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About The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1908)
V P R tM lfc H R E S IG N S . THE STAYTON MAIL e. D. AirXANOfR. PublUlwr M any C h an g as in B ritis h C a b in s ! to F o llo w as R esult. WEST MUST UNITE London, A pril 7.— Great Britain ia in a peculiar position, being without either premier or miniatty. The long | expected resignation of Sir Henry 1 Campbell-Bannerman, the prime min- lis te i, was officially announced Saior- I day night. According to the conit cir cular, he resigned on the urgent recom mendation of his medical advisers, and, aa the constitution provides no auto matic successor, it renting with the kii g A R esum e o f th a Less Im p o rta n t but . to choose a new head of the govern ment, and in accordance with the cus N o t Less In te re s tin g Events tom and precedent, the whole cabinet o f th e Past W e e k . lea'gns with the premier, no ziep to appoint a ministry can be takeu until Heri>ert H. Asquith, chancellor of the The torpedo flotilla has reached Mag exchequer, who has been summoned io dalena bay (or practice. Biarntx for the purpose, ha» seen the K ng Edward is severely criticiaed by king. his people (or leaving his post at a The positron of the country is quite unprecedented, there being no previous crisis. Naval experts eav many new recotds example of a change occurring in the were made by the battleships fleet at premiership while the rovereign wa- abroad. On this account the course of Magdalena bay. procedure to oe followed is in some Howard Gould is suing his wife (or a doubt. divorce. Drinking is her worat offense, Sir H enry’s condition remains un according to his story. changed, aocording to the physicians’ The king, (in telegraphing O liver C. Dallas, under arrest at H el bulletin. his acceptance of the prem ier’ s resigna ena. has admitted making many false tion, conveyed an expression of his re reports on mineral surveys. gret and esteem, with best wishes for Harriman denies that he has main Sir H enry’s recovery. tained a monopoly of the tiansportation business in Oregon and California. S T A Y T O N .................. OREG O N NEWS OF TOE WEEK In a Condensed Form (or Our Busy Readers. P O L IC Y IS C H A N G E D . t The Canadian Pacific railway has de cided to build a second line through Jap an M u ch Influenced by C o m in g o f the Rocky mountains to the Pacific A m e ric an F le e t. coast. Tokio, A p ril 7.— A few days ago The Italian car in the New Y oik to Count Okama received a deputation Paris automobile race has arrived at Bin Francisco and w ill take a steamer from the Japanese residents of Sacra mento, Cal., and from the Japanese lor Alaska. newspaper men of Sen Francisco, who Representative Hobson, of Alabama, wished to solicit his views on the em i says the navy needs more ships. That g ra tio n problem. The count is report- Japan could easily whip the United 'ed by the vernacular papers to have State« at present. said that it was very difficult to And out wherein lay the object of the dis On her return from San Diego to American battleship Magdalena the Connecticut exceeded patch of the squadron to the Pacific at this time. A her trial speed, and that after the long good deal has been made of the move trip from Hampton Roads. ment by the European press and it was A bitter prohibition campaign in I l l i looked upon there as an occurrence of nois is near an end. unusual significance. - Japan, however, Philippine Democrats have indorsed had received the assurance of the United States government (hat it was Bryan for president. not intended as a menace to Japan, Japan is to abolish the stigma of caste but was merely undertaken for the pur on the lower classes. pose of training officers and m#n. Nevertheless, kri^gtever the real ob Great Britain is alarmed at the ject cf the movement might be, it wa* growth of Socialism. indisputable that Japan’s emigration The chief of the Crow Indians defends policy bad been considerably affeited Indian Agent Reynolds. thereby and it was not easy to sever en Russia is inclined to the demands on tirely the dispatch of the fleet from the the control of Manchuria. policy Japan bad lately pursued toward Delaware Republicans w ill send on- the United States in this connection. instructed delegates to the convention. An entire trainload of oranges has just been sent from California to Iowa. Japan is making extroaordinary war preparations to continue the expansion policy. The old Fifth avenue hotel in New Y ork has closed aDd politicians are homeless. The German diet has forbidden the use of any language at public meetings but German. Harriman officials announce that ex tensive improvements to San Pedro har bor w ill be made by the Southern Pa cific. It is announced that'the coal mine at Hanna, W yo., in which a score of min ers were killed, w ill probably never be reopened. A general etnke in Rome has follow ed a labor riot. Ruef s last objection’ to been overruled. a trial has The Brazilian Cruiser Bergamin Con stant is to visit Honolulu. Andrew Carnegie has given $5,000,- 000 more to pension university profess ors. Hard times have forced Helen Gould to retrench her charities. Two indus trial schools in which she is interested are to close. Retired clearing house certificates of Chicago to the amount of $14,000,000 have been sold to a cardboard factory and reduced to pulp. Charles Fisher, aged 17, dropped, dead in the streets of Bedford, Ind. He was addicted to the cigarette habit and had one in his mouth when death camo. The proposition to build a new sub way in New York from the Battery to the Bronx, under Broadway and Lex ington avenue, to cost $60,000,000 has been approved. For the third time in six weeks the Ohio river at Cincinnati is above flood stage. A Chicago jury has decided that $60 hats are excluded from the “ necessary household expenses” for whioh a hus band is liable when incurred by his w ife without his approval. FLEET ASSURES PEACE. Evans Says V oyag e to Pacific W as W e ll T im e d . San Francisco, A p ril 7.— Ldmiral Roblev D. Evans, in an interview printed in the Chronicle today, said: “ The greater interest of the United States today is in the Pacific. The coming of the fleet to this coast has not only demonstrated to the world that we have 16 battleships which can be brought together for a long cruise at a moment’s notice, but it has called the attention of the people of our own country to the fact that we have a Pa cific coast as well as an Atlantic coast, and that it w ill be defended just as much as every inch of land around New York, and that our interests in the Pa cific today are greater than in the A t lantic. “ This is the short road to the coun tries of the Far East, where the greatest commercial development is to lie. W ith development w ill come war, but it w ill be a commercial war, fought with brains aDd dollars and not with 10-inch guns. It w ill be generated by such men as Harriman, and the part of the navy is only to be always ready. W e do not plan nor fight commercial battles. “ The coming of the fleet was most opportunely timed by the president, and its arrival in the Pacific has result ed in the present assurance of peace. Not that I ever believed that there was any actual danger of war. The people of both countries realized too well what a dreadful calamity such a war would have been.” C o lle c t M o re y by A utos. San Francisco, A p ril 7.— W ith a “ flying squadron” of ten big automo biles pressed into service for the occa sion and a corps of volunteer col Hectors, extraordinary efforts w ill ire made by the fleet committee to bring the total of the fleet fund to $70,000, and to cease work in that connection by Wednesday. Before the collectors wind up their efforts Tuesday night they w ill visit 2,300 saloons and 600 restaurants w ith in the boundary of the city and expect the to secure pledges of between $15,- 000 and $20,000. T ra n s p o rt S h e rm a n Salle. Ban Francisco, A p ril 7.— The trans Indiana Republicans are booeting for port Sherman w ill sail at noon tomor Fairbanks. row for Manila with a large number Germany la preparing to float a loan of first class passengers beside« 100 o f $162,500,000. enlisted men of the Twenty-fifth coast Diamond workers of Germany are on artillery, and 130 recruits for the troop« in the Philippines. •trik e for higher wagee. Important legislation Pending at National Capital. TEAM WORK WOULD CARRY DAY D ry F . t m H o m estead B ill, in W h ich W e il i t G reatly in te re s te d , A m ong M e a su res. Washington, April 4.— There are aev- eial imp >rtant b He (tending befoie senate and hours, or in their comm it tees, of gieat iuterest to the West, any one of which can probably tie pasted if Western renatois and iongrensnien w ill get together and make a united effort. Mo-t coin-picuous among thorn at the p e-ent tim e is the 320-acre d iy farm lioiueat.ad bill, a measure that means a gieat deal to the states west of the Mi-souri river, in many of which set tlement is practically checked tiecause the last lands have passed to private ownership, and what remains cannot be sncces-ifully entered under the exist ing homestead law. Another most meritorious mea»ure hanging in the ba'ance is tiie Borah bill, providing funds for building schools, installing sewer and water aye terns and making other municipal im provements in towns established on government irrigation projects. This bill projos*■ to donate to snch towns all moneys derived from the sale of town Iota, a fund which, in most in stances, w II be amp v for the purpose. E< pe ie-e ' ha» eh« wo tlist towns cn gover mei t projects have been slower of deve lopineiit than tow ns on Carey act p ojecia The latter have grown rapid ly. Large school» have been erected ; adequate water and sewer sjsterna have been in.tailed, .tree)» have been im proved. etc., whereas in towns on gov ernment p rojict» the citizens have been obliged to go down into their own pock ets to provide and mviutain schools and property boh e '» 1 ave been compelled to bear the entire expense of all civic improvemer te. The national drainage bill, which contemp'ate» the reclamation of swamp and overflow 'd lauds in all parts of the United States, .lands little chance of pas*ing this see-ion. Though it is a measure of great merit, there doea not seem to be that interest that is essen tial to for.e through a bill of suili mag nitude and importance. It is difficult to explain this lack of interest, too, for there ie siaicely a state that has not some lands that would be benefited by a national drainage law. There is one bill that congress w ill certainly not pass this session, yet one that should have been enacted long ago — a b jll repealirg the timber and «tone act and submstituting some more prac ticable statute providing for the dispos al of governin' nt timber. It haa been amply demonstrated that, the timbei and stone act is vicious and unjust. H O P E L E S S S P L IT . In ta rs ia ta C o m m issio n C a n n o t A gros on S p o san o H ate C a s a . W a.hlngton, A pril 6.— After havii g the Spokane rate oa»e under considera tion for more than one year, the Inttr- state Commerce coimnl.sion la appar ently hopelessly divided legarding the dtoiidon which should l>e rendered. The cane Is the most important it|>on the dockets of the commission, and up on It hinge» the entire rateJabiio of the United States. If the ccmmisalon(shoiild decide with the shippers of Spokane, the theory up on whioli the railroad* have made rates from the earliest days w ill be u |* m t and pa-t decisions on the abort and long haul clause of the commerce act w ill be more or lee* nullified. Chi the other hand, if the commission refuses tc dis turb the pieeent adjustment, a long step toward establishing the justice of the ratemaking methods of the railroads w ill have been taken. Recognizing the import of the case, the comm Isa Ion went Into a uioat careful and elalioiate inves tigation and hearing of all the facts and listened to argument» from a large iiiimbei of the business, railroad and com iueuial lawyers in the W est. Since the arguments weie heard the commission has hail numerous confer ences regard ng a devision, and it de velops that there are at least three d if ferent views which thus far have proved irreconcilable. The coinmisaion lias struggled in vain to get a major ty re port and app a ren tly is in a deadlock. The cam* Is one which had been both ering the railu s'ls in the Northwest lor years prior to the commission’ s being given greater powers. Owing to water competition, a.cording to the railroads, the rates to Spokane from live Eastern seaboard are the rates to the Pacific coast, plus the local rates from the Pa cific coast back to Spokane. The latter c r y insists that this is unfair. P O P U L I8 T 8 N A M E T IC K E T . W atson and W illiam s T h e ir C h o ic e fo r N atio n al O ffic e rs . St. Louis, A p ril 4.— For president of the United States, Thomas E. Watson, of Georgia. For vice president, Samuel W . W il liams, of Indiana. This ticket was nominated yesterday by the Peoples’ party convention after two stormy sessions, throughout which the Nebraska and Minnesota delega tions, working in the interests of W . J. Bryan, strove desperately to bring about an adjournment til) after nominations had been m ale by the Democratic and Republican parties. Hopelessly out numbered, and without any chance whatever of gaining their object, the Nebraska men fonght desperately to the last, and, when Jay A . Forrest, of A l bany, N. Y ., mounted the platform to place M r. Watson in nomination, they withdrew from the convention, attend ed by the Minnesota delegation. S m e lte r T ru s t Pays Big F e e . Helena, Mont., A p ril 4.— A fter a year’s contest, the American Smelting A Refining company today admitted its defeat by sending to Secretary of Stale A . N. Yoder a check for $3,685, as a fee for the filing of a certificate showing an increase of capital stock from $66,000,- 000 to $100,000,000. The corporation contended that the paymer^ of this fee in New Jersey made its payment un necessary in Montana, but Attorney General Albert J. Malen ruled other wise. The fee is the largest in the his tory of the department. Will Fight Tw o-cent Law. Chicago, A p ril 4.— A combined at tack on the 2-cent passenger rats is promised by the railroads that operate in Illin o l«, Minnesota and Missouri. It is probable that the suits w ill be filed next week. The call for a confer ence to meet, at which officials c f the Illin oie roads w ill be present, was Is- sned today, and plans for the fight w ill then then be laid. ROADS ARE BLOCKED Blizzard and Snow Ties Up Mid dle West Traille. TEMPERATURE GETS NEAR ZERO F ro m M a n ito b a T h ro u g h M in n eso ta and W est to M o n ta n a , G ale C a r- rise C lo u d s o f K n o w , \ St. Paul, A pril 2.— A terifle gale ie blowing here today and Is bearing a cold wave down from the Northwest, aocording to tire United States weather bureau. The oold wave w ill cause a drop in tempertaure to about lOfdegrees above zero. Very low temperature prevailed to day at most place« in Manilolm and territories. It was two degrees below zero at Medicine fla t today and four below at Prince AH art. A dispatch from (lrand Forks, N. D., says: “ A heavy snowstorm, accompanied hy wind, caused delay to trains in North Dakota today. The east bound Oriental lim ited of the Great Northern arrived four hours late and reported that the storm raged all the way from Great Falls, Mont. A ll trains from the East were from half an hour to two hours late this morning. The snow ia drifting and It is befleved traffic w ill be tied up west of Grand Forks. A bout a foot of snow haa fallen here in the last 24 hours. It is report ed that the Hoo line from Ardock weal to Keutnare 16 badly tied u p ." In th e G rip o f a B liz z a rd . Crookston, Minn., A pril 24.— The entire Bed river valley haa been since D epo sits o f E n o rm o u s V alue D isco v last night in the grip of the worst b liz ered In U ta h . zard of ttie winter. Washington, A pril 6.— T itle to lands in the state of Utah containing salt de P O R T L A N D S R O S E C A R N .V A L posits of an extent and purity hitherto not only unknown, hut undreamed of, G re a t P re p a ra tio n s Being M a d e fo r is involved in a sensational contest now F lo ra l E vent. lieing fought out in this city. About 38,000 acres of lands lying along the Portland, Or., A pril 2.— This week western border of Utah have been dis the management of tire Portland Hoae covered to be overtopped with salt, and festival, which w ill give a $50,000 cele an attempt Is being made to acquire bration during the fir»t six days of them by the filing of placer mining June, inaugurated a campaign of pub claims on the part of individual«. The licity throughout all sections of the vaule of the lands was today estimated country. The cim paign consists of the by one of the claimant» at $00,000,000. sending out hy mail of 260,000 lieauti- Deposited by nature on the lands fully colored and artistic advertising over which the contest is being made is “ inserts," in which plan all the whole a lied of pure salt, which in some places sale and retail houses, hotels, restaur lies to a depth of six feet. This salt is ants, publio schools, drug stores, etc., of so fine a quality that it has been have lieen enlisted. Great demand found unnecessary to refine it. I t can has been made for these attractive in lie marketed direct from the deposit and serts already and they w ill be sent out tests have shown It to he 98 per cent regularly unti I the festival opens June 1. pure. Elaborate preparations liave One of the fine feature« of the hig been made for the control of the land jubilee w ill lie the grand water carnival by individuals, who have thus far kept to be held one evening during the week. the discovery of the deposit out of the Every individual, firm or corporation newspapers. that owns a pleasure or business craft For two or three months they were that plies in the waters of the North successful, but dow the state of Utah west has been invited to enter some has awakened to the vast poesibllities craft in the magnificent decorative and of tide salt deposit and the aid of the illuminated aquatic pageant. senate of the United States and the Capt. J. C. Hpeier, harbor master o f president has been invoked in an effort this port, chairman of the water carni to retain the product, which the com val committee, lias been in communica monwealth claims under a section of tion with many associations along the the enabling act making it a slate. streams and rivers of this section that are interested in water aporte and most of them have assured him that they S O O N D E C ID E L U M B E R R A T E S w ill i>e glad to iwrticlpate In tnat event. Quite a number of towns and cltiee T hen C o m m issio n W ill A ct on O p e n of Oregon, outside of Portland, have ing P o rtla n d G atew ay. come to the front to help make the fes Some have ap Washington, A pril 6.— The Portland tival a huge success. gateway cane, which was argued la»t propriated as high as $600 and $600 to fall and which involves the shipment defray the expense of building a fine of lumber eastward from Puget sound decorated and illuminated float for the via Portland, w ill not be decided until splendid night parade “ The Spirit of the Interstate Commerce commission the Golden W est.” ' W ork on these floats is already under has rendered an opinion on the lumber rate cas«s which were recently argued way and new committees are being here. The commission w ill this week heard from every few days. The tim e hold Its first conference on the lumlier is short, so the management urges those rate case arid its decision in that case towns that dealre to take [»art in the may not be forthcoming for many demonstration to communicate with weeks, though there Is a disposition to the festival management at once. Commercial bodies from all parts of settle this question with an much ex pedition aa po«aible, as it involves the California w ill come here for two or lumber industry of the entire North three days of the festival. A spécial business m en’s excursion under the west. auspices of the California state hoard of trade, which w ill embrace organiza In creases F ire H a z a rd . Kan Francisco, A pril 6.— The present tions from all the leading cities of that unsatisfactory condition of Han Fran commonwealth, lias already been ar ranged for. cisco’s water supply, especially from the point of view of protection against fire Hazard, was forcibly outlined in a A ll A nxious to See F le e t. communication sent to the board of Melbourne, A pril 2 — Alfred Deakin, supervisors today by the board of fire prime minister of Australia, has re underwriters of the Pacific. The report ceived a cable message announcing that seta forth that the water system of the the American hattleahlp fleet, which city is a gravity system, with "p res w ill be divided into two aqundrona of sures not standard,” and says that the eight warships each, w ill arrive here distributing reservoirs and tanks within September 1. The fleet w ill arrive at the city “ do not contain five days’ sup Sydney September 13. The armored p ly .” cruiaera, however, w ill not visit Ana- tralian waters. Mr. Deakin lias cabled P olice A ssist B u rg la r. Washington that It is the desire o f Philadelphia, A pril 6.— An amazing other Australian states that the fleet story of alleged dishonesty in the police ahonld visit Hobart, Perth, Adelaida department of this city was told today and Brisbane. by Harry Rothsnberger, aged 19 years, who was arrested charged with larceny. B u ffalo B ill B re a k s D o w n . The youth mad a a confession, in which Chloago, A p ril 2.— Colonel W illia m he says he was aided and abetted in a F. Cody ( Buffalo B ill) Is seriously ill number of burglarise in the wholesale here at the Stratford hoetl, suffering district of the city by four policemen. from a general nervous breakdown. F IG H T F O R S A L T B E D S . \ * *