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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1908)
12 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. FRIDAY EVENINO. OCTOBER 0, 1003. I - .. .- m .a m . J m m mm, mm mm. mm mm."' s-s a M n S w-w l a. r" 1 r-"f " M f li HllVJ I nr Kri Uhlf : V ItBN hhlfhU I Hh IrJII I IX V h I. If All i f r l.f L'CI; I . a a v i mm i h n , a i vihki a a a a a a a iwkiiiii is a as , . . - , . ' ' : .- v: , , ,. i ." .v. , , AS UJ:. i. . . ::?T W , ,.-d:;l i 'Aiv. r if.. w 1 -iM ' - " "' '. V - - - "',''Sn' t t. th milk. eonnaal milk ' i 11 "" '" 11 "" . nd cream; whll 10,100,000 ar required 'xyr'w1KwOTr ::" "i' ium jumtah th buttr of this country 'T f k ' jf , . vf 'V: . I Awnf vrodvouoa. .. 1 r :' , , . t jj ' ' ,Ih production of butUr ! i f . ' I v ; , i , j j 1 I '. ? about 160 pounds per jrar, from each . f, 1 ' f P P i-. - cow. It requires about 840.000 cows m i j , s i I ' 1 to furnlah the cheese consumed In the X t m i -it v r I III ' t I of the Ilooa Mill company VI Chsrlai v. furrv. eroreiarr of sue. The ul was brought as a '1 lie mill cm- njf XllBd f he - neeoMarw apors ana 'urrr rfused to file them. In 'order le test the law. . Mandamus proceed ns wera instituted. . rmwTThrjifr---1 " SlVv.A.lder. near Third Street Sandy McfherMn'e quiet ftahlnc trip, lea lit. tie pickaninnies a Jauah from start to psh: , ' i -, . , . :, I , MAN -WHO SHOT HIS t UNCJiE EXONERATED tDslted rreai Leased Wb. ..Tscoma, Oct . Harrr Starr, who cldenuily killed pis unola, , Joe Eley, Wednesday nlfht mlstaklnf him for burrlsr, has baaa eiorerated by a Jury In Judjt Chapman's court The testl- mony shewed that Eley was ubject to fits of epilepsy and that he often rose from his bed and walked In the nlrht air while suffering; from -an epileptic at tach. It was shown that a mule time was irlven for an answer after Starr awoke and began calling, before the shot was fired. LOVED PHOTOGRAPH; . COURTED BY MAIft "'. 1 (rnrtad Press Uat4 Wlre. Spokane, Wash.. Oct f.Ulsa. Lliils Cait of Petersburg, Ind., was married at i ociook last night to "W.-J. Moors of Hlue Creek, Wash., whom she had never seen unfll she stepped from the Northern Paclflo train. Mr. Moore had a slight advantage over his bride, for while he also had never laid eyes on the woman, ha had seen her photograph, Moore fell In love - with hep likaiitiae and was Introduced to her through the tnalla. SUOXTLT . OOZJDXB WITH BSOV. ' When you see that kind of a weather forecast you know that rheumatism weather la at hand. Get ready for It now by getting a bottle of Ballard's Snow Liniment. Finest, thing; mads for rheumatism, chilblains, frost bite, sore and stiff Joints and muscles, all aches end pains. Sold by Skldmors Drug Co. 16o. 0o and 11.00 a, bottle. vwvwwv vwwvwvv i SJJI v '1 Near Oak SI. FV WWW W (Br s Staff Oorreeposdent) ' Salem, Or- Oct I. Little more than half a century ago Salem was a good place- to go. t trade with rthw trapper and get scalped by the Indians. r- Buc the dim and winding Indian trail has ' broadened with the years Into k high way of civilization, and the Indian finds himself absolutely stranded ' on the shores of progress and plenty. The old Orcgonlan harks back at the mere men tion of the. Indian land, to the days when blankets and moccasins were much In evidence and the implements of warfare much in demand. . J It was the beaver that became re-1 vpunniujo lur: win vh-uji vk , lamette valley. It led the trapper and trader from the Mississippi to the western ocean. - Along their trail in aftrr veara. the emigrant wajrons dotted white the limitless plains from the foot of the Rockies to the Pacific, end the emigrants left their toll by the trail In namelrss mounds on the plains. Yet their splendid achievements have proved that the white man's footsteps were surely not on the wrong trail. The old trappers of the Rocky moun tains, who followed the beaver In his aimless wandering into the most glori ous empire of adventure and resources the world ever saw, has lost the fron tier. He has bid good-bye to the de Bert' and the wilderness. ' . I SiarioVs JUobss. - "'' Marlon county was once the richest of all the red man's hunting grounds. Now, It Is the richest of all the whit? man's fields and orchards. . , .. - . Again the seasons nave run meir Course. The farmer's harvest of Marlon county is nearly gathered. The smoke of the thrasher's engine has faded from the western horlson, and nearly the last measure of wheat has been tossed to the Brain bin. For many years, the tide of emigration flocked to the cities in the Willamette valley, but the tide has turned -oountryward. . sThs ,-. rural f rea mall delivery, the rural trolley car, and the rural telephone are effect ing me most remamsote social trend in the hlstorv of the valley. They are changing the whole face of the coun- , try. xne larm is no looser a jjiauo iur dullness. Many writers, following the spirit of the steam era. have been too eager ro glorify the commercial enterprises of the cltv and , too ready to exalt the possessors of wealth, showing, by com parison, the narrowness of sericulture. -Marlon county Js coming back to first principals. The farm worker has not labored in vain.' The coming . years are to be the period of the open field and e. xne agricultural coi ns; the impulse and It Is Inspiration. "Not' many country home, ; lege is feel In 4endlnr new years ago, 80 per cent of the graduates if our agricultural college sought em- " ployment in Our cities. Today, nearly 90 per cent of these graduates are re turning to the farm with pride. Trapper and Soont Tha Willamette valley was not syon by the trapper, the scout, or the miner, but by the hero of peace, who drove . his prairie schooner into unfamiliar lands and turned -over 'long stretches of rich virgin soil that pointed towards the setting oun, The average Marlon county farmep Is asfwell informed upon ii A 2K - 1J country' As a nation, we consume about 20 nounda of butter ner capita. per year. About one-third ' of the 0 tlon's output of butter comes tfora the farms, where about 1,500,000 arm ers ana ' meir iamuies ami otiuru 11. Over 6,000 factories make the rest of the 1. BOO. 000. 000 that we use annually, More and more each year, the farmers of Marion county are turning atten tion almost entirely to the fruit and aairy inaustry. The earlr history of this , county reads Ilka fiction. Life came; Indian and bear; fur trader and missionary; lumberman and homesteader; ox team and railroad. Each moved across the stage and hag played his part, often unconsciously in Its dramatic history. Than began the development little by little. '- Farms sprang Into - existence. The soil was tested and found to be f t-f. .(:. trpper Right-Hand Corner, Pet Bears, Indian Training School, Chemawa; at State Insane Asylum; 1 Lower, Salem. School Children a Parade.. . J, i. Marlon, county will become one of the leading counties of the state In the dairy Industry. Expert dairymen of the auestlons of the dav as the average I Industry Is hot only supplying home business man of (hn rttv.' though lei SAh SI 11 m Vtf Inn hi skins anAAiw asTAaJn lacks acquaintanc with many things to other markets. The pork and mut wbich some regard as essential to cul-nn inrinatrv niu.. Jure. One must not be hasty In form- A new. stock Industry Is coming to the ing conclusions as to the farmer a. In- front in the cnuntv If thi inmn leuiffence. on me Dasis or nia cioibh, ut t, 1. . 1- nor even his use of grammar, for he teresting individual, any way you take is dealing with nature, rather than htm. Personally, he Is a beauty. He a pleasant front or a smooth tongue. h, a browser and not a graser, and .Far back from the railroad, the coun-1 prefers the brush. of thft mountain to tv still retains enough of its former tne grass or the .valley. wilderness to make the -tlaee lnvitlnr. I goat is not a vagabond 11 This Dart of the rountv '. dasnite the I cousin who loafs about the street has" been conquered by a cheap clown making fun for small presents, . in ooys. tie is an aristocrat, and. a fact that it the hand of industry. striking contrast' the scenes of fron tier days, for no man can destroy the characters who made history, prior to the opening. For . many years, the wneat industry led all others In ' the county. About 2,000,000 bushels were snipped out annually. .Hop Shipments. ' It has manv resources and nroiip. Last year 300 carloads of dried prunes were shipped from Salem, at a value of about I1;000 a car. -The county roauuea a targe amount or nops, and alem Is the largest shipping noint of The beeri source of profit to his owner, Dairying Industry. No one can lift the veil and look into the future, but It is quite plain that this county are confident that cows, producing 6,000 pounds of milk and 200 pounds of butter annually, are In reach of every farmer or dairyman who will take the pains to bring his cows up to such a standard. The average yield now for each cow is less than 4,000 pounds of milk and about 160 pounds . of butter. It was an Oregon cow that took first prize at the St Louis exposition... This cow weighed 1,000 pounds, and' in the 120 days of the test, she produced five times her own weight in milk and over one-third of her weight: to butter. There are 21,000,000 cows In the United States, and their average is 8,660 pounds of milk a year. It requires 6,400,000 cows roliflc for agricultural purposes. Then ry ana tne banks and mercantile houses , until to- e in- followed the factor foundry, dav an Industrial and agricultural clre has been hewed and ploughed out nap 1 of the wilderness of haJf a century ago. 1 .. Xaudnnrkg Dons, There is little left of the cherished Burroundlna nlnneer. A lonesome bear comes out to the . clear ing and is now regarded an a novelty mors than nuisance. The red men are few in number and navo become, in most cases, citizens. A few reserva tions are left Occasionally a feather orowned chief or a moccaain-footed squaw la seen, but they are only re minders landmarks ol the long ago. t But how about the farmer, the man with the hoe. the man behind the plow. th man who with axe and Btumn-DUller has made a . paradise of hundreds of thousands of acres, tne man wnot has planted the orchard In very di rection ss far an the eye can see. All credit to the man who began the work of development with the sawmill, all tn the railroads, all credit to the manufacturer, the merchant and tvi anhnoi teacher: but do not let us forget the man who has wrought such. a wonaenui cosun in m of Marlon county, ua it wan wpo aera- couia $ 74 Third SL As wetl as the largest stock of Diamonds and Watches, is -offered at our store, at prices that cannot be equaled by any jew eler in the city, hence the magnitude to which our store his grown , the past 19 years. Visit us and become acquainted with our liberal methods and business integrity. Our Easy - Payment System Is worth Investigating. You simply pay us one-third when making your purchase, take the article "home. The balance you pay a little each, week or month. ' We charge no more than were you to pay cash. Marx & Bloch Largest Diamond Dealers in Oregon. onstrated that this countr pro- eS dues something besides lumber and gold. He Is the man, whether 7hntn nr necessity, who has nrovi that the soil of the Willamette valley would reap an abundance of almost .u.n known agricultural crop. res. it was the settler who really discovered the Willamette valley. All honor to such a man. Make way for him and his followers. Portland's Finest Exposition OF FALL KILLS IN this product, in the world. FROM MKH Catarrh Murderer in California Seen in the Act and Pursuit Is On. Is Bad Breath, K'flawktafl and Spitting, Qnickly I Cured Fill Out Free Coupon Below for Large Trial Package Mailed Free. (United Press Leased Wirt.) San Bernardino, Cal., Oct. 9. Sheriff Ralphs and a posse are In the Bear valley country In search of Will Mc- Kee, who- Is accused of the murder of R. H. Coombs, a wealthy cattleman, and a man named Talmage, yesterday. The shooting was done from ambush and wan witnessed at & distance by Albert Watts, superintendent of the (Rose. mine. 1 Watts ran eight miles to the nearest telephone and informed the sheriff of the tragedy. watts declares tnat uoomos ana Tai- mags . had had trouble with McKee over iqlnlng claims and cattle range. McKee . had threatened them several times but was - apparently pacified by the two .men. . After the shooting Mc Kee was seen to return to his cabin. secure an additional rifle and ammu nition, and with a canteen slung over his shoulder start for the mountalata. C0RP0KATI0NS SEEK TENUEE EXTENSION (United Press Leased Wire.) Ban Francisco, Oct. 9. The banker's of the state are preparing to advocate the passage of a constitutional amend ment that will permit corporations to extend the terms of their corporate ex Istence 60 years from the flgie the ap- 8! illcatlon ia made. An amendment of kind Is now oeiore xne peopte lor a vote and a united enori is 10 De mans In Its behalf. This resolution follows a decision of 1 the supreme court of the state, handed down yesterday, In which the legisla tive act of March 18, 1907. premlttlng corporations to extend their corporate life by making application to tne sec retary of state, was declared unconsti tutional. The opinion was rendered in the case I CLOTHING FOR MEN ' CCPC ft "A Square Deal for Your Stomach a means a square deal for every body. It means health and strength that means the joy that comes from success that z-a a.av uiaiBuoi pi&iaiy stowi want a few days 1 , ssad7 will do for any snffsrer. Cstarrh Is not only dangerous, but It rauses bad breath, ulceration, dath and r f bones. loss of Ui Inking and reasoning Vcwer, sills ambition and rrgy. cfXen eauiwa loos of appetite, ii6 tftnn. dy'rcf-'. raw throat and cm u nr. Ma. Jt n1a attention at vr cure wit 0t.w Catarrh Core. 11 la quirk. r1ka!. permanent care. bTe it rils the )ifti of tb pot-r-ra that raws catarrh. I r t )r tn rrre a?l wno.sre snf-t"-r. fmm t . dtntirnoa end loetli- t -ous 'trrh rre 1 xiati.f rot mrw em at catarrh .!. m mf how lof 1 stt(4tn r -m -4. 1 V 1 a fril rcs. ' t,. r.f jj (rt .-f.l f ur " ' ' ti-ir sn-i I S tr-t- ij ' ' r rt.,rn r- i. " ! ' "' i t '.at you will he welcomed Instead of hsnnd "rm?'nm- C R -" Marshall. Mich Pill out coupon below. FBEE This foupnw Is awd fw on trial prtM' f Osnas ComMiMd Catarrh Core. m))4 fre In plsln pa-kg fmrlt Ml in year sr4 1 i i mm on 4rUX Hdvs btnsr and eiaii t C X. satrss, nvt ataia mtrx . MarskaUr atjck, . . 't . ' CAMP ACCIDENTS AT ATASCADEE0 (Uafted Frees Leased Wire.) Camp Atascadero, Cal., Oct- (. The camp of tha Seventh regiment threatened with destruction yesterday afternoon by a grass fire that startetB near tha tents. The fir call was sounded, and regulars snd militiamen ' worked together to quencn a oia.se trial threatened to win out the entire ramo. Governor Cillett and his staff watched the men working and praised their dl ripllne. Several acres were swept by the names. Bergoant Kd Beeley or Company E waa struck above the eyes by a bullet from a cartridge tnat exploded in the fire. He was ant to San Francisco for treatment. The field hospital also sent Corporal Cyril Hfll of the Klrst artillery. who waa run over by a calasoa, to Saa Francisco. ber of troop B. Fifth cavalry. fU from bla horse daring a drill and was rl- ouslv rat stMMit tne fsc ad shoulders. He was operated upon at the field bos- pitat Mr. DrTroort Jails Hnohaad. - ralUd r-r-M tmmrt WIrel DeTr 4a honla D P 0 a means Shredded Wheafi the food that lifts you out of the dumps and rives vou life Su and energy for the dajrs work. Try it a few mornings with hot milk or cream and notice the difference. Your grocer sells it i s Atiftt, Cat. Oct. t OMtrr. T. I n rtost. forwerlv of tee FTwnclo. ts I II. ll hTw swelling nlMM 00 9214 1 I I 'is as the r2t of charges hrovgkt I I Inst bm yr hl wlf. be has aw-i , I I warrant for the srrvst of Mrs. I LJ Dav of ft) Jom. with whntaj ohei . Maud. alig- br btitfd came to tMs cltr. Mra. rnTnv dlar. tht ht bae-t- nA mortrrd (w r4cnvr at a Fyfcc r-rw-r to rd tm 1 1 u II : ill mMmmMtW " N il " i'l U II l- s&4 n IS- & 4l 43 X I BO 1111" g in imffimfflm-, 'HI 1v 1 'ir, I. 11 1 imj't 1 IS III lr?s.l ' III 11 Vi-4. "1 You Are Invited To inspect what is unques tionably the finest assort ment of Suits and Overcoats In Portland and Oregon. VCollegian" Suits Have No Superior and Few Equals. , A Collegian" Overcoats Need, no introduction or comment. For elerance of e s i z n, thoroughness of workmanahip and for beauty. and dependability of fabric the procession. , a n Heat in Oycn Before Serving. -- i -- 1 n Wellington Hats Star Shirts - NEW FALL STYLES ARE READY A.J.RICHARDS0N CO. Opposite Woodard, Clarke & Co, Wsshington Street. M ' fmr r-4 tr.ua fr,fc4e fcis w.fe and i ' r T r rv T innc