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About The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1908)
THE STAYTON MAIL c. o. AicxANDra. r«aa»w S T A Y T O N ...................OREGON NEWS OF THE WEEK I d i Condensed Fora lor Oor Bnsy Readers. A R muitm o f Ab« L «u bn^ortwit ba* Not L « m LWwrweting Event* o f the Paet Week.. The battleship fleet ha* passed Magellan strait* and is now in the Pacific ocean. The Swift Packing Company has completed plans for a JS.iOO.OOO plant in Portland. A Yale graduate and athlcde has been found to poetess a cowzplete outfit of burglar's fowls. Premier Franco, dictator of P o r tugal has not left his room since ar riving in Bordeaux, France. Roosevelt says the Charge's that be Is using hi* influence to help Taft along are false and malicious. Claims of aSleged illeiStlmate heir* o f Alfonso XU are creating consid erable trouble for the Spanish gov ernment. One child w k killed and many persons injured in the cruah at the funeral of the dead king aad prince o f Portugal. Members of the royal household declare that the Portugese crown prince rose and fired twice at the as sassins before he himself fell dead. California railroad commission has evidence to convict the Southern Pacific of rebating on about 4,»00 separate counts, the fines for whieb w ill amount to $80,000,MM). K ing Edward and Queen Alexan dra, the Prince and Princess of Wales, Princess Victoria and many government oflUials attended the memorial service* for the late King Carlos o f Portugal and the Crown Prince. The battleship fleet has turned to the north. LIABLE TO FINES OF S80.000.000 Claar Casa Against 8 . P.—Paid Ra bat*« tor Yaars. Sun Francisco, Feb. 11.— Penalties unprecedented In the history of the prosecution o f corporations tn Cali fornia. or a complete revision aud | vitalizing o f the laws applicable to railroads, will be the outcome of tho I investigation to be instituted this week by the State Railroad Commis sion, In the rooms o f tho Chamber o f Commerce, In the Merchants' Ex change building. I Assistant Attorney-General Ray mond Benjamin said today that 4,000 cases of rebating have been perfected against the Southern Pacific Com pany, practically through Its own ad missions. These cases will be pre sented to the Railroad Commission by Attorney-General U. S. Webb. Mr. Benjamin and O. K. Cushing, special counsel for tho California Traffic As sociation. Should convictions be ob tained on eaoh o f these cases, and the Maximum j>enalty of $20,000 be imposed for each violation o f the law, the Soutlwrn Pacific will face an aggregate fine of $80,000,000. In .each case .the evidence practi cally le conclusive, from bills of lad ing to the indorsed checks Issued by the cuutPany to the shipper, In reim bursement. When the State Board of Railroad Commissioners requested the Southern Pacific to submit its books to Mr. Benjamin, Peter F. Dunne, counsel for the railroad, re plied that the railroad's books would be available at any time. The com placency with which the railroad cor poration greets the investigation Xoreordalns that it will not fight the action of the Railroad Commission on merits but rather upon the law involved. Section 222 o f the state legislation which creates the State Board of Railroad Commissioners, with their power to fix ratett provides: “ Any railroad corporation or transportation company which shall fall to conform to such rates as shall be established by such commission • • • shall be fined not exceed ing $20,000 for each offeree. • * ” In 4,000 cases the railroad com pany failed to conform to the rate set by the Commissioners. The prac- Lice is of long standing, bat the only records available are those subse quent to May, 1906. In some n.f these rehates the railroad refunded 53 per cent o f the original charge the shipper- DRAG O U T SKELETONS. Germany has reduced the import Alleged illegitimote Hair* of Alfonso dnty on sugar. Making Trouble. A leader of the Black Hoad has been Madrid, Feb. 11.— The question of Raptured in New York. alloting a pension of 250.000 pesetas The senatorial deadlock in the Ken- to the Infanta Alfonso, the son of tacky legislature continues. Don Carlos of Bourbon and the Prin The Pennsylvania railroad ha* juat cess o f Asturias, who recently mar ried Princess Louise of Orleans in ordered 55,000 tong of steel rails. England, has received the approval Seattle ministers have started an of the Council of State and now goes before the Cortes. But it has raised agitation against Sunday theaters. many complications, not the least in Governor Pennypacker has been im teresting of which are suits for sim plicated in the Pennsylvania capitol ilar allowances brought by the na frauds. tural children of Alfonso X II by Elena Sanz, a former well-known Franco, the deposed premier of Port Spanish actress, and a natural cous ugal, has arrived in France, fearing in of the king named Carlos Allen murder but defending his policy. Perkins, a second-rate but popular The Elgin National Watch company actor in the music halls of the cap has closed its factory for an indefinite ital. Perkins claim goes back to his period on account of dullness in trade. great-grandmother, the famous In Government troops will be removed fanta Carlotta, who provoked the from Goldfield March 7, at which time Carlist war by obliging Ferdinand the Nevada police will be ready to take V II to admit the principle o f the Salic law. It was Bhe who slapped charge. the face o f Calomarde, the Premier, Warren Oliver, a member of the elec and drew from him the historic re toral college which named Lincoln, is tort: “ W hite hands are not offensive.” dead. He was a pioneer of California Perkins’ birth is not recorded in and 93 years old. Gotha ,but he insists that his real Associate Public Printer Bram has name is Don Francisco Carlos Pio aseumed contol of the government Rose Alfonso Luis Fernando Allen printing office. W . 8. Rossiter will Perkins Guerowsky Bourbon Luth- continue the inquiries into the conduct erlan Hossen Dricbma Vrichna and Ottendorf” and consequently a blood of the office. relation of most of the reigning sov- Woman surffagiste are making a erigns of Europe. hard fight in New York. Survey for New 1 unnel. Judge Hargis, a leader of Kentucky Seattle, Wash., Feb. 11.— Survey fued?, has been killed by his son. ors and engineers in the employ of Florida Republicans are bolding Taft the Northern Pacific have for montbB and anti-Taft conventions and having been locating a new tunnel through the Cascades. The fact became fist fights. known yesterday, when the men, Great Britain has paid the bandit driven from their work by the heavy Raisnli $200,000 for the release of Sir snows, arrived at Green R iver Hot Harry Mac'ean. Springs on their way to St. Paul. From Hot Springs comes word thet The Western Bar Iron association, of the big Stampede tunnel is to be New York, will advance the price of abandoned as soon as the new bore bar iron $5 per ton. is completed. The new bore is to The house committee on naval affairs be seven miles long and will cost up opposes four new battleships and the ward of $10,000,000. president has prepared to fight. Franco Excites Curiosity. Bordeaux .France, Feb. 11.— Sun A greyhound has returned on foot to ite old home at Oakland from Western day passed with 8enor Franco, the ex-Premier of Portugal, still in Bor Montana, a distance of 1,500 miles. deaux and still in seclusion. His Franco, former premier and dictator privacy has remained unbroken; of Portugal, has arrived in Madrid. since his arrival Friday he has not He was driven from home by the many emerged from the hotel where he Is stopping, not even, from his room. threat* of assassination. The former dictator has become a By an agreement of trans-Atlantic problem which the people are dis steamship oompanies the rate war be cussing with curious, wondering, tween Europe and the United Htates even sympathetic interest, but no one has been enlightened a3 to the hour has come to an end. of his departure, or his destination, Owing to opposition to the erection for it is certain that he is not to re of a statue to the late Senator Quay on main here long. the capitol gronnds at Harrisburg, Pa., Temperance Worker Dead it is proposed to put the question to a New York, Feb. 11.— John W. popular vote. Oliver, editor and principal owner of Bryan declares that W all street is the Yonkers Statesman, died at his home in Yonkers today, aged 92 worse than Monte Carlo. years. Mr. Oliver was an early lead The national convention of the So er in the temperance movement, and cialist party will be held in Chicago with hie brother, Isaac Oliver, found ed the Sons of Temperance. May 10. HALL IS CONVICTED SWIF1 PACKING CO. COM ING Ready to Begin Work on 83,600,000 Plant at One*. Portland. Feb. 10.— In the first and only authorized »'a t «‘incut which hua been given out either here or anywhere else regarding his com pany's plans In the Pacific Northwest Louts F. Swift, president of Hwlft A Co., last night declared that the mammoth Portland plant, which will represent an outlay of $8,600,000 and which will be erected on the Pe Speedy Agreement Believed to Indi ninsula, will be completed uud ready for operation In all departments In cate Conviction, In Viow o f one year. Portland la also to bo mude Judge’ e Instruction*. the center of the pucklng industry of the Pacific Northwest, and the Trout- dale plant, uear Portland, eventually Portland, Feb. 8.— At 1:30 o'clock la to be abandoned, at least so far as this morning the jury In the Hall con tho packing aide of the business Is spiracy trial announced that it had concerned. To what use. If any, the reached a verdict. The verdict was Swift people are to put their prt>seut sealed in an envelope, under instruc extensive aud valuable property ut tion* given by Judge Hont last night, that point was not vouchsafed. and was returned to the oourt and The Swift people are ready und opened at 10 o’clock this morning. prepared to go ahead with construc On convening oourt thia morning tion work Juat as Boon ub the rail Judge Hunt directed that the envelope roads have Indicated whut connec lie opened ami the verdict road. The tions ou tho Peninsula they will es jury found Hall guilty as charged. tablish, and when they will be ready Under the Federal statutes, conspiracy such a? that charged In the Indictment to do the work. When these connec on which Hall was tried, is punishable tions with necessary terminal facili by a fine not exceeding $10.000, or by ties have been decided upon, work on imprisonment not exceeding two years. tho packlug plant will be rushed to completion. Portland, Feb. 8.— last night’s lu the official interview, H. C. session, which convened at 7:45 Gardner, heud of the construction de o’clock, Judge Hunt delivered exhaust ive instructions to the jury, the charge partment of Swift A Company, who requiring two hoars for its delivery. will have direct charge o f erecting At 10:12 o’clock, after Judge Webster the pluut, acted as spokesman for for the defendant had interposed ob President Swift, and entered into as jections to practically every instruction full a discussion of the plans of the of the oourt, the jury retired to deliber Swifts us the head o f the big con ate on a verdict. The jnrora were in cern deemed wise to give out for structed by Judge Hunt that if a ver publication at this time. Mr. Uurdner, in explaining why dict should be reached during the night, they were to seel it in an en the public could not be taken fully velope and repair in the custody of the into the confidences of his concern bailiffs to their rooms, the verdiot to at this time, said that certain plans, be returned at 10 o'clock thia morning such as whether the company should secure power from some of the com to which hour the court then ad panies already In the field here, or journed. erect its own plant on the Peninsula, Judge Hunt’s instructions were far are yet to be settled, and that there more elaborate than in any of the pre were a number o f other considera ceding land fraud or conspiracy cases. tions which, if disclosed now, might They consisted of a learned exposition lnt«-rfere with their consuminutlou. It was also clearly brought out of the law as applied to conspiracy charges and a lucid interpretation of that if Portland ever intends to wrest the statjtes pertaining to the fencing the bulk of the Alaska trade from and homestead acts and the statute of the Sound cities, the merchants and shippers here will have to establish limitations. a direct steamer line from here to When the instructions had been given the North. This was brought out In Mr. Heney expressed his satisfaction answer to the direct question as to with them, bat Judge Webster, for the whether Swift A Company intended defendant, submitted exceptions in a to enter that field, now monopolized general way to the entire charge. by various Seattle and Tacoma puck ers. “ Swift & Company," declared Mr. REFORM POSTAL SERVICE. Gardner, “ are in the packing busi ness und packing business alone. Commission Rtcommsnds Changas in They are not in the transportation business, nor in the cattlu-raislug Interest of Economy. business.” IN GRASP OF STORM I Prediction ot Prosecution Proves Correct. Ice King Reigns In East and Middle Vest. JURY DELIBERATES THREE HOURS MANY SUFFER FROM SEVERE COLD Washington, Feb. 8.— In a prelim inary report of the postal commission authorize«] during the last congress, the main recommendation will be to the effect that the office of the fourth assist ant postmaster general shall be done away with and that an executive officer appointed by the president for a long term be installed as the active head of the department, who shall act nnder the direction of the postmaster general and hold the same relation that a su perintendent of a railroad holds to a railroad president and directorate. The examiners found that politics too often interfered with the systematic running of the department and that the heads were seldom installed for any length of time before being retired or placed elsewhere. Under present conditions it is neces sary for a mail hag lock broken on an Alaskan route to be transported the en tire distance to the Mississippi valley before it can be mended. To do away with this and other impracticable meth ods, the comm its ion propose* the for mation of divisions with full power to administer offices within their boundar ies. Said boundaries shall not neces sarily follow state lines. Of the 62,000 poetoffices rnn by the government it is thought that folly 30,- 000 can be operated in such a manner as to become non acconnting offices and do away with the too frequent issuance of stamps and many intermediate re porta. _________________ Mexico Grants Coaling Station. Mexico City, Feb. 8.— The concession by Mexico to the United States grant ing the privilege for the establishment of a coaling station at Magdalena bay is now in force and it is expected that the two barges provided under the con cession w ill Ere anchored in the hay be fore the arrival there of the fleet. Fur ther negotiations are pending for a large target range and permission to land marines for small arms practice. Previous requests of like nature were not favorably receive«! by Mexico, bnt thia one may be granted. Smuggles Arm* Into China. Hongkong, Feb. 8.— Chinese imper ial customs officials thia afternoon seis ed a Japanese steamer near Macao, which was landing arms on Chinese territory. It is alleged that the arma were intended for revolutionist* nnder Dr. Hun Yet Hen, the leader of the rev olutionary party in China. NIGHT RIDERS ON RAID. Imprison Cipzens and Burn Tobicco and Warshousas. Hopkinsville, Ky., Feb. 10.— Last night at 12 o'clock a band of about 150 mounted night riders, masked, heavily armed und wearing the In signia o f a secret clan, Invaded Fre- donta, Crittenden county, captured James Scarberry, operator o f the Cumberland Telephone Company, and cut all telephone connections. They then forced Dave Potter, a clerk in a drug store, to open his store, in which they corralled several citizens and held them prisoners. Leaving a large guard in the town, the others galloped to the village of View, five miles away, and blew up Alfred H. Cardin's tobacco factory, containing 35,000 pounds of tobacco belonging to him and his croppers. The loss aggregates $10,000, with $5,000 insurance. A fter firing volleys Into the air the night riders returned through Fredonia and released their prison ers. Eighty per cent of Crittenden county farmers have tobacco pooled in the Soe.iety of Equity. Mr. Cardin is not a member. He is a prominent citizen, aged 73, and was formerly a candidate for governor on the Popu list ticket. The Planters Association has no organization in this county. Blow Up Bank. Joplin, Mo., Feb. 10.— Four men early this morning blew open the vault of the Rank of Sulphur Springs, Ark., and secured over $1,300 in cash, besides notes and other val uables. The cltzens of Sulphur Springs were aroused by two explo sions, but by the time the officers reached the downtown district, the work of the thieves had been com pleted and four men were seen to mount their horses anil ride west ward. The mountains in this direc tion are filled with many gorges and it is believed that the men have made good their escape. Fatal Snow Slides In Colorado, Bliz zards In Michigan, and Bloat Storm In Illinois. New York, Feb. 6.— Large districts of the Kart and Middle West are suffer- i iik from a cold wave of unuauel severi ty. Rep«>rt* from many loclaltle* are to thrjcffect that the eatrems cold ia coupled with a fall of mow of sufficient depth to interfeie with transportation facilities, while several fatalities have occurre«!. A elect storm in the Middle West has added to the general discom fort. All of the charitable institutions are over crowded and many homeless men, to keep from freeaiog, have been forced to hmidle around tiree in the open street*. The whole state is in an icy grip, the mercury falling to a record of 46 «iegreoe Delow in the vicinity ot Balls too. Other fatalities are report*! from Colorado, where numerous «now elide* tiave occurred in the mining district». Weather condition« throughout New England are the wont of the present winter. The cold anap la general in that section, although no fatalities have a« yet been recorded. Noithfield, V L , reports the ooldest wether ia New Eng land, with the mercury registering 34 degrees below aero. The lake region Is also feeling [th e cold. Michigan ia in the grasp of a se vere bliazard, In whioh arrn weather ia com bmed with a blinding etorm. Railway traffic ia completely paralyzed In many parts of Michigan and the atorm ahowa no sign of abatement. Chicago last night experlenad one of the worst sleet storms in years. There wo* much suffering front the icy bla«ta and traffic on the electric lines wee al most completely demoralised, although ■tJ%m train« were operated. In Central am! Eastern Pennsylvania ■now foil to a depth of more than a foot, . I t was estrrmely cold throughout the mountainous regions, the mercury dropping ae low as 16 degree* below ae ro. Service of both «team and electrio lines wee crippled and there w u con siderable suffering. PUBLIC PRINTER REMOVED. It Accused of Many Irregularities lr* Government Office. Washington, Feb. Jusl aa tha president’s action In suspending Public Printer Stillings arid appointing W il liam 8. Rossiter to perform hie dutlea was being announced tmlay, a commit tee of laix)r leader» of this city, accom- panie«l by Representative Gary, of Win- cnnsln, called at the White House ami presented to the president a resolution adopted by the Central Labor union here, charging Mr. Stillings with vio lations of the eight-hour law , in tho government printing office, and adde«l: " I t ia difficult at thia time to get witnesses against Mr. Stillings, for tho reason that manv of them are employe«! in the government printing office amt directly under hie charge. We hope, however, to follow up our oral state ment with affidavit», if ue< essary. ’ ’ The president Informed the commit tee of the action he hmi already taken in the case. Resolutions by numerous labor or ganizations in various cities charging violation in the government printing office of the eight-hour «lay, discrimina- ton against veteran soldiers and the willow* of soldiers and violation of the civil service law have been submitted to conuress and the president. Mr. HtiHngs is from Hoaton and was appointed public printer in 1906. He hail l>een general manager of his fath er’ s printing firm in New York and at varioua times manager of the Printers’ Board of Trade of that city and of New York. Mr. Rossiter also came from Massachusetts and hail business connec tions in New York and Waahintgon be fore assuming office in the census bu reau in 1890. Destructive Prairia Fire. Fort Worth, Tex., Feb. 6 — More than 1,000,000 acres of priilrle have al ready been swept by a fire which la passing over Lubbock, Crosby and Oarra counties in Western Texas. It is esti- mate«l that there it already $600,000 damage done. Ranch honsca, corrals, livestock and crops have been destroyed by the fire. A few of the ranchers, whose places were In the path ’ of the blaze have manage«! to save their prop erty by burning the dry grass in that Archbishop Returns. neighborhood, hut most were unable to New York, Feb. 10.— Archbishop cheek the flamea. Patrick W illiam Riordan, of San Francisco, whose recent mission in Wisconsin Ready April I. Rome was both for rest and to advo Washington, Feb. 6 — On April 1, cate the appointment of Rev. Edward J. Hanna, o f Rochester, as Coadju next, the battleship Wisconsin will ha tor Archbishop of San Francisco, re placed In commission at the navy yard turned today on board the steamship at Puget sound. Her commanding Cedric. officer has not yet been »elected. m 9