panama canal without in­
terfering with excavation work, and it
is thought barge traffic can now con­
tinue permanently.
The village of Alfred, Mich., was
wiped out by a forest fire, The inhab-
itants were forced to seek safety in
the Escanaba river, in which they had
to remain for hours.
Charles E. Mellen, former president
of the New York. New Haven & Hart­
ford road, promises to tell all he
knows of the road's high finance deals
and give the names of the persons who
profited by them.
Obstacles that beset the path of the
Northwest Butter & Produce company,
of Portland, have been swept aside,
stockholders think, and this associa­
tion of country creameries is now
ready to take on a new lease of life.
Denver
Assurances given by the
secretary of war that there is no in­
tention of removing Federal troops
from the strike districts in the Colo­
rado coal fields sion, caused general
satisfaction among strikers, mine
owners and state officials. Governor
Ammons made it know n that he was
anxious to have the United States cav­
alry guard the districts until the state
can take care of the situation. This
has to do with procuring funds through
the $1,000.000 bond issue provided by
the legislature.
Of the $1 000,000.
however, more than $600.000 already
has tw'en exhausted.
Governor Ammons' position is that,
even if the Federal tro«>p» are with­
drawn, he will not send the militia
back to the coal fields until the pres­
ence there of the militia is imperative.
Under the resolution providing for
its appointment the commission is em­
powered to conduct an investigation,
to assist the governor in restoring and
maintaining order ami “to consider
ways ami means of restoring and main­
taining peace and good order through­
out the state.” Under the last pro­
vision, it was said, the committee
would consider plans for mediation.
The resolution creating the commit­
tee provides that it shall investigate
whether the coal companies have been
observing the state law relative to
cheek weighmen, permitting workmen
to trade where they please, non-dis­
crimination in the employment of un­
ion ami non-union miners, wages [»aid
miners, amount of state coal lands un­
der lease ami terms of these leases ami
the causes of the present strike.
Oregon Agricultural College. Cor­
vallis Un supremacy of Oregon as a
dairy state, so often assert«-«! by the
Agricultural College Dairy depart«
nient. is being verified by teats an«!
records mad«> in various parts of th«-
state. The number of cattle of any
on«- bree«l in Oregon is very small in
comparison with the number of that
breed in th«- Unite«! States, yet the
numl»er of cows that have made note­
worthy records in Oregon is a very-
large percentage of the entire number
in th«- Unite«! State».
In the Jersey br««««i thia condition is
must noticeable. Of sixteen cows in
the Unit«-«! States that have products!
over 900 pounda of butter in a year 4
cows, 25 |n-r cent, are in Oregon. Of
30 that have produced more than 800
pounds of butter. 6 cows, 20 per cent.
are in Oregon. Of 106 cows that have
produced more than 700 pounda of but­
ter within a year, 14, almoat 14 per
cent, are in Oregon. There arc but 5
cows in the whole country that have
produced above 1000 pounda of butter
[wr year, but there is one more that
came within 7.1 ounces of reaching
that mark, and that one is an Oregon
cow.
The foregoing figures are from offi­
cial records, which are kept by but
few dairymen. There are more than
60 breeders of pure bred Jerseys in
Oregon, and but twelve are doing ad­
vanced registry work. Thia is called
a poor showing by Professor Graves,
head of the College Dairy department,
but it has accomplished emtugh to
show Oregon’s unexcelled dairy re­
sources.
Refugees Tell of Bad
Treatment by Mexicans
San Francisco Graphic reports of
th«« rnunler of American», th# capture
by a Mexican lrsn»|«>rt of th«’ Amer
lean brig Geneva, the Imprisonment of
United States Consul Edwards, of
Acapulco, ami many atrocities on the
west coast of Mexico were brought
here by th«’ officers ami 150 refugees
on th«> British steamer Cetrlana, which
arrived from Manzanillo.
Lieutenant Edward J. Minister,
royal naval reserve, commander or th«’
Cetrlana, got hie steamer, l”a«i<«l with
refugees, away from Manzanillo by
daring and skillful action on April 28,
when it was believed the Mexicans
were preparing to burn it at the dock
by firing ami dynamiting the wharves.
Acconling to the refugees, when
news of the i-apture of Vera Crus by
th«« Unit«ai States reached the west
coast, it was taken by the Mexicans as
the beginning of war. Th«’ Mexicans
were inflamed to a high pitch, they
say, and the Americans abandoned
their homes ami fled.
As the Cc
triana got away from th«’ dock, man­
euvering adroitly out of what is re-
|a»rte«l to be an attempt to hem it in
by four Mexican steamer», a rifle fir««
was direct««! against it. Many of the
bullet» »truck the steamer.
Upward» of a »core of murders,
moetly of Americans, were reported by
the Cetriana’s pa»»eners.
Captain W. II. Ferguson, of the brig
Geneva, of San Francisco, was ope of
the Cetriana’s |>aa»enger». For nearly
a week his ship, crew ami fiair refug­
ee* were hel«l as prisoner» of war by
the Mexicans, he reported, The ar-
rival of the cruiser Raleigh brought
about his release.
COL. ROOSEVELT
WELCOMED HOME
Somewhat the Worse for Wear,
But “Feeling Fine.’’
IHdn ’t Rrfuae Covcrnorahip of New
York, but Would
Nothing
to Say About Presidency.
New York City
Th«s»l«ire Roose
vclt return««! home Wc<ln««««lay after
many month» in South America.
Accompanied by two n»tur»li»t» of
his party, George K. Cherry and I am »
E. Miller, the ex preaident arrived
from Para nt «[uarantine shortly before
4 o’clock on board the Ho«»th liner
Aidan.
With a few crisp sentences, punct­
uate«! by decisive gestures, the colonel
reaffirm««! the verily of the “River of
Doubt,” curtly denied having ex­
pressed himself a» to Presidential
probabilit iea of 1916, <leclare«l he
Portland Shipment of the 48 logs 29.00p pounda. There is only one der­
would not run for governor of New
to be used as columns for the Oregon rick in the Northwest that can handle
York, mad«' a few deprecatory rvmarka
building at the Panama-Pacific expo­ them and that is the O.-W. R. & N.
about hia critic», and, with harbor
sition will lie completed within the derrick at the Albina dock.
craft tooting and flag» fluttering, wa»
next two or three days.
The Oregon
The Oregon building at the exposi­
taken on b«>ar«l a tug, which prm-eeded
commission has sent out seven cars tion is to be of Grecian architecture on
to Oyster Bay.
containing 21 logs. Three cars of logs the "plan of the Parthenon at Athena.
Friends who had been alarm««l by
will be sent from Central Oregon and The 48 log pillars surrounding it will
the
re,»>rta of Colonel Roo»eveil's se­
one from Southern Oregon, and 12 logs be five feet in diameter and 45 feet
vere illness were greatly surpriaed
will be sent by steamer from Coos high. They will l*e dedicated to the
when they saw him. He was notice­
Bay. The logs are assembled from 48 states of the Union and each will
ably thinner and he u»««i a cane as he
different points on the Cloumbia and bear the emblem of a state. There
walk««), but hia face wore a healthy
Willamette and are donated by the will be a ceremony around each column
Federal Gunboat Put Out
tan ami apparently he had not lost an
lumber interests of the state.
by representatives of the particular
ounce of the vigor ami energy which
Of Action by Aeroplane The average weight of these logs is states.
have become characteristic of him.
Uve
Survivors
Picked
Up
Durano, Mex.—The vulnerability of
After »laying 10 daya in thia country
Many Cows Under Test
war vessels to the attack of aeroplanes Festival Queen and Suite
After 13 Days' Drifting Colonel Roosevelt will go to Spain to
was demonstrated Wednesday, accord­
Will Travel in State
For Advanced Registry Halifax, N. 8. - After 13 days of the wedding of hia son. Kermit.
ing to a message received by Genera)
As the tug, which carried several
Portland—What has been one of the
Oregon Agricultural College, Cor­ terrific suffering in an ojp/n boat nirmlcr» of the Roosevelt family, in­
Carranga. when the federal gunboat
Morelos, which has been one of the most spectacular and thrilling cam­ vallis - There are now 92 pure-bred adrift at sea, five survivor» of the cluding Mr». Roosevelt, W. Eml in
effective defenses of Mazatlan against paigns of its kind ever conducted in dairy cows under test for advanced freight steamer Columbian were picked Roosevelt, Archie and Thetalore. Jr.,
constitutionalist attack, was force«! to Portland the contest for the selection registry in Oregon, according to the up in the North Atlantic by the Unit­ »pproachtsi the Aidan, the familiar fig­
ed States revenue cutter Seneca.
put to sea with her upper work» on fire of the “Queen of Rosaria" who will
Eleven others of the boat'» crew ure of the Colonel could be »een lean­
report
of
E.
R.
Stockwell,
instructor
preside
over
the
public
functions
at
to escape the bombs of the constitu­
who
left the Columbian when »he was ing far over the rail a» he waved a
the
approaching
Rose
Festival
—
is
in the Agricultural College Dairy de­
tionalist aeroplane fleet.
hia lipa tlexcti into the
burned
just south of Sable Inland on greeting,
The message which was sent by­ drawing to a close in a bewildering partment. Two prominent breeders of
familiar
smile.
May 3 had »uccuml>ed to injuries and
Millions of
General Alvaro Obregon, said that the whirlwind of excitement.
Not a few eyes were wet /«» the col­
pure br«d Jerseys have placed their
bombs from an aeroplane bursting on ballots have been cast and the last two herds in the list of candidates for ad- privation», and their bodies had been lector of the port, Duilley Field Ma­
thrown
overboard.
The
death
roll
of
or
three
days
have
witnessed
a
tre
­
the deck of the gunboat not only si­
lone, and » host of newspajiermcn
vanced registry honors during the the lost freighter now stands at 15.
lenced the federal guns, but also pre­ mendous increase in the totals. The present month.
Interest
in
this
Twenty-seven other member» of the scrambled up the companionway. The
vented the riflemen on board from fir­ prizes to be awarded to the twelve branch of breeding high-producing
crew were saved by the Cunartl liner Colonel s U xm I at the top ami shook
young
women
who
are
successful,
the
ing effectively.
| each man by the hand.
dairy cattle is spreading rapidly into
As the upper works, the bridg«« and queen and her royal court, will be a other sections of the state, although Franconia and the steamer Manhattan
Colonel Roosevelt antici|>at««l moat
the bulwarks of the federal vessel tour de luxe of the principal cities of the actual work of advance«! registry after two days' exp«aiure.
of th«« thing» people wantmi to know
The
men
snatched
from
death
by
the
the
Pacific
Coast,
at
each
of
which
were ripped away by the constitution­
testing ha» been confined so far to the Seneca were the first officer, whose ami he submittc«i to a fusillade of
alist bombs the federal commander, lavish entertainment is being prepare«! Willamette valley.
name was not given in the radio dis­ question» before going on the lug that
without a defense, put to sea while for them during their visit.
This work takes the full time of one patch from the vessel; Seamen Robert took him home.
The
party
will
travel
by
private
car
the aeroplane hung like a hawk above
“Not n word about the political sit­
man, an«! [»art of the time of a number
him, hovering in apparent fearlessness and will leave Portlaml on the night of of students of the »< nior class who Ties, Oscar Kendall an«! Peter Bellan­ uation,“ lie »aid. “1 d«»n’t know any­
ger,
and
fireman
Michael
I.udwigscn.
above the battere«! craft in an appar­ Friday. May 29, anti be on their jour­ make frequent visits to dairy farms
The survivors bad lived on only a thing nbout it, for 1 haven't »«-en a
ent effort to drop a bomb into one of ney eleven days, visiting Tacoma, Se­ where testing is being done to superin­
fejv ship's biscuit» and a cask of wa­ newspaper. Any pa|>ers which have
attle,
North
Yakima,
Spokane,
Salt
the smokestacks, where it would ex­
given my view« on the Mexican situa­
Lake City, Los Angeles and San Fran­ tend the tests and make official re­ ter, which hail long ago been ex­ tion have mis<|uot««l me.
plode in an unprotected spot.
ports.
Most
of
the
Jerseys
are
being
hausted.
They
had
gone
the
limit
of
English suffragettes demand protec­
The bombs, however, did not reach cisco, with short stoj>s at interm«;diate tested for one year, but a few are on
“That Applies to what has liecn said
human endurance.
tion of the Unionist leaders.
either of the vital parts of the vessel, points. Upon their return, the queen the eeven-day teat.
Hope for this missing third boat had about my presidential intention»,” he
$nd
her
maida
will
appear
at
all
the
.the magazine or the engine ■
—-i
“The ¡»urpose of the teat is to ascer­ been abandoned after a dozen of the added.
tne gunboat, steaming Oesperately un­ important events or tne Festival which
tain
and record officially the milking trans-Atlantic liners search«»! for five
He wan informetl that he was re-
takes
place
June
9-12
inclusive.
der forced draught, finally drew be­
questions.
qualities of the cows use«! for breeding days in n wide radius of the s|>ot where |«>rted to have «aid that he woul«l not
yond the radius of the aeroplane's gas­
dairy cattle, and th«-n retain only the the ship had burnt into flames.
run »» a enndidate on the Republican
California newspapers urge the nom­ oline suppply, and the destroyer of the
Sutherlin Has Fine Bait
cows whose records are satisfactory, “
ticket, and that if he liecame » can­
ination of women for lieutenant gov­ air turned back over the harbor to the
didate it woulii be on the Progressive
for Decoration Day Crowd said Mr. Stockwell. “The time has Total Eclipse at Sun
ernor of the state.
protection back of the constitutionalist
ticket.
come when the purchaser of pure bre«j
It is believed the importation of lines, where the hangars are situated.
Sutherlin- Fried chicken, strawber­ dairy hen! bulls demands that their an­
“Not a word of truth in thia,” the
To
Occur
August
21
The pilot of the aerial craft was not ries and cream an«l a ball game be­
Chinese eggs will be considerably re­
cestors have records of high produc­
Colonel said. “I have not mail«* a
designated in the message, but it is tween the traveling men and business
duced next season.
Washington, D. C.—The eclijs-o of single declaration about the political
tion.
By thus improving the best
thought here to have been Captain
The Butte, Boise & San Francisco Salinas Carranga, a cousin of the first men’s teams are only three of many­ strains and eliminating the [siorest, the sun on August 21 next— total in situation in 1916.
"I haven’t been naked If I would
railroad company files articles of in­ chief, who is in charge of the constitu­ items on the program arranged by the dairy herds will be improved, be- parts of F.uro|>e ami Asia and partial
the people of Sutherlin for Decoration coming of greater value both to the in Northeastern America -is attract­ run for governor of New York,” he
corporation in Idaho.
tionalist aerial fleet.
day, May 30, to lure the business men dairyman an«! the breeder.”
ing the widespread attention of astron­ replied in annwer to another question.
and traveling men of Portlan«! and
omers and scientists, various expedi­ "If asked, I would »ay that I would
other cities to a day of games and fun.
tions being arrange«! to witness this not.
PORTLAND MARKETS.
Reserve Bank Starts in
A tour of the valley, with the vit­ Land Is Opened Under
phenomenon.
"A» to the river, it is oxtr/iordinary
New York District ¡tors as guests, will be made jr. ine
__
Enlarged Homestead Act The moon will pass exactly between to have put on the map a river as long
Wheat — Track prices: Club, S7(a
In Persia, a» the Rhine, but there in no mor««
88c per bushel; bluestem, 906/91c;
New York — The Federal Reserve morning, a stop |w <«>ade at noon
I.a Grande
Between 65,000 and the earth and the sun.
forty-fold, 886/89c; red Russian, 876/ Bank, of the Second reserve division, at Fair Oak/. ,nere the fried chicken 70,000 acres of land located in Grant, Russia and Scandinavia the full effect doubt of it» existence than there is of
88c; valley, 88c.
organized in accordance with the new and, at «■a.vi/erries and “real cream,” Umatilla, Baker an«l Wallowa counties will be seen. It will be seen as a par­ the Rhine."
Millfee«!—Bran, $23.506/24 per ton; Federal bankir g lav««— •<
fiially the posters announce, will be served. have been designated by the Fe«leral tial eclipse at sunrise in the Northern
Colonel Roosevelt was asked how he
felt.
shorts, $26.506/27; middlings, $326/83. launched W««i1.._B<iay at the New York The ball game slaughter will begin at got• ■ ■ nu qt as object to entry under states and Canada.
In this eclipse the diameter of the
Hay-—No. 1 Eastern Oregon tinij^ Hearing house, when representatives 2 o’clock. Tennis matches begin at the enlarged homestead act.
“I don't look like a sick num, do
All of
— er'.
thy, $166/17; mixed timothv, *!' 7i.5; of Albany, Syracuse, Buffalo and New 6:30. The dance will begin almost this lan«l is, or is supposed to Ire, of cone at the earth's surface is only I? was hi» rejoinder. “I have he«-n
valley grain hay, $ 12 -"-Ox*.' i4; alfalfa, York City National banks were sworn any time and end when the visitors semi-arid character, non-mineral and about 85 miles, so that the eclipse is very ill with jungle fever, but I'm all
visible as total only in a belt alstut 85 right now. I feel fine.”
126/13.50.
in as incorporators of the new institu­ cry enough. A large and lively crowd containing no timber.
is expected.
miles wide stretching over the coun­
B»rt J reed, $19.506/20 per ton; tion.
It wa» learned, however, -from Mr.
It will be subject to entry June 1 of
tries named above.
The im[>ortant ( berry, that the Colonel »till suffered
orewing, $216/22; rolled, $23.506/24.
this year, where vacant and public.
cities
Bitlis,
Trebizond,
Kief,
Minsk
Oats — No 1 white milling, $226/
Kansas City, Mo.—Ten bankers, Oregon Berries Shut Out
from slight symptoms of fever. Colo­
Persona now holding a claim on which
Riga lie near the center of this nel Roosevelt confessed thnt he had
22.50 ton.
representing five banks, signed the pa­
Others—Artichokes Fine they have not made final proof may and
belt. It passes 100 miles north of lost 55 pounds, part of which he ha<!
Corn—Whole, $34; cracked, $35 ton. pers of incorporation of the Federal
Portland -This week will win«l up make entry at once of an additional Stockholm and Trondheim.
Vegetables — Peppers, 206/30c per Reserve bank for the Tenth district
regained.
II«« had also l««en troubled
160 acres of lan«l, and can make proof
pound; radishes, 17Jc per dozen; ar­ here Wednesday. The bank is to be the California strawberry season, so on the additional tract when they
by biteH of poisonous insects.
Mt. Vernon la Reahinglcd.
tichokes, 75c per dozen; celery, $46/ located in Kansas City,
The signers far as this market is concerned. Re-1 prove up on the first entry.
Entries
4.50 crate; spinach, 5c per pound; represented banks in Omaha, Denver, ceipts of Oregon» are increasing rap­ prior to June 1 are of no value, and
Washington, D. C. Mount Vernon,
Man Rolla Three Milea.
idly anti soon the local fruit will shut
horseradish, 86/10c; rhubarb, 1)6/2c; Lincoln, Rawlins, and Muskogee.
Idbal
land
officers
are
instructed
to
the
home
of
the
Father
of
His
Coun
­
Baltimore
G. Howell Parr, a social
out the southern article.
Oregon ber­
cabbage, 26/2Je; asparagus, $16/1.50
comply strictly with the time for filing try, is to have its fourth set of shin­ leader in Baltimore, who started at
ries
sell
all
the
way
from
$1.50
to
per dozen; peas, 86/9c p«>und; beans, More Pay for Night Work Aim.
and to reject all entries made prior to
$2.75 a crate, according to quality.
gles since it was built, in 1743. The 7:45 o’clock Wednesday night to roll
106/11c; turnips, new, $1.50 per sack;
that time.
Washington, D. C.—Senator Lewis,
Alameda berries cleaned up at $2.
carrots, $1; parsnips, $1; beets, $1.
mansion was reshingled in 1785 and from the Elk Ridge Kennel club to
During
the
month
of
April,
182
of
Illinois,
is
author
of
a
bill
entitled
Florin Dollars ranged in price from
Parkway, about three
Eggs—Fresh Oregon ranch, case
in 1860. Before putting the fourth University
;
r
'
,rn
homesteads
were
filed
I
on,
12
public
__ :
.....„.............
Some
Jessies
from ... ..... ..... ....
miles,
completed
hi« task at 11:20 a.
count, 20)c per dozen; candled, 21)6/ “to reduce night work in postoffices, ” $1.25 to $1.75.
but which, in actuality, is a bill to in­ the same place sold as low as 60 cents. land sales were held, 25 final proofs root on, the shingles were rounded at m. Thursday. He pcrform««d th«’ feat
22c.
were
made,
and
15
allowed.
A
total
one end to make them conform to the on a wager and finished in good condi­
That Oregon can grow artichokes
Green fruit—Apples, $16/2.50 per crease the pay of night employes in
The bill provides that was shown by a sample lot brought in j of 27,120 acres were fil««d on or dis­ original shingles of 1743. The shin­ tion. For more than 15 hours, with
box; strawberries, Oregon, $1.256/2 postoffices.
posed
of
during
the
month
of
April
by
gles are of cypress, hand made in frequent intervals of rest, Mr. Parr,
These arti­
per crate; cherries, $1.25 per box; hereafter 45 minutes’ night work per- by an Italian gardner.
this larxl office.
North Carolina, and are of the same dressed in a football suit, turned over
formed by clerks and carriers in first chokes sold at $1.256/4.40 a dozen.
_____
gooseberries, 3)6/5c per pound.
size
as those used when the house was anti over on his hand» and knees, uphill
and
second-class
postoffices
shall
be
Onions—New, $26/2.25 per crate.
Roy, 14, la Reat Speller.
first roofed.
and down, through mud ami over
Potatoes—Oregon, $1 per cwt.; buy­ computed the same as one hour day
Pure Rahy Milk la Plan.
Oregon City — Austin Young, 14-
»tones, without once rising to his feet.
ing prices, 606/ 70c at shipping points. work, night work being that per­
Portland
—
The
city
may
co-operate
Parka' Execution Seen.
year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. W. F.
Poultry— Hens, 156/15)c per pound; formed after 6 p. m. and before 6 a. m.
broilers, 256726c; turkey», live, 206/ The bill has not yet been considered with the Visiting Nurse association in Young, a student in the Corral Creek
Vera Cruz Additional confirmation
Plumhera Under inquiry.
establishing a public milk depot, school, near Wilsonville, is the best of the execution of Private Samuel
22c; dressed, choice, 256/ 26c; ducks, by the postoffice committee.
Des Moines, Iowa.
The examina-
where especially prepared milk for speller in the schools of Clackamas Parks, of the Twenty-eighth infantry, tion of witnesses in the nation-wide
12c; geese, 106/He.
Explorer
Reported
Safe.
babies
will
be
kept
during
the
summer
Butter — Creamery prints, extras,
county. This was decided at the all­ waH received here. There was brought probe of the activities of the Master
The association has asked Clackamas »[»oiling bee last Saturday, into the American lines one of Huer­ Plumber»’ Association of America, al­
Berlin—Baron Erland von Norden- months.
27)c per pound; cubes, 23)6/24c.
senold, the leader of the Norwegian the city commission to help to the ex­ ' when each of the 17 districts into ta’s conscripts who had deserted.
Pork—Fancy, 10)6/11c per pound.
Ik« leged to be a trust, was begun here
South American exploring expedition, tent of furnishing quarters where the which the county was divided was rep­ said he was an eye witness of the exe­ by th«« gran«l jury in the Federal Court
Veal—Fancy, 11 Jo« 12c per pound.
Hops—1913 crop, prime and choice, who was reported to have been killed milk may be sold to those able to buy resented by its best speller.
cution of Parks anti agreed to relate of the Southern district of Iowa
by Indians, March 14, last, is safe. it and given away to those who are
126/15c; 1914 contracts, 146/15c.
This was the last spelling bee of the facts as far as he knew them to Judge Smith McPherson instructed the
Wool—Valley, 186/20c per pound; The news of his escape from the In­ not. The question was considered by 18 which began in March A beau­ the American general in command if grand jurors a» to the intent of the
Eastern Oregon, 156/19c; mohair. dians reached here in a letter from the commission Thursday, and it is tiful silver cup was presented to the in return work was given him here or Sherman anti-trust law.
Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia, dated probable an appropriation will be made winner.
choice, 1914 clip, 27)6/28|c.
he was otherwise cared for.
,
March 21, which reported his arrival for store-room.
Cascara bark—Old and new. 5c.
2.17 Mail Roxea Tampered.
at Trinidad, the capital of the Bolivian
Grain Bags—Calcutta, 8)c.
Ronda Defeated Radiy.
Circle City Almost Cone.
Lomlon
Sydney Drew, printer and
Cattle — Prime steers, $7.756/8; department of Beni.
First Flour la Hailed.
.Salem—With complete returns from
Seattle A special cable from Fair­ publisher of the Suffragette, the news­
choice, $7.256(7.50; medium, $76/
Astoria -Astoria Thursday celebra­ 51 precincts, the $550,000 road bond banks, Alaska, nays:
paper representing the militant sec­
Woman Dropa From Airship.
7.25; choice cows, $6.506/7; medium,
ted the opening of its new flour mil). issue lost by a vote of 0080 against
“Report» from Circle City say the
$66/6.25; heifers, $66/7.25;
light
Nevers—In order to show her con­ During the day great crowds of peo­ with 3079 for. It is believed complete flood cause«! by the break-up of the ice tion, was committed for trial at the
calves, $86/8.50; heavy, $66/7.50; fidence in a detachable parachute in­ ple visited the plant. In the evening returns will show the proposition de­ on the Yukon river was the worst in Ol«l Bailey. charge«l with inciting
bulls, $56/6.25; stags, $66/7.50.
vented by her husband, Mme. Gayat de there was a special programme of ex­ feated by more than two to one. The the history of the ram(^ The town members of the Women’s Social an«I
Hogs—Light, $7.506/8.25; heavy, Castella dropped 2500 feet from an ercises, following which the first sack negative vote was so emphatic that was almost wipe«! out, all the »tore», Political union to commit malicious
$6.506/7.25.
aeroplane. She landed gently on the of flour manufactured at the new mill the election officers in numerous in­ government buildings and dwellings damage to property.
An official of the poatoffice testified
Sheep—Wethers, $4.256/5.25; ewes, grass of the aer«»lrome. and a crowd was sold at auction, the proceeds be­ stances did not report the result, which near the waterfront being damaged by
that 237 letter boxes shad been tam­
$3.506/4.25; yearling lambs, $56/6.25; carried her shoulder-high from the ing donated to the public playground accounts for leas complete reports than ice.
No casualties have been re­ pered with and 4000 letters damaged
field.
apring lambs, $6.506/7.25.
fund.
in the contests for nominations.
ported.”
by suffragettes.
Giant Logs Are Shipped
to Panama-Pacific Expo