Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1908)
Hcppncr Gazette . . . Issued Thursday of tech Week HEPPNER OREGON BRIEF NEWS OF THE PAST WEEK Interesting Events from Outside the State Presented in a Manner tc Catch the Eye of the Busy Reader Matters of National, Historica' and Commercial Importance. Bryan counts on carrying New York. The biff theater hat has been abol ished in Paris play houses. . The grand jury at Springfield, 111., has returned 20 more indictments. Taft says that, if elected, he will call a special session of congress to re vise the tariff. The sultan is recalling his ministers and ambassadors and replacing them with new men. Serious troulbe is feared in the Ala bama coal district where the white miners have ordered the blacks to leave. During a storm near Pottsville, Pa., lightning set off a-charge of dynamite 1,300 feet under ground, killing two men. A Southern Indiana coal mine has been foreclosed by a Chicago bank which held paper to the amount of $3, 000,000. The trial of Theodore W. Halsey, the San Francisco telephone magnate, has been postponed until September 26, on account of illness. Mayor Taylor, of San Francisco, has received notice that the government has made an additional appropriation of $3,300 a month with which to fight the plgaue. A non-union negro miner was shot from ambush near Birmingham, Ala. Six indictments have been returned at Springfield, Illinois, against rioters. Holland awaits the report of M. De Reus before deciding on final action against Castro. The National Editorial association n working for a new libel law, seeing defects in the present statutes. New York firms have secured con tracts amounting to $16,000,000 for paving and sewer work in Havana. The Congo Reform associaation has protested to Secretary Root against the annexation of Free State by Bel gium. A Connecticut farmer emulaatedl Darius Green by atttempting to fly with a pair of paper wings he had con structed. The repeal of the Fourteenth amend ment was predicted at the National association of attorney generals held in Denver. Harriman has promised to extend the Columbia Southern railway into Central Oregon and says work will be gin at once. A row is on in the British cabinet. This will end King Leopold's bloody reign in Africa. Turkish women are to be emanci pated under the new regime. The Belgian chamber of deputies has adopted the Congo annexation treaty. The pope, who has been suffering from a cold, has almost entirely re covered. The Pacific Telephone & Telegraph officials have issued a general order to hereafter accept no whiskey ads for directories. Springfield was inflamed by the ac- : cidental shooting ness and for a oi a granu jur vwl- , time it looked as if another riot would break out. The Wells-Fargo Express company has lost all Rock Island business, amounting to $1,700,000 a year, be cause a $2,000,000 loan was refused. Attorney General Hadley,. of Mis souri, says there is something wrong with a judge who will render a decis ion like the Federal court gave in the Standard Oil appeal. A meteorograph is being set up on Mount Rose, Nevada. This machine registers automatically for 40 days at a time, the temperature, atmospheric pressure, humidity and other data of importance in determining weather conditions. t refuse Dutch ' : Castro continues vessels to call. to The Young Turk party is perfecting a plan to depose the sultan. The Oregon Supreme court has just decided a case started 1 years ago. The Russian government continues to execute alleged revolutionists by the score. The Rock Island railroad is said to be seeking control of the .Moffat road now building from Denver to Salt Lake City. Great preparations will be made to welcome Roosevelt in Egypt when he visits there on his trip around the world. In his speech of acceptance, Chafin, Frohobition candidate for president, ac cused the old parties of suppressing the liquor issue. A Canadian pressman at Chicago has appealed to the British consul for pro tection against the labor union, fearing his life is in danger. TRAIN IS WRECKED. Cottage Grove Local Goes Into Ditch Near Eugene. Eugene, Or., Aug. 25.- Fireman Frank Boulter and three unknown tramps were killed, Engineer Jack Nichols was fatally injured, and six passengers were badly hurt in a wreck of the southbound Cottage Grove local shortly after 9 o'clock Sunday night, four miles north of this city. When two miles north of Irving, the engine, going at schedule speed, struck a cow, which was on the track, and turned turtle, landing in the ditch. The baggage cars and passenger coach es, pushing the tender ahead of them, continued on the ties for 75 feet until the baggage car climbed on top of the tender and stood on end. The impact hurled three of the passenger coaches from the track, only the last two re maining on the rails. The wreck, from the standpoint of destruction to rolling stock,, is one of the worst in recent years in the South ern Pa:ifie in Oregon.' The engine and tender are a pile of scrap iron. The rails and ties are torn up for a dis tance of 75 feet, while the passenger coaches and baggage car lie on their sides in the ditch. The cow which tried to cross the track and caused the wreck was cut completely in two. ARE READY FOR HOME RULE. Cubans Capable of Self-Government, According to Magoon. Hot Springs, Va., Aug. 25. Charles E. 'Magoon, provisional governor of Cuba, talked with Mr. Taft today re garding conditions in Cuba. That the people of Cuba are qualified for self government is the positive assertion of Governor Magoon. The Cuban people, he indicated, are heart ily in favor of i government ownership of public utilities. They now own the telegraph lines and the test of the pop ular will, which has just been made on the question oi private concessions ior telephone lines, he believes has demon- strated their desire for government ownersmp. ine lest reieireu io vt made at the suggestion of President Roosevelt, and consisted in the submis sion to the 82 provinces of the draft of a law which, if approved and enacted, would have resulted, according to Gov ernor Magoon, in the telephone busi ness of the island going into the hands of the present Havana Telephone com pany. The concession of this company expires in 1910, whereupon the tele phone lines and plant of the company in that city will revert to the Cuban government. i mi a-i. 1 . FORTY PERISH WITH SHIP. Norwegian Steamer Goes Down Off Coast of Norway. Bergen, Norway, Aug. 25. The Norwegian steamer Folgen Fonden, from Bergen to Haugesund, on the west coast of Norway, was wrecked last night near Skoneviks and sank in three minutes. The steamer carried "70 passengers and it is believed 40 of them were drowned. Fifteen bodies have been recovered. The captain of the steamer was among those saved. The Folgen Fonden carried on only a local traffic and it is believed that no foreigners were aboard. It is reported that a terrible panic occurred when the steamer struck; that fearful scenes were witnessed as the vessel sank. Beats were hurriedly manned by those who had witnessed the catastrophe and they hurried to where the steamer had gone down, but j most of them arrived too late to rescue the passengers. Bring Geld From Alaska. Spattle, Aug. 25. The steamship Hyades arrived at midnight from Nome with $300,000 in gold dust and a small consignment of freight. Her arrival caused considerable surprise, for being a freighter and starting trom Nome nn hnnr after the stenmshin Nnrth- 'western, a passenger ship, it was thought the Hyades would not show up for at least two days yet. The steam ship Northwestern arrived at 4 o'clock this afternoon from Nome, bringing : 330 passengers, $20,000 worth of iur and $150,000 in gold dust. Miners Burn Nevada Town. Reno, New, Aug. 25. Hazen. junction point of three railroads the mining camps was destroyed fire, when miners celebrating the the into by sec- ond stampede to Rawhide, overturned a gasoline generator in their room. A loss of nearly 8100,000 was caused, every building in the town being burned excepting the Southern Pacific fiepot anrl freiht ehods. The fire burned from the eastern end of the town to the extreme western end. Alaska Town Wiped Out. Seattle, Aug. 25. - Moore City, Alaska, in the Innoko district, was burned on July according to passen gers who arrived on the Northwestern today from Nome' and St. Michael". The United States commissioners of fice, the jail and a few cabine were left standing. Turkish Car it; I Alimo. Constantinople, Aug. 25. Fire broke out this afternoon in the Stamboul quarter and within a very brief period a terrible conflagration was raging. A strong wind carried the flames along at ' great speed and for six hours they j swept over the section, destroying 1,500 houses and shops. I Von Sternberg is Dead. Heidelberg, Germany, Aug. 25. Speck Von Sternberg, former German ambassador to the United States, died i here yesterday morning. . NEWS NOTES GATHERED FROM VARIOUS PARTS OF OREGON FIELD FOR SILK CULTURE. Oregon Climate Appeals to Caucasian Expert. Portland Datika Kaukasieli,- of Ku ties, Caucasia, of the well kneiwn fam ily of ...noblemen of Kaukasielis, is here in the interest of silk culture. Mr. Kaukasieli says this is a very fine climate for the production of silk, and that the establishment of silk culture means much for the Pacific ccast. lie says it would do more for this cj; st than any other industry, and would mean employment for thousands and may result in the building of factories when the culture is well established. ' "Silk culture is one of the greatest productions commercially and has made nations and established commerce, and is the means of great wealth," said he. Mr. Kaukaseili has invented a device by which silk can be produced at prices which makes the industry profitable, even at the high price for labor in America. He is very enthusiastic re garding it, and says he will establisn the silk industry in the United States. Turpentine From Stumps. La Grande That an excellent grade of commercial turpentine can be made from old pine stumps which literally cover the Blue mountains, is the re markable discovery of W. E. Powell, a painter of this city, who is now per fect ng a process of extracting the fluid trom the stumps. Mr. Powell has been offered large sums for his dis covery, but so far has declined to sell and will develop the industry himself. He declares that an ecxellent grade of turpentine can be secured from the pine stumps of the logged-off lands, thous ands cf acres of which lie accessible to the railroad in all parts of Eastern , 0re(ron and he believes that he has a j discovery which can be DUnt into ; tpriP Seeking Route for Line. Eugene Reports from the country lying west of Eugene say that men rep resenting the Carver railroad are at work choosing a route for the road that will bring it to Eugene before going to the coast. It is known that Mr. Carver's first plan was to build out in to the timber belts and thus work to ward the coast, but since the project was started the lumber business has fallen off so that it will be necessary for the road to depend on something else for its freight. Thus it is consid ered probable that the growing portion of Western Lane will be tapped and the road extended from Eugene through the Siuslaw country to the coast. Suffers Butter Famine. Tillamook Despite the fact that Tillamook is the main source of supply for dairy products for all parts of the Northwest, locally it is now suffering from an acute famine. For the past few weeks it has been impossible for the housewife to secure a roll of butter for culinarry purposes. This extraor dinary phenomenon is accounted for by the fact that Tillamook butter brings fancy prices outside, and the manufac turer either finds it more profitable to ship his goods, or else has his output contracted for in advance, and the home merchant must rely upon that of domestic manufacture for his supply, i Gold Near La Grande. La Grande The city of La Grande is considerably sitrred up over the a -pearance on the streets recently of a man carrying a sack of gold ore which he asserts he found on Mt. Emily, les than 10 miles from the city, a peak which overlooks the entire valley. The ore exhibited gave everjj v'dence of being first class and of pnyimr grade. During the past 20 da s he las been prospecting on the mountain, and h's sack brought here is only a part ( f h s findings. Local men who own claims in the vicinity of the hill will tal e active steps to look into the rumor Buy Provisions at Portland. Portland Local merchants will not los? the trade of the comminry de partment of the Northern Pacific be cause of the transfer of this d- p la ment to the Spokane, Portland & S a tle road. F. H. Fogarty, assistant general passenger aent of the North ern Pacific, has written M. Mosses hn, acting secretary of the chamber of commerce, that the new service will result in the dining cars of both roads securing all their produce in Portland. Hop Crop Light in Marion. Hubbard Hops and hop picking are uncertainties at the present time. Not all the hops in this part of Mnrien c unty were cultivated or cared for1 t'is year, and now, owing to the ev-; tremely weak market, it is higlly probable that many yards that have be"n cultivated will rot be picked. The crop is not a heavy one, as many of the long arms on the lower part of the v'nes have no hops on at all. Pick- j ing will be later than usual. N-jw Road Projected. Albany An electric line from Albany to Brownsville, a distance of 22 miles, is being projected by E. II. Rhodes, a local capitalist. He also plans to build a street railway system in this city. and if franchises are secured he will begin work immediately. Local capit- al is behind both enterprises, and other local men, whose names have not yet been made public, are associated in the project with Rhodes. FIX PICKING PRICE. Hop Growers at Salem Decide Upon Eighty Cents a Hundred. Salem About 40 hopgrowres of this vicinity met at the city hall and adopt ed a resolution fixing SO cents a hun dred pounds as the price to be paid for hop picking this season. This is 20 cents a hundred less than last year. The opinion was unanimous that growers cannot pay over 80 cents a hundred and can scarcely afford to pay that much in view of the present price of hops. Eighty cents a hundred is practically the same as 40 cents a box. Joseph Harris, agent for Benjamin Schwarz & Sons, has received word from London that the Kentish Obser ver in its last issue estimates the Eng lish hop crop for 1908 at 540,000 hun dred weight, against 275,000 hundred weight last year. Boost Good Roads. Corvallis The launching of a great campaign for legislation and state aid for public roads, the enactment of leg islation to obtain legal title and for the protection by the state of that title for users of water for irrigation and power, the inauguration of a move ment for cutting up big tracts of land for division among small holders, and the furthern prosecution of the claims of the Willamette valley and Oregon for the government purchase and coi -trol of the Willamette locks and the improvement of the Willamette river, were primal objectives of the meeting held here last week, at which an en thusiastic body of Corvallis business men was presennt. Vale Wants Irrigation. Vale A Commercial club meeting was held here last week and a commit tee was appointed to take up the mat ter of government irrigation in this county. It was the opinion of the club that favorable consideration will be given the matter at this time. The project was known as the Malheur and covered all the different streams in the north half of this county. H. L. Wal lace, who has returned from New York, stated that the Federation bonds will be signed within a week. He has contracts with an Eastern construction company. Yamhill Wheat of Fine Qjality. McMinnville Wheat, once Yamhill's main crop, but now only a side issue with the farmers, is coming to the warehouses quite lively this week. So far 27 ' bushels to the acre, machine measure, is about the best yield report ed, although the grain is generally very plump and heavy and overruns in weight. One farmer's load of 25 sacks gainedsix bushels when weighed at the warehouse. There are a number of crops not yet threshed where the esti mated yield has been placed much high er than the average. Railroad Rates Bar Stockmen. Klamath Falls L-nless the stock men of this section secure abetter ia"e they will be forced to drive to Shas a valley, California, before loading stock on the cars. Some of the stock men made a shipment from Mou: t Hebron, a station on the Californ'a Northeastern, but the rate was so hieh thit they can afford to drive to Monta gu, a distance of about 15 miles, and lord at that place. Another effort is being made to secure better rates. PORTLAND MARKETS. Wheat Club, 88c per bushel ; forty fold, 90c ; Turkey red, 90c ; fife, 88c; bluest 'm, 92c; valley. 88c. Birlev Feed, $24 50 rer ton; roll ed, f 270 28; brewing, $2'k Oats -No. 1 white, $26.50 per ton; grpy, $26. Hpy T'mothy, Willamette Valley, $!4per ton; Willamette vflley ordi nary, $11; Eastern Cregm, $16.50; mixed. $13: clover, $9; alfalfa, $11. Fruits Peaches, 40(7; 85c per box; Bartlett pears, $150. per box; plums, 75c per box: grap s, 85eO$1.50 per crate; blackberries, $10 1.10 per crat". Potatoes -- $10 12 5 r r hundred; j sweet pet" toes, 3,0 4c per p und. ! M Ions - Cantaloupes, $1.25 re; 1.75 pr crate; watermelons. $1.50 per 100 loos"; raed, ',c additional; casabas, $2.25 per dozen. j V g.'lab'.es Turnips, $1.50 per sack ; ; carrots, $1.75 p rsack; parsmps, $1.75 per sack; beets, $1.50 per sack ; beans, j 5c pel -ound ; cabbage, 1 i1., c per pound ; corn, 250 30c per dozen: cucumbers, 3 0 40c per box : egg p' ant, $1.75 p r crate; lettuce, heal, 15c p:T dozen; pirsley, 15c per dozen; peas, Gc per pound; peppers, 80 10c per pound; radishes, 12 '.jc per dozen ; spinach, 2c per pound ; tomatoes, 75cf$1.25 per crate; celery, 90c0$l per dozen; arti chokes, 75c per dozen. Butter- Extras, 30p per p und ; fan cy. 27 V.c; choice, 2.rc; store. 18c. Fggs Oregon extras, 2'Of ?7c per dozen ; first s. 2 ui : ;c; second 20 23c; thirds. 1. "0 20c; Eastern. 2 102" c. Poultry- Mixed chickens, 130 13 '.c p r pound; fancy hens, 11c; roosters. 10c; spring, loe; duds, od, lZc; spring, 130 15c; geese, old. 8c; young, 10c; turkeys, eld, 170 18c; young, 20c. Veal Extra. 8c per pound; ordinary, 707,' vc; heavy, 5c. Pork Fancy, 7c per pound; ordi nary, 6c; large, 5c. Mutton Fancy, 80 9c per pound. Hops 1907, prime and choice, 4,' 05c per pound; olds, l0l?4c; con tracts, nominal. Wool Eastern Oregon, average best. 100 16 1, .c per pound, according to shrinkage; valley, 15015.ic; mo hair, choice, 180il8c. FEAR STRIKE RIOT. Conditions Growing Serious in Ala bama Coal District. Birmingham, Ala., Aug. 24. The nerve tension in the Alabama strike zone is exceedingly taut. The attempt at assassination of a nonunion miner at Pratt City last night is a theme' of general discussion. Deputies attempt ed to make an arrest for trespass at mine No. 5 of the Tennessee company near Pratt City today and met resist ance on the part of white women. Two women were arrested. A big barbecue waa held at Fulton Springs several miles north of this city today. Several thousand miners, union men, were present, and W. R. Fairley, Alabama member of the na tional board of mineworkers, was among the principal speakers. A number of evictions from com pany houses has been accomplished at the Sayre mines. Big bodies of men are meeting all trains along the north end of the mineral railroad. Reports come that threatening let ters are being dropped on the porches of homes of men remaining at work, and as a result many men are leaving. AVERT CLASH ON BORDER. French and German Officers Cool headed in Emergency. Paris, Aug. 24. War between Germ any and France was averted by the cool headedness of French and Geruman army officers in a dramatic frontier episode which is reported from Lunes ville. Two German army corps are en gaged in maneuvers near the border, and yesterday morning a battalion of French rifles, marching out from Ram bersvillers, approached within 50 yards of the frontier and suddenly found it self face to face with a German regi ment which was drawn up at an equal distance on the other side. The troops stood looking at each oth er for a moment without uttering a word or giving vent to an explanation, and then their respective commanders simultaneously orderered them to face about, ami they were soon at a prudent distance from each other. A fine illustration of military discip line was given on both sides, as a cry might have been the signal for serious trouble BUILD MANY SHIPS. Japs Will Have Large Fleet of Auxil iary Cruisers. New York, Aug. 24. According to Kashiora Shiba, one of the managers of the Mitsuhishi dockyard at Naga saki, Japan, the Japanese government is making earnest efforts to increase its fleet of auxiliary cruisers. Mr. Shiba, who arrived at the Hotel Astor tonight, declared that while the Japan ese navy is highly efficient, there is need of a fleet of steamships which could, in time of war, be converted in to cruisers. "Our dockyard, " said he, "is work ing at its fullest capacity. We are at present turning out three 14,000 tur bine steamships, which will do 21 knots, and which will ply between San Francisco and Hongkong via Japan. The boats will use oil for fuel. In ad dition to these boats, we are building four large steamships, which will run from Japan to England via the Suez canal. All these vessels will be at the service of Japan in case of war. Our dockyard, of course, is not the only one that is active in producing this big order for auxiliaries. The dockyards at Kobe and other places are all run ning at their full capacity." Strikers Cry'Conspiracy. Montreal, Aug. 24.- A formal state ment issued today by Iiell Hardy, chair man of the federated trades of the Canadian Pacific railway system, charges that the strike of the past three weeks, in which 8,000 workmen have been engaged, is due to a conspir acy on the part of some of the officials of the company to disrupt the unions and drive the union men from the company's employ. This conspiracy, Hardy alleges, had its inception in conferences held by the railway super intendents and master mechanics early in the present year. Cloudbursts in Colorado. Pueblo, Colo., Aug. 24. Cloudbursts in the vicinity of Florence tonight transformed Oak, Chandler and Sand creeks into raging torrents, which are sweeping through Florence and vicini ty leaving ruin in their wake. The damage is expected to agrgegate $150, 000. The Florence Fuel company alone has been damaged to the extent of $2, 000. Water covered the Santa Fe tracks to a depth of several feet, and the Rio Grande's are in danger. Dere'i-rt in Mid-Pacific. Honolulu, Aug. 21. The steamship Asia which arrived here today from Hongkong and Yokohama encountered j a derelict schooner in latitude 33 :5( north, longitude ".' :25 east. It is thought that the dismasted vessel was M.e Japanese schooner Kinomoto Maru. The Asia carries a cargo of .silk valued at two and one half million dollars, to ie lanueii at un iraneisco. ihe steamer Aorargi en route from Van- eou-er to Australia arrived here today. Mefpor Falls in Kansas. Salina, Kan., Aug. 24. A large meteor fell three miles north of Ells worth last night, lighting up the coun try for miles around, and burning brightly 20 minutes after it struck the ground. The meteor exploded when it struck the rround, and shook the town of Ellsworth. ASKS REHEARING OF REBATE CASE Government Presents Petition to Cir cuit Court of Appeals. Should of Decision Stand, Prosecution Future Cases of Like Nature Would Come to Naught, Argues Attorney General Would Elkins Law. Nvllify Chicago, Aug. 22. Petitions for a rehearing in the Standard Oil case were presented by the Federal govern ment in the Circuit Court of Appeals here today. It is authoritatively stat ed that this is the administration's at tempt to save the Elkins act and the interstate commerce law from becom ing futile. The filing of the petition marked the appearance of Attorney General Bona parte in the case as well as that of Frank B. Kellogg, who is a special assistant to the attorney general. Be sides these two names the petition is signed by Edwin W. Sims, United States district attorney at Chicago, and Special Assistant James H. Wil kerson, both of whom presented the government's side of the case in the original hearing before Judge Landis, who administered the famous fine of $29,240,000 against the defendant. Although it is not specifically stated in the petition, it was agreed by coun sel for the government in their con ference at Lenox, Mass., following the reversal by the Appellate court of Judge Landis' decision, that if the in terpretation of the law given by Judges Grosscup, Seaman and Baker was al lowed to stand, successful prosecution of rebate cases against corporations would be impossible in the future. The lawyers at the conference, over which the attorney general of the Unite! States presided, were a unit in express ing the opinion that the reforms in re bate matters brought about by the Roosevelt administration would repre sent so much loss of time unless the higher court can be convinced that it is in error in the construction of the law. BOYCOTT IS EFFECTIVE. Japanese Liner Forced to Cross Pa- cific Without Cargo. San Francisco, Aug. 22. Proof of the effectiveness of the Chinese boycott on Japanese goods was furnished today when the Japanese liner Hongkong Maru arrived with no cargo. Of Chinese passengers the Hong kong Maru hml only two. Eight took passage at Shanghai, but the boycott authorities heard about it and six were persuaded to go ashore and wait for an American liner. The other two were allowed to remain on the vessel for the reason that if they had awaited an other vessel their registration tickets would have expired before they arrived here. According to passengers on the Hongkong Maru there is a great busi ness depression in Japan, and a number of steamship companies are on the verge of bankruptcy. BUSINESS WILL INCREASE. Railroad Officials Much Encouraged by Outlook. Chiacago, Aug. 22. - Traffic officials gerenerally are predicting a large in crease in the movement of general merchandise within the next few weeks. From investigations made by them of the conditions of stocks now in the hands of country merchants, they have found that these are run down to an extent that it will be absolutely neces sary to have them renewed if the hold ers are to continue in business at all. In a week or two agricultural com munities will begin making their fall purchases. With the present crop prices they are certain to be in funds, and they are expected to be liberal buy ers. Urges War on Rats. Tacoma, Wash., Aug. 22. Health Commissioner Dr. Spiro Sargentich will soon issue invitations to the health officers of all coast cities to attend a conference in Tacoma, when the sub ject of fighting bubonic plague and oth er diseases will be discussed. Dr. Sar gentiche has already conferred with numerous health officers in Washing ton, Oregon and California, and his idea has met with the approval of all. A number of leading physicians of t he coast cities, as well health officers, have signified their willingness to attend. Treasure Room Looted. New York, Aug. 22. It became known tonight that jewels valued at more than $i:0,OO(l had been taken from a secret treasure room in the mansion of Frederick G. Bourne, at Oakdale. L. I. The treasure room wan built when the mansion was erected and its existence was knewn only to the fami ly. The jewels were those worn by Commodore Bourne's three daughters Marion, Marjorie and Florence, at brilliant society functions. Roosevelt Books Passage. New York, Aug. 22. It is reported here today that President Roosevelt has engaged passage on the liner Celtic, which will sail March 7, 1909, for Eu rope. If this report is true, he will remain in the country less that three das after his successor is inaugurated and will lose no time in starting for the hunting trip in Africa that he has planned.