Page 3 THE GOLD HILL NEWS, THURSDAY. JUNE 9, 1932 Scenes and Persons in the Current News OREGON STATE NEWS OF GENERAL INTEREST — Principal Events of the Week Assembled for Information ol Our Readers. THE M ARKET* Portland Wheat — Big Bend blnestem. hard winter, 6ly{c; soft white and western white, 6*% c; bard winter, northern spring and western red, 66%c. H ay—Buying prices, f. o. b Port land; Alfalfa, Yakima, *14. Butterfat—Pound 13015c. Riga- Ranch, 18014c. Hogs—Good to choice, *3.90 0 4.10. Cattle—Choice steers, 360006.60 Lambs— Spring, *4.00 0 4.60, Seattle Wheat—Soft whits, western white hard winter, 6tc; western red, 65c; northern spring, 67c; bluestem, 47c Eggs—Ranch, 16018c. Butterfat—Pound 16c. Hogs—Good to choice, 3404.20. Cattle— Choice steers, *606.60. Bheep— 8pring lambs, *404.60. Spokane 1—President Moaclckl of Poland reviewing (be troops In Warsaw ■( the huge celebration of Poland'« birthday 2— hr. A. Hit ling. In charge of the agricultural department of the Chicago World'« Fair of 1088, driving a team of oxer in the ground breaking ceremonlea for the Agricultural building on Northern laland. 8—Dr, John F. ( ondon ( Jafele I leaving the grand Jury room In New fo rk where he told of hl« part In the search for the kidnaped and murdered Lind bergh baby. “Aeronautics” for the Commerce Building Cattle —Steers, good, *6.0006.50. Hogs—Good to choice. *3.6503.76. Lumtw—Good to choice, *4.00 0 4.60. J. A. Lehrer, W alla Walla, waa unconscious last week near Heppner, tils car had rolled off the grade. Fire believed due to spontaneous combustion caused considerable dam- age to three business houses at Co­ quille. R. W. Price, manager of Crater Lako lodge ar.d resort, announced that the resort opened for tourists June 4. The lodge will be opened July 1. More than 6000 persons, moat of them near starvation, were at work In the berry fields near Banks after weeks of cloudy weather delayed their start F. A. Thompson was killed and four others were Injured when two auto­ mobiles collided on Pacific highway between Harrisburg and Junction City. Tbl« pediment for the new *17,000,01X1 Department of Commerce building In Washington waa designed by Haig Patlglan, sculptor. The design represents the genius of aviation whose arm» are being fastened to a conventional wing «« he Is about to «oar. Figure« on either side of the central group are shown bearing aeronautical accessories and th* eagle« at each corner suggest flight as well as hatching new flyers. BIG LEAGUES EYE HIM Amelia Earhart Flies Ocean Alone J. C. W rig h t pioneer rancher of Klamath county, has been seriously Injured by a bull, which gored and trampled him In the barnyard of the Wright ranch. W right Is 75 years of age. Ratn. snow and hail fell at Cascade Summit recently. The snow melted es soon aa It fell. Several fishermen attempted the trip to Gold lake, but only two of the men succeeded In mak­ ing the trip. A dead coyote killed In Curry coun­ ty ' has been worth *26 in bounty In the past, but the county has about decided that It la through paying that amount for "bootlegged" coyote pelts from other places. Gale Sharp, 20, son of F. M. Sharp of W ilhoit Springs, was killed at the Eastern & Western logging camp 25 miles south of Molalla when hla foot caught in a switch frog while he was braking a log car. Growers of the Upper M ill Creek, Rowena and Mosier districts have ap­ pealed to housewives of The Dalles to use locally grown strawberries in preference to outside berrtee of poor­ er quality and lower price. i Someone unidentified placed 10 or 15 sticks of dynamite In a cabin used by Jack Course, a woodcutter, on the Vanderxanden place near North Plains and reduced It to kindling. No one was In the cabin at the time. Charley Devens, member of a social­ ly prominent Boston family and pitch­ ing ace of the Harvard university team, who may make hla entrance Into professional baseball at the end of the •nrrent season and sign with one of the New York clubs. Iteports have It that both clubs are after Charley's gig- asture, but the youngster refuses to romment until after graduation. BUILT OF COBBLES New photograph of Mrs. Amelia Karhart Putnam who flew from Harboi Grace, N. F„ to Culmore, Ireland, near Londonderry, the first woman to makt a solo flight across the Atlantic ocean. Her goal was Parts but the exhaust manifold of her plane burned out and her motor was straining, so aha tandec In Ireland. Raising the Assuan Dam in Egypt 4 This new stone lighthouse at the Sun Francisco yacht harbor, looking like the old Itonian watch towers, was built entirely of eobhleaiones that were removed from the city streeta In Sun Francisco's progrnm of aiding the un­ employed and beautifying the city. The great dam across the Nile at Assuan. M l miles south of Cairo, U now being heightened over 21» feet us one of the first steps In a glgnnilc Irrl gallon project promulgated hy the Egyptian government for the cultivation ol 7,0tX),(X)O acres of soil now lying barren for a part or all of the year. The Umpqua River highway district la rapidly paying off Its bond debt W. A. Lovelace, chairman of the board of trustees, canceled *6800 of bonds recently. Thia leaves only *18,456 unpaid of the issue of *110,000. The last large group of state high­ way Jobs to be let this year w ill ba awarded at the meeting of the Ore­ gon highway commission in Portland June 23, Instead of June 9. It waa an­ nounced by H. B. Glauayer, secretary of the commission. Construction of a fish ladder near the power bouse at Gold Ray dam, on Rogue river, to take care of tbs sal­ mon that crowd up ths spillway, will soon begin. Ths ladder will be con- etructed out of funds provided by the California-Oregon Power company. I Formation of a co-operative, profit- sharing plan between James H. Owen. general manager ol the Owen-Oregon Lumber company ot Medford, and ex- logging camp workers, whereby a small unit of workers started opera- ; | | < . I I tlona last week, was announced rs- - cently. Eulalona chapter. Daughters of the American Revolution, of Klamath Falls, dedicated two bronxe markers on Memorial day to the Scon chin cem etery near Beatty. One marker was placed at the grave of Wlnema, hero ine of the Modoc war, and the other at the grave ot Chief Bconchln. When members of the Linn county court audited bills tor the primary election they started discussing means of reducing the cost of balloting, Elimination of several voting pre- clncts through consolidation was agreed to as the most feasible method of bringing down election expenses. Spinach by the ton has been packed In the Ray-Mating cannery at H ills boro under the special qulck-freexlng process which has had the organise- tlon employing as many as 480 women for sorting the leaves. Running on a two shift basis, the cannery has also been busy putting up asparagus at night. Remaining assets of the First Na­ tional bank of Bend were offered at public sale June 4 by Receiver Hall. j The notice of sale lists bills receiv­ able to the amount of *400,413. To date the bank haa paid 44 per cent in dividends on deposits. It waa closed In April, 1927, with approxi­ mately *1,000.000 In deposits. ALL hat, lean and genial face, alar­ apangled frock coat and striped trousers, fam iliar symbol of the whole | United States: what one person would I be so bold as to claim to bave been the original Uncle Sami Yet II* Troy, , N. Y„ there was recently erected a ' monument to Just such a person, one Uamuel Wlleon, who flourished In the ' meat necking business at the time of the Ws. of 1812 and became the name­ sake of a whole nation quits by acci­ dent. In 1812 Elbert Anderson of New Jersey secured a contract to furnish j “2,(XM1 barrels of prime pork and 300 i barrels of prime beef In full bound barrel* of white oak" for troops sta­ Samuel Wilson, | tioned at Albany. more familiarly “Unde Sain.” was ap­ j pointed to see that thia meat met specifications and was properly ! packed. Every barrel thus approved | be had stamped “U. 8.— E. A.." stand­ i ing for United States and Elbert An­ . derson. «The story goes that one of bis own employees, when asked what the j Initials stood for, replied. “Uncle Sam. Uncle Sam Wilson. He owns near all [ about here, and he's feeding the army.” The questioner thought the story a good one. spread It, and thus nicknamed a nation! The city council of Reedsport haa unanimously voted to enforce strictly the ordinance fixing charges for water and regulating the collection therefor. For several years the council has been lenient and has permitted many water users to work out their water tax. As a result revenues have shrunk and the city faces a serious situation. Prospectors In the Mule Creek dis­ trict, down the Rogue from Grants Pass, believe they have uncovered the mother lode of the great “golden sone" district of the mid-Rogue area. The discovery haa been kept quiet for several weeks but a miniature “gold rush” Is on. The main lode Is said to vary from 70 to 400 feet In width. W illiam Jesse Doughty, son of Mr. and Mrs. W illiam T . Doughty, waa killed by a falling tree on his farm a mile east of Bay City. Mr. Doughty, in comnany with a neighbor named Posy, was felling a tree on hla place and due to a high wind the tree did not fall In the direction It was ex­ pected to. Twins from goose eggs! That Is the report from Bandon which relates the experience of E. C. Cochran of Two Mile, a district south ot Bandon. Mr. Cochran was reported to have set a goose on five eggs, which he saw on various occasions and never was there but the five eggs. On May 17 four eggs had hatched and one tailed to produce anything. In the nest were seven goslings. There are approximately 15,000 heads of families and 600 single men In the Portland district who are with­ out employment, Charles A. Gram, state labor commissioner, reported. Gram said that In addition to these Idle men many transients were pass­ ing through Portland in quest of em­ ployment. McMinnville reported 100 unemployed men. Hillsboro reported 250 unemployed, while Corvallis esti­ mated its idle ruen at 600. In the Salem district 3500 men and women were said to be seeking work. Al­ bany reported 750 without work, Eu­ gene 1000 men. La Grande 705 men, Medford 300 men, Roseburg 900 men. James Pappidimos, Astoria cafe man, was grieviously cutting fine steaks out ot the largest salmon caught on the Columbia river this season. Happy when he was given an opportunity to buy the giant Junior Johnston, 8, was drowned chlnook, ha became chagrined when In the Chenowlth district, near The Informed that he would without doubt Dalles, when he fell from a raft in an have received the 10-dollar American old reservoir. W ilber Peterson, 8, who Legion prixe tor the biggest salmon, also fell Into the reservoir, was held besides his price per pound had he above water by Dan Peterson, 12, and turned the "big fellow" in the con­ test for the biggest fish to display be­ saved when help arrived. One of the greatest centers of straw­ fore the visiting legion navies from berry experimental work was opened the Portland convention In Septem­ for public inspection at Oregon State ber. The biggest chlnook entered In college June 3. Growers had an op­ I the Legion contest to date weighs 65 portunity to view many developments pounds. The winner last year scaled In cultural and variety experiments 75 pounds, three pounds less than the salmon bought by Pappidimos. as carried on for many years. The first summer session at Bend's Junior high school with pupils paying for the cost of the course w ill be of­ fered this year. Those taking the course will be eligible to enter high school in the fall Instead of at mid­ year. A fountain honoring the memory of W illiam Berrlan, for many years man­ ager of the Butte Falls hatchery, in Jackson county, has been erected on the hatchery grounds for the use of visitors and campers along the Rogue river. U N C L E SAM Construction work on the new *50.- 000 hotel at the Oregon c a ve s^ m o v- lng along as fast as Contracror Gua Llum with a large crew of carpenters and helpers can progress. Contract­ ors promise a completed building by July 15. Jackson county’s new courthouse will be officially dedicated early In August. Plans for the ceremony are now under way. I t will be one ot the finest courthouses In the state. AU sec­ tions of the county will take part la the dedication. T BLAC K M A R IA OR many years It was not the 'bine chariot” that carried disturb­ ers of the peace and petty felons off to Jail; police raided dives and gam- ' bling Joints, but they didn't bundle 1 their captives où In a “cage on ; wheels." Instead, they sent for the i “Black Maria." and thus paid dubious 1 honor to one of the most un Boston- like of our early Bostonians In old Colonial days a negress named Marla Lee kept a prosperous sailor's boarding house In Boston. Sfcs : was a woman of gigantic stature and prodigious strength, and used them to good advantage in maintaining quiet and order not only In her own estab­ lishment but all up and down the wa­ ter front—and this in a day when ships carried canvas and sallormen ashore were wont to be a roistering and liberty-taking lo t Such was her repute for instilling awe and obedi­ ence Into the hearts of the lawless that the police authorities frequently enlisted her aid In making arrests. It la said that she once, single-handed, herded Into the lockup three trembling sailors, lately bold and swaggering seamen on a too-rlotous shore leave. Finally, so often did the strong arm of the law lean for assistance on the stronger arm of Marla Lee that to "send for Black Maria" became synonymous with “send for help In getting this disorderly person to Jail” ; and the name “Black Maria” 'thus ! passed to the police wagon or patron to which It has stuck until the gang­ ster and racketeer have coined for them new terms more In keeping with the modern scene. F • a • SHERLOCK HOLMES HERLOCK HOLMES, unique among the detectives of literature from the wily Lecoq of Gaboriau. our first detective story writer, to Philo Vance, has perhaps attained that distinction from the very fact that he was only part fiction. When Conan Doyle, creator of the character as we know him, was a medical student at Edinburgh univer­ sity, he became a pupil and friend of Dr. Joseph Bell, then professor at the university, later member of the med­ ical staff of the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. Doctor Bell gained hla drat fame as a diagnostician; through methods of acute observation of detail and keen analysis, be solved mysteries of disease that had baffled all others. Latei be applied similar methods to crimes that chanced to come to his at­ tention. and gained such a reputation for solving cases that he was fre­ quently called In by the crown pros­ ecutors and even by Scotlnnd Yard to aid In unraveling their most Intricate mysteries. Doyle, who often meutloned hla debt to Doctor Bell, described hla “sharp, piercing eyes, eagle nose and striking features," and his habit of holding his hands before him. fingers together, when observing a client, and of making decisions only after ob­ serving every Insignificant detail, a method fnmlllar to every admirer of Sherlock Holmes. S <® t i l l W estern N e w sp aper U n io n .) Parisian L ife Changing Paris Is said to be becoming a city of suburbs Instead of a haven for cos­ mopolitans, latest estimates showing thnt every week day nearly 1.000.000 persona travel to and from the city on 2,122 trains and thousands on street cars. 800 Gilt Statues In the Temple of the Five Hundred Arrhats, In Canton, China, stand 500 gilt statues. One of them la supposed to represent Marco Polo, the famous Venetian traveler of the Fourteenth century, who, completely transformed Into a Chinese. Is now worshiped as * Chin*»«*» «mint.