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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1907)
Hcppncr Gazette HEPPNER OREGON RESUME OF THE WEEK'S DOINGS General Review of Important Hap penmgs Presented In a Brief and Comprehensive Manner for Busy Readers National, Political, His torical and Commercial. General Bell says the nation ia not prepared for war. A crisL is near at Chicago in the telegraphers dispute. Crown Prince George, of Servia, w ill visit the L nited States. A prediction is made that Japan will invade Europe .and fight Germany. Consul Jenkins has been recalled for favoring President Zelava in Salvador ine Kaiser has ottered to buy an air sip n its inventor can sail it across Germany. The railroads of the country have adopted a plan of publicity to conciliate the people. Mrs. II. F. McCorinick, daughter of John D. Rockefeller, says her father is being persecuted. Endeavorers from all parts of the United States are on their way to Seat tie to attend the conventiono. St. Louis publishers are to sue the government because their publications have been barred from the mails as sec ond class matter. As an evidence of the large amount of money sent out of the United States by Japanese it is shown that those in Portland annually send 1 120,000 to Japan. A row betweed Tillman and Dolliver has led to talk of a duel. The Hague conference is having some lively debates over the Americaan prop ositions. Express companies in Nebraska will fight the new state law reducing rates 25 per cent. Japanese have formally demanded li censes in San Francisco preparatory to suing for damages. Commissioner Jfeill is making strenuous effort to keept he telegraph era strike irom spreading. The Jamestown fair has borrowed another $350,000. The company's property is given as security. Sedition is spreading in India and it is predicted that England will soon have another war on her hands. Archbishop Glinnon, of St. Louis, has been appointed to take a census of American Catholics, estimated at 15,- 000,000. The Union Pacific at the Omaha shops has just turned out two all steel box cars and it is probable the change will be adopted. Judge Charles Swayne, of the North ern district of Florida, is dead. The judge was brought into prominence a Buon ume ago dv an attempt, to im peach him. Telegraph operatocra are to vote on a general strike. It is reported that the Moqui Indians in Utah are on the warpath. Philadelphia has forbidden games at school in which there is kissing. Odessa is again the scene of rioting in which many Jews are being killed. A tornado in Eastern Wisconsin struck several towns and killed two people. The Hague conference is receiving many propositions to mitigate the hor rors of war. Negotiations are in progress to settle the dispute between United States, Co lombia and Panama. Grover Cleveland, who has been ill for three weeks, is improveud suffi ciently to be around the house. Bandit Raisuli has captured General MacLean, commander of the body guard of the sultan of Morocco. STANDARD MEN TESTIFY. Rockefeller So Long Out of Business He Knows Little About It. Chicago, July 8. John P. Rockefel ler, president of the Standard Oil com pany, of New Jersey, occupied the wit ness stand in the United States District court Saturday, while Judge Landia plied him with questions regarding the financial strength and the business methods of the corporation of which ho is the head. Mr. Rockefeller was a very willing and an unsatisfactory witness. He was ready to tell all that he knew, but he said that he knew practically nothing. 1 he net result of his examination was that he believed during the yeara 1903, 1904 and 1905, the peiiod covered by the indictments on which the Standard Oil company of Indiana was recently convicted, the net profits of the Stand ard Oil company of New Jersey were approximately 40 per cent on an out standing capitalization of $100,000,000. The investigation by Judge Landis was instituted by him for the express purpose of determining whether or not the Standard Oil company of Indiana, wJiich was convicted of violation of the law, was really owned by the Standard Oil company of New Jersey, whether NEWS ITEMS OF GENERAL INTEREST FROM THE STATE OF OREGON CARNAGE PALLS FOURTH. DEER SEASON OPENS JULY 15 Change In Game Laws Not Generally Known by Hunters. Albany That net more than 5 per cent of the sportsmen of Oregon know that the open season for deer begins this year July 15, is the opinion of a local hunter. TIm fact that the hist legislature changed the deer season has not become known at all in this part of the state and men who always begin deer hunting as soon as the seuson opens are making no plans to go into the mountains until next month. According to the new law, the open season lor buck deer is from July 15 to November 1. It was formerly from .August 15 to November 1. The season for female deer remains the same under the new law as it was under the old from September 1 to November 1. These changes in the deer season are ( give the matter his attention. He lis- FOREST FUND FOR EACH STATE Pinchot Says Department Proposes Improved Service. Pendleton- While in the city for a few hours, G iff ord Pinchot, chief for ester oi the united States, announced that if his present plana were material ized that the next appropriation for for est reserves, by congress, would be di vided into specific appropriations for the states. His object in this change oi poncy is to secure better appropria tions for the individual states, making it possible to pay better salaries for those who are placed in charge of the forest reserves and thereby secure more competent men. The question of having the forest re serve district headquarters moved from Portland to this city was taken ud with Mr. Pinchot, and he promised to the Union Tank Line companv, whose cars were used for the shipments, made in violation of law, were similarly own ed, and also to obtain an idea of the fi nancial resources of the convicted cor poration in order to inflict a fine pro portionate to the offense and the assets of the convicted company. It was stated by olhceis of the Stand ard Oil company of New Jersey that it owned the grealer part of the stock of both the Lnion Tank Line company and Standard Oil company of Indiana. Specific figures as to the earnings of the parent corporation were given by Charles M. Pratt, its secretary, and they were close to the estimate given by Mr. Rockefeller. embodied in house bill 151, which is recorded on page 341 of the 1907 ses- (sion laws. Another change in the deer law is that it is now a misdemeanor to kill dogs chasing deer. It was formerly illegal to hunt deer with dogs and that tened carefully to the arenmenrs mmln for the proposed change and admitted that there seemed to be some good rea sons why the change should be made. The forester says his particular pur pose in coming to the West at this time is to study local needs, hear complaints, SMASH WHOLE DEFENSE. to State to Prove Moran Was Sent Denver for Cash. Boise, July 8 A little at a time the outlines of some of the features of the rebuttal testimony to be introduced the state in the Haywood case leak out. It is found that among the wit nesses lor the defense whose testimony ill be demolished is Pat Moran, the Cheyenne saloonkeeper. Orchard tes tified that Moran went to Denver for him in June, 1904, and got $500 from Pettibcne. That was when Orchard and John Neville, with the latter'a boy, reached Cheyenne on the occasion of the flght from Independence after the depot explosion. Orchard wanted more . B i m r money ior nis trip. jioran was a friend of Pettibone and he readily con sented to run down to Denver to get the money, as Orchard did not feel safe in showing himself in the Colorado city just then. Moran denied the stcry in every feat ure. He did not even know Orchard s name, hearing him called "Shorty," and he could not recognize pictures cf the famoi's witness when these were shown him while he was on the stand. Though he was sadly rattled and dis credited on the cross examination, he stuck to his denial. Nevertheless, the state will have wit nesses to prove Moran was in Denver. CHINA TO BE AVENGED. piuvisiuu jo mau uuLiuiujcu an mo iinn ciyiuin me purposes oi tne iorest re law. Under the old law many dogs serve, adjust differences, and in short caught chasing deer were shot and j to adapt the administration of the re killed and the new provision was in- serve affairs to the local conditions, serted in order to protect owners of val- j He says he is finding that complaints liable dogs, which would break loose concerning the reserve is not due to the and chase deer without the knowledge theory or policy of the administration Celebration Victims Up To Former Records for Number. Chicago, July 5. The annual slaugh ter has been done in the name, or rather under the guise, of "patriot ism." With 58 known victims, and hundreds of others groaning out their lives in hospitals, it Is certain that the list of victims to the "Glorious Fourth" will exceed 158, the total Inst year. In J90b, with all the precautions that couw: bo taken bv authorities, the tola injured reached nearly 0,000 and the total this yeur when all the returns are in, will bo quite as large, more likely larger, for the foolkiller has been sadly remiss in his duty. Inventors have brought forth new engines of destruc tion . The toy pistol and cannon cracker and deadly dyanmite cane have claimed their usual quota. One peculiar feat ure of the casualties this year is the number of deaths frcm fright. Of the five instant deaths in thin city, four of their owners. 4 f,MT .j these he is endeavoring toadjust as Albany Albany's public library will rapidy as possible. but to mistakes that f n the conduct of the have been made reserve affairs, be started as soon as a suitable build ing can be found. Arrangements are complete for instituting it and as soon as temporary quarters are rented the library will be opened. Nine directors have been elected and their election haa been confirmed, in accordance with the state laws governing public libra ries, under which this institution was formed by the city council. These di rectors are Frank J. Miller, Mrs. J. K. Weatherford, II. II. Hewitt, Fred P. Nutting, Mrs. H. F. Merrill, Mrs. S. E. Young, M. II. Ellis and Miss Lucy Gard. t He went from here to Coeur d'Alene. Idaho, and from thence goes to Helena to meet Secretary of the Interior Gar field. He expects to be in Portland July 13 and 14 were from fright. This f is a splendid tribute to the manufacturers of explo sives and the blithering idiots who use them to cause suffering. In New lork three persons weie killed by explosives, and a girl was trampled to death under the hoofs of a panic stricken horse scared by celebra- tors. Cincinnati, Philadelphia, Milwaukee and several other large cities report no deaths, but hundreds of accidents. The total fire loss attributable to fire worka was $304,000. This was greatly reduced by heavy rains, which were general over the Middle West the night beiore the fourth. i ' SUE SAN FRANCISCO. SHOW OF FORCE AGAINST JAPAN Why United States Battleships Are Coming to Pacific. Japan Has Blocked Open Door In China aud Broke Many Promises Navy Department Officials Try t9 Minimize Importance of Great Demonstration. The Miners' Federation has voted to continue Moyer and Haywood in office and given about $45,000 to aid in their defense. Chester B. Runyon, cashier of the Windsor Trust company, of New York, haa disappeared with $96,317 of the company's money, leaving no trace of hia whereaboute. Harriman has ordered full publicity cf all railroad accidents on his lines The Miners' Federation convention at Denver has adpoted a Socialist plat- orm. Thousands of Japanese are being smuggled into the United States from Mexico. A new ordinance passed in Philadel phia makes the city a partner in all street car lines. A French emigrant agent has been arrested by his government for sending weavers to America. Navajo Indians in Arizona threaten a revolt because the agent killed one of them in self defense. President Cabrera haa passed whole pale death sentences in Guatemala for alleged revolutionary acta. The contest for the Republican na tional convention city is now on. Chi cago seems to have the preference. I Prominent Oriental Writes Roosevelt Threatening Letter. Mexico City, July 8. The most ag gressive utterance that lias come from i 1 . . m j i me pen oi a L-innese concerning tiie Chinese exclusion act is a document written by Kong Yu Wei, leader of the Chinese reform movement, who recent ly left this city for New York. The let ter was written to President Roosevelt, seeking to enlist the president's aid in revision cf the present laws. The etter says in part: Two decades of rigid enforcement of the exclusion laws have brought about the ill will of 400,000,000. A united Chinese will seek to avenge its wrongs. Its anger will be vented in ways that I dread to think of. 'The time will come when a small park may start an uncontrollable con flagration and the friendly ties between our people severed beyond remedy. Americans have been wont to condemn Russian cruelty toward the Jaoanese. How much more humane has been America's treatment of the Chinese." Water for Irrigation Next Year. Ontario Messrs. Allbright and Eg gleston, of Portland, Christian Co- opeiative representatives, have re turned from Upper Willow creek. They state work is progressing rapidly on the irrigation project, and that work of survey for the laterals ia still going on. The huge reservoir in Cow valley will be in readiness to deliver wat3r next year, and while the project of the federation is a vast undertaking and will take a long time to construct, they say it will surely be completed to irri gate thousands of acres of high land in Malheur county. ; S. P. Behind Spencer Power Plant. Klamath Falls The positive an nouncement has at last been made that tne work being done at spencer s on Klamath river is the begiLi.:ng f a large power plant which the Southern Pacific company will complete in the course of a few yeara. The operations of the workmen engaged on the plant have been rather mysterious and em ployes who have worked there for s months or more did not know what they were working at or for whom. Salmon Reach the Calapooia. Albany Salmon are rpeorted to have been seen in the mouth of the Cala pooia river, where it enters the Wil- ! lamette at this city. If salmon are successfully passing the falls at Oregon City and ascending the Willamette a long deferred hepe of residents of the upper valley is being realized. In spite oi an tne contrivances which have been placed in the river at Oregon City to enable salmon toa scend, very few fof the fish have ever been seen as far south aa thia citv. Will Find Klamath Reds Active. Klamath Falls The Klamath Indian reservation is a Dusy place tnis sum' mer, and Secrelary Garfield will find much to interest him when he visits the home of Uncle Sam's wards in the ! middle of July. At the Klamath : agency, where the schools are located, ! about $40,000 is being expended in im provements Hie chief improvements being made are the constructing of a sewerage system and an electric light ana water system. New Clerk in Land Office. Burns There is rejoicing among the patrons of the United States land office here over the assurance just received from the department at Washington that a clerk is to be added to the work ing force with the opening of the office. The work of the office has been badly congested and this will relieve the strain and permit the completion of important transactions which have been awaiting action for some time. Germs on Car Transfers. Paris, July 8. A well known Bor deaux physician, Dr. Busquet, has been analysing the germs on transfer tickets used on streetcars, and has found that they propogate most dangerous diseases. He soaked a number of them in gela tine and then gave them to a conductor to be used. At the end of the day's work he went to the office and claimed these tickets. He then left the bacilli to cultivate and found that in a few hours four out of every five had devel oped bacilli of the worst kinds of diseases. Appeal to Mrs. Russell Sage. Berlin, July 8. An attempt will be made to induce Mrs. Russell Sage, of New York, to use part of her enormous fortune to abolish the terrible white siave iraue, which is continually going on between J-.urope and America. In no manner could Mrs. Sage immortal ize her husband's and her own names than by wiping out this blot upon her country's reputation, Gem ans say. The white slave trade, it is claimed, is in creasing instead of lessening. Sultan's Credit Exhausted. Constantinople, Juyl 8. The sultan is Wing persistently dunned for repay ment of his numerous loans from Euro pean financiers and is at bis wits' end to find a way out. Buy Land for Weston Brick. Weston The proprietors of the Westn brickyard have purchased of James D. Gish his addition to Weston, consisting of nearly 10 acres in the low er part of the city. Before making the purchase the brickyard people quietly demonstrated that the soil was well adapted to the making of a superior quality of brick. The price paid was $2,0C0. Ontario Wants New Land District. Ontario A petition is being circulat ed in Ontario and numerously signed asking the government tc create a new land district for this section and the appointment of a register and receiver, rne omce to De located at untario or Vale. At present parties having land office business to transact have to go to Burns, a distance of 150 miles. Harney's Prospects Excellent. T nit . . rurns mere are excellent crop prospects in all parts of Harney countv Grain has' a fine stand and fruit of all varieties is looking well. Alfalfa has made an unusually good growth this year, and there are some rich patches ot it on dry land with no artificial irri gation. Haying will begin early in July and the crop is very he avy. Injured Japanese Claim Damages from Bay City. San Francisco, July 5. Suit against the city and county of San Francisco was filed this afternoon in the Superior court for the recovery of $2,575 for damages alleged to have been sustained by the proprietors of the Horseshoe res taurant and a Japanese bath house at Eighth and Folsom streets on May 23, when a row, caused by an attack by la bor union men on two nonunion men, who were eating in the restaurant, re sulted in the fronts of the two places being smashed by stories and clubs. The suit was brought in the name of J. Timoto, proprietor of the bath house, but includes the damage to both estab lishments, the proprietor of the restau rant having assigned his claim to the plaintiff. The papers were filed by Carl E. Luidsay, attorney for Timoto. Asso ciated with him are United States Dis trict Attorney Robert Devlin, who ap pears at the request of United States Attorney General Charles J. Bonaparte, and Karl II. Webb, of counsel for the proseution. Japanese acting counsel 3latsubaio ia also taking an active interest in the case, which is the first legal action re sulting from the declaration of the United Statea government that, by due legal process, reparation should be made for whatever damage the Japan ese may have sustained. BIG LEVEE LETS FLOOD GO. PORTLAND MARKETS. Clackamas Land Booming. Oregon City The large increased fees of the recorder's office in Clackamas county is a good indication of the healthy growth in the real estate busi ness. The fees of County Recorder Ramsby for June were $421.01, against $209. 35 for the same month during the previous year. Murphy Estate Valued at $70,000 Salem The will of the late Judge J. J. Murphy, has been nroUtted here. It leaves an estate estimated at $70,000 to he equally divided between the wid ow, Elizabeth C. Murphy, and the son, Chester G. Murphy, the latter being named as executor without bonds. Fruit Box Factory for Weston. Weston C. W. Avery, manager of the Blue Mountain sawmill, has gone to Portland to purchase machinery for the equipment of a box factory to be run in connection with his mill. The demand at present is far in excess of .taess the supply with present facilities. Mohair Wheat Club, 80c; bluestem, 88(3) yc; valley, tic; red, 84c. Oats No. 1 white, $27.5028; gray, nominal. Barley Feed, $21.5022 per ton brewing, nominal; rolled, $23.50 24. oU. Corn Whole, $28; cracked, $29 per ton. Hay alley timothy, No. 1, $17 18 per ton; Eastern Oregon timothy, $2123; clover, $9; cheat, $9(10; grain hay, $910; alfalfa, $1314. Fruits Cherries, 810c per pound; apples, 75c$l per box; storage Spitz enbergs. $3.50 per box ; gooseberries, 7c per pound; cantaloupes, $3.503.75 per crate; apricots, 75c$2 per mate; peaches, $1.251.50 per box; plums, $1.65 per box; blackberries, $1.25 1.50 per crate; loganberries, $1.25 per crate; raspberries, Sll 50 per crate; prunes, $1.501.75 per crate. Vegetables Turnips, $2 per sack; carrots, $2.50 per sack; beets, $2.50 per sack; asparagus, 10c per pound; beana. iUc per pound; cabbage, 2ac per pound; corn, 3550c per doz en; cucumbers. $1 per tox; lettuce, head, 25c per dozen; onions, 1520c per dozen; peas, 45c per pound ; rad ishes, 20c per dozen; rhubarb, 3gC per pound; tomatoes, $1.50 per crate. Potatoes Old Oregon Burhanks, $3 3.25 per sack; new, 3c per pound. Butter fancy creamery, 22Ja25c per pound. Poultry Average old hens, l12c per pound, mixed chickens, 10c: spring chickens 1314c; old roosters, 9c; dressed chickens, lfi17c; turkey?, live, ll12c; turkeye dressed, choice. nominal; geese, live, ('riuc: young ducks, li(auie; old dncka, 10c Eggs Candled, 24;25c per dozen Veal Dressed, 5 $Fh7 ac ptr pound. Beef Dressed bulls, 3f5;4c per pound; cows, Oec; country steers, Mutton Dressed, fancy, 8c per lh; ordinary, 67c; spring lamhs, 99c per pound. Pork Dressed, G8)c per pound. Hops 68c per pound, according to .quality. Wool Eastern Oregon average best. 1622c per pound, ac-ording to shrink age; valley, 2022c according to fine- One Million Dollars Damage to Farm Lands in California. Bakergfield, Cal., July 5. The Buena Vista lake levee has broken, flooding 30,000 acres of land belonging to Mil ler & Lux and theTevis Land company, and causing $1,000,000 damage. The Sunset railway has been put out of commission and tne oil lields are cut oft from communication with this citv. The levee held back the waters of Buena Vista lake, covering 19 square miles, and protected a bxly of re claimed land extending for a distance of 15 miles, including the old bed of Kern lake, the property of the Kern County Land company and Miller & Lux. This land was covered with crops of growing grain ready for the harvests and with alfalfa. Of the flooded land, about 22.000 acres belonging to the Kern County Land company and 8,000 to Miller & Lux. The territory is divided into four big ranches, and the work of re clamation haa been in progress for nearly 20 years. The levee was built in 1886-7 iointlv by th two corporations at a cost of $250,000. Washington, July 6. Interest in world politics and the possibility of conflict with Japan was renewed here today when the definite news that t. great fleet of United States warships would be sent to the Pacific coast be came generally known. Also a new phase was put on the matter when it became known that the move, calculat ed as it is to impre's Japan that she ia not dealing with a pewer like Russia, hinges on something deeper than thw resentment of Japan at the treatment ler citizens have received thut San Francisco. The real issue, it ia pointed out here, is the open door in the Far East. Ostensibly it was for the open door that Japan went to war with Russia. But after her victory the door of trade in Manchuria and Corea waa pretty well blocked up with obstacles placed by Japan, much to the discomfiture of American and British meiehants. America was given assurances that the door would remain open and, though the president is at Oystei Bay and other officials of the government are out of the city, it is reported here that the United Statea intends, if it should become necessary, to be prepar ed to insist that the Japanese govern ment put no restrictions in the way of trade with the continent cf Asia. While it has been constantly declar ed by the Navy department that no menace to Japan ia intended by tho dispatch of the fleet, and Ambassador Aoki, of that country, has asserted that Japan will not construe the presence of ine tieet in tne Pacific as such, it is understood litre that the arrival of the battleship squadron in the Pacific marks the initial step towards the maintenance of a permanent fighting neer, in tne i'acinc hereafter. Whether te entire fleet of 18 vessels which is now destined for the Pacific remains there or not, it is asserted on the authority of well informed officials that the American navy in the Pacific will never again be inadequate to cope with any emergency on that side of the continent unless there is a vast change in the aspect of international politics. BELIEVE SCHMITZ BARRED. Prosecutors Say Name Cannot Legal ly Go on Ballot. San Francisco, July 6. Announce ment by Eugene E. Schmitz that he would be a candidate for re-election to the mayoralty this fall to a fourth term unless his appeal for a new trial is in the meantime denied by the Appellate and Supreme courts, has raised the question whether he can legally go- upon tho ballot. An examination into the law on this point was made today by Assistant District Attorney Robert Harrison, and the tentative conclusion was that the mayor is barred. Schmitz maintains that he is not con victed until his conviction by the iu'rv n Judge Dunne's court is finally passed upon and sustained court of the state. by the Supremo Throws Sop to Peasants. St. Petersburg, lulv 5. The govern ment is snowing ieverisn activity in pushing the distribution of the 25,000, 000 acres of crown, state and peasant land, which it has decided to distribute in average lots of 25 acres to individual peasant soldiers on easy payment terms, in order to make a ehowing beiore the convocation of the new parliament. Four of the participants in a pawnshon rooDery nere June 12 nave been Fiji Islands Devastated Victoria, B. C, July 6. News of a disastrous hurricane in a portion ot" the Fiji group, resulting in the com plete devastation of Futuna island, causing great property loss, but no losf of life, was brought by the steamer Moana, Captain Davidson, which ar rived from the scene of the hurricane. The island, which towered high with beautiful vegetation, now is a great rmrnt-up brown lump of earth. Tiie island is a scene of desolation, strewn completely with debris, and that no lives were lost is considered remarkable. Coal Will Be Scarcer. Rock Springs, Wyo., July 6. As a result of the suits filed by the govern ment against the Union Pacific Coal company, forcing that companv to abandon coal property alleged to have been illegally secured from the govern ment, three of the big coal mines situ ated on the disputed property have been closed down. The minea belong; to ine Rirperior Coal company, which The tried ia ownpd hw tha TTni nrtrt;n 1 I ' tllV Vllllfll 1 MIT I III". by court martial and condemned to lie , effect will be a further shortage of hanged. Eight bandits at Riga have in the West. been sentenced to death. coal -Choice, 20 (g 30c per pound. Pouring Into British Columbia. Vic toria, B. C, July 5. It is ex pected over 3,000 Japanese will arrive in British Columbia during thia month from Japan and Honolulu, and aa manv a . .... ii not more are expected in August. The steamer Kumeric will bring tho lirst large contingent of 2,000 Flocking Over Border. Mexico City, July 6. Two hundred and seventy. five Japanese landed at Santa Cruz yesterday. The Japanese are headed for the coal mines in tho d strict of Laa Esperanza. Joseph Z. Strand, a Chinese immigration inspec tor stationed at El Paso, who arrival Japanese in una citv r.winv otot.i n.4. from Honolulu. t h fnll.,-.l l fi... ' 1 ,K ''"P steamers. The numbers brought across the Tacific are constantly increasing. Five steamers due during the next two weeka have over 600 on board . Straus Probes Immigration. Montreal. July 5. Oscar 8. Straus, secretary of commerce and labor, left here tonight for Honolulu, via Toronto and Winnipeg. Mr. Straus Is studving conditions at the torts where immigra tion into the United States is the heav iest. anefe are flocking to the border in great miiiiwra ami buying tickets from J Juarez through to Canada, in order to enter tne United States. No Idea of Boycotting. London, July 6. "The leading- .1,.. ... 1 r .-via ui commerce assure rue," cabled the Tokio correspondent of the Daily Telegraph, that they never even entertained the idea of boycotting American goods. Such a boycott would be considered euicidal. in view of the existing trade ccnditionaJ