Heppner Gazette Issued Thursday of Each Week HEPPNER OREGON RESUME OF THE WEEK'S DOINGS General Review of Important Hap pening? Presented in a Brief and Comprehensive Manner for Busy Readers National, Political, His torical and Commercial. Henry Watterson says he wants no public office. The British Liberal party has spli on home rule. Dowie has returned from his new col ony in Mexico. There is a growing disaffection in the St. Petersburg garrison. Russian police have found letters telling of a plot to kill the czar. Sarah Bernhardt will build and maintain a theater in New York, ac cording to her manager. Turkey is expected to offer no resist ance to the allied fleet unless troops are landed, in which event a fight may en sue. I he large number ol accidents in football games this season has aroused college authorities to take action against the game. It is probable that in the reorganiza tion of congress Ankeny and iulton will secure chairmanships of important committees. The management of the Rock Island railroad has decided to practically re build the entire system to secure t minimum grade. Fifteen persons were injured and many others badly shaken up in wreck on the Missouri Pacific near Leeds, Missouri. The Russian minister of finance esti mates that the expenditures for the coming year will be $1,020,000,000 and the revenue $1,027,000,000. The powers may allow Austria to seize Macedonia. A fierce gale in Chicago did much damage to property. A fresh mutiny has broken out on the Russian Black sea fleet More graft is being exposed in the insurance inquiry at New York. Bulgaria is anxious to invade Mace donia, but is restrained by the powers. Russian employers have united to fight the strikeis, who have nearly ruined them. Helena shippers have organized to fight rate discrimination and may form a state association. The cashier of the Hayti, Missouri, bank has disappeared with $18,000 of the institution's money. A large colony of Boers is to locate in Venezuela. A grant of over a mil lion acres of land has been made by President Castro. The president has appointed H. J. Hagerman, of Roswell, N. M., as gov ernor of New Mexico, to take effect Janaary 1, the expiration of Governor Otero's term. Four prisoners in the Jefferson, Mis souri, penitentiary, made a desperate attempt to escape. Two guards were killed, a third seriously wounded, and the prison gates blown up with nitro glycerine. The convicts were captured after a fight in which one was killed and one wounded. Balfour will resign as premier of Great Britain. Missouri ia continuing its fight against the Standard Oil. Fire in a' coal barge at London de stroyed 2,000 tons of coal. The government's case in the second trial of Burton is completed. ' Japan is working to raise Togo's Eunken flagship, the Mikasa. The allied fleet of the powers is preparing to seize Turkish ports. Spain will spend $4,200,000 for the purchase of rapid fire field guns. A Nebraska man has been fined $50 and costs for making a cigarette. Four Berlin banks have organized a bank to do business in Turkey and Egypt. Ambassador Reid has contributed $500 to the fund for Egnland'B unem ployed. Another national strike of coal min ers is imminent. Should it occur, 300,000 men will be affected. Lieutenant General ChaffVe has re- itred from active service. He is suc ceeded as chief of staff by Major Gen eral John C. Bates. Acting Public Printer Ricketts has forbidden the making of handbooks on the racse among employes of his office, under pain of dismissal. Ohio Democrats plan to control both houses of the legislature by unseating Republicans. Witte ib seriously ill. Iowa is fighting a trust of fire insur ance companies. The British army is to have a gene ral staff at its head. Twenty-four Russian provinces are in a state of anarchy. . The cruifer Minneapolis is said to be ground off the French coast. GREATEST HARVEST IN HISTORY Present Year Was Record Breaker in United States. Washington, Nov. 28. "W. alth pro duction on the farms o the United States in 1905 reached the highest amount ever attained in this or any other country $6,415,000 000." In the first annual report of his third term Secretary of Agriculture Wilson presents an array of figures and a state ment representing products and profits of the farmers of this country, which he admits "dreams of wealth produc tion could hardly equal." Four crops make new high records as to value corn, hay, wheat and rice although in amount of production the corn is the only one that exceeds pre vious yields. In every crop the gen eral level of production was high and that of prices still higher. Beside the enormous yield of wealth the secretary estimates that the farms of the country have increased in value during the past five years to a present aggregate of $0, 133.000.000. "Every sunset during the past five years," he eavs, "has registered an in crease of $3,400,000 in the value of the farms of this country." Analyzing the principal crops for the year, the secretary says that corn reached its highest production at 2, 708,000,000 bushels, a gain of 42,000, 000 over the next highest year, 1899 ; hay is second in order of value, al though cotton held second place during the two preceding years. The hay crop this year is valued at $(10,000,000. Cotton comes third, with a valuation of $575,000,000; wheat, $525,000,000; oats, $282,000,000; potatoes, $138,- 000,000; barley, $58,000,000; tobacco, $12,000,000; sugar, cane and sugar beets, $50,000,000; rice, $13,000, 000; dairy products, $50,000,000, an increase of $54,000,000, over last year. PLENTY OF MONEY. Secretary of Interior Has Not Been Furnished Proper Figures. Washington, Nov. 28. When the secretary of the Interior and the Recla mation service reach an understanding as to the extent and condition of the national reclamation fund, it is expect ed that a number of new irrigation pro jects, including projects in Eastern Oregon and Eastern Washington, will he approved and placed under contract. But until there is a complete under standing, the present chaotic condition must continue, arid inactivity will be the rule, save on projects that are act ually under contract. The great misunderstanding that now prevails is as to the amount ol money available for use, and the restrictions under which that money may be ex pended. The Reclamation service has its own set of figures, but those figures do not coincide with the figures which have been furnished Secretary Hitch cock by the men in his own department upon whom he relies. The secretary, confronted with very different financial statements, from sources which ought to agree, has concluded that neither is right, yet he is unable to figure out for himself just how much money he has to spend, and how much he has spent in the 3g years the reclamation law has been in force. WRECK TAKES FIRE. Fourteen Persons Lose Lives in Mas sachusetts Disaster. Lincoln, Mass., Nov. 28. Fourteen persons were killed, 25 were seriously njured, and probably a score of others cut and bruised in the most disastrous railroad wreck recorded in this ftite for many years. The wreck occurred at 8:15 o'clock, at Baker's Bridge sta tion, a mile and a half west of Lincoln, on trie main line oi me t nciiourg en vision of the Boston & Maine railroad. The regular express, which left Boston at 7:45 o'clock for Montreal, by way of he Rutland system, crashed into the rear end of an accommodation train jound for points on the Marlborough branch, and which started from Boston at 7:15. Of the dead, a dozen were passengers n the two rear cars of the Marlborough rain. The other two were Engineer Barnard, of the Montreal express, and his fireman. No passengers on the express train were injured, lit those who lost their lives, a number were ap- arentlv instantly killed in the collis- on, while others were eitrier ourneu io death or died from suffocation. All Cut and Dried Affair. Washington, Nov. 28. Two things are positively known about the coming congress, namely, that Joseph G. Can non, of Illinois, will be re-elected speaker and John Sharp Williams will be nominated for that otlice by the Democrats, thereby conferring upon him the title of minority leader. Fur thermore, it means that Messrs. Can non and Williams will personally make up the committee slates, the speaker naming Republican members and all chairmen, and Williams naming the minority members. No Flowers at Capitol Washington, Nov. 28. There will be no flowers in either house on the opening day of congress. A resolution of the senate was adopted during the last session of congress barring flowers from the senate chamber. Mr. Cannon has already given notice that he will not allow the flowers to he brought in as heretofore. Rivalry of admirers of different members of both houses reached a stage where the deEks were buried in flowers. Famine in Part of Japan. Victoria, B. ('., Nov. 28. Famine prevails because of the failure of the rice crop in Northeast Japan. Thegov ernment has begun relief measures. NEWS ITEMS OF GENERAL INTEREST FROM THE STATE OF OREGON NEW LUMBER CENTER. Two Mills Building and Three Under Consideration at Dallas. Dallas Though situated in the midst of a splendid fruitraiaing and hopgrow- ing territory, Dallas promises to become a great lumber center an well. In ad dition to the Cone mill, now being built, and the Nap mill, which will be remodeled, three more propositions are now before the business interests of the city for consideration. Plans for the remodeling of the Nap mill are completed. The mill will be rebuilt several hundred feet west of the present location, and enlarged to a 50,-000-foot plant. A pond will be exca vated between the "Y" tracks of the Falls City railroad and will be led with water from the same source as the Cone mill. The Cone pond is completed, and the superstructure of the mill under cover The sawing frames and carriage trucks are being put in place and everything indicates the early completion of the plant. Every house in Dallas is occupied, and new cottages are springing up in every quarter. The common comment of all newcomers is that Dallas is a beautiful town and has the finest court house lawn in the state. Although the Lewis and Clark fair is said to have drained the valley of all the stray change, the merchants say trade is good. Big Land Deal. Weston Two of the largest real estate transactions consummated in this section for some time were record ed this week. One was the sale of 240 acres of land, with fine Improvements by Mrs. Annie O'Hara to Charles M Price for $18,500. This is one of the finest farms in this section of the coun try, having upon it a handsome brick residence. - Mr. Price also owns a third interest in what is known as the Steen place, located on Dry creek, consisting of 560 acres. This, it is said, he is about to dispose of to his brothers. Old Picture of General Lane. Salem State Librarian J. B. Put nam has received from New Orleans an old photorgaph of General Joseph Lane, Oregon's first territorial governor and one of this state's first senators. The picture bears no date, but was taken in Washington, D. C, presumably while Lane was delegate in congress or senat or. JNo communication or explanation came with the photo "further than the words, "Compliments of William Beer, Howard Memorial library, New Or leans, La." Extensive Plant at Carlton. Carlton The Carlton Lumber com pany's new mill ana extensive plant, representing an outlay of over a mil lion dollars, will be in full operation by April, 1906. With the natural ad- Aautages Uarlton already enjoys through its position among the foot hills of the Coast mountains and the other improvements now being made. Carlton expects soon to be numbered among the leading scenic and indus trial towns of the Willamette valley. Southern Pacific After G-avel. Eugene Southern Pacific surveyors have laid out a route for a spur in the northeastern part of the ci'y to the gravel beds across the river, just out side the city limits. It is said that the company intends getting its ballast ma terial for its proposed new line from Natron across the mountains from the extensive beds here. A trestle will have to be constructed across the river, which is narrow at that point. River at Very Low Stage. Eugene The river at this point is almost as low as it was during August and lower than was ever before known in November. Loggers tind great scar city of water above here for driving logs, and would welcome a few days of rain. There is plenty of snow high up on the mountains, which fell a month ago, but the weather has continued j cold and the snow does not melt Buys Indian Creek Mill. Elgin J. G. Brown, of the firm of Shockley & Brown, sawmill men, has disposed of his interest in that firm to his partner, and has purchased the Cummins mill, located on Indian creek, together with 320 acrea of timber land. H. G. and II. E. Reed, experi enced sawmill men, are interested in the deal. A new engine, edger and gang lath mill will be added. Want Pay for Dead Cattle. Elgin F. E. Graham, of this town, has presented a claim against Union county, amounting to $2!H), for the loss of cattle killed by the collapse of the Wallowa bridge. Hector McDonald, who was also driving a herd of cattle across the bridge at the time and Buf fered a similar; loss, has also put in a claim against wallowa county for damages. No Right to Sell the Land. Salem Attorney General Crawford has held that the State Land Board has no authority to sell land lieqneathed to the state for the Soldiers' home. He holds that the board can sell land only when it has authority of law to do so and its general authority erten.Ij nnltr I. j ... ..... . w...j to the pale of state land granted by the government. 8c. ADVANCE IN PRICE OF LOGS. Logging Camps Soon to Shut Down, and Shortage is Expected. Astoria While several of the loggers in the Lower Columbia river district are under contract to deliver logs at $7.50 per thousand the year, the others price for fir logs to until the first of have advanced the $8 and a few sales are said to have been made at figures a shade higher. In spite of this ad vance in price, the demand is excellent and the logs are being taken as fast as they are put in tide water. A number of the larger logging companies will close down their camps for at leas month or six weeks as soon as the heavy rains set in and as, with the single exception of the Eastern Western Lumber company, none of the nulls have a large supply of logs on hand, a shortage is looked for before the end of the winter seaaon. Notwithstanding the advance in the price of fir logs, spruce ia still selling at about $7. Buys 2,000 Lambs. Prineville Stockmen here are sti'.l commenting on the sale recently of 2,000 lambs by Williamson & Gesner to the Baldwin Sheep & Land com pany, at $2 50 per head. Such a large sale at this time of the year is consid ered as remarkable, particularly when the price is such a good one. In the spring there would be nothing extra ordinary about the transfer. That such a large hand should be transferred jus as the feeding season is coming on, and at a good figure, is taken to mean that there are indications somewhere of a good price for both mutton and wool next spring. West Coast Lumber in Demand. Portland Within the last few weeks a new market has been openeud up for Oregon and Washington lumber, and already shippers are preparing to trans port by water more than 9,000,000 feet to New York. Part of this lumber will go from Portland on sailing vessels and part of it will be taken from the mills of Puget sound. Outside of the extreme heavy timber heretofore, there has been radically no demand for Oregon and Washington lumber in the New York markets, and the suddenness and magitude of the orders of recent date have come as a surprirse. Can Corn at McMinnville. McMinnville If present interest in the matter does not wane, next year will see McMinnville with a large corn canning factory. Several years ago samples of corn were sent to this coun ty to test soil, climate and other con ditions. The results sent back to the promoters show the quality first class in every particular. The Eastern peo pie contemplating building a factory here state the plant will be the same size as the one they now operate, pay ing out about $10,000 each year for the product and about $6,000 in wages. Irrigating Harney Land. Burns Ten thousand acres of the best sagebrush land in the state will be put on the market as soon as in spected by the proper state official, as a result of the operations of the Port land Land company. It will I e sold in tracts of from 40 to 160 acres at $10 per acre, a lower price than that for any irrigated land yet put on the mar ket in Oregon. This company was first to get a contract from Oregon to irri gate land. PORTLAND MARKETS. Wheat Club, 71c per bushel; blue red. stem, 7374c; valley, 45c; 67c. Oats No. 1 white feed, $26; gray, .5022 per ton; rolled, $22.50 $26 per ton. Barley Feed, $21 brewing, $2222.50; 23.50. Rye $1.501.60 per cental. Hay Eastern Oregon timothy, $15 16 per ton; valley timothy, $1112; clover, $89; grain hay, $8W. Fruits Apples, $11.50 per box; huckleberries, 7c per pound; pears, $125 1.50 per box; grapes, $1.25 i.fi5 per box; Concord, 15c per basket; quinces, $1 per box. Vegetables Beans, wax, 12; per pound; cabbage, 11,'4C per pound; cauliflower, $1.752.25 per crate; cel ery, 75c per dozen; cucumbers, 5060c per dozen; pumpkins, ?4'lc per pound; tomatoes, $1 per crate; sprouts, 7c per pound; squasn, ?iic per pound; turnips, 90c$l per sack; car rots, 65 75c per Back; beets, 85c$l per sack. Oniona Oregon yellow Danvers, $1.25 per sack. Potatoes Fancy graded Burbanks, 65 70c per sack; ordinary, 5560e; Merced sweets, sacks, $1.90; crates, $2.15. Butter Fancy creamery, 2527aC per pound. Ejfjja Oregon ranch, 35c per dozn. Poultry Average old hens, 11c; young roosters, S 10c; eprings, 11c; dressed chickens, . 12 14c; turkeya, live, 17 18c; geese, live, 8a9c; ducka, 1415c per pound. ' HopsOregon, 1905, choice, 810c; olds, nominal, 56c. Wool Eastern Oregon average best, 1621c; valley, 2426c per pound; mohair, choice, 30c. Beef Dressed bulls, l2c pr pound; cows, 34c; country steers, 442c. Veal Dressed, 37j'c per pound. Mutton Dressed, fancy, 772o per i.nnd; ordinary, 45c; lambs, 7ja' Pork Dreseed, 67c per pound. MAY LOSE POSITION. Mitchell Likely To Senate Canal Be Displaced on Committee. 27. Apparently Washington, Nov Senator Mitchell is to be deprived of the chairmanship of the committee on interoeeanic canals when the senate re organizes next month. This has not been definitely decided, but it ia the concensus of opinion of arriving sena tore that Mitchell will have to relin quish his chairmanship in order that some active member of the canal com mittee can preside at its meetinga this winter. congress must appropriate money eaily in the coming session for contin uing work on the Panama canal, and must decide whether the canal shall be built with locks or at the sea level This legislation, together with all other legislation pertaining to the canal and the canal zone, muBt be considered by the canal committee, and will be one of the most important topics to be con Bidered. Because of its importance senators believe the canal committee should have an active chairman, who can not only preside at committee meetings, but who can vote both in committee and in the senate, and who can furthermore take charge of canal legislation after it has been reported to the senate. AMEND IMMIGRATION LAWS. Sargent's Plan for Keeping Out All Undesirables. astnngton, rov. 27. Kadiea changes in the immigration laws will be made next year, if the suggestions of Commissioner General Sargent are put into effect. Mr. Sargent is anxious to have limits placed on the number of immigrants, and that persons who are either too young or too old to sup port themselves should not be per mitted to disembark. This would not however, apply to those who can furn ish guarantees that they are on theii way to relatives. Mr, bargent believes that by an ar rangement with foreign governments the useless traflic of deportation of im migrants unfit to land here could be stopped, tfetore an immigrant is per mitted to take passage for America, he should undergo an examination at the point of embarkation. HITCHCOCK TO RESIGN. Rumor That Western Congressmen Have Got His Scalp. Washington, Nov. 27. The fact leaked out tonight from a responsible source that at a recent cabinet meeting Ethan Allen Hitchcock, secretary of the Interior, expressed a desire to ten der his resignation July 1 next. The same authority announces that Vespa sian Warner, of Illinois, now comrnis sioner of pensions, is to succeed him. It is said the proposed change in the cabinet has been brought about ty members of congress from western states, who charge that Mr. Hitchcock, in operations against land grabber", has permitted his personal feelings to enter into the prosecutions. While this charge had been often repeated, it in said that the retirement of Mr Hitchcock will be wholly due to the desire ot the president to surround hiniEelf with younger men. Million women fight svioot. Characterize Him as a Man Sanction ing Practice of Polygamy. Philadelphia, Nov. 27. A meeting of the executive committee of the Na tional League of Women's organiza tions, formed two years ago to oppose the continuance in the United States senate of Senator Reed Smoot, of Utah, was held here today. Women from all sections of the country were present. It was announced that a petition would ie presented to the senate asking for the exclusion of Mr. Smoot on the ground that "he is a member of a eirarchy whose president and a major- ty of the members pratctice and teach polygamy." The memorial will state that "Mr. Smoot has never raised his voice against these doctrines, and the Mormon hierarchy has broken 'its cov enants which it gave to the United States when statehood was granted." Sailors Want Discharges. St. Petersburg, Nov. 27. Details ot he mutiny at Sevastopol are not av.tila hie at the admiralty, the dispatch of ie Assoxiated Press from the war port iving the. first intimation of the out- reak. An officer of the staff said that four equi pages anil the Black sea fleet were at Sevastopol at present. He rx- lained that in addition to other long- existent caues of discontent the sailors had been stirred up by their retention in the service as reservicests, the ukase releasing many of them from the serv ice having just been published. Burton is Guilty. St. Louis, Nov. 27. Senator J. R. Burton, of Kansas, was Saturday night found guilty on all six counts in the indictment upon which he has l)een on trial for the past week in the United States Circuit court, charged with hav ing agreed to accept and having ac cepted compensation from the Rialto (irain & Securities company, of St Louis, to appear for the company in the capacity of an attorney before the Post office department. Will Cut Forests and Crops. Iibau, Nov. 27. Agrarian disorders have broken out in the Baltic province. A peasant meeting adopted resolutions to cut forest on private land and to ap propriate crops. The governor general has issned a proclamation to the troops to fire on such offenders, and saying that the participants at such meetinga will le court martialed and sent to dis tant provinces. CHARGES ALL TO OREGON Refuses to Make Change in Favor of Klamath Project. Hitchcock Admits California Will Have Share In the Benefits ' Fulton's Plea for Umatilla Irrigation Falls on Deaf Ears Secretary Openlv Denounces Malheur. Washington, No?. 25. Secretary Hitchcock is now convinced of the in terstate character of the Klamath irri gation project and acknowledges that California ia to benefit by the work in contemplation fully aa much aa Ore gon, but he ia not willing to change hia nrdnr r'huro'ino' t.hn nt.ir allotment. tr the state of Oregon. When Senator Fulton again took up the matter of the Umatilla project with the secretary, he found Hitchcock hold ing the same views he voiced on the occasion of hia previous visits, contend ing that Oregon's 51 per cent reserve fund has been appropriated and ex plaining that there are no funds avail able for construction of the Umatilla project. Mr. Fulton maintains that, even if the secretary adheres to his determina tion to charge the entire cost of the Klamath work to Oregon, there is yet enough money in the reclamation fund to the credit of Oregon to build the Umatilla project. On June 30 last Oregon's restricted fund was practically $2,500,000. Deducting $2,000,000 al lotted for Klamath, there was yet $500,000 left, and it is Mr. Fulton'a contention that since July 1, 1905, enough money has been received from disposal of public lands in Oregon to make the other $500,000 necessary for the Umatilla project. The secretary ia unable to state how much money Or- gon has contributed to the fund since July, but will advise the senator when he ascertains the facts. Notwithstanding that he denominates the Malheur project a "steal," and al ludes to the operation of the wagon road people as a "graft," the secretary will not formally set aside this project, though admitting that he will not con struct 1'. Nor will he permit the Mal heur allotment to he used in part for the Umatilla project. He says Oregon has had her full share- of reclamation money outside of the Malheur project, and is not entitled to the benefit of the- money which is now credited to tha project, hut which is not being used. TRY TO DAM SALTON SEA. Lerge Force Working to Save Rail road From Destruction. Los Angeles, Nov. 25. Two hun- Ired men, divided into day and night shifts, 20 teams hauling brush and sand, two piledrivers thumping away almost incessantly, two sternwheel steamers carrying construction material anil commissary stores from Yuma these forces under Superintendent J. Tolin are engaged in the Herculean task of building a 600 foot dam across he west channel of the Colorado river four miles below Yuma, by which the California Development com pany hopes to bring Salton sea to a standstill and eventually restore the Salton Sink to a lry bed of evaporation of the flood wtaers that have wreaked such havoc there. If the dam is a success, the Southern Pacific railway in . ime- will he able to abandon its 16 miles of shoofly track east of Salton, and resume its main ne. If the darn is a failure, 40 miles and perhaps more of shootly may have o be hunt, the w hple Imperial coun try may he deprived of its sumdv of anal water, and the Colorado river may he diverted through the River Padrones into Volcano lake, thence to nd its way northward through the ew river into the Salton Sea. What this would mean mav be conjectured rom the damage already done by the flooding of the great sink. Congress Will Investigate Expense. Washington, Nov. 25. It wmb stated at the War department today that while congress would be asked to appropriate a total of $16,000,000 to meet he needs of the Panama canal work to June 30 next, it is not ex pected that congress will appropriate it in a lump sum. The canal officials expect that congress will pass a bill making available a portion of this amount to meet the immediate wants because, congress would probably in vestigate to learn how the money thus far expended has been used. Three Big Battleships. Washington, Nov. 25. Three first- clans battleships of at least 18.000 tons displacement and 18 knots Ppeed, three scout cruisers of 5,000 tons dinnlai P- ment, one gnnWt of the Helena class Bnd four other gunboats of liirht draft two for use in the Philippines and two for service in the fivers of China, with additional topedo boats ami torpedo boat destroyers, are the principal re commendations of the general board of the navy in its program. Hyde-Dimond Case Postponed. Washington, Nov. 25. The hearing by the Criminal court on the demurrer filed in the Hytle-Dimond case, in which fraudulent land transactions on the Pacific coast are charged, which was set for today, was postponed for- two weeks.