Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1913)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL PORTLAND WEDNESDAY ...EVENING. - NOVEMBER 5, 1913. STATE HORTICULTURAL TO ITI SOCIETY DISCUSS IMPOI NTSUBETS All : Phases. 'of , Proper Growing na iviarKeimg pr rruirio Receive Attention. - 1 "Much Interest Is attached to the zorth- .coming meeting of the Oregon State ' Horticultural society which will be held . ' In this city, Pficember,10-12, Every phase of thV proper . growing . and marketing of fruit will be discussed by well known authorities and it is ex pected that the attendance will be the largest ever known at any meeting of the aoclety. . 4 - ' V .-. j , According to Frank Power, secretary ' , ; of the organization, the program will be . , the best ever arranged for over a quar ter of a century. At tha meeting it will V ,? be decided whether the Oregon organisa tion will adopt the ruled adopted by the .Spokane meeting. , , " A live, topic will be the question whether tha state shall have regula tions regarding packing and processing fruit , .. . . -.., The program is planned as, follows: Z "' "Foreign Markets for Our Fruit," Honorable H. B. Miller. , . Miss Ava B. Milam, domestic science department, O. A. C, "Cooperative Can ; ; neries." . - George Tinker, manager Corvallls .; cannery. ' . J. O. Holt, manager Eugene cannery. ' H. C Atwell, manager Forest Grove t cannery. "Drying Prunes and Loganberries," F. ;.- i R. Brown, O. A. C. ."Fertilisers Recent Experiments in Orchard Fertilization," F. O. Bradford. O. A. C. t "Transportation by 8teamer.", ;'" "Drying Apples and By-Products." . "Brown Rot," Professor II. 8. Jack son, O. A. C. "Standardisation of the Prune," Pro fessor C. I. Lewis. . "Methods of Handling and Processing the Prune," J. T. Brumfleld and H. T. Jenks. "Variety Adaptation of Fruits," C. A. Malboeuf, chairman of committee, as sisted by Professor C. I. Lewis, Albert Brownell. Various other papers on drying and handling the prune will be read by grow ers. W. 8. Allen, Dundee;. Robert John son, Qorvallls. "Heading Back Trees," S, ' D. Evans, Umpqua. "Cover Crops in Orchards," Bruce Cunningham, Salem. "Care of Orchard Cover Crops," Mr. Skinner, Roseburg. , "Use of Manure in Building up an Orchard," A. L. West, Salem. "Evaporation of Prunes," Z. L. Cham berlain, Newberg, Or. MRS. R. A. DUNMIRE EXPIRED THIS MORNING Mrs. Richard A. Dunmire died at 6: JO this morning at the home of her daugh ter, Mrs. J. P. Jaeger, 610 East Twenty ourth street, north. Death followed a long illness from Bright' disease. , Her home was at 83 "Wasco street, but when she was taken seriously ill last week, she was removed to the home of ,rer . daughter, where she suffered a stroke of paralysis Sunday night Mrs. Dunmire, who is survived by her husband and daughter, was born at Coloraine, Pa. The family lived In Chicago until seven . years ago. She was prominent in the work of the' W. C. T. U. and was a member of the West minster Presbyterian church. Her hus band has been connected with the Ore gon Humane society. The funeral will be held Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the Jaeger home, with Dr. Henry Marcotte oonductlng the services. BELIEVE ROCK ISLAND ROAD WILL PROGRESS Portland railroad mem have manifested keen interest in the recent change in management of the Rock Island system, whereby T. M. SchaumaCher becomes head. In the stepping down of Daniel G. Reld as chairman of the board of di rectors and W. H. Moore as chairman of the executive committee in favor of the . new chairman, local railroaders see an opportunity for vast development in the system. 'Schumacher is an actual rail road man. having worked up from lowly positions through several lines until he was made vice president of the El Paso A Southwestern railroad, a subsidiary of the Rock Island. Positive and systematic development and extension is now said to be the : plan for the Rock Island. H. U. Mudge , remains president of the system. -- STU M PI NStlXTRiSTREETIM BRINGS; B AGK O liD; DAYS: STUDENTS V 1 s "m 1 fx h..Vi, Roots ,of 'big fir found under surface of pavement 'by electric' company. ... Where once a forest stood now the heart of a big busy city! This fact has been impressed on thousands of Portlanders who have-had occasion to pass Sixth and Washington streets dur ing tha last two days, by the presence of a huge stump, the remains of what was once a large fir tree, It was un earthed by workmen engaged in laying pipes for . the Northwestern Electrto company's heating system. They had extended the , Sixth street trench into Washington street about six feet, when they came hard up against the solid stump, held fast in the soil by roots that spread out in every direction, and covering an area of probably IS feet square.' Although it has been three feet below the surface of the thorough fare for at leant half a century, the stump, which measures more 'than a yard across the top, Is as solid as when it supported the tree trunk from which It has so long been separated. All modern methods short of dyna mite have failed to dislodge the stump, and the old pioneer tools, the ax, wedge, saw, have been brought into play. It is anticipated tnat the old stump will be removed from its resting place possibly today. - mm. VICTORY Campus ParadesJMusIc, ; Song and ,' Unrestrained'; Merrr-'i n'PfeviffUi' (Special to Ths Journal.) Unlveralty of Oregon,'. Eugene, Or., Nov. XB. -"Oregon Spirit" f is rampant When the early returns last' night front Portland, : Eugene. Willamette valley points and eastern Oregon Indicated vic tory for , the university, the , students were hopeful; when victory was assured at 1 o'clock this morning, pent-up eo thuslasm broke. Rallies in bathrobes and slippers were held; Oregon' sons and "pipful" speeches made and .fresh men ordered to serenade the girls' dorm itory and sorority houses.- - i . - Monday, evening President. Campbell announced a holiday for Ttiesday in or dcr to give each eligible student an. op portunity' to vote. iToday ISO- men stu dents bearing the" , "referendum", In .a coffin, and led by the students' bjnd, paraded: through' the campus-buildings, on' the campus and later followed them through town- Rv 'rfUW' ' ' '"''' Free fhows will be the rule in. Eu gene theatres this evening. All . theatre managers have caught the "spirit' President Campbil,wbe left PotHand last. night to address the Natlotfal as sociation 'Of state universities la ) Wash ing ton, P, C, November 10, and to visit Johns. Hopkins, Princeton, and Harvard universities, was elated, and . said he believed that with the approval of high er education by the people of ' Oregon the "New Era" had begun. ,.:$&, Two Oregoni&ns Receive Pensions. '.Vaablnstoa Bn(vo of Ti loornaLl . Washington, Nov. 6. The following have received pensions in Oregon: . Par ish L. Willis, Portland. $20; Matlla J. Wood. Oregon City, $12. UROPE-BOUND ZE WILL AVOID TROUBLE Says; He Does Not Want j to Take Part In Unconstitu- nal Proceedings. Havana, Nov. 5. General Felix DJaii, who arrived here last night on ith steamship BPransa, sa,ld today that expected to take the next boat for Eu rope, to remain until conditions in Mex ico are such as to indicate that he can be of service there. ' He wan lnilitent on landing at Vera Crus and remaining there unty aftar election, he said in a statement Issued lata night, because, as a candidate, he wanted to fulfill "the requirements of the law governing .elections. ''My - "purpose1 being acoompllahs V the statement added, "and as 1 di'l i t wish to be involved in the unconstitu tional proceedings which are certain t occur . in, Mexico, ' 1 was compelled to leave.the country...., -"'i 'l : ,-. i v , Dla admitted that h was afraid to fall Into Huerta's hands, slid down a rope from hls hotel window, was es corted, by 4 friends . with drawa ravol- vers , to' the ' American veoneulate an.l then to the launch which took him on board the Wheeling and so got Mm away Frorn the Wheeling he was transferred on board the Louisiana, from the Loutsi ' ana to the Michigan, and from the Mich- , ? Jgan. at sea, to the Esperanss. Of the 89 friends who were with Mm when he landed at Vera Crus there re- '" mained at liberty, he said, only Jos Sandoval and Cecilia Ocon, who escaped , ac ine same iiiiib ,mniBejt mnu iiuiuna with him here. Colonel Del Rio, a for tieth auppor.ter, who was with him: In ' France and intended to accompany him '; back to Mexico, was taken aick on the', , voyage westward, had to remain in Ha . vana, and Is stUI here. ' i ill i wmmmmm2Sm ' mm RS SHORT E ON CLOTHESPIN WOOD Appeal to Forest Service for Information Regarding Material. RECOGNIZED AS MAN FLED S., P. & S. TRAIN Special Agent Joe Keller of the S. P. & S.yoad Monday evening recognised a man . giving his name as John Johnson as the . prisoner who escaped from the Seaside train Saturday night The man waa arrested on Burnside street and is being held for Sheriff , Thompson of Columbia county, where he is wanted for . taking liquor on a railroad train. Keller arrested four men on the Seaside special . Saturday evening, each . charged with being drunk. The practice of men bring, ing liquor on the train has become so annoying that the company hereafter .plans to arrest all caught drinking In the coaches. John Daniels was given 26 days on the rookplle Monday by the judge for drinking on the train Saturday night; , , . Help! cry the clothespin manufactur ers, so loud that their wail has been heard by the Portland ' office of the United States forest service. The raw supply for the time honored clothespin is said to be becoming exhausted. The clothespin is one' of the few household articles that has never been improved upon as a device for holding clothes on the Una The same old split wooden stick that has been in use for 40 years is in use today. Metal de vices of every kind have been Invented to take its place, bu the wooden- pin still prevails. And so the wooden clothespin is in danger of being exterminated by its pop ularity, rapor Dircn or beech are about the only woods that can bemused, ar at least they are t'.ie only woods that the manufacturers know about at this time. They have made a broadcast appeal for a substitute or for a new aupply of the standard wopds. Paper birch and beech work very easily, are light and do not split easily. Howard B. Oakleaf, head of the de partment of wood products of the Port land forestry office, says that he can not offer the clotiiespln magnates much encouragement. "The only woods we have that might serve the purpose are three kinds of birch," says Oakleaf, "and none of these varieties appears very abundantly. In Washington and in a very few places in Oregon we have 'western and mountain birch, and in Alaska only we have what is known as the Alaskan white blrc.i. Over north of Spokane" they are logging a little white birch, but that is the only place In the northwest, I believe." WARRAN T FOR JOHN D CHARGING it MURDER Colorado Miners Want One Because of Strikers Killed in Battle With Guards, DAUGHTER OF WEALTHY MAN JUMPS INTO SEA Use common sense buy Superior coal. t ton. Main 164; A-1541. (Adv.) San Francisco, Nov. 6. Miss Salva dor e Barrera, the pretty daughter of a millionaire plantation owner of Salva dor, disappeared frops the Pacific Mail liner City of Para October 17, while en route to San Francisco from Balboa to visit relatives, according to advices re ceived here today. It was believed Miss Barrera leaped overboard, though friends could advance no motive for the act A note written to a French merchant who traveled with Miss Barrera from Bordeaux to Colon and which waa never delivered, read: "ThanR you, Mr. Paris. I have seen .you at your best, as you nave always seen me. do not think am throwing myself into the water for the sake of the trunk I lost at Colon. I send you regards." The note closed abruptly and was not signed.' (United Pnas Leaied Wire.) . Trinidad, olo.,' Nov. 6. Leaders of the striking' southern 'Colorado , coal miners consulted here today with their lawyer, Horace. Hawklns, relative to tha swearing 3out' of a warrant charging John.raVRoekefeller with murder, in connection .with the. fatalities which have Occurred in fights between mine guards and strike sympathisers since Uie strike began. The union leaders have contended all along that Rockefeller, the real power behind the southern Colorado mine op erators, was waging the fight against the men in the hope of crushing union ism In Colorado. , The. operators replied that in the event of an attack on Rockefeller or any of-their number, they will swear out warrants for Mother Jones, Vice President Haynes of the Miners' union and President McLennan of the State Federation of Labor. HERE'S no argument between Capital and Labor about Moyer $15 suits for both are agreed that their & dollars are equal at Meyer's Good staunch fabrics worthily made, that become the strong limbs of brawny Labor in factory or on farm as well as his supple brother in of f ice or counting house. And equal economy for both nowhere else can clothes be bought at the price that yield so much in service with satis faction. Have a look at Mover's newest models for your Winter wearing. When You See It in Our Ad, It's So fflOYEM First and Yamhill Second and Morrison ' Third and Oak Laundry Changes Hands. Condon, Or., Nov. 6. The Condon Steam laundiy has changed hands aaaln. William Shaw having traded it this week to R. W. Andersbn of Troy, Idaho, for 120 acres of land near that place. The consideration named In the transfer waa 16600. i JURY SAYS HUNTER WAS TOO CARELESS Medford, Or.. Nov. 6. The coroner's Jury which sat on the case of thn nmi. dental shooting of George Bingham of wegon city ty Wilbur Klme, returned a vercuci charging Klme with careless ness. we may be prosecuted. Klme said he mistook Bingham , for a deer, and after bearing the evidence the Jury decided that the mistake was the result niy ana wtneoeesary: conclusion on me, part or Klme. M A Tabic Beer- We mean by this that t - 1 : t .... .-, . . .. . . ' is -not 1 brewed for indiscriminate use. Its, , purity and, nourishing qualities make it the y ideal beer for home use., Your .family will ' like its flavor. ; , jV K ' t , PHONE YOUR GROCER OR : C k , Portland Brewing 'Special Sale ats Go flt:-'" To universally rec- ,glf jPff4 i " - fe&ffijxgs 1- fttliC$ ognizcd individuality which 1t' I WvSR5k Tgm Sk has made W. H. McBrayer's ,a"Bi,JfcAlffi5 - yX-MS- CcVr fiw the world's most IBV0lMvJ M 3& famous aged bottlcd-in-bond whiskey during three n-'iVjU orations,. millions have bccn invcstcd;.,;..,- R I By rNKPg " So manv oeoole who khow its aualitv renuire this, that ym ' v . . . -z - n.. MsfMW - t v Sport CoaU $12.50 Other CoaU from $15.00 Suits $40.00 values .. . $18.50 $50.00 values ...$24.50 NATIONAL SAMPLE CLOAK AND SUIT CO. )1bos lSlO ?S UPSTAIRS Suite 903-004900 wsUsaflfBldV. 6th Wasblagtoa. Sseoad Vloor. To keep that universally rec ognized individuality' which has made W. H. McBrayer's Cedar Brook the world s most famous aged bottled-in-bond whiskey during three en-fi erations, millions have been invested. , , Jfl ll uu many ucupic wiiu miuw 110 uuauiy rcuuup itiis, uiat t.. u : l, . - T Jiuy uy utiijriug cctcit ycat o cuuiuiuus oupuiy lur lO ,l 8 years ripening before it is bottled-in-bond or marketed could hat 1 rich, - smooth, mellowness, which our "grandfathers dernanded be attained in W. H. ''McBrayer's Cedar Brook Bottled-in-Bond 7 to 8 Years Old.- . Unlike other advertised 4 to 5 year; old whiskies made in Kentucky, Maryland, Pennsylvania or elsewhere, which are bottled-in-bond at about 4 years the limit required by U. S. Gov't Law Cedar Brook is always the same, always satisfactory to the most refined taste, and consequently has a larger sale than all . those others combined. Found always in Leading Bars, Hotels, Restaurants and Gabs. Try it. W. H; Mf BR AYE R?S Thicls RriestvVKiskey' - - - . - '. 7Vl7ATCAT,n H.M?BRAYERS -1 m . M h : I mm s '. i i I