'£>/-> e G o l d H ill N e w s Heavy snow rail In the Sumpter die V BI ï s l l F b 1 \ EBY SA Tl KP.KY KT G O l O H ll I JACKSON COUNTY, trlct has caused delays to railroad | D o n ’t h u r r y to b u y FLOUR traffic and telegraph and telephone lines have been hampered Ben H. Lam pm an Mrs. Sarah A. Evans was reelected president of the State Federation of Entered at the Gold Hill |>ostotlice (or transmission through the mails as Women’s Clubs at the convention at second-class m atter Hood River. Since the establishmant of the state automobile registration d partmeut in SATURDAY, OCT. 18, 1913 1911, Multnomah couuty has paid In more than $36.000 in fees. SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 PER ANNUM IN ADVANCE Owlug to effective forest patrol Lina county passed through the aummer without a single destructive forest fire. 1894 AND 1913 Glendale and Sutherlin will not vote on local option Issues November 4 HE WALL STREET JOURNAL prints some timely compari­ because of technicalities lu the peti­ * sons between 1S94, when the Wilson - Gorman tariff law tions. Governor West had no right to Incur went into effect, and 1913, the»year of the Underwood tariff law. debt In carrying on vice crusade work, Standpat interests are claiming that our “infant” industries still and the emergency board had no au­ to declare legal such action, need the paternal hand of government to protect them against thority according to the attorney-general. competition, the argument being that if required to stand alone L D. Westfall of Tualatin won the they will fall. There have been no notable tumbles, and there handsome loving cup offered by the Great Northern railroad for the beet • will be none, for a very good reason. agricultural exhibit at the state fair ' Most American industries are no longer infants. Manufac­ at Salem. tured out put, figured on the value added by manufacture to ex­ More than 30.000 head of sheep will j Bend for Chicago stock yards, i ported articles, amounted to $3 per capita in 1894, compared leave this probably being the largest single with $12.16 per capita now. The products of American manu­ shipment of mutton ever made from factures were worth $73 per capita nineteen years ago; now the\ Oregon. Eugene was chosen as the next ' are worth $107.60 per capita. Gross earnings of railroads were place of meeting at the dosing session $15.87 per capita as against $49.26 now, The total value of the of the annual convention of the State farm output in 1894 was $49.26 per capita; in 1913 it is $61.38 Federation of Women-» Cluba at Hood . River. The Wall Street Journal says: High school officials of Coquille "We now consume either for personal or business have placed a ban on pupils' attend < Ing picture shows, parties, dances , use 5.38 tons of coal apiece, as compared with 2.25 tons etc., on any night In the week except j when the Wilson bill went into effect. Our per capita on Friday and Saturduy. output of steel has increased from 130 pounds to 634 George Temple, aged 12, a Chemawa pounds. In this short interim of only nineteen years our student, shot Watchman George Sta- i niff. The latter hit the boy on the stock of gold has grown from about $500,000,300, which i head with the former s weapon. Both was hidden away where Gresham’s law couldn’t get at i may die. ir, to $1,900,000,000, which is now in the banks and the The Notl tunnel on the Eugene-Coos Bay railroad Is nearly ready for the pockets of the people doing active service. In 1894 the ; rails. Trains may be run from Eu- security markets were so bad that our industries were i gene to Mapleton within the next 60 able toraise only about 5.54 of new capital per capita, days. School fund loans In Oregon aggre­ this year the total will be close to $19; while our bank gating $100,000 may be forfeited un­ deposits per capita have more than doubled.” J ’cvcr look into the conlereatn- less the notes are renewed or fore­ incas ol a Bon Ton Milk I'lim h There has been a vast growth in wealth during the past 19 closure suits are brought, says Gover­ on a hot day — as coin|s>ui>dcd nor West. years, and Wall Street Journal’s figures go to the essence of by our new Electric Mixer? Representative Humphrey of Wash­ standpatism’s argument for continuation of a prohibitive tariff. ington may visit some of the more im­ G re a t S tu ff, F o lk s! If high protection is necessary for “infant” industries, when will portant river and harbor projects In the infant become able to stand on his own feet? A five-fold per Oregon If Representative Hawley Q u a lity £ he can't make the trip. capita increase in the output of steel would seem to indicate finds Quenchers a t The C. A. Smith lumber company that American steel industries are reasonably well established, hat been asked by Governor West of t-r» |« J I‘iir|de Yin Fizz Calwa < irape Jnice strong enough to stand without the government’s supporting Oregon to defend Its title to 10,000 Cherry Drips Orangeade acres of land which, it Is Intimated, hand. Hires' Reliable (tool lleer has been obtained by use ef dummy Strawberry — Pineapple The nineteen intervening years between 1894 and 1913 school land selections. T r y o ur S p e c ia l marked the end of most prohibitive tariffs. The infants have Guy M. Lindsay, former cashier of the Citizens National bank of Baker B a n a n a Sundae grown into manhood. The bottle is no longer necessary in their City, was freed of the charge of mis­ feeding. Today the need is for equal opportunity, and oppor­ appropriating funds, because of the tunity should be open to the man who consumes the products of government's failure to produce any damaging evidence against him. industries as well as to the man who produces them. George H. George, president of the The Underwood tariff law marks a new era. Never again Astoria National bank, vice president, will the United States go back to the policy of upbuilding a few secretary and treasurer of the Colum­ bia River Packers' assoication and one at the expense of the many.—The Oregon Journal. N o rth b o u n d of the foremost citizens of Oregon, No. 14 l»;0() a. in. j died at his home in Astoria. No. 24 (motor) 12:14 p. in. I That the national forest, which re­ Briet News or the Week present agreement and it is thought No. 1« 5:5« j». m. Springfield, Mo., defeated the pro­ that with the control of the traffic cently was opened to homesteading of No. 32 (motor) W:0B p. in. S o u th b o u n d posed commission form of government in the hands of the government its available agricultural lands, Is on the brink of an era of development is No. 23 ( motor ) 0.00 a. in. charter. gradual suppression will be easier. 3:15 p. in. the opinion of J. Roy Harvey, newly No. 15 Arguments in the government's anti­ No. 31 ( motor ) 5:5« p. in. appointed supervisor. trust suit against the International People in the News Secretary of the Navy Daniels has Harvester company were scheduled to Adolphus Busch, multi-millionaire informed Senator Chamberlain that in­ begin Monday in St. Paul. St. Louis brewer, died in Germany, sufficient room on the battleship Ore­ The California railroad commission aged 76. gon will prevent Oregon guardsmen has ordered transportation lines to Prince Taro Katsura, ex-premier of from accompanying the ship through Miners, I can sharp­ put in individual sanitary drinking Japan and a close friend of the em­ the Panama canal, as an escort. en, repair or make cups which will sell to the public for peror, died after an extended illness. Suit has been filed by the attorney 1 cent each. tools, and guarantee Yuaa Shi Kai has been elected pres­ general of Oregon against the gover­ Suffragettes in London interrupted my work to stand ident of China by the two houses of nor, secretary of state and treasurer, services in the Westminster Abbey, the republican parliament. He will for recovery of $14,000 said to have the racket; try me with chants* for suffragettes now in rule five years. Twenty candidates been unlawfully spent out of the peni­ and be shown prison, when the clergy failed to men­ were nominated. tentiary revolving fund. tion the women in their prayers. Senator Chamberlain has been told The concerted yells of 3000 fans at According to information brought to the Temple auditorium, Los Angeles, Victoria by a Japanese liner. Dr. Sun by the state department that the pro­ ___B L A C K S M IT H where they were watching the base­ Yat Sen, organiser of ’he Chinese rev­ posed legislation by Chile has been ball score, split several pipeB in the olution of 1911, has not left Japan, changed to make the lumber duty 70 $30,000 pipe organ. but is in hiding at the island empire. per cent ad valorem, an increase of Hereafter a matron and a policeman Failure of Governor Johnson of Cal­ 60 per cent. Instead of 215 per cent must stand guard with a watchful eye ifornia to name a new medical board as intended. Governor West intends to put the in every public dance hall in Boston is keeping 500 young physicians from payment of expense of grand Jury In­ to see that the tango, turkey trot and getting licenses to practice. Washington.—Representative Rich­ other dances of a similar character Mrs. Kmmallne Pankhurst, the fam vestigation of I. W. W. deportation in mond Pearson Hobson, representative Coos county up to A. H. Powers, ef are not attempted. ous militant suffragette leader, sailed of Alabama, and his colleague, Ma­ Strong opposition to abatement of from Havre for the United States the Smith-Powers Logging company. jority Leader Underwood, engaged In Powers is blamed for inetlgatlng the the severity of examinations at the aboard the liner La Provence. a bitter debate on the floor of the West Point military academy is voic­ It is rumored that the widow of deportation. Very largely through The efforts ol house over the senatorial contest In ed by the superintendent. Colonel Mayor Gaynor will seek to have the their stnte, In which they are rival Townsley, in his annual report. will of her late husband overruled on Representative Slnnott, the director candidates. The oratorical duel was Commissioner of Mediation Stew the grounds that sufficient funds for of the geological survey has recom­ precipitated by Mr. Hobson reiterat­ art, of the federal department of labor, her maintenance have not been pro­ mended to he secretary of the inter­ ior designation under the enlarged ing utterances he made last week In will recommend forthwith a congres­ vided. a speech at Wetumpka, Ala., Intimat­ sional investigation of the strike of Mrs. Jennie May Eaton was placed homestead act of sections 7, 8, 16, 23 ing that Mr. Underwood was "the tool to 36, township 26 south, range 16 Colorado coal miners. on trial at Plymouth, Mass , Monday, of Wall street and the liquor Inter­ The Western Fuel cases. In which on an Indictment charging her v^ith east; sections 1, 2, 11 to M, 23 to 26, ests,” and charging that he had gain­ are Involved many officers and em the murder of her husband, Read Ad 36, 36, township 27, range 16 east ed Alabama's support In the last pres ployes of the Western Fuel company, mlral Joseph O. Eaton. U. S. N„ re­ Lake county, near Fort Rock. Idential campaign under ialse pre­ Governor West has appointed a charged with conspiracy to defraud tired. tenses. • he government through manipulating The petition to have Lola Norris committee to devise a plan for an im­ Cheers from Democrats and Repub­ proved system of forest taxation. The veights, came up for trial Monday in ' and Marsha Warrington, who eloped licans greeted Mr. Underwood as he governor also will urge the committee the United States district court at to Reno with Diggs and Camlnettl, rose to reply, and later, when Mr. .'an Francisco. declared dependent . was denied by to formulate a plan to encourage re- Hobson tried to Interrupt, there were and the settlement of The Pri;i-V government has decided Judge Shields on the recommendation 1 f°rest®t,° n logged-off lands and to make recom­ loud cries of "Sit down, sit down; an opium monopoly in of the probation committee. you've had your time.” mendations to the next legislature . : expiration of the ültPüOY* BY SAT., NOV. 1st T this space w ill contain our an ­ nual F lo u r ad. Don’t fail to r e a d it. T h e s a l e w i l l l a s t o n e w e e k a n d w i l l b e c a l l e d “ F L O U R W E E K .” R e s p e c tfu lly , L A N C E & COM PANY Whizz! Whirr!! B-u-r-r!!! 15c The BoN- ToN S. P. Time Card Just a w ord! D. H. M IL L E R ---------------- H e a d q u a r t e r s f o r ---------------- H ardw are Stoves Tin, G ranite ami Aluminum Ware Garden Tools H aying and Heading T ihi I s Builders' Materials and Toula Ibsitliig Building Paper P aints (»ils Varnishes Brushes Gias* C nskeryw aru Large Assortment ol tjm ensw are As tine u line and assortment ol F is h in g T a c k le as there is in the county Cattaraugus Ciiiley Omis Ammunition Picks Shovels Miners' Supplies Powder, Fuse and Caps Rase Balls ami Mills, and Bals. My Stork Is complete in every H im - and my prh-es an- right R e m e m b e r th e p l a c e t o p u r c h a s e t h e a e G o o d « ia D. H. M IL L E R ’S “G o o d q u a lity g o o d s a n d P r ic e s R ig h t ” Ready for Hot Weather Try our Sundaes, Sodas, and Cold Drinks C . F. C A R TEP Turner’s Lunch Room UNDERWOOD AND HOBSON HAVE CLASH Iron b y Electricity Late Model Electric Irons. Guar- teed 5 years, now $ 3 .5 0 W e will send you one on tria l CALIFOR.NIA-OR.EGON POWER COMPANY :: MEDFORD, ORE. z