i .Lead WESTON ER .11 JJL NX ' 4 I j TCI TfZSTON, OREGON, FRIDAY, FEMIlUAltV 4, NO. 33. WORLD'S DOINGS ;0F CURRENT Wffll Brief Eesrra cf General Kews Uvd News Items of All Nations and t Pacific Northwest Condensed " for Our Busy Readers. Canada will tond tO, OOO bom mm to the front la Europe. Many looter are caught by U. 8. marince In Ibo flood-strtckso dUtlcts f California. The missing K-S ubmarlne to re ported In her regular course off tbo ooMt of needle, Many sections of tbo Middle Wort ere sxper tensing floats and much dan- go to proporty u reported. President Wilson declares too U. & navy to prepared for immediate war, lut it la inadequate1 In mm. General Oroeles, Villa follower, to take from train near Chihuahua and not. II waa a federal turncoat, PboaaanU driven by hunger aro warming Portland Heights and aro boinf fad by streetcar an and rati . dents. A float of Garoaa Zeppelin attack London and Paria, killing and wound ing tO or mora In Parla and eleven In London...-,. . V-H Compulsory military training of klfh school students of Waablngton tat to proposed by the state school ossmlseloa, ' A negro attacks an auto party noar Buffalo, N. Y., killing motto and m and seriously wounding tho daughter, Bofcbery was tha motive. Carman forcoa deliver two attacks with band gronadoa "ear Hill No. ltd. Both attack raoattod in failure, ao cording to tbo French official an- wrancomont. ; Director Sturgis, of tbo Aoatrallan Bank, London, aald that reports sbow. od the Aoatrallan wbaat crop would pa a record one. Ka animated tbo yield would bo 1(0.000.000 bushels, of which J 00.000,009 would bo available for export. Nlnotoon thousand acre of (and In Pino Valley. Bakor county, Oregon, ehioflv suited for dry farming and for overa! yean Intended to eomo under a tote Irrigation scheme, will do openea to entry In the La Grande land office February 14. A meeting In Waablngton, D, C, to dlaetuM the exchange conspiracy to do preM the price of cotton and meaaareo farther to regulate the cotton ex change of the United State, waa called for February 14 by Repreeeota- tlvoa Ileffln, Chandler ana Jeeowa. Senator Reed, of Missouri, attacks Roosevelt in the senate by declaring "It to a bappy thing for ' this country that there has been Inalateoce on American rights, 'and equally fortunate that there baa not been soma not beaded, Importunate demagogue In the White House," Every employe of the Bunker ' II 111 A Sullivan Mining Co., of Kellogg, Idaho, above and below the surface, will receive an' Increase of wages of approximately (0 cents a day if the price of lead keeps up. It Is known that the company for some time has been contemplating this advance. ' The President would be " authorised to negotiate with the Carranxa govern ment for purchase of Lower California by a resolution introduced by Repre sentative Britten, of Illinois, Be de clared socb purchase would pot into the hands of the do facto officials of Mexico millions of dollars for rehabil itating the government and the conn try's industries, v Whlls the President was standing on the rear platform shortly before the departure of bis train from Chicago, a sharp explosion wss beard. Secret service men crowded to the platform and the President, apparently some what startled, entered the car. A cloud of escaping steam showed that the connecting boas between the resr coach and the one next forward bad burst.' ' ' General Wood opposes plan for con tinental army and proposes that the regular army be brought to full strength "first. , ;f V The Swiss government will apolo gise to Germany for the trampling un der foot of the empire's emblem by an infuriated mob. President Wilson delivers his first address on preparedness In New York, He will visit the Middle West for ten days, delivering speeches on this sub ject. .'. Spokane WMherwomen are now said to patronise the laundries, and have other luxuries, not furnished by their Inebriate husbands before Washington went dry. ' It Is reported In Vstlcsn circles that the condition of Emperor Francis Joseph, of Austria, who bas been seri ously ill for several days, Is rspldly growing worse. Daily Record of Congress Saturday, Jan. 80. ftanata Hanatnr fi barman. RsDUbll nan. Intrtviuaad a raaulutlon of Droteet sgainst reported renewed demands by Japan on China. Senator Tillman praised Beeretary Denials In s speech on the navy and attacked former Beeretary Stayer. Military committee continued work on the army bllL Uooee Military and naval commit tee continued bearings. . Knrlal worker and labor leaders ssked for revision of the workmen compensation law. Friday. ian. 98. Senate Petitions bearing million imaa nrotaatlna- eralnst war muni tlona shipment presented, resulting In Vigorous asoaie. t Debate on Philippine Independence bill returned. Military committee continued bear. log on army bill. Ilouaa Admiral Grlffln. chief navy engineering bureau, testified be- for naval aammittee. Gen. Wood told military committee armv should be recruited to xuu strength before a reserve to enrolled. Postal committee favorably reported postofflce appropriation bill providing that railroads be paid for mall trans portation by space. Thursday, Jan. 87. Senate Public tonda committee re torted water power bill recognising urledletlon of both state and federal rovernmenta over water power sites. Postoffice committee reeommeooea doDoslts of coat! Mvinga fund In federal reserve banks. Military and naval committees con tinued bearins. ' House Military and naval commit tees continued bearinn. Rivera and harbors committee) bear RepresenUlve Sumner on Trinity River project. Republican Leader Mann naech advocatlna- DreDarodnes. iUnresentative Dennett, ox new York, daf ended German- Ameri cans In a sneech. Passed toe Bhaekiaiora fze,vw,vw good roads bill. Wsdnesdsy, Jsn. 98. (UnataPailen Mistlona committee discussed Colombian. Niearaguan and Haitian treaties. , Senator Hitchcock DroDosed amend ment to Philippine bill granting lode- nanrfanea In from two to four VOara. ' " r : ..... . . ... . ,.i m i debated entia laoor pin wiutoui dihu action. ":, UtllLarv committee continued bear Inn an arm reoreanlxation. House Military and naval commit tees heard witnesses on Uc state oi national defenaa. RaMatar Rarrlaon areed the bOUM Interstate commerce committee to re vise the general dam act in the inter act of wster power development, - sicFJTo cf was umk (CmAl m FACES flGHT Waahlnoton. D. C While President Wilson is carrying to the country his anneal for adequate national defenaa. one of the vital elements of the pro gram be bas recommended to congress ik mntiiwntaL arm faces serious opposition In both the senate and houae military committees. , Riii.lt an arm, dnaerlhad be Secre tary Garrison as embodying the most attractive scheme that could be de- mtmmA a .lu a tin! tat of the Brob- lem of training an adequate number of f ederal voiunioera in . peace iu, would be expected to provide 400,000 men of the total of approximately 1,000,000 which the entire plan is cal culated to make available. ' Present Indications are that the con tinental proposal In some form will be Inta th. arm liuvaaae bill b- Ing prepared by the sonata military committee, although that measure will tu AmtA matniv a a enmnlste re organisation of the regular army on a basis or, approximately xao.uuu men with the colore. Increasing Secretary Garrison's proposal In that respect by nearly 100,000 men. - Senator Chamberlain, chairman of the senate military committee, aaid he waa confident hi committee would turn out without arcat delay a well rounded bill providing for all the ele ment of a national army of 1,000,000 or more men. Negress to Cast Ballot. Hood River. Or. At the coming May primaries Daisy Moody, a domes tic in a local family, if her plans ma terialise, will be the first colored cltl sen to cast a vote In Hood River coun ty. According to her registration, the girl is a native of Tennessee. She registers as a Republican. Of the Hood River county voters who hsve registered. Republicans 'are over whelmingly In the majority, tne ngures being m follows : Of 166 men 113 sre RonnKiioana. ami la mmin are Re publicans out of a total 18 registered. British Stssmer Founders at, Sea. Naw York Ths British steamer Chase Hill, which sailed front New York for Havre on January is, xoun dered at sea, according to officers of steamer Indrslema, which arrived here Friday. The captain of We In drslema said that on January si se sighted the Spanish steamer Mary Adrlstico, which signalled that ahe on board the shipwreexea crew oi rh.a mil. No details were riven concerning the loss of the vessel. ASKS QUICK ACTIO!! ON DEfBiSE PLANS President Wilsca Urges Pec?!e to Prepsre&ess. Wm CCfSiJMS AS LW.S Cleveland Speech Unusually Grave and Warning of Nation's Im pending Danger is Given. nt.rw4 O Naw circumstances have arisen. President Wilson declared R.tnnl. mMrh make It absolutely necessary that this country should pre- pare roc adequate national owonae "We are In the midst of a world thai ara did not make and cannot al ter," the President aald. "it whole atmospheric and physical conditions m Ik antuMtlma nf our own life, al a: and therefore as your reeponsbile servant I must teu too was ue oa . . . ii . a a. a. cars are Infinite and constant. 'I ahoold feel that 1 were guilty of an unpardonable omission If I did not go oot and tell my fellow countrymen that new circumstances havs arisen which make it absolutely necessary that this country prepare herself for mmr nni far anvthlns' that amacks In the least of aggression but for ade quate national defense." "Whenever the ordinary rules of commerce at sea and of international relaUonehlD are apt to be thrust aside or Ignored," be continued, "thereto danger of the more critical kind of controversy. "America la not afraid of anybody. t fciuM, I MAt vrvir fcallne when I say that the only thing I am afraid of 1 not being ready to penorm my duty. I am afraid of the danger of theme. I am afraid of the danger of Inadeauacy: I am afraid of the danger of not being able to express the cor rect character of this country with tremendous might and effectiveness whenever we are called upon to act la the field of the world's affaire. He waa applauded frequently and k. ka amka nf dafandin? the na tion's honor the cheering waa tremen dous. "1 do not wish to leave you with the Imnreaslon that I am thinking of some nartfalar danrar. I merely wish tO tell yon that we aro daily treading amidst Intricate dangers, ine oao gera that we are treading amoungare not of our own making and not under our control. I think no man in the United 8tates knows what a single week, a elngle day. single hour may bring forth" The President socks of the navy and the coast defenses, saying: "Take for example the matter of our coast def ensea. It to obvious to every man that they are of the most vital importance to the country. Such coast defenses as we bave are strong and admirable, but we bave not got a d.fanaaa In anmiffh nlaeea. Their quality to admirable but their qunatity la tnsumeiens. - And the navy of the United States 1 Yoa have been told that it ia the sec ond In strength in the world. I am eorry to aay that experts do not agree .hi. ihna wkn tall von that. ' Reck oning by It actual strength I believe It to be one or the most esftctent naviee In the world: but Its strenght ranks fourth, not second. You must reckon with the fact that It to necessary that that should be our first arm of defence, and you ought to insist that everything should be done that It Is possible for us to do to bring the navy up to an adequate standard of strength and effi ciency. - ' . "Where we are lacking moreper harw is on land and In the number of men who are ready to fight. The characteristic desire of America Is not that ahe should have a great body of men whose chief business to to fight, but a great body of men who know how to fight and are ready , to fight when anvthinft-that is dear to the na tion to threatened. ' You might have what we have, -millions or men wno have never handled arms of war, who are mere material for shot snd powder if you put them in the field, and Amer ica would be ashamed of the Ineffi ciency of calling such men to defend the Nation." Captives Charge Torture. Petroirrad. via London The Russian army headquarters has Issued a state ment concerning the sttituda of Aus trian toward Russian prisoners. .. The statement tells the experience of six soldiers who esesped from cap tivity in Austria. It declares mat they and 600 of their comrades refused ta dlv trenches and were tortured. four being shot on June 14 at a vil lage near InnsbrucK. toe execu tioners, ths statement ears, were cadets who volunteered for the Drunkerd List Stirs City, n.tuwav fh Conaternstion bss been csused among several cltisens of this place by the appearance of their names on "Habitual urunxara iw that have been given the railway agenta In Jefferson county by tae prosecuting attorney. r.n.t rfiaaatiafaeilon. too. ha been expressed by msny of the persons af fected, who contend that It ia a ques tion as to what constitutes an habtuial drunkard. NEWS ITEMS Of Central Interest - About Oregon Membership of Eugene Cannery Association Makes Rapid Growth Eur ana The volume of the canned goods business of the Eugene Fruit Growers' association, an organlxatlon In which 641 Lane county fanners are . .. .. . a mm . - , MMIMUUM I III XD DBT EHII ilnrln th naat vaar. eeeardine to an announcement made la the anneal ra mwt at Uta nimnr. 4. O. Holt, read at a meeting held in the Eugene cham ber of commerce. More extensive operations or ue cannerv are owned bv the eseocistloo sre planned for 1018, when deport ments for the manufacture u jama ana preserves. In both glees ana tin, wiu be added. -Mr. Holt renorted that there bad been some decrease in the volume of green fruit shipments on account of a short sddIs eroD during the psst year. and that the dried fruit output had been about the same as for the 1914 In detail the report show that the total amount of fruit and vegetables bsndlsd In all departments wss t,U0, 000 sounds, an increase of 10 per cent. The varieties of products canned num bered 17. The cannery this year bas bandied a number of orders foe the War depart ment, some of the Lane county prod ucts being shipped to the Mexican border.' . - Rabies Is Investigate! Klamath Falls FieU Agent E. T. Averblll, of the United States Biolog ical 8urvev. who was sent Into Kamath county to investigate, the rabies epi demic situation here, bss returned from the Bly country.'. He declared the two bead of cattle that died of rabies on the Given ranch on Spragoe river were brought ia from Harney county last fall, but that some of the number had grown on the ranch, and bad therefore been bitten there. Mr. Averhillssid: "While I waa at Bly, Clarence Taylor, living near by, killed a coyote which showed ymptoma of rabies strongly. I sent the brain to Dr. Robert for examina tion. I also sent in the brain of a cow which bad been allowed to die of peculiar symptoms resembling rabies. .Pay No Delegate Expense. Salem No provision now exists in the election laws for the payment of expenses of delegates to the National conventions, according to an opinion riven by Attorney General Brown. This opinion was in reply to sn inquiry by I. S. Smith, senator from Coos county, and sponsor for the repealing measure paased by the last legislature. Under this opinion Secretary of State Olcott announced that he would not audit any claims for delegates' axpen- s which might be made. While the new law does not specifi cally repeal the section of the 1911 laws relating to the payment of dele gates' expenses, it obliterates it from consideration by Implication, the attor ney general holds. Cold Kills Range Cattle. R.k. rttl In the Interior are suffering from the cold, and several faiha kava haan remted. W. H. Officer, Isee, Grant county, lost sev eral calves and others were oaaiy iros- n In tka .irf and noaea. . Itt the Tl- cinity of Ironsides, Malheur county, several cattle also are reported lost, white the ranges near,Durkee bave suffered.. In other parts of Grant and Malheur counties the snow is so deep that roads k kaan ahandnnad end travelers arC compelled to go through the fields. Several cattle are reported snowoouna In KWIa Valla. Baker MMintV. and hope of ssving them has been given up. . ; ' : Malheur Cornf Trect Big. Ontario Malheur county is doing its share In togging the corn belt into the Northwest and stretching it across Oregon. Estimates by County : Agri culturist W. W, Howard and the corn committee of the county grange place lest year's acreage planted to corn In the Malheur and Willow Creek valleys st 8000 acres, with an . average yield 40 bushels. Exhibits from this crop were displayed at the State fair,, the Manufacturers' and. Land f Products show, the .Panama-Pacific exposition and the com show at Walla Walla. ' Blind Slough Camp Busy. , , Astoria After a shutdown of ap proximately one and half years the Larkin Green lagging company's ramn at Blind Slouch to DreDaring to resume . operations thie spring. .Six sets ox timber tellers ana aoout su bucket already are at work. . As soon as the weather conditions are favorable, the company will begin dumping about 800,000 feet of logs in to the wster daily. A short time ago the company's railroad was extended into a tract of about 100,000,000 feet of timber. Tax Adnata Put Up to Counties. s.iamIt la the dutv of the various county courts to fix ths rate to be paid newspapers for puoiisning oennqsni tax lists. Attorney General Brown ruled in response to an inquiry from B. Tongue, district aworney i Wahfnstnn eountv. The attorney nl alan bald that nawDaDers that bave been designated by County courts official organs cannot oe compenoa to publish the lists, unless a specine agreement to do ao hsa been made by them. ' llUil WHOSE Can era! view of CoelhnirUchie miae. II of the emploreee of which were murdered by Mexican bandits because ssoat of thess were aaaortrena At the left la C. R. Watson, raanager of the mine, who waa killed. r - at The great all dee which have blocked the Panama canal have become a matter of such cancers to the UnMsd Statee that President Wilson appotated a commission to study the causea of the eUdea. The photograph shows General Ooethala and the commiaslcct viewing the slides and watching boats go through the canal SHOES FOR SUFFERERS FROM THE WAR ' " 77 ; - I O ' ' '- ' - i- '1 1 " 3 - " v - -1 j i r - i j C:y ! ! f ) vV i I - 'l i a . j- ' ' : '"n,- -sN .i.v , 1 V- I? "i . '.r V - ..r- f: UN3C.iir.CffS C-y ..,,4 " ' ,"1""., '.TiT! ' 1 'TumvkMnM'w iiiiismsisii Mra Priea PoaL Dromlnent In the vfr ia nna tt tha man aooietv women ensased la the work of obtaining shoes for the war sufferers of Belgium. She Is aeen In this picture with two little Belgian-Americans who t bar come with their mite to help the unfortunates in the country from which their parents came. BUSINESS FORECAST v - . V , - ir aiMMBi .mmMMmKmmmmmm The Cnlted Statee chamber of commerce has sent out from Its Washing ton headquarters this msp giving a United States during the nrst tour montns oi xib. im uy a . m a 1 1 a ah Jt S m- Iamm 4 k A sfeereAeat 1 AfF en exhaustive study oi industrial ana commercial wmuu, " - ths chamber. Aa will be aeea. the localities baring "good" prospecta (those unmarked! are the Atlantic and a large part of the southeastern states, those between the Mississippi aad the Rockies and a part of California. Those where the prospects are -nor" are in iray, aau ma muj ouUook U declared "poor" to a part of Waablngton and Oregon, marked black. HEfl WERE KURDERED STUDYING THE PAHALTA CANAL social life of Tuxedo Park and New FOR FOUR MONTHS forecast of business conditions in tne BY MEXICANS Ny psm a J. SLIDES FLEW FOR PAN-AMERICANS ' -If ! Juan Domenjos, aviator, recently made one of the most daring air voy agee ever seen In Waablngton. The flight waa made over the White House snd "Whitu Lot," and was for the en tertainment of the hundreds of Pan Americans In Washington for the Pan-,, American Bdentlfto congress. The feats of jJomenJos were watched by his wife, a noted beauty in Brazil, where the couple now live. She Is shown in the picture talking with htm Just before he took to the air. Domen-. Joe, While now engaged In aeronautic work In Br&xll. makea his homo at Biarrlts, France. " 1 Strength of Pennies. , . The penny fund tor sick and wound ed haa forwarded the eighth million pennies (worth two Cents each) to the -headquarters of the British Red Cross society and St. John Ambulance asso ciation, making a grand total of nearly t $167,000. Tola haa been raised by meana of a systematic house-to-house collection,, , asking for a penny from every man, woman and child. The money goes towards the Red Cross work at ths various fighting fronts. Already many districts have finished most success- ' ful collections, but there still remain qthere where the work haa not begun. London Observer. , ' Popular Advice. 1 understand you hava a centena rian heref -Tea. A hale and hearty old gentle- " man who is a great comfort to all who know him.' "How is thatr r TTa K nn aat rulrlL Ka ilv'u'r everyone who wants to live lor.g to 5( fast as se pieases.