eston Leader .; w VOL. XXXV. 1 WESTON, OHEGON, FRIDAY, FEimUAIlY 18, 1910. KO. S3. WORLD'S DOINGS OF C1IW W Uva News Items of Ait Nations and Pacific Northwest Condensed for Our Busy Readers. , A noted Hungarian actreee has been f shot M Brtliah py Tl.lrty-U.re gsmblers war arreetsd la mlU at Aberdeen, Wun. Th county auditor at Tacoma issued 91 permit to buy liquor In on day, Rmt Admiral Charles Eben Foi, U 8. N.. retired, dlta at Dm eg of 65 year. ' . Th plot to poiaon many prominent ritlMtia at a banquet In Chicago la laid to anarchists. Grahame-Whlt, th noUd British aviator, baa ben gravely Injurad by rail In hit aeroplane. Brigadier General Baijamln C Card, ' retired.' die at tha age of 91, at hia boma In, Washington, D. C. Philadelphia' street Sunday with a heavy coating of lea caused by a bad sleet storm. Sis par cant of tha Ash fry In tha - hauherie at Bonneville war loat ba re um of tha mant heavy storm. Caaolln In Portland la aelling for I8 cent a gallon and may go blghar, In New York It eella for 14 cent. Dr. Bun Yat Son, -prldent of China, la report ad ra-marriad to bia private aacratary at Toklo, Japan. Tha valua of raai aatat in Naw " York City la piarad at IH, 205, 000, 000, an lyre of 197,000,000 over a year 4 Tr wealthy A mart can hav aqulp- 4, , . p4 4 boapltal train of IS eara and bar, presented s It to tha lrneh gov- ernment. " Tha Aim plcturaa of tha Columbia River Highway ar tob ahown In Syracuse, N. Y., , upon request from ' that city. - :.; President Wllaon la now declared a candidat for rnoml nation, ragardleaa of tha one-term plsnk of tha Demo- rratlc platform. Two young man in an automobile war killed at Sumner. Wash., when their machine waa atruck by a North ern Pacific train, , Rear Admiral Grant, tha submarine commander of tha U. S. nary, declare that undersea boat ahould be at leaat 800 tone aurfac displacement." Richard L, Metcalfe, ax-governor of tha Panama Canal son, ha Invited W. 1, Bryan to debate tha question of . preparedness before th votera or Ne- break a. ,, " Tha Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage sent President Wilson a vai- antln on which waa Inscribed : "Won't you b our valantinat Wa will be your valentine." Dr. Carlos Mendosa, ex-president of Panama, died auddenly Tueaday night from heart trouble, waa burled tha fol lowing day. after tha body had laid In at ate all day In tha government build ing. Dr. Mendoaa waa tha leader of " tha opposition faction of tha Liberal party and waa widely regarded aa ona of tha moat able men In Panaman pol v , Itica. German capture Urge taction of French tranche In Artoia. ;: Portland eitliena hav ralaed a fund of over $13,000 for tha relief of suffer Ing Jewa in Europe, .v. Th customs officlali at San Fran w' eiaco hav aelsad a totem pol that ' baara nuda picture and la otherwise Indecent. , According to the decision of the Ne ''. tional Aaaociation of Merchant Tailor, tha ideal American' maaaurament ahould ba, height, 6 feet t inch; cheat, 88 Inchea; waiet, 88) inchea; , hips, 89 inchea; thigh, 811 inchoa; calf, 14 i inchea; head measura, on? aighth of tha full length of tha body; lega atralght and feet arched. V Germany and Austria, through their embaaslea in Waahlngton, have notified the United 8tata of their intention to treat armed merchantmen aa war ah I pa after March 1. That data waa Axed to give tha entente all Sea time to aignify their Intention toward tha re . cent note . of tha United State pro posing tha disarmament of all mer chantman.,' The Willamette river at Portland A reache a 19-foot atag and flood all . waterfront basement. A liquid which burst into flame when poured on paper ia believed to have been used - by Ineandiariee who act Ar to tha Ottawa, Can., parlia ment building. , The Navajo Indiana ar dancing their war dance and threatening to at tack white eettlera in Northeastern Arizona,' In retaliation for tha slaying of ona of their number recently by po licemen, according to two cowboy fro.a Utah. mm km ro ora Washington, D. C Germany la un deratood to have agreed to the auggea tlon of the United State the aha sub atltut the worda "recognlsee liabil ity" fur the words "aseumee liability" In the tentative draft of tha communi cation designed to settle the Lueltania case. Tha revised draft waa received here lata Wednesday night from Berlin. It waa aubmllted to Secretary Lenelng by Count von Herns tor IT, tha German ambaaaador. Several other change deelred by tha United H tales and eWribed aa be ing of minor importance also ar eaid to have been made. In ona Instance, however. Germany la nderatood to hav proposed change In the lan guage suggested by tha American gov ernment. Prom blah Teutonic authority came the statement that It waa expected the Luaiunla case would be Anally settled to th satisfaction of tha United CHARLES C CROWLEY Chartee C. Crawley, a privata data- tlv ef tan Francisco, snd recently In tha employ ef tha. Oerman consulate la tha western elty, haa been arrests by agents af th daoarOnenl of Jua Use an a eharee of eeneplrin ta de- at rev ah Ids aarrylna war munition and supplies ta tha allies. , State and Germany at a conference between Secretary. Lansing and Count von Bernatorff. . it also waa said that th on modiflcation ' made in Berlin waa not material and that German offi cial her did not consider that th Slate department would object to tha Chang. . ,v,--' Teutonic offlciaJa aeetned moat eon- Adent that in asTeeing to th Ameri can request to auoauuit ue wora a . . . . k. I 'recoffniaea" for the word "assume nreoeding th mention of liability of Germany to make reparation for injury tohautrala tha Borlin foreign me had removed all causa of poeabli diffV- euky . v . .... .nj .' ; . AaAspeci$f war waBe;;;; taMerfi by Cenfcrcsce ef AHa London A genaral oonfsranc of th allies in Parle to consider all polit ical and strategical aspect of the war la to ba held. Announcement to this effect waa made in tha house of ,coi mona by Premier Aaquith. . , Premier, Aaquith 'a statement -waa made In tha course of an address in connection with the opening of parlia ment. Th premier said large vote r i-raitit anuiM ha Baked next week. ; lis announced that tha government waa now taking flock of all it muni tions, men. Anancea and industrial re serves, so as to be in a position to . put forth it maximum atrength. , .The forecast made aeveral week ago of a dally expenditure for tha war of 5,000,000 had proved, tha premier aaid, to be nearly accurate. Obligations incurred by the war, ha added, would impose a aerioua strain on tha country for a generation to coma. This burden, he believes, could ba met only by large addition to tax ation and by maintenance of England' credit b.V keeping' up tha volume of exports, holding down unnecessary im ports and reducing expenditures. Two Ship Burning at Dock. New York The British steamers Pacific and Bolton Castle, lying at the pier of Barbor & Co., at the foot of Pioneer street, Brooklyn, caught Are early Wednesday and it waa believed that both would be destroyed. Some of tha members of the crewa were thrown or jumped into tha water, and loaa of life waa reared. The nre started on tha pier of the Now York Dock company, the longest in the East River, and apread to the two steamers and two lighten loaded with gasoline which were lying at tha pier. Fir Found on Steamship. New York Fire waa discovered in the cargo on board the steamship Veendyk of tha Holland-American line aa the vessel waa passing out to aea Wednesday, Captain Lleuweh quickly put back to tha pier at Hoboken. It was said after 80 firemen had fought the flames for more than six houra, that the Are waa under control. Effort will be made to determine it cause. The Veendyk . carried $300,000 worth qf oil cake consigned to Rotterdam. I o' , SUSPECT AliARCIiiST OFBIGPOISONPLOT Two Kindred Bcterc Sid Whoa Scl? Is Semd. lives Saved by Custom of Serving Meager Portions Only Ounw of Arsenic Used in Food. Chicago "I do not wish to create a panic In Chicago," waa the cryptic reply of First Deputy Superintendent of Police Schuettler, when asked Mon day to live bia viewa of th plot to poiaon several hundred prominent Chi caroan. Schuettler spoke testily and In the too of a man who ia harboring th secret of a arrest calamity. At tha earn time he refused to admit that he believed Jean Crone, missing assist- ant chef at th University Club, who eerved th banquet, wa th only man who figured In th plot. Two hundred of th dlaunguiaaaa list of 400 banqueter who attended a dinner given to Chicago new lawoue archbishop. Moat Keverend beorg William Munderlein, were taken III or poisoning after th aoup coarse. Th archbishop did not partak of th aoup, nor did Governor Dunn, who waa among those present. Indications ar that ScttiMtuar t hot on Crone' trail and ia gathering evidence of a plot io which Crone waa only wilt among a gang of anarchists who planned to kill th distinguished group of men. This waa born out by the activities of bia atsuT of detec tive. Two hours before Health Commis sioner Robertson gave out th report of F. O. Tonney. city chemist, that 8.7 arraina of white oxida of ananie had bean found In an analysis of pint of th poisoned aoup aerved at tn banouet, two anarchist were taken Into Scboettler'a office. Both of th anarchists were quea- tioned for more than an hour. .When they had gone Schuettler, in an inter view, adrrrkted ha bad report on Crone for several month. Ha knows th aaawtinn Cronee ha attended, what h aaid at those gatherings. He admitted Crone waa a red hot "dyed- in-the-wool" anarchist, that n knew Cronee' aaalociatea, that hia detective hav questioned thee men. Schuettler made known in ran mat Crone at meetnig of anarchists last May asked tha speaker if hi study of chemistry he is an amateur chemist would injur hi standing in tha an archist movement. Th speaker' re ply throws soms light on th motive of th poiaon plot It waa this: "No, a chemist, could do great deal In the anarchist movement." Tw8 MMes Drewsd to Portland. Ore. Two war drowned and six other narrowly escaped drown ing when s Salem-to-Portland canoeing oartvof the Portland Rowing club UtrucIT th whirling rapida and eddiea off. Rock Island in th Willamette river fly mile south of Oregon City Saturday afternoon at 2:S0 o'clock. Th drowned were Charle Kirk patrick, 660 Eaat Madison street, 22 years of ago, a clerk' In th clearing house at th First National bank, and Harry Gammie, S3 year of ag, pay- Ina- teller in Ladd & Titton bank, and athlete of Considerable repute. whose residence waa 848 East Six teenth North. Both were athlete of tha Multnomah Amateur Athletic club and expert ' canoeista of the Portland Kowfnjr club. The accident cams at a sudden turn- Ins point In a heretofore uneventful trio down the Willamette from Salem. About midway throueh ' the eddiea the canoe In which Gammie and Kirk Patrick wer ' struggling suddenly turned 6vor and Humped them into th river. Both began a desperate strug gle agalnat th water, but their effort teemed to be of little avail, tha water being ' awift and tha undercurrent tremendous. : Treasure Hunt Renewed.' Los Angeles, Cel. Having obtained an extended furlough to enable him to undertake a second treasure hunt on Cocoa Island, Walter Bunker, a police patrolman, left Sunday for the little dot in th Pacific Ocean off the coast of Peru, , where ha hope to unearth a vast store of gold aaid to hav been buried on the island 200 yeara ago. Bunker haa obtained th uae of a yacht belonging to J. Bt' Mexican cap italist, who accompaniea tha expedi tion. Bunker'a last expedition failed on account of trouble with hia crew. . 298,000 Belgians Shod. New York Tha Commission for Relief tn Belgium announced Sunday that since tha beginning of ita winter campaign it had aent 296,000 paira of shoes to the destitute of Belgium and Northern France. Of these 100,000 were for women, 60,000 for children, 48,000 for boys, 48,000 for girl and 40,000 for men. The commission bought 825,000 worth of leather to be cut up and tacked onto wooden soles and to repair old shoes. NEWS ITEMS Of Central Interest About Oregon Railroad In Douglas County Is Held Liable for Taxes Rom burg In a decree handed down in the Circuit eur here Judge Hamil ton held that tha taxes due from the land of the.Southem Oregon company In Douiriaa county 1 tne rear ivw wer collectible, aid that th holdings of th company way subject to sale to satisfy tha delinqoent eertiAcatee the earn aa other lands which th Use wer not paid. (The unpaid t amount to about IJO.000. Suit waa brought against th Soutn n Oregon company aeveral month ago to compel Jheni to pay th taxe due on their Ussis in this county for th year 1909. AM anawer waa filed by th Southern Oregon company in which it waa denied that tha Usee wer a lien against the land, or that they remained due and unpaid on the date of reaching delinquency. It waa also alleged by th def enae that th certificates of deMnnuency war not filed recularlv with the clerk. Another contention offered br in defenae waa that th Federal courts had decreed that their Interest in the land did not exceed f 2.60 an acre, whii in some , Instance they wer ised as hlito: as S20 an sere. Th defense contended this waa aufflcient to nullify th entire assessment. Th county attorney offered in v denccthe origniat certificates of delin quency, which Judg Hsmilton held wen regular and aumcieni to warrant disposal of tha lands for taxe. At torney John af. uuertn. or counsel jor th Southern Oregon company, an nounced that he would appeal th esse to th Supreme court. The question Involved in th ess ar identical with those of th Oregon k California grant lands, according to local attorneys. State Land Board Stands' Firm on Irrigation Project Salem The? Desert Land Board Wednesday stood by its recent action in recommending to th government further extension of the state' eon- tract with th government on th Ben ham Fall unit of th Central Oregon Irrigation company's project in Crook county. At this meeting a copy of a resolution adopted by the Bend Com mercial club protesting against any further extension of the contract waa read. Embraced in tha Benham Falls tract are about 74.000 acre. The board decided to aend the addi- tonal data furnished by J. E. Moraon regarding th M arson Land company's project at La Fine, to tne Oiparaneni or th Interior. The Doara is iavor abla to BTantins Moraon three yeara' extension on hi contract with th state, aa he desires, but the Federal land department ao far haa refused to give th state an extension on its con tract until Moraon supplies more in formation. County Assessors of State Hold Convention at Salem Salem Through th paaaaga' of th county high school tuition fund law, thousands of children in Oregon ar now able to attend high school where before this waa not possible because of the parents' inability to bear the expense, J. A. Churchill, superinten dent of public instruction, told th county assessors of tha state. The as sessors began a three-day aession and conference with the Slate Tax com mission her Wednesday at th state house. Tax Commissioner Eaton is chairman of the conference. " Superintendent Churchill praised the new high school tuition fund law in hi address, declaring that official of the United State Bureau of Education at Washington, D. C considered Ore gon's law the best ever passed in the interest of aecondary education. Following an address by B. F. Keen ey, of Lane county, ' on "Assessment of Motor Vehicles," Commissioner Galloway declared that automobilea ought to be taxed according to their respective horsepower. Timber Saving Is Great; Salem In the protection of pri vately owned timber in Oregon statis tics given in tha report of State For ester Elliott . indicate - that great progress haa been made in the last aix year. When the new forestry cods was en acted, in 1911, and th compulsory Ar patrol law, In 1918, a reduction in Are losses throughout . in umoerea sec tion at once waa effected, in lyiu 81,640,997 worth of timber waa de stroyed in Oregon. Last year it to taled only 19333. The total loss in th five yeara eno- ing with the close of last year was 896,620. This is lesa than ons-aix-teenth of the loss sustained from Are in 1910, the last yeara under th old system. - ' Drinker Defies Court. Baker Facing a sentence of 50 day and a fin of $65, imposed by Justice of the Peace Hubbard, because he re fused to tell where he got the liquor that made him drunk in Baker last month. Charle Blackwell will demand that he be released. His attorney, an nounced that be will Ale a writ of habeas corpus. The state and national constitutional right of refusal to tes tify except under a guarantee of com plete immunity wm no maoe me dssis for th writ. If necessary the ease may be carried to the Supreme court. iV Tola remarkable and historical picture show Peter, king of Serbia, seated on aa ox-draw cart, oa his way out f th coos try for which be fought ao bravely. Tha vehicle used aa a royal coach had bees an ammunition wagon. SNOWSTORMS r Thee Oerman troop on the eastern front evidently do not mind a hot rations at a field kitchen, la tha RESCUERS OF MANY ARMENIANS 0 United State Consul and Mrs. Amrirn Mnsulate st AleoDo. Syria. 7 -4 owing to th energetic action of Mr. Jackson, who adopted a strong atti tude with th Turkish military authorities, that thousands ot Armenian Uvea In Aleppo and In the surrounding regions were aaved. Mrs. Jackson Is a great favorite in th highest social circle In Aleppo. During the mas tacre of th Armenian, th room at th American consulate wer packed with Christiana. Mr. Jackson's home BRITISH DESTROYER .... ,v. ik. whlck was destroyed by th Turk abandoned by It crew. v . .if v -I -- ' L " 1. J KING PETER OF SERBIA GOINQ DO HOT WORRY THE background are transport wagona. Jesse B. Jackson tn the parlor of tha The Armenians say that it waa solely la In Paulding. O. - . SUNK BY TURKS 3 Rr4) rrnln-lnat destrover Louii afUr at had atranded and had been INTO EXILE aarraWewr "us - -wnaw. ' , yrx n ""in , & - t i GERMANS J snowstorm, for they ar enjoying their LEADER CF I'GNTENEGHiXS This ia General Martlnovtcb, th a tut military leader of the Montana grin who opposed the plan of sur rendering to the Austrlans and took., command of tha troops that sought to : make their way to safety through A r ban la. : ' SMOKE FROM HIS CAPTOR Tbla six-year-old Sorblaa younrs'.ei. a orfanner lb a Gemin dtetl!- camp, la happy resarJlss of the f4 that the whereabouts ef his j&re!;'- are enknown. Hi costume I a son dnacrint tine, belna msdS BP of Mfts4 off trousers and eaat oS afp&rst. Th sardine cstch ra E.:re;a I I been a great failure. I w"? 1 faeB9BasBBMaaieaBs -Mswwsaaaetj f .... " 1 X t f f