The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current, February 06, 1913, Page PAGE THREE, Image 9

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    PAGE T H R E E
Clarence Darrow the Man On the Flathead Reservation
a Foremoat Champion Facet Lot Angelas
Jury in Second Trial
A h hd aftermath of th« trial un<l
conviction of the McNamara brother*
ami the subsequent conviction of 3.1
alleged conspirator* rein«» th« second
trial of Glarmee M. Darrow for brlb-
a juror la th« McNamara nun,
Darrow waa acquitted on tb« former
rharg* shortly aft«r thu termination
o f that memorable trial, ami th« open-
Ing of th« second mark« another rhap-
ter in that dark alary.
Murh of Mr. Darrow’* life ha« lawn
»pent In th« inter«*! of the laboring
man. Time and again he him eume to
the defena« o f aoni« poor unfortonatfl
who mam without th« meane to d«f«nd
hiniaelf |iro|*-rlv HU eon nee t ion with
tb« d e fe a s e of Moyer, Haywood an,|
I’ettllame in tile t'oeur d ’ Alene rirun-
try in Idaho brought out «very re
aouree of tlia man and deinon«trnt<Ml
hi* tltnnaa aa a rriminal lawyer. It
waa aome tune before lie would eon-
aeut to take charge of th« McNamara
drfenae, but once in th« game he
fought «very Inch, and when he found
that acquittal waa iniimaailda aeeured
eoufmaiona from the |irioeipiila in
thia great erime. In the bitturnea« of
thia
trial,
charge*
and
counter-
• barge* were hurled at each other by
oppiMuug eotiuael, and among the*«
Dnrrow become Involved in the »1
legml bribing o f juror*. January 20th
the Aral verttre waa drawn nnd
pro«««» o f mnking up a jery begun.
It la a trying moment la the lift»
of Mr. Dnrrow. Guilty or not, ho
t-otoea to the liar of juatlee after a
lung ami aucemmful earner before that
aclf *ame tmr aod muat submit to the
gliu-lliug tactic,. of the prosecution a*
lie ha« often applied thuue anme tactic*
to th« defend not. Past th» prime of
lifn, with the liardeet o f life'a battlhs
fought aud with th« proapect ' of
piisting hia remaining yynrs in <|ui«t
retirement, ho ia called out to face
ebargea that, whether they are proven
or not, will leave a arar on lit» numo
forever. Per there win he »«th. who
will refit*« to believe him inuoeeut,
regardless of the out'-ome. The mean«
he ha* iieeumutated during tho year»
of foil will go, much of it, to clear bi*
name of the tarniah. und where »oemed
to be the hope of en*e for the butane«
ot hi* allotment o f yenr», there may
be want, loucliiie»» and toil. Without
eonaidering at all the question of hi*
guilt or innocence, the rireumataneo
call* for «yaipathy, for tin- arenaed
enn not e»ea|«' n certain amouut of
runtaminatioa.
f
Pasting o f tfie Indian in W estern Montana M a rk s
Epoch in Northwest History
Tho «tory o t S r laroad* o f wM
men* Into tb« Platin ad Imliaa r«w n
the moat iotereating, If one o f the
auddeat, chapter* in th« conquest o f
the Went. Mad lue-ou*« ¡I mark« th»
gradual crowding out o f a paaroabl»
trilw o f native Americana from tho
lióme* their father* have claimed fur
I'eneration*, and the ronieipient throat
ing Upon them o f a civili au t ion they
did net Invite yet welcomed.
I'or
year« the Piatitemi, or Meliah Indiana,
allured the Ritter Hoot volley with the
white men, even going ao far na to
protect them against tho nttaeka of
outaide tritma. It waa they who aent
four expedition* to Ht. Doni* to indure
tho mi anion il ri«* to ronie and tell them
o f tb« white man'a niedjrin« after I k
naco I,a Mou**e had rome at the head
of a band of Iroquois with th« my*
terioua faith. Three of íbea» expedí
tina» wer« never heard o f »gain
Brave and fearle** warrior», they vor
treated the whitea with more ronald-
«ration than the average tribe*.
J«*ko valley. Envoy« of the govern-
mrnit ram» with the document» for the
cbiaf’» « gnat ore, bet ' ‘harlot worn ob-
dttrat«. fTlai proteetlng arm bad oft» i
Iwen lot red to bee» the white» within
M* valley from -laager. The Bitter
Root valloy gad bee a the hum» o f his
ancestor* for age* and be woald nut
sign any papers renoanclng forever the
fight* o f M» tribe to tlMaa» I aod*. The
pemuon offered Mm and tb« freedom
of roaming at will wore scorned. But
A rice, war chief, elected by the full
vote of the [Miufd«, found the mercenary
motive In hi* heart and accepted the
terms thus offered him, supplanted
• harlot aa chief and moved with a
largo |»art o f the tribe into the J o e l»
valley. < ’harlot made a trip to Waal»-
ington and entered hia protest, be|
gtng for t V privilege o f staying ia
the land o f hi* father*. But bis r »
quest war unheeded. A few year* later
all trace o f the Indian’« possessions in
thle valley has disappeared.
Now the Jocko valley ia filling up
rapidly with white*. Now the Indian
I ayatem of canal* and lateral* directly
j from th« Jocko River.
Almost no
reservoirs are needed for thia division
and tb« work ha* ao far progreseed that
»ever a I tbouaand acre» are now under
the ditch. Water waa turned into the
canals and laterals ia 1010 and waa
diatributed to na many of the Indiana
ua deaired It. The result ia apparent
> from the luxuriant growth to be found
where water baa been applied. Several
thousand acre« in the Mission valley
| were also brought under the ditch dor
ing the «nine year. Binee 1010 addi-
tional acreage has been added each
year.
In the Mission valley 113,000 acres
will eventually be supplied with water,
which will be assembled from all the
»treama in the vicinity. A series of
reservoirs and a connecting feeder
-anal will store up the supply, which
(lumping plant will be developed at
Newell dam and will 1 m conveyed into
the several division* b y high power
line*. Fifteen thousand acre« will be
irrigated from the Little Bitter Root
* * *** — A choir« lo ner* tract of
apnle land In Hood Rlvsr Valley, tW
mflaa from etty.
elevation shout
J.*®* feet, almost level. Price, ft. _
Eaay terms to party who will tro-
pro»«». For further particulars, ad­
dress R B O.. Poet Office Boa 111.
Portland. Oregon.
DO
YOU
KNOW
THAT
$5 A Month
m
GROW YOU A FORTUNE
A SK US
CHAPIN-HERLOW MTG. ft TRUST CO.
In the lodfo P olity o f the Flathead Reservation
PO RTLAN D. OREGON
U SE
THIS
COUPON
Send me Free Booklet
Milwaukee Road Open
Into Moses Lake Country
"SECRET OF THE WEALTHY"
N a m e ___________
_____ ______
------------------------------------------
S ta tt _________________________
Branch Line Now Tapa District Which U Rapidly Coming to the
Front. Much Activity Manifested in 1 -anris, end Glowing
»a . A re R (eceivet*
1
Reports of Immense Fruit Crop*
R. II. William*, president of the Uhl-
rngo, Milwaukee A I’uget Hound Hall­
way, has juat received in hia Heattle
office several sample* of apples and
grn|H-a grown on a twenty acre orchard
in the new Moaea i A k * district east
o f Wenatchee. The owner secured 10,-
<> 0 il tioxe* o f apple* aloua from hi*
ranch during the *eu*on juat past.
The Milwaukee road ha* completed a
branch line into the Mosea Lake dis­
trict, which is now in o|»-r*tii»n into
the town of Neppel, and iwveral proj­
ect* are under way for the reclama­
tion of large area* of land. Recent de­
velopment* in this new fruit-growing
section have resulted In eousideAbla
activity on the part o f the railroad*,
who recognise the district aa a future
feeder of considerable importance. The
tlreat Northern Railway has surveyed
n cut-off from its main line which
pauses through the center of thia re-
glon.
Report* o f tho large crops raised by
those who have already settled in the
Moaea Luke country have aroused much
interest here, and n large number of
Seattle |>eople have become financially
interested in the district. One firm i*
juat now placing on the market four en­
tire section* o f these laud*, which are
irrigated hy means o f pumping plants.
The entire district i* underlaid with
sheet water, und in fact it waa the re­
cent discovery of thia water which
caused the great activity in the dis­
trict. Now settler* arc going in by the
It ia alleged that Owen Johnson, who
i* so fond of describing tho impish
tricks of his schoolmates at Lawrence-
ville nnd Yale, was not any too good
ii youngster himself.
Anyway, the other day the aluinni of
the Morse School, which Johnson once
attended, held a dinner, and Johnson
s|>okr. Said ho: “ 1 suppose that t
was the worst boy that ever went
through Morse.’ ’ He expected to hear
the customary “ Aw—I was twice as
bad,” from everyone. But to a man,
obi pupils and former masters, they
shouted: “ You w ere!” —Chicago Rec­
ord Herald.
hundred*. Regarding this new coun­
try und its pro*|<ect* Ira D. Kdward*
of Wenatchc* waa recently quoted aa
follows;
“ I have n«ver seen any on-hard in
the \V«-n»trb*o valley superior to the
on« I have just visited in the Moas*
Lake region. The orchard referred to
ia the Tichacek homestead. 1 simply
marvel at the magnificent fruit they
have grown there. The trees nr« now
six and seven vear* old nnd they aver-
ag« 12 to 1.1 boxes to the tree. Last
season there was harvested on this
place 16,000 boxes of fancy apple*,
which brought *1.41 per box net
through "the Wenatchee Fruit Growers'
Association.
The orchard produced
nlmut 6000 boxes o f Jonathans alone.
They ran fully 60 per cent extra fancy.
The alxe wa* better ^ a n four tier on
the average.
“ People in other district« have no
conception o f what thny are doing in
tho Monea Lake district. Canadians
from across the border seem to be ap­
preciating the district more than those
o f us who live nearer to it. Between
1.1 and 20 sections of ptoses Lake or­
chard land have been sold to Cana­
dian* in the last few months.
“ First thing we know we folks in
Wenatchee and other part* o f the
Northwest are going to wake up to the
fact that we must pay about twice as
much for acreage around Moses Lake
as it Is selling for today. There ia a
great ojiportunity in this country.”
Has Liitocoao B uttomholm
In T w o Heights:
DELMAR
REXTON
2X in .
2 in.
HIS is the new straight-front
shape. It does meet dose— be*
cause it has theLiNocoju) B utton ­
holes . T h e y are on ly in
T
Id
© C o lla r s ^ )
The country in which they grew up
is rich in the grandeur o f scenery, with
n wealth o f tradition and historical in­
cident. The valleys and hilla abound
iu retreats, each with it* own myth and
story. Wonderful waterfalls ami lakes
are to be found everywhere, adding
chsrm nnd mystery to the one-time
haunts o f prTmitive man. Now the In
dinns are passing and tho footprints of
his outward path are being obliterated
by the vineyard, the orchard and the
field o f grain. Thus the ambition of
the white man is gradually encroaching
upon the Indian lands, anil a peaceable
coercion is being used to induce him
to retreat farther back.
For years the Indian and the white
maiMived in peace together in the Bit­
President Taft ia n busy man these
ter Root valley Gradually It filled up
days, getting ready to turn over the with immigrants from the Knst, and
keya to the White House.
the Garfield treaty was drawn up to
induce the Indian to retire into the
Champiou McCarty will not fight
Jack Johnson unless the public de­
mands it. No danger. The publlr ia
too much Interested in keeping the ti­
tle In whit« hands.
is asked again to make way for the
white man in return for the bribe of a
small patch o f land that is already his
own. For though the Flathead Indian
is still a part of the Flathead reserva­
tion, he is not the Indian of old. The
younger generation eare little for the
encroachment* of civilization, but those
of the obi days who are still alive view
with regret the passing of the days of
their youth. As time goes on the young
men offer less resistance to the white
man's ways and even welcome his
teachings.
The Flathead irrigation project is
one of the many efforts o f Uncle Sam
to bring the rose out of the hungry
soil. It contemplates the irrigation of
1.12,000 acres in the Jocko, Mission, Lit­
tle Bitter Root and Camas valleys on
the west side of Flathead Lake. Of
this amount 16,000 acres o f the Jocko
valley will be watered by means of a
River and Sullivan Creek, and in the
sonthw-est part o f the reservation the
flow o f Camas and Cottonwood creeks
will supply 5000 acre*.
The soil of the Flathead reservation
is clay, forest loam and gravelly loam,
and responds quickly to the application
o f water. Thu rainfall in this district
is often ample for the production of
most forms of vegetation, and the de­
mands on canals and reservoirs will be
inconsiderable in those seasons. Where
irrigation has been applied, however,
the results have surpassed even the
hopes o f the most sanguine. The val­
leys have been coming to the front
steadily during the past few years in
the variety and quality of their agri
cultural products. Complete . and in­
tensive development is only awaiting
the completion o f the system o f canals
that will distribute water over the 152,-
000 acres.,
L IN O C O R D B U T T O N H O L E S
are so protected where the strain
comes that tkey\ don't tea r out.
Hence, ID E S IL V E R C O L L A R S
retain their style and fit to the end.*
T h e D E L M A R , because it’s baked
and so shaped in the baking by our
special V c r tifo n n P ro ce s s , has the
vertical effect so much desired. Has
ample scarf space.
*
GEO. P. IDE 4k CO,
Troy, N.Y.
LIN O C O R D
BUTTONHOLES
Shaw Explains W ater’s Value
■Mr. Henry Clay Frick has begun the Irrigation Expert Tells the
construction of a *3,000,000 residence
In singing the praises o f irrigation
in New York City. Mr. Frick could
doubtless live ns easily in a *200,000 one must not lose sight of the fact that
house and let the |>oor have the bene­ oftentimes the greatest returns from a
piece of irrigated land result from
fit of the bnlauee.
feeding the entire farm product and
taking it o ff in the form o f dairy
products and meat. This commands
particular attention at present in view
o f the high price o f beef and the ac­
knowledged scarcity of it in the en­
tire country. Western irrigation has
The fight between Hill and llarriman lines for possession of Eastern dcmons^jited its effectiveness and is
still in its infancy. It remains for
Oregon presented many interesting situations. Entering the coveted terri
tory by the Deschutes river canyon, the rival railraads pushed their lines of farmers and fruit growers to find how
construction down either aide of the river, one camp being ahead one day the best returns may he realised from
Professor Thomas
and the other 116- next. The above illustration shows the two crews running its application.
Shaw, a prominent railroad agricultur­
ist, emphasized the value of dairying
and stock raising on irrigated lands in
a recent address before the Oregon
Irrigation Congress. While his remarks
are applied to Oregon in particular,
they cover the subject in its applica­
tion to every irrigated district in the
West, for the general principle prevails
that where water is brought on to land
its best returns may lie realized from
an intensive application of the profit
arising therefrom.
Professor Shaw
says in part:
“ In no line o f production can irri­
gation render a better return than in
furnishing food that will be turned into
milk aud other dairy products, meat
nnd wool. For the growing of these
products the door o f development
stands open. In no line of agricultural
production is the chance to make good
money better or even as good.
In the Deschutes 'ffyver Canyon
“ The reasons for the stability of the
neck nnd neck, the llarriman line on the east side o f the river and the Ore livestock business in the future are
gon Trunk on the west. Many difficulties in construction were encountered many. The increase in the number of
and considerable litigation resulted because o f the narrowness of the can­ consumers for meat ami dairy products
yon at several points. The lines now extend several miles into the for- is proceeding at a much faster rate
than the animals which produce these
tile empire nnd construction is still being pushed.
product«. The same line o f reasoning
N e c k to N e ck fo r Possession
o f E astern O re g o n T e rrito ry
-
-
F o rtla n d B r a n d
45
W estern Agriculturists of Best Methods to Bring Results
may be applied to wool and poultry and
the products o f poultry. The statis­
tics published by the United States De­
partment of Agriculture make this
claim absolutely certain.
“ On the irrigated lands the oppor­
tunities for growing swine are superla­
tively good. This is more especially
true when the swine are grown in
connection with dairying. It follows
from the abundance of food that can
be grown which is exactly adapted to
the needs of the swine. No pasture
has ever been produced that will meet
their needs iu better form than alfalfa
or that will produce so much food per
acre, and where can alfalfa be grown
better than on the irrigated lands of
Oregon f It follows from the further
facts that the grain thnt produces the
pork o f the highest quality, such as
barley ami field |>eas, may lie grown in
the first form on these lands. The cli­
mate also favors sneh production. Its
equable ami mild character favors the
production of two litters per year from
the same dam should this be desired.
In sreas with cold winters it is scarce­
ly practicable to grow profitably two
litters in one season.
“ Pork thus grown should not cost
the producer more than three cents per
pound.
It cannot be grown more
cheaply >n the best sections o f the
corn belt, nor cHn the corn belt pro­
duce bacon of equal quality with Ore­
gon. The conditions for growing pork
of the highest quality on the irrigated
lands o f Oregon are at least as good
as they are in Denmark, and Oregon
has a great lead in the natural rich­
ness o f the soil snd in the equable char­
acter o f the climate. Why should not
Oregon soon become an exporter of
high cltisa bacon t
“ The irrigated and irrigable lands
ha^ve special adaptation for the produc­
tion at low cost of dairy products,
whether milk, butter, cheese or the by­
products of the dairy, as skim milk and
buttermilk.
“ Goqd water, so essential in dairy
husbandry, is abundant in all sections
where irrigation is practicable in Ore­
gon. This follows from the fact that
the water comes from living streams
that in nearly all instances are cradled
in the mountains. The relation be­
tween pure water, abundant in sup
ply, and high quality in the dairy
product is so close as to be inseparable.
‘ ‘ The Oregon dairyman has a great
advantage over dairymen, for instance,
who live in climates that are less
equable. He is not handicapped by
such heat in summer that comes to
the South nor hy the cold in the win
ter that comes to the North east of
the Rocky Mountains. To the Oregon
dairyman the equable climate brings
much advantage. It enables him to
prolong the grazing season and it calls
for less expensive shelter. Some per
sons cherish the view that the man liv­
ing on irrigated lands, whose holding
ia usually limited, has not room on
which to graze his cattle, but they fail
to consider thnt the production of irri­
gated lands in pasture is quite as large,
relatively, aa the production o f the
same in hay.
“ With the price for dairy products
as they are and as has been shown, it
is not probable that they will be loss
in the near future. The dairyman on
irrigated land should reap a very
profitable return. With such possibili­
ties within reach of the Oregon dairy­
man it will be greatly to the discredit
of Oregon farmers if the state con­
tinues for any considerable period to
be a purchaser of dairy product».”
,
FO U RT H STREET
P o rtla n d , O re.
Alw ays the
Best
Optimo
Cigars
Now better than ever
-X
RATS in the Cellar
MICE in the Pantry
ROACHES in the Kitchen
Nothing is more disagreeable than a
home infested with vermin. Deetroy
them with Stearns’ Electric Rat and
Roach Paste, the standard extermi­
nator for more than thirty years.
It kills o ff rats, miee or cockroach««
in a single night. Doee not blow away
lik* powders; ready for nae; nothing
to mix.
This exterminator ia sold
under an absolute guarantee o f money
back i f it fail*.
Sold by druggists and general storsa
everywhere or sent by Express Prepaid
on receipt o f price. Be sure to get the
:enuine; 15c and St. 00. Stearns B!ee­
rie Paste Co.. Chicago, I1L
f