TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN MONDAY, MAT 21, 1906. PHASES OF INDUSTRIAL GROWTH IN THE STATE OF OREGON 12 PRUNE CROP IS A Adds More Than $1,500,000 to Wealth of Oregon Each Year. GOOD YIELD THIS SEASON Jerome Laselle Discusses Prune In dustry and Prophesies That It Will Soon Become Exten sive In Eastern Oregon. ALBANY, Or May 20. (Special.) Ore Eon last year produced approximately 300 carloads of prunes, aggregating 00 tons or 12,000,000 pounds,, and brought Into the tate $540,000. This waft an off year, when there was but one-fourth of the usual crop. 'Under the conditions about us this year," said Jerome Laselle, of Laselle Pros. Packing Company, "we expect a lit tle more thaa halt a crop. Taking into consideration new acreage of bearing orchards, there will in all probability be 1000 carloada of prunes raised in Oregon this year.' Prunes are looking good, and have been thinned sufficiently to become of good size." One thousand carloads of prunes, each "car running about 40,000 pounds, will make .the output for the state 40.000,000 'pounds, and will, if sold at an average of 4 cents a pound, bring Into the state Jl.600.ono. . This places what has often been considered an Industry of small lm- 'portance in the Btate, In the position of a recognized factor In the commercial Jife of Oregon. The addition of this vast amount of money to the income of the agricultural laboring classes is no email item, and the prune business, like the hop industry, makes necessary the em ployment of a great number of men. How Crop Was Saved. Last year when the yield of fruit throughout the valley was very small. Laselle Bros, saved the prune crop of Linn County. With less than one-fourth of a crop on their orchards, many owners thought it would not pay them to start up their dryers, and were about to aban don their crops, when the Laselles stepped in and rented and operated the dryers of the county. All the prune crops were bought green, and many prunes were shipped in green and prepared for the market In the Linn County evapora. tors. These men have been In the prune business in the valley and Eastern Ore gon for many years. Beginning as orch ardlsts, they maintained faith In the fu ture of the prune business In Oregon, and hranrhed out until they are, perhaps, the largest buyers of prunes in the state, and they deal exclusively in this fruit. Be cause of their long experience in the busi ness and the interests they have estab lished in Eastern Oregon, Washington and the Willamette Valley, these men are familiar with the conditions existing In every portion of the state. From Mr. Laselle comes the statement that all over the state prospects are good for an excellent crop of prunes "Of course It will not be a full crop, but It Is better as it is," said he. "The prunes, when the trees are not full, attain a much larger size, and bring a higher price. Last year the small crop made prunes grow unusually large, and their size increased their value. Oregon Prunes for Europe. ".We ship most of our prunes to the Eastern States, where they consume great quantities of the dried fruit. But much of the crop that goes from Oregon is. shipped direct, to Europe. Last year we shipped considerable of the fruit that we handled to England. Oregon prunes are certainly appreciated as among the best." laaelle Bros, have dryers located in several parts of Oregon, and In Clarke County, Washington. While Mr. Laselle states that the Vlllamette Valley is at present the greatest prune-producing sec tion of Oregon, he says the Eastern Ore gon country Is adapted to prune raising, the fruit being firm and sound, and that people there are planting more prunes every year. He expects that the prune crop will eventually assume an import sn' In Eastern Oregon even greater than It holds in the valley. In the Willamette Valley, Marlon County holds first place as a producer of prunes, and Linn Coun ty ranks second. The dryer and packing house in Albany have made this, cfty one of the prune cen ters of the state.. The country" around Al bany Is dotted with prune orchards that have not brought a full crop for some years, and left the orrhardlsts not quite its hopeful and confident of the business as could he desired. This year there seems every Indication that the prune men are coming in for their delayed re ward, and will reap a bountiful harvest. IXQIAXS WILL BUILD CANAL Will' Be Employed by the Govern- ntent on Klamath Project. KLAMATH FALLS, Or., May 50. (Spe cial ) Klamath Indians will be employed In the building of laterals for the first unit of the United States Reclamation Service main canal of the Klamath project. The details have been worked out and the In dian Bureau and Interior Department of ficials have approved their employment. It Is expected that not less than 100 of the natives of this region will be at work within the next month or six weeks, un der direction of the engineers, who have recently been acquiring the equipment for n complete construction camp. Captain O. C Applegate. for many years in the Indian Service and in charge of the Klam ath agency, will have the -work of em ploying the bronze-hucd workmen. Su pervising Engineer Llppincott, of the Reclamation Service, in charge of all Cal ifornia projects and the one at Klamath Kails and also that at Yuma, is now here on official business and In connection with the plans for establishing the construction camp of the project that will be under direct 'eontrol'of the engineers. The Klamath Indians are said to be ex ceptionally industrious, excellent In the care and use of horses and in every way qualified to give good results In their la bor of building the works that will make their former domain among the most pro ductive agriculturally and horticulturally f any portion of the Coast region. . FOKCE OP 300 - MEN AT WORK Contractors Expect to Complete Pro ject In Advance of Time Set, KLAMATH FALLS. Or.. May 20. (Spe cial.) Mason, Davis Co.. the Portland contractors constructing the first unit of the main canal of the Klamath project of the Government, are now rapidly Increas NOW FACTOR ing the number of men and teams em ployed and have Installed plants of ma chinery for hastening and economizing In some of the heavier work of digging the big canal. Forty-two additional teams were brought into the basin this week by the contractors, together with nearly 100 additional laborers, and the force which, up to this time, has been rather small in number, will be maintained at probably not less than about 800 men at any time, and very largely Increased during the heaviest construction period. The work at the lower end of the unit is being pushed to completion, and the tunnel through the hills Just below the intake is being driven with all possible speed. The central por tion of the main canal cannot be built until September, after the last irrigation of lands under the Ankeny canal, which will be replaced by the big canal of the Government. Work in connection -with the project Is progressing satisfactorily to the contrac tors and it is their expectation to com plete the big undertaking far in advance of the stipulated period of construction fixed by the contract. . PLAX IMMENSE LOGG1XG CAMP Will Clear Tract or 10,000,000 Feet of Timber. . MONTESANO. Wash., May SO. (Spe cial.) Another big logging camp will be established in this immediate locality within the coming week, to cut out a tract containing 19,000,000 feet of the finest tim ber in this section. The camp will be lo cated a few miles east of Montesano. on the Satsop River, and a railroad will be built from the edge of the tract to run the logs down to the Northern Pacific road for delivery to the mills on Gray's Harbor. Sol Foss. one of the most experienced logging men in this timber country, who was manager of the Lamb Timber 'com pany, of this city, for several years, and later superintendent for the Diamond Match Company at their camps down near Chlco, in ' California, will have the supervision of this big industry. POSTAL BUSINESS GROWS KLAMATH FALLS WILL HAVE SEW OFFICE. Foundation of New Building Is Un der Way Distributing Center for Klamath Region. KLAMATH FALLS, Or.. May 2a (Spe cial.) Klamath Falls will have a new Postoffioe building after September 1 that will be a credit to the town and in keep ing with the splendid character of public Improvements that mark the progress of the future distributing center of Southern Oregon. Hiram F. Murdoch,- Postmaster, began negotiations with the Postofflce De partment last August for the provision of larger quarters to meet the requirements of a community assured- of a very rapid Increase in population. Two propositions were submitted, one for the rental of en larged space at the present location, and the other for the erection of a new build ing. The second mentioned tender was acepted by the officials of the department. Work was started this week on the new building, which will be located on the south side of Main street,' between Sec ond and Third streets; size. 26x40 feet, and the lease to the Government is for five years; the rental will be $400 per year, including light, heat, water, full equip ment of furniture, fixtures and boxes of the most approved pattern. Equipment of the building will be under the super vision of H. B. Hall, assistant superin tendent for the department at Los An geles. For the immediate relief of the press ing need of enlarged facilities. 100 double dial, keyless lock boxes will be installed at the present office by enlarging the space occupied by the office, provision for which was made In a recent authoriza tion of the department, and the necessary additional fixtures will Sorm part of the equipment of .the new office. Ask Removal of Postmaster. Attention has been recently directed to the Postofflce situation at Klamath Falls through the action of the Chamber of Commerce of this place, requesting the removal of the Postmaster and demand ing better postal facilities. It seems from developments that the effort for improv ing conditions has been under way for many months, and that the resolutions adopted came at a time Just preceding public announcement of the plans already aproved at Washington. The important point to the people of Klamath Falls and vicinity is that the town is to have a new Postofflce building and modern equipment at a date not later than September 1. Hiram F. Murdoch, Postmaster, has served In that office for a little more than four years prior to July, 1903. as a third class Postmaster, and since that date, un der the new classification, as the head of a second-class office. The salary of the office is $1600 per annum, with a total al . lowance of $420 per annum for clerk hire, based solely upon the separating service necessary for the office. Everybody Waits in Winter. Because of the belated arrival of mails from the railroad connection at Pokeg ama, the mall service was very Irregular during the Winter and early Spring months, but, with the adoption of the steamer service between Keno and Klam ath Falls, a great improvement has been made, the mall frequently arriving earlier In the afternoon than the specified hour in the contract. During the period of bad roads. It was sometimes the small hours of the morning before the mail due not later than S P. M. reached- the office. There Is a very heavy mail to handle at Klamath Falls, the average being about 20 pouches, exclusive of that for Lake view. Merrill and Fort Klamath, but in cluding that for Bonanza, Dairy, Red field, Lorella. Bly and Odessa, and a large part of Take County, in this state, and Modoc County. California. This greatly increases the work of the office, as the mails for the railroad and outgoing stage lines to Inland points must, all be ready at an early morning hour. The foundation for the new building is being laid, and the contractor is mak ing preparations to complete the building as rapidly as possible. - COXDOX GETS WATER SVPPLY Purchases Spring and Will Bond City for $17,000. . CONDON. Or., May 80 (Special.') Con don Is building an addition to its present water works. The Darling ranch, with a big spring, has been acquired by the city In order to secure the excellent water supply. The city paid $5000 for the ranch, and work will be started at once. This will give Condon an abundance of pure water. The ranch is located 4H miles northwest of town, and Iron pipe will be used in bringing the water to this place. Arrangements are. all complete for putting in the engine and pump. An election will be held Thursday for the purpose of bonding the city for $17.01)0. the amount needed for the new Improve ments. The public is in favor of the Im provement, and before next Fall Condon will have solved the water problem. For twenty-five cents, you can get Car ter's Little Liver Pills the best liver reg ulator in the world. Don't forget this. Gee pill a dose. WEALTH. IN " MINES Faith in Resources of Pine Creek Region. TELLURIUM ORE IS FOUND Miners Eagerly Begin Work of the Present Season and Expect to make Big Clean Up in Gold. NEW PINE CREEK, Or.. May 20. (Special.) That the Pine Creek district is to have a real and substantial boom in mining is now self-evident. Who knows but that it may become another Cripple Creek, for surely the earmarks would in dicate as much? Pine Creek has that which made the Colorado camp famous the wide world over tellurium. Tellurium ore has been found here in as many as three different places, the rock assaying from $70 to many hundreds of dollars a ton. In one place, a property owned by Messrs. Jeter and Frakes. a shaft 20 feet deep shows a ledge, both walls well defined. 12 to 20 Inches of ore carrying tellurium and assaying $215 a ton. Gold Discovered Last August. The first discoveries of gold of record In this camp were made last August, the rock being free-milling in character. One of the first properties discovered, the Big Bonanza, owned by Messrs. Wade, Reld and Plummer, and now under bond to J. E. Stribllng and associates for $120,000. has a most splendid surface showing and bids fair to develop into an immense pro ducer. There are numerous claims with a fine surface showing, upon which little work has been done, on account of an early Winter and an unusual heavy snowfall this Spring. The mines, being at an ele vation of about 8000 feet, there remains quite a considerable amount of- snow. It is melting rapidly, however, and will, in all probability, have entirely disappeared by June 1. With the opening of Spring an immense amount of energy Is being put forth, and this camp will undoubtedly be heard from before the coming season shall have ended. Considering the geographical location of Pine Creek, lying, as it does, Just a little northwest of some of the most famous ore bodies of Nevada, and that gold, both free and . In tellurium, has been found here, much Is possible. Town of New Pine Creek. The town of New Pine Creek has a pop ulation of 250 and has two hotels, two liv PRIMARY LAW WORKS A REVOLUTION ANCIENT GLAD-HAND METHODS AND MACHINE TACTICS OF THE BOSSES ARE PLACED ON THE SHELF, WHILE NEW SCHEMES TO GAIN VOTES ARE TRIED WITH PROFIT PIFTY or sixty years ago, before John D. Rockefeller had swapped his birthright of hair for a mess of tainted money and when the Hudson's Bay Company was the only trust doing business west of the Mississippi River, the stock-in-trade of the Oregon politi cian was the ability to grasp every voter in the territory by his bewhiskered paw and call him by his first name. Twenty years later he was compelled to add a black frock coat and have the genealogy of every callow first voter In the Willam ette Valrey at bis tongue's end. That was the golden age of Oregon pol itics. The bucolic statesman .who covered as many miles as a Methodist circuit The Country Editor Will Oppose the Repeal of the Primary Law. rider In the course of a year and was willing to plod on horseback through 75 miles of Oregon mud to make the eagle scream at a political rally in a log school house paoked with men, women, children and untaxed Siwashes, Including 80 vot ers, waa the man who landed the nomi nation when the state convention met. For that was before the railroads and the trusts owned the Senate and National is sues were things to conjure with, even in a school election, and the sidestepper got his at the first convention bauot-box. In the Days of the Bosses. Later, when the railroad came and the statesman rode on a pass and managed his campaign from a city law office, there was another change, and the hapless granger who knew the times were out of joint but couldn't put his finger on the exact spot of dislocation, was led blindly to the polls by his precinct boss and vot ed for the good of the party, as the in terests of the state boss in the city might appear. And when the bosses had di vided the spoils for sufficiently long and had come to depend on the strength of the machine and the eloquence of the hired spellbinder at the windup to pull the party through, the individual voter suddenly turned Populist, and the ma chines which had run so smoothly swift ly went to smash. Among the first fruits of the popular awakening was the direct primary law, which was passed by the last Legislature, and which recently had its first trial in the State of Oregon. Its intention was to turn back the hand of Time and restore to the commonwealth the golden age of politics, when the voter nominated and elected the man of his choice to offices of public trust and political machines, packed conventions, cut-and-dried slates and deals between the bosses were things yet undreamed of. Printers' Ink and Press Agents. But alas! for the Utopian dream of the statesman who had hoped in the wreck of the machines and the dethronement of the bosses he would come into his own. He has discovered that the easy-going methods of 40 years ago are as hopelessly antiquated as the clothes the handshak ing politicians of that day used to wear, and that printers' ink and the press agent are tbe modern substitutes for the wide ery barns and two stores. It Is located on the Oregon and California state line, in the middle of Goose Lake Valley, near the mouth of Pine Creek Canyon, up and through which the mines are most con veniently reached, by good road and trail, five miles away. Goose Lake Valley la one of the most beautiful as well as one of the most productive spots of the state a valley of highly improved farm and ranch property, two miles wide and 30 miles long, on the east shore of Goose Lake, at an elevation of 5000 feet. It is highly productive in grain, hay. fruit and vegetables. The climate and elevation are especially adapted to the growing of Win ter apples. Prospects of a Railroad. To reach Pine Creek from the Oregon & California Railroad, a line extends from Thrall, Cal., to Pokegama. A stage line runs via Klamath Falls and Lake View to Pine Creek. The town can also be reached by stage from Nevada. Pine Creek has been promised a railroad within a year. The Nevada, California & Oregon Railroad Company now has its surveyors at work north of Madaline, the present terminus of that road. There is one continuous easy grade, from Nevada's plains, up through the Goose Lake Val ley, thence through Lake and Klamatk Counties, on through the old Military Ga to Eugene. RICH ORE OX GOOSE CREEK C. C. Cox Discovers Rich Sulphite Ledge 300 Feet Long. BAKER CITY, Or.. May 15. (Special.) C. C. Cox returned last night from his copper mine on Goose Creek, bringing with him some samples of sulphide ore, which will go from 6 to 10 per cent copper and about $4 in gold. This ore was found in the tunnel about 200 feet from the mouth, and 80 feet below the surface. The previ ous rock has been the ordinary native cop per ore which is found in quantities along the belt. The ore runs north and south, and ap pears to be an immense sulphide dike. The outcroppings Indicated sulphides, and the ledge has already been opened for 14 feet. The ore Is identical with that of the Indiana mine. The ore body on Mr. Cox's property has been ascertained for 300 feet at a depth of 12 feet. Just how much deeper it extends is not known, as Mr. Cox is only opening up the property to ascertain the extent of the deposit. But this showing is the finest ever made in Goose Creek section, and there is no doubt but it will be a big mine. Caterpillars Live Despite Rain. - ABERDEEN. Wash., May 20. (Special.) Despite the reports from various parts of Washington and Oregon that rains have killed the caterpillars, thousands upon thousands of which threatened the fruit trees of these states, the water does not seem to have disturbed their feeding capacity in any degree here, and they have not been starved, as it is claimed by the ranchers of the eastern portion of the state. The old method of breaking off branches of trees or using the torch has been resorted to here, and so- far Is the only safe means of getting rid of the pest. By keeping a check on the insects no dam age has been done so far to fruit trees in the vicinity of. Aberdeen. personal acquaintance which formerly won battles in the political arena, and that it Is Just as impossible to shake each of the 100,000 voters by the hand In one campaign as it would be now to kiss all rhe new-crop Oregon babies between the Ides of January and the Calends of June. This, In brief, is the lugubrious tale which is told by the candidates, success ful and unsuccessful, who fought the fight, each according to his own methods, in the recent primary campaign, and who now gather at Republican state head quarters in the building and compare notes end expense accounts. Fortunately for the Democrats who as pire to state office, their sapient lead ers saved them from the expense and worry of a primary campaign by ignor ing the spirit of the law and holding a mass meeting which was a state conven tion in all but name, and "suggesting" a list of nominations which In all but name was a state ticket. Whereby they saved their financial ammunition for bolstering up what they privately deemed a forlorn hope of electing a few of their strongest candidates at the polls in June. Advertising Gets Votes. According to candidates who have been through the mill, personal acquaintance and popularity is a good thing, and the tact to endure spluttering kisses from in fant Oregonians without flinching not to be sneered at, but both must be backed up by genius of the sort which made the face of the pioneer in the talcum-powder Industry more familiar than the kindly visage of the Father of His Country and indelibly impressed upon the retina of 80,000.000 citizens the features of the mod est violet who first made $3 shoes. Patriotic desire to serve the great com mon people In state office and to fight to the hurt ditch against' aggressions of trusts and monopolies Is admitted to be what the statesman of an earlier day ve. hemently referred to as a sine qua non, a trump card, but it must be backed up bv judicious advertising, or it shares the fate of the breakfast food that depends for its success upon mere edibility, or Babies for tbe Office-seeker to Kiss. the soap of 99 per cent purity which at tempts to break into the family washtub except through the magazines. Political advertising pays; witness the fact that very few of the candidates who were successful in the primary campaign failed to Indulge In It with lavish pro fusion. But the candidate must have the goods to deliver; for some of the .men PRODUCTSDFAPPLES New Company Will Utilize Grand Ronde Crop. CAPITAL STOCK IS $40,000 Factory Will Be Erected for Manu facture of Cider, Vinegar and Other Products From Apples. LA GRANDE, Or.. May 20. (Special.) An incorporation, to be known as the Ripley Oregon Fruit Food Company, was organized this week with a capital stock of $40,000. The object is the manufacture of vinegar, wine, cider, apple butter. Jelly, Jams and other prod ucts. The promotes and principal stockholder is Mrs. W. F. Ripley, re cently of Denver. Mrs. Ripley holds $15,000 of the capital stock. The other Incorporators are: J. Ire land, of the Eastern Oregon Colonizing Company, and L. Oldenberg. one of the most extensive fruit-growers in the valley. Mr. Oldenberg holds $5000 of the stock. The remaining stock is being taken up by fruit-growers all over the valley, and there is little doubt but that all will be subscribed within a few days. The fruit-growers realize this is too valuable an Industry to neglect, as it will be the means of working up a raw product which is abundant here, and which, under the present conditions, is of almost no value. With a factory of this kind established, the cheap, cull fruit will be worth more per ton than sugar beets. Mr. Ripiey interested the Cove fruit growers in the enterprise to the extent that in two days spent in that section he succeeded In getting stock subscrip tions amounting to $3000. Fruit-growers are given the privilege of sub scribing and paying for a portion of the stock in apples. The proposed plant and maohlnery will call for an expenditure of $33,090, and the remaining $10,300 is required for operating capital. The factory building is to be 45x150 feet, with ce ment basement. Apple vinegar will be the principal product, and the annual output, including wine, boiled elder and other products from apples, will be 300,000 gallons. The factory will use 100,003 bushels of apples a year. Mr. Ripley was induced to investi gate the conditions here by E. C. Rowe, agent for the O. R. & N., and after visiting all fruit-producing sections who spent the most money In advertising their candidacy failed for no other rea son, apparently, than that they could not convince the voters of their sincer ity. Another proof of the adwrlter's maxim that no article without Intrinsic merit will warrant any large and system atic expenditure of money Inasmuch as a permanent demand cannot be created ar tificially. Picture Help Candidates. The most successful of the Republican candidates say that of the thousands it cost them to get nominations for the state offices to which they aspired, the money was most wisely spent which went for pictures of themselves. One of these candidates paid out $300 the first week of his campaign for 1-cent stamps which he used in mailing to every voter whose name hp could obtain a blotting pad bearing a large half-tone cut of him self, together with the name of the office which he sought in large type and a few words stating his platform briefly. "My tiieory was that since I could not meet the voters personally I would have to make them familiar with my face and link it In their mind with the name of the office so that in my necessarily rapid tour of the Btate I would need no intro duction. I spent at least $750 for postage during the campaign and paid the news papers of the state two or three times that sum for printing my pictures and advertising matter; but I firmly believe the pictures did the work." People Will Not Read Pamphlets. It is the belief of this candidate that a mistake was made by the candidates who flooded the mails with lengthy circular letters and argumentative appeals to the voters. In this day of hurry and bustle, he says, people have not the time to read, and will not read, political pam phlets. The task of convincing the doubt ing voter, he thinks, must be done by word of mouth, by the candidate himself, or his friends. Accordingly, he visited every important community and person ally talked with every voter he could reach. In - remote precincts where he could not go himself he secured some friend quietly to promote his interests In the same manner. Another, and m6st successful pri mary campaign, however, was waged almost entirely by written arguments mailed to the voters of the state. The man who made this campaign attri butes his victory to the fact that he had something to say to the voters and told it to them early and often, reiter ating It until they were finally con vinced of his sincerity of purpose -without having seen him in person. This candidate mailed most of his printed matter to the voters in sealed envelopes, making it personal," as the advertising agent says, and his. ex pense for stamps alone is said to have been nearly $1600. Winning candidates who used the mails to a far less extent, and did very little in the matter of newspaper ad vertising, lay their success to personal work among the voters In the more im portant communities and to the posses sion of many old-time political friends who remembered them in time of need, giving their time and labor free of charge. One of these candidates had as his opponents men whose expenses for various forms of advertising ran up into thousands of dollars, yet the fact that the" man who eventually succeed ed showed that he "had something to advertise." that is, could make an ap peal to the voters of his partyand show personal worth which was more or less recognized by the state at large. Newspapers Profit by Campaign. Newspaper advertising was one of the features of the primary campaign that was a distinct novelty. To the credit of the press of Oregon it can be said that a great majority of the news papers treated an the candidates fairly, accepted advertising matter from all alike, charging all candidates the scale of prices agreed upon and generally re fraining from selling the editorial sup from Boise to Seattle, including Walla Walla. Hood River and Yakima, he is convinced that Grand Ronde Valley of fers the best advantages for an indus try of this kind. He comes here from Denver, where be operated a similar plant, from which he withdrew because of the scarcity of the raw product. He has followed the business, continuously for 20 years, and is the sole possessor of the secret of making apple wine and vinegar that preserves the fruit flavor. Mr. Ripley, being an experienced dis tribltor of fruit products, says there will be no difficulty whatever in find ing a ready market for all the factory can produce. MOROS AS THEY ARE. Fen Picture of Bold Fighters of the Philippines. Lord Buchanan In World's Work. The Moroa are of an order much lower than that of any class of human beings In the United States. Unspeakably filthy in their habits, treacherous and cruel, they compare neither with the Indians nor with the Southern negroes. They are Ignorant and superstitious. About a year ago a force, under Chief Hatal. sur rendered to General Wood a tremendous position on Bud Kausukan without firing a shot, and gave up all their priceless rifles, because the night before a navy torpedoboat-destroyer had flashed its searchlights on the fortifications from the Eea, and the terrified defenders imagined that Providence had been drawn into an alliance with their enemies. 'As war riors, the Moros are fanatic9, but, for all that, there is magnificence in their dis dain of death. The lonely "Juramentado." who takes an oath, shaves his beard, binds his limbs, and goes to kill and be killed. Is a type of the animating spirit of the race, I have known such a one thoughtfully to bide his time in a walled city, whence escape was Impossible, and when the fit hour had come, to whip out his weapon, and seek only to strike a mortal blow before the merciless rifles about brought him to death. One. by a camp, peddling fruit, cut a soldier down wtth a broken spear head, waa shot to the ground, staggered to his feet, struck onoe more, was shot down again, rose a second time, and was then stopped only by a rifle bullet through his brain. Another charged to his death, single handed, with his spear and knife, on a company of regular Infantry sitting In line with their loaded rifles across their knees. The same wild spirit animates the Moros in a fight. At Pang Pang, where the destruction was very heavy, after the walls had been scaled by our troops, and the works were at the mercy of our arms, time and again the fire was stopped, and the defenders were Implored to surrender, that their lives might be pared. But pity was scorned' with a volley and a rush of gleaming knives. From the very Valley of Shadow always came back the stubborn reply, "We are not a race that surrenders!" I do not think that anything much finer or much more impossible to deal with ever came before any army In the world. When a Jolo Moro goes Into his cotta, he . goes there to fight to a finish. He scorns sur render. He becomes a human tiger. He will cut you down while you seek to dress his wounds. port of the newspaper Itself, a thing whloh they were often forced into do ing under the old regime, when news paper advertising was not counted legitimate campaign expense. The result was that the newspapers printed, it is estimated, $850,003 worth of paid campaign advertising, and the country editors. It is asserted, will op pose any repeal of the new primary law on the ground that It would mean a return to the old method of giving space away to candidates, or resorting to what la often called grafting. One candidate says that 90 per cent of the newspapers which he asked to The Voter Became Familiar With the Candidate's Face. quote him advertising rates, and to which he sent advertising matter, treated him fairly. Ten per cent, he al leges, attempted to extort fancy prices from him and used their editorial col umns against him when he protested against the "hold-up." According to many candidates news papers which sold their editorial sup port to certain candidates and refused to take the advertising of their oppo nents, proved worthless to the men giving them subsidies. Papers of the opposite party often accepted the ad vertising refused and printed it, to gether with the statement that the candidate's party paper had refused to print it, thereby exposing the venality of the transaction. Refused to Buy Editorial Support. "I figured out," said one candidate to an Oregonian reporter, "that any news paper willing to sell me its support would not be worth having; that the editor was probably a man whose opinions were val ueless In his community and that the people were well aware of the fact. I did not consider that I lost anything by the fact that my opponents in several communities bought editorial support." The main objection made to the new primary law is the heavy expense it en tails upon candidates for nomination. Most of the candidates who entered the primary campaign spent as much, and many of them two or three times the amount usually spent under the old con vention system, to obtain election to the same office. On account of this fact, many of the candidates who are not well provided with this world's goods will be forced to retrench strongly during the regular cam paign, thereby giving their opponents of the other party an advantage. Yet few of the candidates who figured in the primary election believe that the new system will ever fall into disuse through the adoptibn of subterfuges sim ilar to that which the Democrats recent ly used. It is pointed out that the can didate of the dominant political party will always deem the nominations worth fighting for and will go before the people, cost what It may, though candidates of the minority party, having but small hope of election, may irame their ticket by agreement among themselves, denying the voters their right to nominate. GI10 THRIVE KLAMATH COUNTY Water of Irrigating Ditches Causes Soil to Produce Bountifully. GOOD DEMAND FOR REALTY People of the Section Prepare for In. flux of Population Which Will Follow Construction of the Railroad. KLAMATH FALLS, Or., May Z0. (Special.) This is the season for the homeaeeker to see the Klamath region, study its , soil, climate, vegetation and industries. Crop prospects were prob ably never better at this season In the great basin that Is soon to teem with a dense population, and In which the shriek of the locomotive is to resound for the first time during the present year. Alfalfa Is receiving its first irri gation, the water being turned In st about the usual time that has prevailed Btnce the first canals were constructed here. There Is little doubt that with earlier Irrigation another crop of al falfa could be cut in tills county, and with the larger system of Irrlgstlon to be provided by the Government, there will no doubt be vast changes In the results, as there will be in tha methods empl-jyed in agriculture. Orchards are now laden with fruit and, although the county is not yet famed as a fruit district, there is ample evidence in the existing orchards of the adaptability to fruit culture of the soil nnd that climatic conditions are not unfavorable to producing the hardier fruits. Berries thrive and all kinds of garden products are grown, although the market demand Is far in excess of the present output. Activity in Real Estate. Realty sales are many, and despite the temporary depression resultant from the unsettled business conditions at San Francisco, the restoration seems to have been quick so far as this re gion was affected, and there is no long er any feeling of uncertainty. It is assured that the irrigation movement is not to be deflected by reason of financial stringency, which was first deemed a possibility of the fire disas ter, and that the very best class of emigrants from the Middle West and from the irrigated sections of the Western States are coming to this com munity. Klamath Falls, Los Angeles and San Francisco men who last Fall decided to organize the American Bank & Trust Company are evincing their faith In the future of this section by proceed ing to the erection of a building of brick and stone, two stories, modern in every particular, 40x120 feet, to be occupied by the new financial Institu tion, which will have a paid up cap ital of $130,000. and will open for busi ness during the present year, Just as soon as the new building can be fin ished. This new financial house will stand at Fifth and Main streets, in the eastern part of the town, and in the vicinity wbere frontage is being trans ferred at prices ranging from $100 to $150 a front foot. Major C. E. Worden and W. T. Shive. of Klamath Falls, are two of the men largely interested in this bank and trust company, both being among the shrewd Investors In Klamath County real estate In bygone years, when many people lacked the faith that is backed by heir capital. Their associates are understood to include some of the very strong financial men of the Coast, and this will be the third bank in Klamath Falls. ELECTRIC ROAD IN PROSPECT Lines Will Help Development of Rogue River Valley. ASHLAND, Or., May 20. (Special.) The County Court of Jackson County, the va rious municipalities of that county and Grant's Pass, in Josephine County, have under consideration applications for elec tric railroad franchises upon the county roads and through the streets of the cities and towns. These applications were made by Dr. Ray, of the Condor Water & Power Company, which has an extensive power plant on Rogue River at Gold Ray. Two years time is asked in which to start con struction operations. The applications for franchise are looked upon as foretelling the construction of an electric railway by the Condor or some other company which shall eventually connect all the towns of the Rogue River Valley from Ashland to Grant's Pass and bring them Into much closer union with each other than they now are. both commercially and socially. Rogue River people picture this valley as a great resort as well as a great orchard and garden section, famed for its peaches, apples, pears and smaller fruits. Mineral springs of great variety abound In the Siskiyou foothills and in some of the other spurs of the Cascades In this vicinity. At the head of the valley, at Ashland, there are sulphur and soda springs whose waters are noted as medicinal as well as) palatable. The sulphur baths here are known up and down the Coast from San Diego to British Columbia, and they have never been developed or advertised in a way to attract the recognition they are worthy of. Natural mineral water from the soda springs of this section Is bottled and finds a market in various sections of Oregon and California, meeting with a favor that is not accorded Imported wa ters for table and medicinal use. Hot and cold sulphur springs that would bring for tunes In many lands are awaiting develop ment and the building of hotels and sani tariums to accommodate the thousands who would come if they knew of the place and the advantages In this line offered here. Capitalists from other states are now. looking some of these springs over with the view of developing tnem. Sew System of Road Building. ALBANY, Or., May 20. (Special.) The new system of road-building, adoption of which by the County Court of Linn Coun- . ty was recently announced, is being put into use as rapidly as possible. The Coun ty Judge yesterday received a carload of large tiling for use In supplanting cul verts, short bridges, filling in low places in roads, etc, and the roadbullding crew will immediately begin laying the tiling wherever needed on the different county roads. Your Dnmtat Will Tell Too that Murlna Eya Remedy Cures Eyes. Makafc Weak EyH Strong. Doesn't 6 mart. Booth Krm Pain, and Sails lor 60 casta.