Image provided by: Santiam Historical Society; Stayton, OR
About The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 28, 1908)
THE STAYTON MAIL T R A P * F O R T E R R O R IS T S . Russia P ro vid es W o rld -W ld s o f S e c re t S erv ic e . C. D. AirXANDCR. PaMialwr S T A Y T O N ................... OREGON NEWS OF THE WEEK I d a Condensed Form for Our Busy Headers. A Resume o f the Less Importent but Not Less Interesting Events o f the Pest W eek. Four mail clerks were injured in a train wreck near Flovilla, Ga. I W ork is about to begin in New York on a building for the various Irish so* cieties. New York hotel clerks have organ ised a club under the name of the Greeters. Dr. Em il G. Hirsch, in an address at Chicago, denounced Germany as a menace to the peace of the world. Sixteen persons were injured, five seriously, by the derailment of a car on the scenic railway at one of Denver’ s amusement parks. Mrs. Yerkes. widow of Charles T. Y’ erkes, intends to devote a por i xi cf her $10,000,000 estate to the erection of a hospital in New Y ork. A man disguised as a girl obtained employment in the St. Louis telephone office and was only discovered when he proposed to one of the girls. First-class west bound ocean travel is at its loweet ebb at the present time. Four big liners have just arrived with their cabins practically empty. S ystem St. 1 etersburg, Feb. 25.— The skilful pctlormai.ee of the police in the round up of the great band of plotters has won praise throughout the city, bearing witness to the thoroughness of the methods evolved for fighting terrorists. The secret police are s e n d in g unlim ited sums in bringing the terrorists to justice and have drafted agents of in ternational experience who aie thor oughly familiar with the by-ways of Western anarchists and w ho w ill in troduce an ^improved technique here. The police depaitment has entered into relations with detective agenciee abroad, ami lias organised an extensive service in a ll thecenteis where Russian emigrants congregate, particularly in New York, Paris and Switzerland. and are making a special effort to penetrate within the innermost councils ef the Social IVmocratic and Social Revolu tionist organizations. Ia connection with the latest plot the men of the secret service were al*«>- lutely trusted by comrades of the revo lutionists, who attended the meetings held in Finland, where the final plan for the assassination of Grand Duke Nicholas Nicholiavitch and Judge Tube- glovitoff, minister of justice, was elab orated. Two hundred plain clothes meu wete called in by heads of the po lice department and given precise in structions as to what action should be taken and apparently they arrested without error the persons Involved. Thus far the police have failed to ex tract a confession from any of those ar rested as to their identity, but seveial undoubtedly are members cf aristocrat ic houses. It is certain that numbers o f the conspirators have managed to evade arrest, and a careful watch is be ing kept f -t these. BLACK H AN D BUSY. That there is less graft and business T h re a te n to B lo w U p G o vern m en t dishonesty in America tx la y than there P o w d e r S to re s . was in Washington’s time, is the opin New York, Feb. 26.— In a letter ion of Dr. R. H. McArthur, of New signed “ Black Hand’ ’ and addressed to York. Commander Braunstrueter, in charge American naval officers were ban of the United States naval magazine at Iona island, the threat has been made queted at Lim a, Peru. that the enormous stores of smokeless A Frenchman has invented a wireless powder on the island w ill be blown up electric power system. unless the married men discharged Mexico is devising ways for the re from employment on tne island Janu form of the public credit system. ary 1, 1908, be put back to work at The Hearst Independence league has once. There are 3,000,000 pounds of decided to nominate a national ticket. smokeless powder and other explosives stored in the nnmerons magazines. The sale of ex-M inistei Conger’ s Chi Secret service men are working to nese curio collection has realized $26,- discover the identity of the writer of £33. the letter. Printed by hand,'the letter Japan has asked for a larger appro was mailed at the Haverstraw postoffice priation for the Tokio exposition in two weeks ago. It was as follows: “ I f the married men that were dis 1912. charged from Iona island are not taken Russian authorities have captured back again at once all the magazines plotters against the life of Grand Duke on the island w ill be blown op. The Nicholas. writer does not fear death. Black H and.” Fire for a time eeriously threatened a On January 1 between 30 and 40 large part of the business district of men, who had been employed on the New Orleans. island, were discharged, owing to delay A mortgage for $225,000 has been in forwarding funds from Washington foreclosed on the Yerkes home and art to continue work. This delay was collection in New Y ork. looked upon at the time as temporary, A Columbia, Mo., man has just died and it was understood the men would who for the past 20 years has drunk at be taken back aa soon as the money ar least a quart of whisky a day. rived. Among the men discharged, most of The children of Eureka, Cal., have whom were laborers, were many Ita l petitioned the forest serv.ee for the cre ians. ation of a redwood national forest. Since the receipt of the letter every An attempt was made to burn the approach to the island has been guard Soales hotel, at Muskogee, Okla., where ed day and night by marines, it ie.said about 100 delegates to the Democratic and the civilian employes have been convention were quartered. kept under the strictest surveillance. Inna island is about seven miles south Railroad unions deny the necessity of West Point. for wage reductions. The Northern Pacific has reduced W ill B are R u e f’s S e c re ts . grain rates from Montana points to San Francisco, Feb. 25.— Every de Chicago. tail of the negotiations between the Senator Ankeny has given a banuet graft prosecution and Abe Ruef w ill be to a number of senators, at which he bared in the exhaustive affidavits to be filed iD Judge Lawlor’ scourt this morn boomed the Seattle fair. ing by District Attorney Langdon, As Early fruit and vegetables for ship sistant District Attorney Francis J ment to th6 North have been damaged Heney and W illiam J. Burns. Heney in Louisiana by a cold wave. and Burns spent yesterday in preparing The Illin ois Supreme court holds that their affidavits, and while they would a labor unionz’ s unfair list is in effect not discuss the contents of the docu ments, both said that the sworn state a boycott and can be enjoined. ments would include every important The Pullman car company has iesned detail of their relations with Ruef. orders to sell no liquors while the cars are passing through dry districts. R e p a ir a t P u g e t Sound. The cruisers West Virginia and Seattle, Feb. 25.— The Colorado and Maryland are to undergo extensive re the Pennsylvania, armored cruisers of pairs at the Mare Island navy yard. the first class, arrived at the navy yard Members of the marine hospital ser today for dry docking and repairs. The vice have condemned a large part of Colorado w ill be e juipped with a new San Francisco’ s packing house district. main battery of four eight inch breech Changes w ill be made at once. loading rifles. The two vessels w ill he Consolidation of the large coal min followed by eight other warships which ing interests of Illin ois and Indiana for w ill be repaired by A p ril 26. the purpose of regulating the output and upholding prices is under way. M ain W a te r P ipe B ursts. Paris, Feb. 25.— The main water Russia discourages talk of war with pipe of Paris, under Tuilleries street, Turkey. burst last evening and converted the The American fleet has arrived at street into a torrent. The water flooded Callao, Peru. cellars in various side streets, extin A number of Stanford students have guishing fires and stopping the dyna mos in at least one large hotel, putting been expellede for drinking. the building in darkness. Miss Dorothy Whitney, of New York, is to wed a Hungarian nobleman. Russia B acks D o w n .' General Nelson A. Miles w ill make his home in Washington, D. C., here after. Secretary of the Navy Metcalf w ill go to San Fanrcisco to welcome the fleet on its arrival there. Copenhagen, Feb. 25.— It is under stood in diplomatic circles that as a re sult of pressure from other powers Rus sia has abandoned her plan of fo rtify ing the Aland islands and that an en tente w ill aoon be arranged. BUILD TO INTERIOR Central Oregon Is Premised Rail Connections. FROM SUMPTER TO PRINEVILLE Line Up Hood R iver V aliev M ay Be E xten d ed S ou th east to C o n n act W ith O th e r L in as. F ulto n D enies E very A ccusation M a d s by H aney. Portland, Feb. 2 4 .—In a long state- merit given to the newspapers of Port land lor publication, Charlea W . Ful ton, senior Uulted Ntates senator from Oregon, answers In detail the charges made against him by Francia J. Heney, special prosecutor for the government in the land fraud canes, in a speech de livered in the Firat Congregational church In this city on the night of Jan uary 2H of the present yesr. At that time Mr. Heney made the direct charge that Senator Fulton's long part iciiiat inn in cnxiked political and business deals in Oregon, notably in timber laud frauds, had unfitted him to occupy the high office lie now holds ami announced a determination to oppose to the utmost the senator's candidacy' for re-election, Mr. Ileuey further charg ed that 8enator Fulton is the tool of the railroad interests at Washington and represents, not the people of his state, tint tiie law-defying coipoiatiuns In oongress. The specific charges made In the Heney speech are taken up one by one in Senator's Fulton’ s answering state ment and denied comprehensively and in detail as to every material fact. Senator Fulton does not mince matters in laying before the people of his state his defense. He strikes squarely from the shoulder and charges in the plainest terms that 1 i i accuser delilierately fal sified in his Congregational church speech, which Senator Fulton points out to have !>eon the climax of a cam paign of malicious persecution and v il li fication begun more than two years ago. Senator Fulton impugns the honesty of Mr. Heney’s rnoti.es. Revenge and partisan politics, he says, are the fatal* of the graft proesecutor’ s enmity to ward him, and Mr. Heney'a olmesaion by an irrspresailile ambition to stand in the lim elight is given aa an added incentive for what Senator Fulton calls the lawyer’ s utter disregard for the truth. Hood River, Or., Feb. 22.— I f pre liminary plans being promoted by wealthy capitalists of Salt la k e City, who own the Mount Hood Railway ex tending up Hood River valley and also the Sumpter Valley, runuing out of Baker City, materialize, Central Ore gon may have a railroad in the near fu ture that w ill open up Its many re sources. The project provides for an extension of the Mount Hood line through the mountains east of Mount Hood, and a party of surveyors is now in the field trying to locate a pass through the mountains. The work is in charge of Joseph A. West, chief en gineer of the Sumpter V a lley. F^arly last fall a large surveying p».rty headed by Mr. West was taken into the Central Oregon country from Heppuer Junction to determine the feasibility of building a railroad on that side of the mountains and bis report is said to have been favorable. The money pow er behind to proposed railroad is David F^ocles, the m illionaire sugar manufac turer and lumberman, of 8alt lake C ity. I f the project is completed the two roads w ill connect at some point in Crook county. By extension of the Sumpter V alley road south it would P R IE S T IS 8 L A I N . pass through Canyon City. Grant coun ty, and also Prineville. A narchist S h o o ts C a th o lic L o a d e r in An extension of the Mount Hood road D an ver C h u rc h , has already been commenced. A big Itenver, Col., FVb. 24.— Father Leo gang of men with a steam shovel was put to work at Dee, the present term Heinrichs was shot and killed when inus of the lice, and w ill build aa soon administering sacrament at tariy mass as it can be pushed through the six in 8t. KlizaU-th's Catholic church, miles of road toward Mount Hood that Eleventh and Curtis streets, thin city, Kneel has been surveyed and staked. This at 6 a. m. yesterday morning. w ill he done to accommodate the rapid ing ut the alter rail between two wo ly developing frnit land in the Mount men, (inaranaccio pressed the muzzle Hood settlement. It is admitted, how of a revolver against the body of the ever, by W . H. Eccles and Charles T. priest after receiving from him the con Karly, president rind manager of the secrated wafer and shot the man of God Mount Hood road, that it may form through the heart. The murderer was hurried to the city part of the connecting link nf the pro posed new line. Officers of both roads jail, and hb threats of summary justice recently went over the territory that were marie by many men In the crowd, would be tributary to the project and it which quickly gathered in front of the is learned that it is considered most chnrch, Chief of Police McHale De- favorably. In addition to reaching larey called the reserve force of patrol many acres of fertile farm lacds, m il men. “ I just went over there because I lions of feet of timber, for which there have a grudge against all priests in is now no outlet, it is said, could be there. They are all agamst the work utilized. ingman. 1 went to the communion rail because 1 could g«-t a better shot. 1 T U N N E L U N D E R R IV E R . did not give a damn whether tie was a German priest or any other kind of a M a n h a ttan Island N o w Jo in ed to Long prieet. They are all in the same class.” Island C ity. New York, Feb. 22.— The first of the great system of tunnels and subways by which the Pennsylvania railroad w ill be enabled to run a train from Phila delphia under the Hudson river across Manhattan island and under the Flast river to Long Island City was completed today. The two ends of one of the four tubes connecting Manhattan Island with Long Island city were brought to gether under the bed of the middle of East river off Thirty-fourth street b * fore noon today and steel rings cornp'H- ing the shell of the tube were for the first time bolted in one continuous string from shore to shore. This tube was begun in August, 1905, and is 4.- 000 feet in length. Two other tubes w ill be completed within a few days and the fourth w ill be finished within three months, according to an an nouncement made by the company. So accurate were the measurements of the engineers that the ends came to gether with a variation of only three- eighths of an inch. E x p act Evans to R e c o v e r. Washington, Feb. 22.— W hile not yet form ally advised by Adm iral Thomas that he has assumed command of the Atlantic fhet, the officials of the Navy department are expecting seme such announcement, on the basis of preceding reports on the condition of Admiral Evans. These reports are not regarded as indicating that the Admiral is suffering from any permanent inca pacity, but that he is sim ply again a victim of rheumatic gout, which Is di rectly the result of the injury he re ceived at Fort Fisher in the C ivil war K entucky S till D ead lo cked Frankfort, K y., Feb. 2 2 — The F* a 1 lot for United Htates senator in the joint session of the legislature today resulted a follows: Beckham, 67; Bradley, 65j Allen. 1; Blackburn, 1; Campbell, 4. Necessary to a choice, 65. IS LOSING C H A R G E S ARE S L A N D E R O U S . RETU RN JBY S U E Z . A tlan tic F leet M ay C o m p le te I t i T r ip A ro u n d the W o rld . Washington, Feb. 22.— Interesting and important news rela'ive to the fu ture movements of the American battle ship fleet was made public at the con clusion of tbe cabinet meeting yester day by Heeretaiy Metcalf, comprising an invitation from the Australian gov ernment to have the fleet, or at least some of the vessels, visit that country, and Secretary Root's reply. This reply is the first authentic information of the movements of the fleet after its journey to Han Fiancisco has been com pleted. After expressing the apprecia tion! of the nation, the secretary says: “ The eventual movements of onr fleet have not been determined. W h ile it is possible the vessels w ill return by way of Suez, I would be glad if some of them could he sent by the Australian route, but it would be piemature to promise this,” Rebate Prosecutions Raise Rates to the Orient. JAPAN CONTROLS ALL MANCHURIA P ro vo kes C hina by H e r A gg ression and Shuts O u t Rival Nations — P o w ers M ay P ro te s t. Washington, Feb. 20.— In'orm stlon from unofficial and individual sources evidencing the aggressiveness of Japan in Manchuria has been accumulating in the State department for some time. That this condition is irritating In In- crcaaing degree to China is also a mat ter of knowledge here. It is said with authority, however, that in no manner has the Chineae government biought the matter to the attention of the American government, and no report on the subject is looked for. A remarkable explanation of the at titude of our government In this im portant matter Is developed a the result of inquiry directed toward officials who cnanot be quoted, but are in positions to direct our policies. In effect, it is aa follows: “ It is frankly admitted that America is losing her commercial foothold in the Orient. This loan, however, is not charged to Japan. Rather it is assert ed to be tbe effect of the growing ten dency toward International government al regulation in the Unitsd States. As an illustrwtion of this, attention is call ed to these facts: “ Five years ago flour in hairuls was being shipped to the Orient from the Northwest, steel rails fretn Pittsburg, and cotton in bales from Texas. These shipments were made |x.asible because of an exceedingly low ocean freight rat« arrived at by a railroad combination. This rate lias been condem n»! by our courts a s a conspiracy against trade, and the development of this trade has been abandoned. The domeelio war, aa it is characterized, agsinst tbe Stand ard Oil company, which is credited with the largeet Oriental trade of any American enterprise, is declared to have been disastrously effective in the Orient, while the tobacco and cotton gixxla trade« are said to have t>een dealt heavy Injury through the operation o f the railroad legislation here. “ From this point It seem »! easy for government officials here convirsant with foreign matters, to view Ja|«ne*» commercial aggression in Manchuria with a greater degree of complaisance than would Ire the case in the face o f an urgent domestic demand for govern mental assistance. Japan, it ia assert ed. without great difficulty, justify everything she has done in Mnnchuria aa sanctioned try the ‘ open diror' policy initiated by the late Secretary Hay, and adhered Ur by the greater nations, inclnding Japan. W hile Japan may justify these thin ga through the “ open door' policy, it has been charged that thrre exists evidence of her use of many methods and prac tices which might not bear tire light of impartial investigation. lkgda« her claim Ut an equal footing with other nations in Manchuria, on the ‘ open diror’ basia, she has, it ia asserted, ob tained many valuable concessions through which her control of the rail road and telegraphic facilities is prac tically complete. Thiscontrol Is known to Ire need prim arily in the interest of Japanese tradesmen and Ur the detri ment of all foreign competitors. M ichig an T ra in s S no w bo u n d Detroit, Mich. Feb. 20.— At least lit passenger trains poked their pilots into imrorvious snow drifts throughout Michigan, and late this afternoon re ports from out in the state indicate that some of there trains are still snow bound. Traffic was completely aband oned in some instances The blizzard which awept down upon the lower por tion of Michigan from the Wezt yester day afternoon still prevails with great severity, and the snowfall ranges from T h r e a t to B low U p D o c k s . eight Inches In Detroit to 18 inches in W innipeg, Manitoba, F’eh, 24.— It the Houthwest section of the state. has just come to light that certain Ita l ians at Port Arthur and Fort W illiam B ra zil C ontinues R ebates. attempted last week to blow up the Washington, Feb. 20.— The president huge Canadian Northern railway coal of the republic of Brazil, to commemo docks recently erected at an enormous rate tfie visit of the Atlantic fleet to cost. Following the custom of the the city nf Rio Janeiro, has signed a “ Black Hand” and similar blackmail d.oree authorizing the continuation of ing societies, they first sent a letter to rebates on tariff charges cn articles o f the manager of the dock that they American merclandise during the fiscal won hi blow him and his Institution up year 1908. The rebates which are con unless he found them work, naively tinued apply to wheat, flour, condensed a<iding that an explosion would create milk, manufactures of robber, watches, plenty of work for the shovelers. writing ink, varnishes, typewriters, re S n o w s to rm C osts S 2 5 .0 0 0 . Chicago, Feb. 24.— The city has com pleted the ta«k of clearing the husinees section of the enow that fell in Ihe great storm of last week. Four thou sand men were kept busy for four days and -8,000 wagon loads of snow were removed. The expense to the city was abont $26,000. frigerators, pianos,scales and w indm ills. B lizza rd In A d iro n d ack^ , Plattsburg, N. Y ., Feb. 20.— A north west storm of such severity as to be nn- uusal, even in this blizzard-accustomed region, is raging in Northern New York tonight, and is rapidly adding to t h » snow that coven the whole Adirondack region. V