23' TitE6nmiJMiATrxM is." 1003: 1 . ,1 ( Has! the Jack Rabbit Pest Abated ray rani tAn7-) ECHO, Or., April The Jaokrab bit pest problem has at last been solved. It was ha who caused th repeal of h coyot law. It waa he who gave alarm - far and wide to th small r&cch.rs of thw sage-brush districts of Eastern X)re- 1 gon sad Eastern Washington, Th garden's, th fruit trees, the " meadows; In fact everything that th , small rancher attempted to grow in this Vast region has been destroyed In tee past and tba future of the country waa menaced by this pest. Tba coyote only preyed upon' sheep, '. and aa tbesa vera constantly guarded by ,th shepherds bis depredations were limited. But the jackrabblt could not be Restricted. By night and by day bs . poured la from tba bills and plains and . derowred everything before htm. In summer . be prayed upon everything growlng, and la winter be attacked what was left, even to destroying the hay In tba stacks and ricks of tba ranchers. Despite tba constant warfare made upon hlra bis numbers continued to In - crease until be became an aril genlua. a nightmare, to the st rug-fling home- buildsr on tba great plains of the two .' states, , . . But a remedy has bern found. Ilia days are numbered. The jackrabblt wUl ' noon b a thing of tba past. Us wUl ' only be remembered In tba stories of the early history of tba oountry. ' It fall to tba lot of an old railroad I man and telegraph operator to solve tba , problem. For many years ha baa bad charts of the railroad station for the a K. AN. Company at Echo. It la situated noma distance from tba town out la tha midst of tba sag brush plains, , Tba rabbits played out on tba level plat about tha depot In full view of tba old man, B watched them In creasing day by day. As he watched fop the belated trains and listened to tba eliciting of tba telegrapblo Instru ment ba could sea tba pests gamboling about .tba plao and devouring everything before them. I H beard tba complaints of tha ranchers. ! H viewed, the de struction they had wrought, , "Is there no remedy T he mused. "Can not they ' be . destroyed without great oostf And ' then the Idea came Into his mind that they might be destroyed and utllted at the same time. Eat them! But there Is a prejudice against eating a "jackrabblt." There was also prejudice against eating iorte. but all of the horses that have been prepared- for the food market have been taken. There la also prejudice against eating hogs and many other animals. but atlll they all find sale in the mar k'ets. "What is the history of the jackrabblt. anyway T" bs mused. Tbs real Jackrab blt la extinct in Oregon. The animal known today as th Jackrabblt is a dls tlnct animal from that species. The present "Jackrabblt" Immigrated into Oregon from Northern California and Nevada a number of years ago- He Is known as the "Blacktall," or American Hare. The original Jackrabblt would weigh, when dressed, six to eight pounds. He wss a large, lean, stringy animal, The blacktall, tbs present pest, will only weigh two and a half pounds when dressed, and bis flesh is aa tender and well-flavored as that of the Belgian hare. The American hare will com pare wjth any in the world for table use. All of these years be has been considered as a pest and unlit for the table. Only tba Indian and tba coyot would sat blm. ' "Can him for th market?" cams the suggestion to th mind of th Echo aag. "He ony eats pur food and bis Sesb is aa pur and Under as that of moat of the animals and fowls used for food A company waa organised with a cap ital stock .of 11,000, and a plant con structed at a cost of 12,000 for experi mental purposes. Th Institution proved a success from' th start and f 5.000 In Improvements are being added. Th present capacity is V00O pounds a day and when th improvements ar -completed the capacity wtU be Increased to a ton a day. The company leased 1(0 acre or ground, seeded to afalfa and constrict ed a rabbit-proof fence around it" Rab- : bits will be driven Into It, and also trapped and placed in th enclosure. There tbey will be fed in addition to being permitted to feed upon tha youni alfalfa They are trapped as needed ir a quiet way ao as not to disturb oth-' era Besides, th company is paylnt 11 a doien for all rabbits, delivered at Its place of buslnesa It has turned , out a boon to th community a. well as a profitable Institution. Ranch ers can make large profits trapping the rabbits, aa it la easy to catch a few hundred In a day or two. People of the Interior may turn put to rabbit bunting and not only destro) tha pest but get well nald for doing It. Th company also has a fruit vap orating plant In connection and this Is consuming the fruit at a good price that has heretofore gone to wast for lack of a market - , .As a remarkable illustration of the prospects of ths rabbit cannery busl ness as an Industry in Eastern '"Ore gon.' landowners have already forbidden the company to trap on their lands. They see In th rabbit already more value as a factor In th .market than he la dangerous as a pest in the communi ty. Thus, at on tell swoop be has advanced from a despised and bunted pest to a much-sought-for animal for bis value in th market It is now predicted that canneries will be established throughout East ern Oregon; that large areas will be fenced in in which to breed them as they ar reduced on; th range; and that I ji ported bucks'' will be place 1 among them t improve them, and that within a few years they will not' bt regarded a pest but will be converted Into on of th largest Industries In the state. The jackrabblt is passing as s aest RUSSIA LOOKS FOR DAWN OF FREEDOM i- ' ' . .' .: ' ' Yoang Muscovy Determined to Effect - an Escape From the Present Egyptian Bondage. ST. PETERSBtTRa, April 18. There are at present In St Petersburg half a dosaa men and women from America who ar writing books on Russia. They ,' will stay her from three months to a year and each will return with a two t volam work on this vast oountry, which i he has seen only from th railroad train and read of In th books at the Imperial Library. It is th fashion now in all ' new works on Russia to belabor George Kennan and bis Siberian stories are spoken of as "yellow journalism" by . these wonld-b authors who ar shown . . a model prison in St Petersburg and , . ar led about like sheep by the Rus sian officials, after which they let loos a tirade upon a matter which was writ ten about 1C years ago, and at a time when th Russian prison system was even worse than it is now. What, Kennan Sid for JBassia, Kennan had three or four things at his command which no other traveler in Russia before or sine has had In th same degree. First, of alt he knew the , Russian language, and without that knowledge one might as well be deaf and dumb so far as getting at real news , i in concerned; secondly,, he bad the con fidence of the official classes and, what ;, is most important he had the confi dence of the revolutionists. To have gained th trust of the last-named class was no small achievement Thirdly, he traveled upon an unbeaten path to Siberia without the luxurious limited train and without official accompaniment. Among the Russians who have suffered the tor tures of prison and exile the name of ' Kennan is mentioned like that of a saint and whatever small measure of prison reform Russia has obtained Ken nan's revelations brought about . Among; the Russtan as well as among American official classes Kennan i not In good repute. Many American officials . who sit in St. Petersburg have been caught in the net of official flattery, and Russia is to them as free a country as .. America "You have Just as much lib erty here as in America, haven't your I was asked by an American business man in St Petersburg. "Yes, I have, until I want to go some where, and then I have to ask the po lice for permission. -, "You can do anything you please so long aa ypu mind your own business." But even such a conversation between ts was Quickly silenced. I said: "What a wealthy country Rus sia would be If it had a sensible eco nomic policy!" The word policy was dangerous and I was stopped before I could go further. freedom in Bnssla. It is all well enough for these well fed Yankees with Uncle Sam's passports , In tbelr pockets to talk about freedom, but when .you go among old acqualn- tances and auk. "Where is my old friend T they reply: "In Siberia; In exile." "What about the other man?" v "He is In England; he had to run way." V- 'T "But where is Ivan Tvanovsky?" "Piv hundred miles from a railroad In th mines.' "What has happened to Petrovsky?" "In 6t Petersburg; in prison." When you come acrosn such yawning spaces among your acquaintances, who . were educated and harmless but enthu siastic youths, you realize .how far from freedom Russia still U. -win the coffee bouse the newspaper Is disfigured by a big black blotch that even one's lmaglna tion cannot penetrate. You feel a pull . -at your heart a painful but sympathetic i Reeling for these full-grown men who ; ar treated with greater rigor than If they were children in a primary school. - One cannot help loving these Russians with tbelr b.ospItable homes and hearts, with their great aspirations, their hard . past their struggling present and their glorious future. Something tremendous im brewing. One does not know where o how, but young Russia is thinking. , feeling and making ready, foe wherever freedom's note rings ever ao faintly a roaring applause greets the speaker or performer; and there are tumultuous scenes when the public reads between the actor'a lines and feels the author's souL Maxim Oorky"s Preat Work. Maxim Gorky, he vagabond author, has put upon the stage personalities which let loos many a winged word that fans the smoldering fire to burn ing flame. His last drama "At the Bot tom.." which pictures the lowest life of Russian trampdom, draws nightly a crowd which completely fills the theatre. The people come and shout themselves hoarse because as these tramps live out their lives they do not hide their feel ings, and th appearance of a corrupt policeman gives occasion for such a demonstration against the whole system that th authorities must be blind not to have seen the tendency of th play. Gorky feels th pain of the lowest creatures, the penalty of sin and the pressure of th higher powers; he is de cidedly "persona non grata" with official Russia, although he is neither a revolu- , tiontst nor a nihilist but an author who talks for the poor because he himself has been poor, beaten, drunken and at the pit of hell. His play makes a pe culiar impression; it Is one of the dreariest pictures which ever passed over the stage, and should official Rus sia discover its tendency both it and Gorky would disappear from the boards. Perhaps the fire which burns in th veins of Russia's youth, would not be at all dangerous if It had a place where it could find vent There is no such thinR as public life in Russia. The stage is under a severe censorship, and only when some blunderer gets hold of such a play as Gorky's "At the Bottom." does the public have a chance to applaud its own thoughts which are but faintly ex pressed by th author. Foreign papers pass through the cen sor's office and come to the reader's hands mutilated, - and the local papers serve no real purpose, and are not news papers in any sense. Thy copy largely the dispatches c from - foreign papers which take from thre to four days to reach Russia, ao that a dispatch may be anywhere from three to five days old before on can 'read it Of th political affairs of bis country th intelligent Russian know little or nothing; the papers cannot Instruct him and to talk about them Is often dangerous. The newspapers were to celebrate this month their 200th anniversary; it was out of the question to review the history of journalism in Russia, for that would be a terrible accusation against an un reasonable and most severe censorship. which has stiffened all individual ex pression and has suppressed and op pressed a most important institution In a civilized state. The only thin the newspaper men wanted to do was to come together at a banquet eat Rus sian cabbage soup and drink a bottle or two to the health of the public censor. dui even tms narmiess diversion was prohibited and the press is now 200 years old and can neither privately nor publicly celebrate its birthday . Very often the artists of Russia have tried to talk to the people through th brush, but -the expositions also are un der rigid censorship, although once in awhile th censor cannot read the lan gruagc of pictures and so some which preach a revolutionary doctrine escape his attention and his wrath. It was so with Ivanow's picture . called "The Car." The czar in the center of the picture looks like a wax doll dressed In shining purple and gold; there is no ex pression in the face, it is Just a great stuffed waa figure. Soldiers in front of. him press back the crowd which looks at him in stupid awe or falls upon its knees in adoration. That picture was a plain revolutionary pamphlet and after awhile the censor awoke to discover the meaning of what to bis untrained eye at nrst seemed harmless, and now no ex position can be opened until an especial art censor has looked at each picture. XTniverslty In Pondage. Th university is as rigidly Supervised aa every other public Institution and the number of Russian professors who are in involuntary exile Is legion. Thrc of the most famous political economist are upon French soli, where not a few ire In frigid Siberia A young friend of mine, a student who wrote a disserta tion upon the labor movement in Amer ica, wan not allowed to present it, al though it waa harmless. Sociology Is not taught at all and political economy Is handled in a very gingerly manner. The less there Is openly taught the' more the students secretly read and talk Nearly every student If he had a chano would give bis life to let life and light into Russia A finer set of young men one seldom has a chance to meet; they are thoughtful; often have a good philosophy of life and know much more than their professors have taught them. America is to many of them a Mocca ; . and anybody who wants to employ 100 talented young Russian university stu dents could have them for the asking. They very often have an exalted opinion of the United States, and I sometimes have to talk down my own country for fear that they may be disappointed when they reach it. They all- feel painfull y the revival of race hatred In Amerlci and cannot understand the attitude of the South and much of the North on the color questloa They ask, "How can these things be in free America?" and It Is not an easy matter to apologise for such a state of affairs. President Roosevelt's, nam Is better known than that of any other American and I have found small tradesmen and peasants who know him and value him according to his merit, writes Edward A. Stelner in the Chicago News. On tbs Eve of a Crisis. Last years student revolts were not the harmless things which the apologists of Russia try to make us believe. It is very amusing to hear on of our con suls tell th story. He sayss "There was absolutely nothing the matter; there wer about 600 Cossacks on the Nowsky prospect who swung their little whips ar.d frightened the crowd away. Nothing at all happened." Well, ac cording to official report about two dos en men were killed by the Cossacks, and In Moscow a huge building was full of men and women who were arrested just because they happened to be in the crowd, and many an innocent young man has been sent into exile for a year or two just because by chance he was among the number. The Cossack Is not a gentle creature, and when he gets a chance at a crowd is Just like a rat ter rtef with his favorite animal. Russian police are gentler than the Cossacks and i tnina that I would do what most Rus sians do when there is a demonstration run away. , NoW, more than ever, is it apparent that the "fullness of time" is come in Russia and that something is going to happen soon. Among all classes the dis satisfaction Is growing stronger every day. I traveled to Berlin with a pro fessor of the Moscow University and as we reached the German frontier he Jumped from the car, rushed to the newspaper stand and, as he came back with his arms full of papers, said: "1 can stand thla physical slavery, being tagged by a passport but I can't stand this mental slavery; we shall have to be free.-' So speaks a public official, ami couniieBs tnousanas say, vry Quietly when nobody bears; "Amen! So let it be." Concentrated Power is the strong point of the Electric Motor, and its power can be applied instantly and shut off instantly. The Motor offers many advantages along the line of Economy, More Efficient Pro duction and better ; Health of Operators. v We have connected tol our circuit hun dreds of motors, running all classes of machines from the small sewing machine to immense traveling cranes . . . . . 0 SSBSBBS' V Hi toe Filir In Portland are operating Printing Presses, Feed Grinders and Iyikers Coffee i Grin and Blowers, Meat Choppers Cash Carrying Sawing Wood Pipe, Running V", oi Cutting Th Hloanurnan Zevalntinn. They tell me a rebellion's on down there in Nicaragua Where there are names like Chautolis. uoajao and Managua. nn1erfJ? nuch why folk, who llve Down in that lnvelv ,nrf , Bo much of time and blood and treasure To spoiling one another's pleasure By stirring up rebellions Just as fast as e er thev ma v. I hunted up an atlas, and the thing is plain as day. For in that revoluting land, where war 18 a diaeajiA I found a bunch of urfiii i,. best of which or. ' Talagalpa. Kulkulaya, Tipatapa and Bed- ChUamato. Mlguellto and some other thing infernal; Salatlname, Mondaco, Chichlgalpa, Mata-" Siscionas, Momotombo, Matagalpa and LdDerctad, Palacuguina, Saupuka laoannla Chlchacajste. Dlramba, Zepadero, KukeramualiaNandasco, Qudesgua and Metatapa and Mo'ndacha. rhiit.rw Villanueva. " " Ctudada, Antigua Sang San, Makuapa- tura Pintpihn ' Talecuclente. Touatepe, Koorlngwaa and ! JUlaalDa. I guess the ones I've aunterf serve the nurnnin mil). And show why .N.caraguans are Impelled so oft to fight For there Is not a name of all th. on.. uear and Prin- ' a ' stems, ana are Blowers ftrV School Buildings, Etc., lite. These Motors are nm in sizes from one-quarter horse-power ; to any size required. Let us send a soDdtor to tell you about it 5 I fly. you win their places That one ma; Z utter gently and not sound lr he d . And so when NIcaraguans fall to was 1na of their rhln v They stalghtway think they're quarrel ing ana war at one beglna Baltimore American, 1P01RTLAM3) ill ELEGf MC: Mmm Y Seventh and Alder Streets - - - - - PORTLAND, OREGON jcxuzsxssx: :sssassivxzsszKS3SssssnsssssszssaKszss;rsa