V HIU.9B0R0 AR0U9, JANUARY 20. 1910 PAM i STEVENS BROS Last Week of i Clip Miff If jon are looking for BARGAINS Come to our Farmington Store. We must make room for our Spring Stock and will sell at nip 1 UvJ Remember, we will sell you ull Kinds of mcrchundise nt the sale at prices which bent any of the soles now utlvertised. Wo hove no high rents; no salesmen 'to poy; no heavy expenses to Keep up BUT WE Must gave lore ftoom Drive over and see our stocK. We are selling' hundreds of articles at below cost. Sweaters, shirts, dress goods, dry goods, shoes, groceries, crocKery and decorated ware All our lines are down to the "no profit margin" Simply be cause we must hove more room. Call and get Our Prices. This is a genuine BARGAIN WEEK This week we have added to the Slaughter Sale List Our Stock of Km m And Groceries And our Prices have been cut below Cost in hundreds of instances. Come and sen GENERAL CLEARANCE SALE STEVEN 11 Farmington, Ore. six Crossed the Plains to Oregon io 185, by Ox Team STIll mtlJIS MENTAL FACULTIES Wrs. Ralph Wllc.i. Well Ksewe Uuntj Fleo era to ALASKA'S GREAT COAL PROBLEM, Roosevelt's Conservation Order Delaying Development LOCAL NEED SAID TO 8E ACUTE A well knoan pl ine reeideot of ilillrboro, end known to i e.rly all who were early Oregon pathfinders, (Mrs. Julia Ann Fickle Wile .x widow of Dr. Ral h Wilcox, a re-l dunt of Hillsboro in the early fifties- Mrs. WToox wan birnin Virginia, August 16 123, anl v-a-married tIr. Ualph Wilcox in October. E. C. Hawkins, Engineer In Charae of tho Copper River and North wart am Railroad, Throws Light Upon an Ab surd Situation P.ylng $14 a Ton For Coal Whon It Can Bo Mined In the Territory For UQ, Ref-ause AlaHkana cannot mine any of their owu excellent coal by reason of the conservation order of President however, the Copper river bridged for tbe third time hundred miles." must be within a ed for Alaska ueil summer, aud one of tlieiu Is uii in the depth of thla pre ent winter To the idltarod placer dig 1 glngs nii'ii ar uow tolling over the) piiow trail lu a wild chase for a xhuro of the undoubted riches Brat found there last season, into me great ci.pp.-r belt of the Cliitlna basin there will be another Influx of miners and prospectors next July when the Cop per Klver and Northwestern railroad rear bee the outer edge of the district. Still another group, the gold qoarta mluers, will Bock to Kenal peolnauta and the Sushitna valley as soon the snow ha gone to follow up the recent Moose pass nud Willow creek strike. It would seem then tbat Alaska baa There are many thousrnds of miles j fimlv advanced to the quarts aiinlng of good tillage land In the valleys of ; stage, nnd to this may be addetHu'lUlO the southern coast of Alaska, to say . r,al mining In the Bering river fields, nothln? of the creat Interior, accord- , This chatiife really marks a most ln EXPERT SEES FUTURE FOR ALASKAN FARMING Important Statement by Govern ment Agent Just Returned. 1841.' They croeeed ihe plains to I Hoosevell tbey are being forced to Oregon in 1841, ret ling fmt in mak" hear' intlM 00 th 0mber re" YktnU'l fWlw. Lain. nr. . -U. LU' UWkTnS. . , . , . I engineer In charge of the uew Copper nt I An I nan I n t , 1 ,1 nt .a, L. 1 I . ,mtrt .,.,,.. .u River and Northwestern railroad, who is now a part of tbe Michael Moore baa just reached New York to make his annual report to the company. Mr. Hawkins la the engineer who built the remarkable White Pass and Yukon road, an achievement second only to the one he has now balf finish ed for the Morgan-Guggenheim syndi cate. Ho has some moat Interesting things to say about the conditions Jo the north land tbat have recently -been attracting public .attention. The local need for our own coal la acute, said Mr. Hawkins. "We feel It especially In our road construction. but every oue else feels It too. Peo ple - must keep warm In Alaska, as elaewhere.-and It needs much fuel to de It la Winter. We pay $14 a ton for British Columbia soft coal to use on the railroad, and It certainly costs the small consumer ne less. Even this baa been uaobUtaabte at times, and we recently faced the necessity of putting a Urge force to work cutting timber for firewood to be need in keep tag e-ur fire caisson and pier pumps going and running the work engines. At tbat we found It at times almost impossible to keep steam In our boil ers, though the safety of much con stractlon and even ef Uvea depended oa it Wltfc an almost Inexhaustible store of coal within a few miles of our tracks we should be getting it for about $1.50 a tea Instead of $14. Cer talnly without adequate fuel supply the opening et Alaska with railroads la going to be very slow. It cannot be otherwise. And transportation devel I donation land claim, in HilUbiro. sod then from hsre went to Ore' son City, where Dr. Wilcox wai three years receiver io the land of fice. The husband died m 1876. Virs Wilcox still retains her men' 'al abilities, and has a remarkable fund of Mminisoeme of the Orrgon arly da) a and frtquently telle how tbelr party crossed to Oregon ia treVe k tuttff a trip that opment la the greatest need of that was dlalroos to many. Her I wonderfully rich territory. tntmry Is eomettrg prodigous. and ber qu int tal e uf early timet pp al tothelieUne aa a page oil romance, tier tir vivti g children ra: Mrs Franc s A chbold, wife I of A C. Archboid, Hillebon ; Ed a ia Wilcox, John U Wilcux and atlas Araminta Wilcox, all reidini I I at No. 90 Sixteen Street, North, The Now Copper Region. "Nevertheless, the Copper Illver and Northwestern Is being forced ahead as rapidly aa possible. By the 1st of nest July it wilt hare reached the mouth of the Uhfttna river, tSS miles la land. Thla means that the great Kotaina-Chitlna copper region proba bly the richest in the werld, but so far almost unexplored will be tnally ac- Portland; and M.S. Cs roline G rade, oeaeible to turners and Droeoectora next of LaUrande. 1 bree cbildren have ! oesnd away. bhe isamemle'rf lifelnrg at filiation of the Meihodiet Ch i-ch Mrs. Wilcox mikes fr. quant visits .to Hillsboro to visit her laughter, Mrs Archboid, and meet i h l In pioneer friends of early life. summer, aa event that Alaska la await big eagerly. This, practically the open ing of a new region for tngreaa and egress, baa. hitherto ' been most dim cult The development of this terri tory means a largo and continuous pro duction ef wealth for generations set in one spot but over a large area. "The road la now carried te the mouth Of the Tlekel river, 102 miles from Cordova, our terminus at Udewa tor. . In thla stretch there ia only one break at Mtle 40, where the line cross es the Copper river between the two active glaciers, Ctllds and Mil as. "It baa been necessary at this point te bond a 1.000 foot bridge of un precedented atreagth and construction W, H. Stratton, of near Corne lius, and who is e 1 known as an lrcbardiBt, has eu d Kmuy Strat too for divorce. They were mar riod in Portland, Ootober 2, 1909, and he chart ei deseriiou Nov. 25, wearing tbat eh left bim without I to resist the tee flows. Just above the hia amsent. or wi.hout Drovocation I bridge Is a lakelike widening of the He also alleges that after she left rt lnt whlcn tne thrw front ' him she sued him for non support, v""'u" ' " Z.tiL t. , . , ... .. VY ' summer long. In winter this lake ta oauainghim humiliation and an- fro several feet deep. At the prea- noyat ce. The case was diemissed ent Wme we M mnnlng trains over against atratton. lis aifo recites the Ice on temporary tracks, so tbat that the told him ebe "could not track wilt be continuous to the end of love an old man" like the plaintiff, the line untU the spring breakup. The Another charge imbat Kmilv look three bridge piers have had a severe el on h convival side of life at a Portland Hotel and tbat her liba tions were that copious that she beotme inebriated. Mary A. Halvorpen, who mar- test this summer. The ice now, as can be imagined, is tremendous. Tbe river is deep and awlft and the force of tbe big bergs afloat en It nothing short of terrtde. Te resist this we have sunk oar piers forty to sixty feet to bed ,A ihn Hlr.n in ton! k.. rock, building them ef solid concrete. " ' " reinforced by heavy steel rails set op ened her husband lor divorce, and r& anki for the cutody of two small M -h h th children, and for $100 to proiecute heaviest kind of concrete and ateel It e fuit; and $20 per month all-1 guards, also sunk to bedrock, and are tnony; or $750 oaBh, for support of J set where there are bars in the' river hereelf and childrei'. Bbe also that deflect the biggest or the bergs, aekl for one third of the real prop- They are ninety feet through from end erty near Farmington, which is va.'u d at several hund ed dollar! I Bridge Building In Alaska. Mrs. Halvoreen says that her bus- "The steel superstructure of the band has frequently charged her bridge we nope to have In place early with hln unfaithful, and has next faH, by which time the line will o osed her to cut and carry in the $ P the .j An ...i ,w ChlMna to the eopper mines. This la I"" " " J to be the first branch ef the road corn- farm, i I nlftaA anrl It annulA hn nnen from thai Bsrney Lsie, of Beaverton, and astra te the southern terminus about ho-is one of the progressive or- on m'n now- . , t AUVlllOl le lawU irciuuiuaj wa, whw 38 of the main line on the Copper riv er and running about forty-eight miles to the Bering river eoal fields la sur veyed, and a good deal ef tbe roadbed la built . This branch could be built In a short time and the Alaskan coal made available for our Alaskan road and tbe people of the territory without further delay. '' "Beyond the end of the present length of track at Tlekel the Una runs through Woods canyon for twenty lug to Levi Cbubbuck. special agent for the department of agriculture, w ho has just returned from the northland. Air. Cbubbuck spent tbe entire sum mer making a geueral reconnoLssance of agricultural lauds tbat may be sur veyed for bomesteadliig by tbe general land office. Tbe chief areas examined were the Sushltna basin north of Sew ard, the Copper river aud tbe T'anaua valleys. Concerning agricultural prog ress and posalbKltles in Alaska be makes atatemeuts that may be consid ered moat conservative, but that will be amazing to tbe great majority of those "outside." "The most obvious fact concerning nearly all the valleys of this area 1 have seeqr-from tidewater northward 150 miles is tbat tbey are natural graxlug lands. There are certainly thousands of square miles of a very high quality of wild grass, tbe uutri tlve value of which for stock seems well established. The grass often stands six and seven feet bigb and la of the most luxuriant growth; also It can be cured and la of good keeping quality. A Great Dairying Country. Nearly all of this land except some side bill areas has more or leas stand lug and fallen timber on it, but mucb Is immediately available for grazing. With adequate winter protection stock thrives, and the market with tbe de velopment of roads would seem as sured. At present every pound of meat consumed must come from Seattle, and meat to of first Importance lu the diet ary of so cold a country as this. In many parts of the country also it costs tbe consumer $1 a pound. All dairy products, too, are brought In by steam er at high cost and this is certainly a dairying country. "There need be no speculation aa to some present possibilities, farming has just begun in a few localities in this region, and local conditions are most varied, but oats and barley are being successfully grown, timothy flourishes, and the root crop to of high excellence. Found Many Fine Farms. I bare been astonished at tbe amount of farming under way around Seward. 1 had expected practically none, and instead I And half a dozen flourishing ranches on a commercial ba sis and dozens of home gardens. Pota toes of first quality are being grown in half a dosen neighborhoods, excellent turnips grow freely, aud there seems no difficulty with beets, carrots, rad lsbes, beans, peas and lettuce. Cab bage and cauliflower are a surprising success in some localities. I believe thla list can be extended almost indeti nltely with careful selection of varie ties, a study of soil requirements and acclimatization by selective breeding. Tbe possibilities are still practically unknown, but we do know tbat tbey are far greater than most people even here In Alaska imagine. Some of tbe most promising parts of this area have not beeu tried at all. aud tbe most successful tests have generally been lu the least likely locations. "Regarding climatic conditions have been somewhat surprised. With in a thousand feet of sea level in fairly open country the growing season is not shorter than lu the mouutaiu region of New Hampshire. Peas are safely planted In May, and danger from frost to considered over after the Crst few days in June. In the fall tbe Urat frosts are rarely before tbe second week In September. It is true tbat tbe summers are cooler than In the north era states and on tbe immediate coast have more rain, but there Is compen aation in the fifteen to eighteen hours of sunshine dally and tbe continuous daylight for nearly three months. "The exact area of the tillage lands in the Sushltna group of valleys, as aa example generally applicable, Is still Impossible even to estimate, as much of the territory is uninhabited and still because of its undeveloped state rath er than because it is Inaccessible. There to a total area of about 2.500 square miles along the western edge of Kenal peninsula bordering Cook in let the greater part of which is prob ably available and some small valley In the interior of the peninsula. roughly estimate the rest which lu eludes the Knik Arm region and Ma tanuska valley to tbe eastward, the Tentna to the westward, tbe main Sushltna valley and smaller tributaries running 'northward far Into tbe in terlor at say, 2.500 square miles, but ft might exceed this considerably. portiint milestone lu the development of the northern territory. Placer min ing prMlures much gold, but It to not a permanent resource, does notmake a permanent population or eveuwrrant as a rule, the building of railroads. Quartz mining dues. The placer fields n Hie Iditai'irtl and Inuoko. rivers. hi. h are said to he larger In extent en than the Klondike tlelds, are sure to yield many large fortunes. If the Held proves as rich as tbe present lowing would Indicate the district Hi have u population of 10.000 within twelvemonth. Already there are ,000 men where a year ago there were inlly a dozen. The excitement ra il! lug w ill le great, and tbe romantic story of the Klondike and Nome will be rceued. Hut It would be most exc eptional if ten years from now should see any Important placer mining going lu that now almost un prospected glon. it will simply be worked out It is different with tbe Cbitlna cop per region, there is a auown Den or ihieralized ruck 1-0 miles loug and eight or ten miles wide. and. though his belt may also be said to be not alf projected, there are tblrty-five more groups of claims on It One or two of these have been so far de- eloped that there Is assurance of a irge ore supply for geueratlona. So sure is the future of this region that apital is spending $10,000,000 on a illroad from the sea U00 miles Inland to lap It let tbere Is every possibil ity that dozens of other properties still unknown may eual that oue or two. Tbe Chitina regloti bad never been eo- ered except by a few miners, en gineers and Indians, so tbat when the railroad, now loo miles inland, reaches he mouth of the Cbitlna river, thirty- five miles farther, next summer, prac tically au eutireiy uew country, the future activity of which is assured ba- 1 forehand, w ill be opened up. At pres ent Ingress is possible only by long rail trips over a very rough country, a ondition that will be changed almost iu a nasb within a rew montns. rne . result to those w ho know what pioneer conditions are Is apparent ! Another uew mining field that gives j jreat promise of attracting large num- r uers or pioneers next summer is wax north of Seward, on Kenal peninsula. This Is old placer country. In which some of the mother lodes have recent ly been discovered and are proving very rich. This country is still very difficult of access beyond Cook Inlet, is there are not even government trails, but a railroad Is on Its way In- land to the Matanuska coal fields, and tbe Alaska road commission baa prom-1 ised next summer to build a trail northward in this valley and across the mountains to the headwaters of tke Kuskoqulin on the way to the Idltarod dlggiugs. This will give a great impetus to both quarts and placer mining along the line and will allow the development of several quartz propositions. The railroad out of Seward already crosses the peuinsuia seventy miles and with uew government tralla has this last year made available much gold quartz country of great promise. On the whole, the most conservative Investigator must admit that Alaska's greatest mining days are of the future itnd that the mineral wealth produc tion will be in the steady ascendant from now onward. ohardists of hie tection, was in t wn yesterday. Mr Lois has been taking tbe Winter oourre in horti culture at Corvallie, and says they hare a splendid and practical equip ment, and avers ihu if people te i- erally knew the worth of the eohool many farmers wou'd attend the Winter classes. Mr lv is is manu- t.oturiug agent for a spray that is advertised in another column. Fruit Inspector 8 J. Galloway, miles. This gorge to exceedingly wild. of this oity, expeots to inaugurate a with almost perpendicular sides for thorough campaign for spraying of considerable stretches. This necessi- f oil trees and destroying of old or "'" continuous rock work, and ch,ds, jus, .. soon as the weather lZt"Z ttlea a little. Tbere are still many old orchards in the county that are pest riddles, and these must go in order to pro'eot the or chards that are receiving care. the road during the w hi tor. From 600 to 1.500 men will be kept in the can yon all this winter, and as soon ns pos sible lu the spring 2.000 more wUl be added to the force. Beyoud the mouth nf tha Chitina construction la moder- J. L. Meek Jr. returned the first .elv easr for tbe Alaskan coast which of the week from a trip up tbe Val presents more and worse obstacles to ley. and went on out to visit bis railroad construction than any part of brother, H A A. iMeit,or uienooi w wona i snow. iu um.,., The Dietitian. Spite ef his mamma's appeals. Little Ben bolts all bis meals, Then, to show It doesn't hurt, Eats some huts for his dessert. Nuts and bolts, when in solution, Build an iron constitution. -Life. Not Golden Silence. "I would like to employ you," said the astute lawyer, "but I understand that you drink and talk In your cups.' "No, no," cried tbe applicant eagerly": I get absolutely speechless." Nesv York Times. STAMPEDES IN ALASKA NEXT YEAR Predictions of Great Activity In the Iditarod Placers, the Chitina Copper Region and Sushitna' Gold Quartz Belt ...... Three different mining stampedes, each, distinct In character, are predict- The Aftermath. 'Twas the night after Christmas, and til through the flat Not a creature was stirring, not even the cat. For father and mother and me and tbe kid. Every one was knocked out with a pala In his mid Because of the candies we ate (or a lark And kid from the paint that he chewed from hia ark. Judge's Library. Very Particular. "Please, teacher." i ' "Weil. Gwendoline?" "I told my ma 1 was In nouns, and she says 1 may lenrn tbe proper nouns, but she doesu't want me to have any thing to do with tbe common oues," Baltimore American. Out of Date Santa. "Keuiember, Johnny, If "you are naughty Sfintu Claus will not Visit you." "1 dont care. 1 saw a picture of him riding around In a sleigh Instead of an automobile." j Jack Tars. Fsw people know the reason why '. sailors are so ofteu culled "Jack Tars," j The name dates from the days of gow- Blplng Samuel Pepys and to an abbre s Viatlon of the word "tarpaulin." It J t . .... Jl..,l...lk ,k. iu,! ' came into use io uiBuuKuiau " practical sea man, who knew his bust. ness, froni tbe "swell" ouicerj who did not always. 1 1 r a .