Weston I Lead ER VOLUME 3!) WESTON, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 23. 11)17 NUMBER 41 OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERA INTEREST Principal Events of the Week Briefly Sketched for Infor mation of Our Reader!. I llrande held n first automobile how laat week. The I'uMiiinii grant of Ijtif cnunly mill establish warehouse In Fugeue. The second annual IHifuf rM ahnw ill In- Mil nn Friday anil Haturday, June 1 ami t. Tba raiahllslimmt of (ruil anil vegetable ranner) ( Lebanon Ihla uimiirr iwmi assured Fred la ararro In Klamath rminty, ami ranchers, In 'jural of auill', can only find l year old hay. V ('. Marstrr, of lloaebura. baa been appointed a member of (tin atato fair board by Governor Wllh)roinlK. II la predicted thai between 110 ami ;no carloads of briM-rnll all! ha hipped out of iHiuglaa county ibia yar. Kugrn bualnraa mm hat launch ed plana for lb formation of ISA,. Ono corporation to tab oer thr flat ledum ry In l.anr county. II. M. Jennings, who baa under Iraaa lha r. A. Hmlth mine al llrnryvllle, la figuring on filling an order for ftA,onn inna of Coo bay coal. Portland s $3,000,000 bond Issue for lha conatrurtlon of grain elevators for handling bulk grain will b placed on lha ballot at lha June election. Albany sow baa uiorulng newspa per. Thla give tba city three dally newspapera, aa two afternoon paper a have been Issued for several yeera. I.lvra of the cltlsen of Oregon ara Insured In lb amount of M.64.w0 In 134.4M policies, according to lusur aoca Commissioner Harvey Welle. At mas meeting at Halriu of mora than 200 rltliens It wa voied unanl library. In addition to voting on Dm $;,nnn,. (tin state bond laaue for rd linprove nii'nt June 4. II la probable that ov. ara I riiuiitl alao Kill al I hi- same lima volM on rowii) bond Ismtea In order lo pnuld fund" In cooperate lib lha alatn. ArrBimi nn nl are al ready being made In liraul county In rail an election In title on a bond Issue of H.i", ami In Tillamook rnrni'f llirrr la under discussion an lartl jf $4i:.o0o, Tba t'tak Oregon Hugsr rAtnpinr, with principal offices at Crania Paas, la preparing for the Inalallatlon of fit heavy, parmauent loading alallona along the line of Ilia Mouthem Pacific In the llogiio river valley, at a coat f l.'n.ooo. Farmer and atorkmen of eastern Oregon are faring a eerloua problem In the shortage of feed due lo the length and eeverlty of the winter. Ordinarily lb" snow la gone from (be grating ground by March 1, but litis year la aa exception. IVtltlona ara being circulated, In Lincoln county for a apeclal flection lo vol on the question of bonding Yaqulna district for $&oo,mo to meet one half of tba aipenaa of the pro poted Yaqulna bay project for Improv. Ing the depth on the bar. A new apple shipping concern. tb Hood River Fruit coiupaii). beaded by II. F. Davidson, formerly president of Uia North Paclflo Krult !ltrlbutora and a pioneer apple shipper of the valley, will participate In iba Hood River apple market next year. Supervisor of the national foreata within tba dlatrlrt romprlalng the northweatern atalea and Alaska con vened for one week brglunlng Mon day In Cortland for a comprehenalve dUcuaalon and Interchange of Ideaa relative to forest service work. At a maaa meeting held at La Grande a resolution wn adopted call ing upon cltltena lo meet and drlro all Chinese from the city. The action waa the result of the accidental abort ing of Mr a. C. K. George by blgh- Fill In Picture Puzzle No, 1 V m . "" "m jt . ' Si : t .v t home rulejfo nKLAND CONGRESS CALLED TO MEET APRIL 2 51 i , 11 . !V., 10 ft r tot K i)3 nji m 94 9 " ' .105 I 0'i .es .69 0i I. . w HAT a-rt of a picture la I hi? Blurt your remit at I. draw a line to I, t. 4, elc, until all of the number have born linked tnKi'tlivr und yu will be aurprliwd and pleased with the reituli - f your art work. Tliio picture alwnya carries a trunk when It travels about, likes to puck that trunk Itself and, alranne to ', pnrt of the picture plays blllmnls ull over thv norl l Now thla la all you are tu be told about It. Ott busy with your pencil and Mud out what the ptuile la. moualy to establish a free ferry aero blndera during a atreet battle. tba Wlllaoielto Kltar al Ibat point. At lha annual meeting of tba Urania 1'aits commercial club the name of tba organisation waa changed to the chamber of commerce of Urania laa. Tha flrat big meeting of potato growera of the Willamette Valley waa held al Hprlngflrld last week. Fully 100 farmera and bualneaa men attend ed. 2uaa K. Moody, governor of Ore gon from Heptember, 1RI2, to Jan uary, 1887, died at hla home In Salem after a lingering Illness of nearly two yeara. Tha aale of new aulomoblllea In tba atato la making rapid alrldea. A total of 2976 now car were registered dur ing tha paat three aud one half months. W. 1). Dennis of Carlton waa elected a member of lha Oregon bureau of mines and geology commission at tha anuual mcvilug of the conimlealon la Portland. Tha atata fair board baa approved a premium Hat for lha 1917 fair aggre gate ISS.OOO which la lha largeat aum evar put up by the ttata tor premluma, It la expected electric operation on the weat aide lines of the Southern I'aclflo between Whltcion and Cor vallla will atari on May 15, but It may be delayed. The L'ugeno Fruitgrowers' associa tion will take atepa at onca for tha erection of au addition to Ita canning plant In Kugene. The new building will be 48x60 feet. A meeting of the prunegrowera of tha Riddle vicinity waa held Saturday for the purpoae of discussing tha tuat tor of building a cooperative pruua packing plant there. With representatives present from all aectlona of Oregon, Washington and aectlona of California and Utah, tha I'aclflo Concrete Pipe association wa organized in Portland. . Ileprosentntlvc Hawlcy has request ed Secretary n to recommend tho Incorporation In the sundry civil ap propriation bill of an appropriation of $2500 for protection of tho Coos Day wagon road grant. A ounvention will be hold In Tort land April 7 for the purpoao of dis cussing the $0,000,000 road bond laaue aud forming a statewide organisation to conduct an educational campaign In behalf of tha road program. Through what la evidently an error In wording In drawing up the act, the last leglelature made an open aeaaon all the year around on ducka, geese, rails, coola and shore birds In Harney, Malheur, fjikc ami Grant counties. An Oregon grape, thla atate'a official flower, will decorate tha lawn of tha white houae In Washington, D. C. It waa aent aa an Inauguration gift to President Wilton by Mra. Viola P. Cement Lime company s pfUnt. The stale has won Ita moat signal victory In tho Hyde Benson land fraud cases tircult Judge T. K. Duffy, of Crook county, notified Attorney Gen eral ltrown that he had made up hla mind In tho Crook county caae, and forwarded to the attorney-general a memorailuni of what hla flmlliiM will be. The state wins ita conleutlona same btulc day. on every point Involved, the court even going ao far aa to require an account ing from Hyde, which baa not been given in any other decisions ao far. The Crook cotiuty caae la the most Important of any Involved in the con troversy which has atreched over seven counties of the state. This de cision return to the state H.S0O acres of laud, or approximately half of the acreage Involved in the auit, and their estimated value, for timber alone, la approximately $200,000, based on tho estimate of federal government cruiser. This does not include the value of the -lands themselves. an important victory, oiuiour.'i h ui-s not bring them all their ori; Inul de mands. Ily tho asrticmcnt. It la as sumed they will be awarded pro tufa time for otertiiuc on the basic rilit hour clay, which they have been us aurcd. Their original demands called for lime and a half tor overtime on the SECRETARY LANE It. A. Ward, specialist In the biologi cal survey department of lha Oregon Agricultural college, assisted by Pro fessor Claude C. Cate. county patho logist, hse organised eight large clubs and IS smaller ones In varlotia parte of Jackaon county for the ex termination of the rodent peal. Merrill O. Ktans, asalstant state leader of county agricultural agents, brought to the attention of the fish and game commission the fact that timber operator are sawing logs on Lakes Ten Mile, Tahkenltrh and Tslltcoos In southwestern Oregon and allowing the sawdust to settle In the water. Tho river and harbor commission advised Itepreaentallvc llawley they have approved a new project for a 20 foot channel depth at the entrauce to Yaqulna bay. Tho engineers esti mate that the necessary work will cost $IU,ooo of which half Is to be borne by the government and bait by local Interests. The desert land board baa selected J. P. Newoll. of Portland, and II. M. Park, of tho board of mines anil geology, as members of a commission to act with Project Manager Newell and Investigate the feasibility of at tempting to repair the leak In the reservoir of the Tumalo project in eaatern Oregon. Pourth-clasa postmasters have been appointed In Oregon as follows: Mrs. Minnie l. Turnell, Edenbower, vice Mable Botcher, resigned; John W, Flick, Home, vice Ella M. Kllck. re signed; Charles J. Ames, Hockcreek. vice Thomas B. Tubbs, resigned; Mrs. Bertha B. Pennel, Tiller, vice C. B. Bartrum, resigned. The public service commission is be ginning to receive annual reports from small public utilities over the slate. These are coming lit under tne new Secretary of the Interior Lane, who ruling that reports aball be filed be- hded lhd med,t0n committee tore April 1 to show tho business transacted during the calendar year, rather than during the fiscal year end ing June 30, aa in the past. The senate has confirmed the fol lowing nominations of Oregon post masters: J. W. Vanderveldun, Banks; Clark B. Foster, Dayton; Boy E. Prlt cbett, Gaston; Shelby F. Deadcrick, Halfway; Volney E, Lee, North Pow der; Edgar T. Davidson, Oswego; Roy J. Rboadea, Powers; Daisy Buckner, Sclo; W. W. Wilson. Yoncalla. Purauant to the terms of the meas ure paaaod by the last legislature auth orizing the governor to appoint a atate lime board and making an ap propriation of $20,000 to bo used in leasing and operating a quarry aud mill for the manufacture of lime for aoll purposes, a proposition has tenta tively been made to the atato to tako over the largo quarry across the river from Gold Hill, one mile distant, LISTER KILLS AUDIT FUND - Measure Making Spreading of I. W. W. Doctrine a Ftlony Is Vetoed. Olympla, Wash. With his final consideration of bills passed, by tho recent legislature, Governor Lister wiped out by veto tho entire appro priation for the maintenance of the state bureau of inspection, amounting U $43,700. Ho also vetoed an appropriation of $6000 for two years' salary of C. Will Shnfer. state law librarian and killed S. B. 24t, which makes It a felony to dlscUHs or advocato I. XV. W. doctrine In the state. Other items vetoed in the general appropriation bill include- $0000 for maintenance, of the executive man sion, $1500 for the bureau of labor and $250 appropriated to Cutter and Maim gren, of Spokane, for planning im provements to the Spokane armory, on the ground that they originally offered to do tho work free of charge. 600 to 700 Killed in Russian Revolt London. -The Petrograd evening papers, according to a Heuter dis patch, estimate tho victims of the rev olutiou in the KiiBsinn capital as be tween 600 aud "00 killed and wounded. American Foreign Trade Drops Off. Washington. American foreign trade decreased approximately $1?0, 000.000 durlnp February, the first month of Germany'a unrestricted sub marine warfaro. which averted a railroad atrlke. RAILWAY MEN CALL OFFBHS STRIKE New York. Tho conference com mltteo of railroad managers early Monday morning authorized Presldeut Wilson's mediators to make whatever arrangements were necessary with tho railroad brotherhoods to call oft tlio threatened striko. Immediately after Secretary Lane had made his announcement tho brotherhood leaders sent telegrams to all tho general chairmen Informing them Uiat tho strike bud becu called off. Tho decision reached by the mau aisera at their midnight conference Farmera to Pay Five Per Cent. Washington. The farm loan board has announced that tho interest rate ou all loans nuide to farmers through out the country by federal land banks would be 5 per cent. Diet Will Goon D Convened and Askad to Establish Government ImimIoii. Homo rule for ('Inland Is the policy of tl in-w H'jr.niaii govern ment, according tu a Iteutcr corre-HMHid'-rit, who sayii Dint the Finnish diet will bo convened shortly aud fiski-d to establish a government poa m mini; the full onlldenr of the peo ple. (ii-ueral Zciii, governor of Finland under the old regime, I1.-1 been sent to I'ctroKrad a a prisoner. Milliliter or Justice Kart-iiky ha ordered the dlHtritt court al Tobolsk, Siberia, to n-li-aie Immediately M. Ovlnliuyer, former rciii:t of the Kin nihil diet, and arranged for bis Journey to Petrograd. Resources of Nation Are Mo bilized and Army of 3,000, 000 Men Projected. RETREAT IS DESCRI3ED Is Dispatch Bays Nothing of Value Left to Encrr.y. Amxtcrdam, via London. A Berlin dispatch to the ihiiiJvoibhd describ ing the German retirement on tho western front says: "As the ground abandoned now has become a battlefield. It wab necessary lo destroy everything that might be of service to the enemy, such as roads, shelters aud tho water supply. This destruction was carried out ruthless ly, but what could be of no military advantage to the enemy was k pa red. "The population that wag capable of military service has been brought away, ao Mint it might not be Incor porated Into the enemy army or re tained as peaceful workers and care for the rcmaii:iug civilian population left to the enemy." Berlin newspapers all publish arti cles by military escorts explaining the movement an part of the strategi cal plan ou the western front and a master stroke to vitiate the prepara tions of the entente for an offensive, giving a decided advantage to the Germans. Unrest In Germany Crews Alarmingly Amsterdam. Well Informed corre spondents on the Dutch-German fron tier report that unrest Is increasing daily among the German frontier pop ulation, which is suffering from terri ble privations. French Premier and Ministry Resigns Paris. Unable to withstand the growing opposition in the chamber of deputies. Premier Ilriand and bis en tire ministry resigned. NICHOLAS II V , V v VP w - Washington. President Wilson, recognizing that Germany practically is making war on the United States on the seas, called congrea to as semble in extraordinary session oh April 3 to deal with the situation. The purpose of the sessfon, now called two weeks earlier than the date first aet, la to receive a communica tion from the chief executive concern ing "grave matters of national policy which should be taken Immediately under consideration." Tho president in bis addreaa to congress will detail how Germany practically has been making war on the United Statea by the ruthless de struction of American lives and ship on tho high seas In contravention of all the laws of nations and humanity, 200 American Llvea Have Been Lost. Since last Sunday, when three American ships were sunk off the British isles in quick succession with loss of American lives bringing the total number of Americans lost through German submarine operation to more than 200 the president and all his advisers have recognized that a state of war existed. From all parts of the country have come calls for the immediate summoning of congress in extra session. In a tentative way plans for mar shaling the full strength of the regu lar army, the national guard and the raising of a volunteer army of 500.000 men have been worked out in the army war college. The volunteer army of 500,000 la planned as a nucleus of what eventu ally would be an army of 3.000,000 and would be assembled in training campa. Industrial Resources Mobilized. The mobilization of industrial re sources has gone much further. Hun dreds of great corporations, through the efforts of the council of national defense, have prepared themselvea to utilize their full efficiency in the de fense of the nation. Henry Ford, the Detroit automobile manufacturer, has offered, and the government has accepted, his great plant to be operated without profit in the event of war. Charles M. Schwab has announced that his - Bethlehem plant, now greater than Krupps, will be used entirely for the government The United States Steel corporation and a hundred other great industrial organizations have been making plana for their participation. The great cop per interests have notified the gov ernment that they would supply the army and navy with their vital sup plies of copper at about half the mar ket price. ADAMSON LAW IS UPHELD Czar Nicholas, who abdicated the throne of Russia aa the result of a revolution. Eight-Hour Day on Railroada Declared Constitutional by Supreme Court Washington. The eight-hour stan dard tor railroad wages, provided in the Adamson law, was held constitu tional by the supreme court The "immediate effect of the deci sion will be to fix a permanent eight hour basic day in computing wage scales on interstate railroads, for which a nation-wide strike twice baa been threatened, aud to give, effective from January 1 of this year, increases in wages to trainmen of about 25 per cent, at a cost to the railroads esti mated at from $40,000,000 to $50,000, 000 a year. Tariff Board is Named. Washington. President Wilson baa German Spies in New York Confesa.' selected the following men as mem- French Gunners Drop Zeppelin. Paris. A Zeppelin has been shot down In flames liar Compiegne. All ot ita crew wero lost. Iiniuviii . . .... Hutu uuiu I,.", viiv ' . v u.b ,u h, - i , , . , . . . , rrtomni Uvtiita ot UbUj' cttl il fetcUj ofyVl IWAvtb ncang tbat thQ brothorUooa hao n touj roidi $i.. l tv . a, THE MARKETS. Portland. Wheat Club $l.fit; bluestem $L70; red Russian, $1.62; forty-fold, $1.67. Barley No. 1 feed. $:: per ton. Hay Timothy, $20 per ton; alfalfa, $16. Butter Creamery, 33c . Eggs Ranch, 27c. Wool Eastern Oregon, 40c; valley, 40c. Hops 1016 crop, 4 7c ; 11U7 con tracts, iiomitial. Seattle. Wheat Bluestem $1.70; club $1.06; " red Russian, $1.63' New York. Albert O. Sander and Charles N. Wunnenberg, indicted as members of the Central Powers war film exchange on the charge of en gaging In a military enterprise and sending spies to England to get in formation for the German military authorities, have pleaded guilty. bers of the tariff commission: Pro fessor Frank W. Taussig, of Harvard University; ex Representative David J. Lewis, ot Cumberland, Md.; ex-Representative William Kent, of Kent field, Cal.; Daniel C. Roper, of Mc Call, S. C; E. P. Costtgan, of Denver; W. S. Culbertson, of Emporia, Kan. Utah OusUr Injunction Sustained. Washington. in sustaining injunc tions ousting Utah hydro-electric pow er companies from forest reservationa the supreme court upheld federal and limited state sovereignty- in develop ing resources iu western "public land" states. Seattle Employer Held Innocent Seattle, Wash. E. P. Erckenbrack, manager ot the Border Line Transpor tation company, waa cleared of any complicity in the death ot Mabel Howe, a domestic in hla home, when a coroner's Jury returned a verdict that the girl had come- to her death through self-inflicted bullet-wound. Dyrpepr.ia. , Kilting vlicli i; the state of nervous exhaustion or great physical fatigue, prolonged mental .strain ur excessive gi-iet inny to suUickut to cause sovcre dyspepsia. Unsightly Weeds. Ubnoxi'His weeds may be killed by coveriug the stalks with suit. Salt mny be used to keep down weeds by fifttiukUua it over tbo. ground 4