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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (May 10, 1908)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL',' PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 10, 1808. STRETCHES OF SAGEBRUSH GIVE WAY TO GARDEi J; -TWsanJv TKrifty Settlers Provided of Lz? ' ' , MWfff - ,, , r - , ;,gS fflWFg W i : Vfr . mm turn, r t at , -.' '- , 1 " . "' " ' . mmmm!Hm!!m gPIBywgpiWWjw ,t i . I;':'- n i 'ii". v ' v ,: fr'iV :s r,- .--,-,' - ; . its ? , , , I. -s if, ' vwxwiMr y -- n r .-.jw,tj f'"'-" By Lu!u R. Lortns. THS SuU ptr tretche e( M bruah In dif f rnt part , of th wt art , rtldly blnf ? trtBi formed Into, a tbouMnds hdea of reen, which nolatur and cvUU nation ar brlnclnc forth. ThoianJ of thrifty and induatrtoua aattlara r drawlns from former arid abrea the aubstanca of Ufa And tha aaaenoa of af fluence. ' -v.. That tha wiatera aeotloa of Umatilla county will aoon be one of the moat beautiful epota la tha Island empire la now a certainty. The foVernmettt la completing the lmmenae project- which will Irrigate thouaanda of acrea of far tile land, which torether with a number of Urge private projeota under 'Way will reclaim from the deaert million of acra of the moat fertile and productive land in the world. - Hundreds of men have been employed thia aprlng- at clearing- away the aage bruah. vaat traota of land have been checked off for the crow ing of crop, and where water haa been ecu red. alfalfa, potatoe and other, cropa are growing: nicely at tnle time. ' Work oq the big dam of the govern ment project haa not been yet completed, though engineera report that It will be finished by July 1 at tha lateat. There la at preaent over 7.000 feet of reserve water available In toe Cold Bpringa rea ervoir. Pipe ltnea have been aatlafac tory to the Utmoat in delivering; water across the valleys by the Inserted ayphon ayatem. One of these pipe lines - is 48-lnch pipe reeniorced with H-lnch steel wire. It waa tha flrat pipe of the size and kind ever laid In the United Btates. The line is over a mile la length and cost 125,000. . There will be 20.000 acrea of Irrigable land under this project, and of the 7,000 acres under the ditch this year only 4,000 )s being put into cultivation and the reservoir and storage will be amply sufficient for this year a needs. Breaks In flie ditches have been remarkably few and none have been serious, -a testimony of the well-built scheme. Water has bn delivered to the ranchers allvdurlng the month of April. Several hundred acres have thus been watered. They In clude several young; orchards and vine yards, and several hundred acrea of alfalfa and rye. Water - has been successfully run through every ditch coming; under -this year's unit of Irrigation and the dltchea carried surprisingly well, requiring very little ' puddling. The ash In the aolt forms a aort of cement, coating: the ancn ana noiaing me water. The water for reclaiming thla land Is taken from the Umatilla river through a feed canal 25 miles long and held in a reservoir which covera about 1,800 acrea, holding 60,000 acre feet of water, or enough to cover the entire tract of 20,000 acres to a depth of JH feet dur ing the summer aeaaon, after two full Irrigations have been had In the spring. The dam will be 87 feet high, 600 feet acronB the base, and Including the wings will be 8.600 feet long, Facts About Umatilla Project Capacity of tha reservoir la 16,000,- II 'mmtmm iL gaaMaBa1BW fort X J iA.'f Lewis declared that the Hermlaton coun- than an acre of his seven-acre ranch; the Umatilla project over 1,700 acres of try waa unquestionably a peachj grape, he raised $70 worth of peaches on one under the nrotect. " Exauralon will cherry and berry country. He stated acre, the treea being four yeara -old; hla na un6r tD ' PrJecl- wursiona wiu that from observation the long early grapes, two years old. paid fl per vine: be pun from all parts of eastern Oregon season would enable the growers to pro- strawberries with him went, about 100 for this occasion, giving the people an 1 rtuce and mature a Jonathan or such crates to the acre and sold on account opportunity to view the Improvements i apple In time to market them in Alaska, of the early season at Si and $5 per made In the west end of one of Oregon's i meeting the demand at high prices, crate. greatest cou'ities Umatilla. Among other things Professor Lewis King brothers, near Hermleton," made Governor Chamberlain and the Oregon i ald: "From all appearances,, western 1402 per acre off four acres of onions congressional delegation. Bacret&rv ! t matllla . haa the aoil and the tfllmate, last year and tha land was new land. JameH R. Garfield of the Interior depart the water supply is unexcelled, and these R. E. Thorn made 1,800 on 250 stands ment and prominent members of the combined will grow fruit to- perfection." of bees. press and business men of Portland and ' R. C. Canfleld raised and sold potatoes other cities of the northwest will be hern Enterprising Citizens. for 3 cents per pound because thev were and addresses will be delivered by many " ' early and he raised a second - crop on prominent northwest uitlsens . in 'honor nenaiaion ana in wni mo i mm mat lana tne same year, of thia event. nPrMlP.T) KnXXn.TJr&rX T?AsIr-TT XTVirmT Vra.Tr'M'JS.TltvT jA. tSPO.lPr county has a data of enterprising citl- The Msxweu lnd & irrigation com vwvj rovj' ni iw w i.u r-w a. ceaww w.-v..fcr-'e..jw'w i i v.. pany raisea l.zoo . melons -on sevei v ' . eP wao ar. uuin, w eights of an acre, averaging from 15 to pressure against tne dam la is pounds Professor I. C. Lewis, state horucul- moat profitable and famous fruit coun- me country out in us true ugni. reopw 20 pounds, or excellent flavor. 000,000 gallons. seven Towns Grow. - r . : The towns In the vlclnltv'of these lrrt- per aquare inch. turisL recently visited Hermiaton and . . . from all over the country are Inquiring . Already, alfalfa is more than knee K&tloa nroiecta are ahovixi a wonflerfnl it wui require iuu aaya 10 rin tne " . Professor Lewis then went Into detail into, the condltlona of this section, ana nign. unions ana tatnnnes are nearly - - - - " " - , reservoir with the feed canal carrying made expert examination or the condl- and recommended various fruits, such without question Just as soon as the ready for market and all oondltons are STowtn. Two years agxj there were only a full bead. tions, afterward addressing the farmers as after careful study seemed best government gets water on all the lands favorable for a good fruit and vegetable 10 or 13 people at Hermlston, While to- Tha land is $70 and upwards In 10 and fruitgrowers on the aubject of com- adapted to the conditions. . In apples he the country will be filled up. The year. jay there are nearly 800 There am annual installments. mercial orchards. Mr. Lewis stated recommended the Jonathan. Bpltzenberg. Hermlston Development league is en- Lands are aelllng rapidly In the irrl- hundreds of new homes belnr built ntsrr ine reservoir arains idu raiiea or ter- mai in nis opinion me non ana aeep Kome ueauty. vv wenap; peaches, Phil- deavorlng to Inform any and an in- gated sections tnis spring. Alucn-nas business blocks and man linnrovementu ( rltory. sandy ash loam about Hermlston would lips. Lemon Cling. Mulr, Elberta, Fits- oulrera of the conditions. been disposed of under the government are beln mad in Jl Mni 1 The seepage allowed in the estimates produce more high grade fruit than any gerald and Crawfords; cherries, Lam- " ' project and the Furnlsh-Coa and , X"CJ- , of the capacity of the reservoir is 20,000 other soil he had seen in Oregon. The Bert, Bing, Royal Anne; grapes, Muscats, Mnnn ln Products Hlnkle landa are selling well. . . ., . gallons per day. cllmatio conditlona he held to be good, Malaga, Tokay, Concords, Moore'a Early: alone' m 'ou-' The Old Arguments ' . There Is no way in which to ee- and his Investigation of the water sys- strawberries. Clark a fieedling. Where different parties had water on Excursion to Proiect. Ere long too day . . i cure land and water rights under the tern the government is Install ng showed The above varieties are those which !-,,. in this vlolnitr last -year through Will come, I say, r, - " project except by homesteading the land It to be the best ayatem in Oregon are going in at the present time largely. la"5" n "IVJ iZ "Wednesday, May 27. 190J. la destined When angry words will paas Between 'ems and living upon it for 10 years, paying These conditions, together with that of However, several of the local growers private dltchea they raised excellent . m.moDj dav in the history of He'll eaten the. fish" one tenth of the cost price each year. splendid transportation and markets, are experimenting along lines suggested crops, the following being some facta " oe a memorable day in the nlstory or To fill the dish. Residence upon the land is absolutely with Hermiston's early season, would by Professor Lewis, and are trying other received from land owners: C. D. Mc- Hermlston. On that day water will be Then try to get hie wife to clean 'em. necessary. undoubtedly, he believed, make this a varletjea also. In his talk Professor Nurlln cut nine tons of alfalfa on leaa turned from the monster reservoir of Washington Herald. TAP ATMRSK DTPT.OM Af!V POTKFTS TO WAP - m ' paav m a m- ja. ja. m mm -a. as -aw a - m A Mm mmmT JL JawjL.te VCtlVltv peril la the one we have not tested. In , ... . - , , - . ,. 1 A.vi.v.jr the Pacific our life Is at ptake. We must of tirown Men J5hoixld tJc Warning to lhis Country to Be on liuard Merchant Marine Haa Been Greatly Expanded ITS III PXllTiin; 1 ol. nn ihirum with tha Rrlti. WHY YOU LOST YOUR JOB F By Richmond Pearson Hobson. EVERISU activity prevails P fey Clara Reese. J ERHAPSyoti are a disorganizing factor, and that la the reason the firm decides to part with you. Ton know that there' are agen- oles in the physical world whlc! and torpedo factories, shipyard equip ments, docks, building plants, gun fac tories, powder an, high explosive fac- mut get there and tab nn ithannM with thn TlrtHHh until thia rival empire, and weaken this hered- that the new Anglo-Saxon treaty," a beat erms we could hope to secure In centralised governments, through eon- e can build new fleets to eliminate In 'tar,y, enemy, particularly when their east-Iron alliance, offensive and da- suing for peace would be to pay an In- trol of the press, have gained an equal the chances. Let s always encourage Janan ln accumulating war ma. 7. .If wuulu nov involve nmr m pi- ioiibi. is uiwini rimi .oemuiiy mat would stagger ine unagm- advantage In molding tnis puoiw opin- f" "'V!;," "V i" ...V ,n ccumuiating war ma- uclpatfon. The purposes of thia alliance are not atlon and yield un to the British: cSba, lqn In line with their policies, as puollo infiVa?1e' tl!" ott MilfrJS: tl" of terials, such activity aa is seen The first Anglo-Japanese alliance was difficult to discover. On the part of porto Rico, the Panama Canal, the ter- eplnton la now being xealoualy molded lnstltutions. eto., etc., but the true way verieof war VTi.tir, ..tlhii.t. each of the contracting powers -would to isolate America. It forestalls and Lawrence and the Great Lakes, and The utmost that could be hoped from or any other people is to be Independent oauae disintegration of .the parts an .,. . . , come to the asslaunce' or the otner in prevenia any possiuie am nioric xne nortnwest to the latitude below the revulsion of feeling ln England P "im j or our securiiy. urn. un ciier- icere are acuve causes which lead t ments are being; enormously enlarged, case the other became engaged with might have hoped to receive from Great ' Puget Bound. Including the whole of would be to restrain anwstual declara- J 0 lovKe' vt,e" of friend- dissolution, and there are subtle nnwp, new establishments are being founded, more than one power; in other words. Britain on aooount of the tlsa of raoes, .Alaska, to the Japanese and their Aslat- tion of war and aave the British from fhlP. " rom the beginning have .1 "'JT. . powei steel and iron works and armor r,it- if France Joined Russia, Great Britain blood and language. With the great ic allies; the whole of the Paclflo slope, tha dangera that might arise in Canada bound ua to Japan," but the only true which aeparate the most tenacious com- . 7 ' m,0r p,ata would join Japan. Thjs alliance elim- British naval base at Hong Kong, be- the Aleutlon islands. Hawaii, Guam, the if Anglo-Japaneae pTanahould meet a way to cheriah these Is to bo lndependj blnaUon, just aa there, are influences inatea Tance ana securea me isolation iw "u i jr . fRMippinea and. Samoa, leaving them check. In the meantime, the British ni or tnem xor aecurny. io gi. ,n morai meaB which, onamt. i of Russia. with a atrona; British fleet In the orient., jree to move down Into Lower Call- fleets would be mobilised and the ex- question of national defense la not lt ' " v !. w"ca Prftt wsld-. This completed Japan" a diplomats Brittah aid to America la tha ona tbicg fornla, Mexico, Central America and posed statea on the Atlantlo and Gulf by any other nation to depend upon oth- uously and break np homea, or aliattcr nnunH.n. Th. n.1 illt.. Jlnltl Would feap the mOSL - Onnth Amln. A 1 I ZYTTl- " 1 ... .! " 1 .... It not ha laft hT tha TTnltAd - j. . .... tones, .mail arm and ammunition equips wltins we alr.-ady completa Th'e "the alliance li tended" t.roduca wovld thu. 'be reduced "T th.tof an prevent' our fi?.r nVwncen- States' .. . . . . " " which IhouTd "JT ll7lmZ ment ractories. , - Kusso-dapanese war, tnererore. ioiiowea jna.uivjmon m wm iMnn ""T miana nation, strue-giing ror existence trated In the PaeJflo. thus insuring to mus we una ourserves oeiween cu- - rw These establishments at home are close upon the heels of the Anglo-Jap- iwe the Atlantlo and Paeirio. ana n the presence of surrounding foes. Japan an eaay tack ln gaining control rope and Asia. uretime. working full force overtime, night and anese treaty. War between Russia and thua to '""J tu'" L. ' Ih2 Frowlnlr B10r orP,werlng aa tha of tha aea. It can be assumed that the Both continents are allied 1 agalnet n- Perhaps you are deyeloplnr eapabtlU day, and tens of millions of dollars Japan waa inevitable, and would have Japanese fleet .In thla Utter ocean, the year pasa. British have guaranteed to the Japanese w. and both are liable to be allied t. , . c"aul"' worth of additional war material haa come aome day, but it la ceruin that great desideratum of Japan, - This picture will e-hock the lmagina- to Tkeep the AWloat Tfleet In "fit At- against us at any time ln the future. Iea "ch as these, n, without nja: been ordered abroad in Europe. Japan, without the cooperation of the It Insures financial aid, ror whlcn tlon of Americana who have been lis. lantlo when war aPDroaohea. Scarcely Therefore, the minimum basic for knowing the potency of your atrangt i Hundreds of millions of dollare of British, would not have taken the ag- Japan has need in maUn her great war tenlng to the mellow words of British have Wa mobilised our fleet of 1 bat- American defense Is to be able to cope 0r influence, are auietlv weakening , - ready specie money have been stored gressive during the contlnuanoe of tha preparationa. and in proaeoutlag the diplomacy Intended to he an opiate to tlesnipa praratory to going around with any European power ln the Atlan- Ait",f! ' .JIT, nlnf "r up. The merchant marine haa been France-Russian alliance. The British, war. . our confiding people, absorbed ln their to T the Paclffe? whei the British T mob- tlo and with any Asiatic power In the undermining the foundations on. whl greatly expanded for over-aea trans- therefore, are absolutely responsible for On the part bf the British, tha pur- ; activities of peace. Ulae n fleet o it battleshtDa. ready for Pacific, both at the same time. your firm's interest reaf You aee it 1 port service. The Chinese are being the war as it came, the first Anglo- poses are equally plain. The Japanese j know that the mass of the British foreign -ervice giving It No cnoice Is left us. this way You cannot .rr "an V laught. trained and organised In prep- Jajpanese alliance, though professing are fast booming supreme in determln;. people have an-affection for America, overpowering fief o"ld be mt off on The minimum upon which to Insure "il.TrV,,. ?:rM,P,J1 1 aratlon for drawing upon the combined peace as its purpose, was a war measure, insl-th commercial pol cies of China 6ut it 18 not that part of the. people foreign T service without exposing thS our safety and fulfill the requirements cw of e to the outside woi renourcea of both countries. Such, likewise, la the nature of the sec- and the far 'east .generally. They can that determine British foreign .policy. British roasts this notice beTna- Intend- of self-preservation. Is to have a navy and expect the outside world to Int , It may be pointed , out further that ona Angio-japanese, alliance, now in " -, ?".uo""" l?Z recalling .-a ract that . stands ed for German ears as well aa American, as large aa that of Great Britain and Dret with the same, Wn m ., in rvA.itinn tn JaDan combined. -. . ... . . these warlike preparations can have no existence and extending till 1 " iJ"? . .'..rw i ou oiear in our niatory, o state that While holding Itself , so mai ausara tbuv. ayuai mnurow. XM ttruisn government, ana governing n,r,t,t with iinuttmA Bankers Cbew Gam. From the Cleveland Plaln jDealerL fulness and loyalty aa th irnrVur. You cannot about tailing office retrenchment of tha cutting dovi A man could go into the First National nomTerUe other ocean and leaving w "i , mo ui muu nvw concern ar-i Kuritniui ' nr Aalntlr. nnwar aa tha nh. treaty modifies the first treaty, WitivA hut ir rtlratori airalnat am. now the British. must loin the JaDanese tne urmsn cave covetea lor genera- classes resent the mnrvelnua mnih erica. - if they becorae-4nvolved-Xa warwltbtlpns. The aAllanee would ineura tha the United Statea, and have sought and In great wars, however, naval and only one nation. elimination Of America, their great oom-wilI aeeit again arry-opportunity t have military preparations are not the only What nation Is Japan's objective In petltor, from the oriental markets and thla growth checked, preparation; dlplomatlo preparationa al- forming this new alliance? Evidently give to the British a partnership In the so are require! The great conquerera It la a great nation that haa no alliance commercial aupremaev of, the Wlc- Followg Public Oolnion. - of history, like Napoleon. Caesar. Alex- with other nations, for tha first treaty It, ma be advanced , that the British "" a-uum. wpmign. ander, -Tamerlane, were aa great In dt- would have been adequate for a nation buld refrain , "om war with the Publlo opinion in England la a strong piomacy as in airecv war Itseir, ana wun iucn jnanuen. iuw S" -J" "VS""' . fa-tor In ihanlnr nrtttah nnl mr,A TT.-J wJ. their greatness and success lav largely great nation Without alliances -America, lmlty of Canada. Thorough exarnina- racior m anaping umnn policies, and Honeyed Words, in their mastery of the dlplomatlo fac- It is blandly aent out from Tokio and "on win take away the rorce of this mere wouia aoyDuees be great revulsion .......i. Tnilnn that tha lllinixi hii Ruaaia in assertion. In the case ttf the Rritlah ' 1 - ... -.1 vtm vi. . .w.. a.vvucuvij . ..... - --. . , . . - . , ', 1 uv.n vi ymjuirn I'J . . . . .,, T , . - . . . . ,,, . mi Himi nr war la Battled ahaniutaiv hw view. wnen itussia waa in ner run uluju w- invuion, put . ' ... - iim ' "" jiup "r uwum. or ina urn inuuuai, atia wuy m-rmrr- x?.- .. the sucoes. or failure of-dl with .the British in alliance with a tL ? ' handspring. Is suddenly taking up hon- body there la afraid of uncUimed pack- In'your own office KSSX aTwK-u' iat n- "ur' .f-- ? Tndir' when thTnew ASaiS-faS- a base forhe Tnvailon of the "United r galled that thera etrong Vulslon words of friendship and 1. urging agea left In th. bang. iv. ..m,- 5 '"f.out things going to Piec.V mv. i i ui.i..., t. .n.a. irui.ani antaraH (ntn Sitaaia Htates. Tnveatl frntlcin ahowa that lan.n . of feelinar ln EnilxnI ak-ainat tha firm- ua to send the fleet to the Pacific, and Bnma tlm. nirn a am all , nanul w ".'".""l. "lyv'J . hands airalnst the thought of such a thing, the British are trying to produce, ana are producing, uneasiness on the- Atlantic eea board, where the papers are now with one voice protesting against sending all the ahlna tn thA nthir nMtin anri tMvIn our great Atlantic cities unprotected. age from waste paper to cut glass and "J"",-apiiau or tne mi : hava raaannaMa aaauranoa hit Mhd, "V I0" nnot Oonride too X.-a... in uiose who are employed -elsawn would monkey with It. and depreciate values ivnd deoiore c While Great Britain Is mobilizing her Joseph R. Krans, one of the officers ditlons and expect your recital to i that soma buAlr Tn hrina- ahnut a far aa nnaaihla lar nrostrate uoon the earth, her armr in control or the pacific ocean could uo measures taxen against .the Ameri- not to rorget to nave it come over to j, e n. t th. . lv.. " l"ur oi i u the isolation of the enemy, and to ae- and navy permeated by mutiny, her peo- occupy the Pacific alope and hold It, can colonies, but thia did not etoo the Japan and give them an opportunity to iv"" - , . " , ' " .Lr'.'L - xaiiure can Co.- cure aa far aapoaslble the advantaSel pl Trent by reVSluUon. in the face of all the military exertion measures, did not prevent the employ- show their undying love and friendship windows. After the package, remained through the preaenl polloy of .your ous cooperation of other nations, in If there waa but little, occasion for we might make. The altuatlon would ment of mercenaries and of the red sav- for America. Great Is the oontraet there unclaimed for several days. Teller Sf,.atinn maw i ?i.ilt V11"' without naval military, financial and moral sup- Great Britain to form the alliance be far more critical in the case of a ages, with acalping knife, for women with Marquis Ito's spontaneous words ti,,,m wnklna decided to look lnaida. SJ. ?h ,iSniY after your nnn port L . 7 agalnat Russia, there. was even less for combined invasion from the Pacific and and children along with them. when our president announced hla In. f"lu HPins ec'a,a, 1,1 fla6' 00 k VA - Japan. The first treaty had proved from Canada at the aamo time. Both The only gauge we can go by at pres- tention of sending the fleet, words that I was a box of chewing gum about omatter how excellent your wr.r' lftna Crtntrtil Rm amply adequate for.Ruasla, when Rue- oceana would quickly be swept free Of ent Is the press, and all during the dif- were a challenge to the "Grandiose pro- worth. He waited another day. and JlpwJt: n" ..now . expert you 'are i must vomroi oca. . si a had a fleet at 'Port Arthur nearly American ahipe. Canada haa about B5,- ficultiea in California, the British pres nouncement of the American president. tUl nobody came after the gum. Then your department, nor how worthy ii Janan bnlno- an island klnsdom. her as large as the Japanese navy. With 000 trained men with which to keep us waa unanimously on the .side of Japan. While Great Britain pulls, Japan he passed the stuff around and salivary general way, nor how difficult It w --e.ii.VJl -tJ. these fleeta annihilated, -except those in check at first, then the British Thla siding of a European nation with pushes, to cause our fleet, or part of it. glands were worked overtime around the be to replace you, there will alwayn t success or fauura m any loreign war T.Meis porta that, were not captured , would pour trained troopa Uto Canada Aslatlca against kindred nations of the to remain In the Atlantic. Of course, bank for a day or ao. ; question raised a to .whether It will always hinge upon the control of by the Japanese, and with no prospect faster than we could arm, equip- and white race in not , an isolated case. In a division of the fleet would be fatal. About a month later. Cashier C b.h expedient or pot for tha firm t r ! . . . . mi. . . , , r , . . .S . i-fr 4mm t. Ik. t rj 1 1. . Iwutni in th. .f.ra .l.t.. a . all , tha .Mia t Invftclnn. liitrnna hv Wa mn.t V-.Aii It lAvnthap Am- m "..nawApth tnM fi h fill t an rffl te nenn-ttnf .-' 7011. " NO Dlmlnf.M .... ..... . v n.t.-.!T. A.rAm T.,. rZt,. east. for a generation, why should Japan leastfor one or two years. The Brit- the Saracens, the Huns, the Ottomans, pact mass of high efficiency, It would who had been In to have the bank show right to stand In . Ita own llsht Instance, depends pon Japanese control BeeiJrtha co-operation of the mlsfresa of h have a standing army of 188,000 the Tartars, similar unholy alliances give good account of itself with a Brit, cause why they should chew wp all of it cornea to Ilvlnsr up to its own t . of the sea. The issue of the war with the seas to keep Russia ln check? men and total effectiveness amounting were formed. Ish fleet or a Japanese fleet either, a man's chewing gum Just because It and the standard which. Us cut i , Russia was not aettled by the brilliant ' ' " to 750,000 men. She has practically an Only SO years ago we find Great Brit- Divided, it would make It useless. . , had been left in the bank for a short rights baa granted. victories of Llaovang and Mukden, but Suggestion IS KtaiCUIOUi. t Zxr"?""t7.V? TJ' ".,"""..5 .V'" "-Cl", ivf "it A?lVU.llt' fi7 which to sup-ply both ' oceana with to aide with the Turk against the Rus- to run till 1916. during the period f wVld full well that RissnSI-. -The -paw alliance la not needed for 1. na wouia aw upon inaia ,-fS mo,r.? "cmr'!wo".w01 An- J .,iii- rWs lta?JT.j ViCt,rJi 1? fi. P . T. Hindua would Join the hordea. of the IshTiold continental nations together to ocean to the other will require going iir(.T. i. ith --.rA. Th. T anW i ""i"' l ' " wiuiin japiDum snq umnsse, na irom in oo- perpwawa. m yoxe oi ine xuras on around tne Horn, practically insuring the- auiance witn jTnce, . -tneuaeoona naval. Mvarnnant haa nnanlv itrnail llut ft ' cupatlon of the Paclflo alobe thev would the necks Of Chlratiana. and barbarous Immunity to tha ocean not occupied at intn fkower in tne world, - an atiKoiiiia nr- j - - -- - . it . . n . . : , . . , i - ... . . . . - the gum. "I waa the one that passed comment of yours has been r rn it around. he said. "Here's $3, If you official ears; not IntP-utiomii'y, t ilia. uu . ,, - -""'"" aiirw.KiS a ,, Farnsworth thought the $2 would put lloase, and soriie ouo r i,, disgruntled owner o? tna gum oacn. Doistar up a chum, or v a , srmd humor. . : . own unwiae ntr .... .. ' ...,,i.it. fnr a..a Ith 1iia.i. .v - Malta that T.uii ran throw tha 1lrJ vnniow croH mo uanua- niMinurw m in iimx in jr-. me ouiorou si .war. it is aouoiiess ,- in next oay nupiuns noucea mat cuea is noSJPil ty a i Hi r ,, , 523ui"?.f?TrAMJtuJe"l.vll railroads to supply all the men menia, count for naught when it is aa- punned by the. allies that If the fleet everybody ln the bank was chewing gum quote you, and ouuivL V, ' MH 1 Inna.A. ... aum. .Hat hAlltlrt.l ntlM.tl - mrt.t K - fM . , I. n A K. . I .. V. 1 1 J rf Iawn. V . 1 . . , . i - ' gum naa oeen p&asea around you win not he afrm.! im. power. The first naval power of the Prance, fnrhln China is aa holnlesa aa .itt,. .',.n.lnna I. vf. th.t k.ith h. j!. l.,:;vrT .Ve. -JLT.iT:" wl lT. ' 1 r t world was ready at hand n4 altin vi.h.. i. Bnt n.iA ti, n.Ti: -Vl.":-',""J,..,"'i' 1,S"-"J"S Ji""""n:""V "u" 1"THTT ":""L.Z""12 ?"'n . DO" ".' wnwhO . . . i . . . , . . .... . "- - - - rf - nii.i,f.i, wuu n i nn nrmni crun .viuuiumu Kiim urM. vuiinv vi.tnif.ri mud lun tii. iur L ti r nreFnui. to vm ri. iniiKcn in ranuwnr n or traiia up ntia- r ttrinii' i . . . ;-;" ; .m e . . . w .. : -uiii rauroaaa to supply an we men mania, count xor nausni wnen n is pianneo oy ine aiues tnat ir tne xieet everyrjoov w,?.tJ? jEaaa HininY?.ir05 ans out of Wo-Chao ny Ume it de- needed for a general Invasion of the aumed that political interests-and ad- fs in the AUantio; tha British will again. . Tl " VQSS Xo a e. - . ' . "t'V";i"--lPlt States, all alongf tha Canadian wantages secured over rival nations are. threaten, but not actually become In worth of EtiV .i. .:. a! volved. at least for a while. untlVto do with -hi. , 1 .,i an finnnrlnnlrv t tank a thlt. ., , . . ' " ' ' " ' . , ....... . . , v , .... v . , . -.v. f1! iu. iv -Bin.nunu vr Ainui vr una- - ' aaaM)LujtJi.' ta aback tha advance of .'Anv"h,.ra-Vitnd'mir. r.,iw.t,T-r.?""Vyl..,-,i""M,tr,ir ri-tf'":."".-":" r.." ZZr?'1?? YI i.'"1""' -"JX " uaaae. wno naa put up a joo raru.. ro ract.-r wl.t-.n ... i " r , I waav eW . FT t&VttV V sfaJDaaBj VVIUWIUfVli . UV Mat faM afMSaA, 1,11 VUfj wmUvV. Ma414 ' VCSaal , MW SAW WUWb UW SVAaSJ 1U? VH aV