Conage Grove Leader
A T ANCH OR IN H O M I WATERS
FORTY MILLION BUSH ELS.
Bxttlesh'p Fleet Arrive» Safely in San
Diego Haibor.
San Diego, Cal., April 14.— la four
.OREGON regularly-lntervaled columns, with
C O T T A G E GROVE.
flagships leading abreast and point
ing the way to the first home anchor
C AN 'T AUKfcfc ON PRICE.
PRO I EAT LOBS O r RANGE.
age the fleet has found In Its four
months o f cruising around the soutb-
.ern-most end of the Western Hemis Salmon Canners Hava Mealing But Oregon Sheepmen Want Flecks Put
No 8cale is Set.
|
Bscs on Reserves.
phere, the 16 ships swept Into the
I sheltered cove o f the sea behind the
Astoria— A meeting attended by
Pendleton— Because the number
towering headlands of Point Loma representatives of practically all the o f sheep allotted to the forest re-
and halted for days of merrymaking salmon canneries of the Columbia serves of Oregon Is 75,000 less this
I for men and officers.
river was held here this afternoon to year than last. Umatilla county
The fleet let go Its anchors— all discuss the prices to be paid for raw sheepmen are protesting to the for-
A Resume o f the Less Important but splashing In the water with simul flsh during the season, which will estry department and application has
taneous precision— at 12:47 P. M., open at noon on Wednesday, but al- been made by the state association to
Not Less Interesting Events
just 13 minutes before the an though two sessions were held In un permit the same number in the re-
o f the Past Week.
nounced hour o f arrival.
For two effort to get together, no agreement serve# this year as was grazed last
hours the ships had been In sight was reached. It Is understood some year. Cutting down the number to
and their coming had been watched of the canners wanted to pay 5 cents be grazed in the reserves will cause
Toklo— Sakatanl, ex-Mlnlster of with wonder by the waiting throngs.
a pound for cannery fish and 6 cents sheepmen to sell under forced con-
Finance, has sailed on a tour of So engrossed were the people in the
for cold storage fish, those weighing dltlons since they have no range for
America.
beauty o f the scene that they forgot 25 pounds or over, others wanted to the surplus and this they claim Is a
New Y ork — A campaign against to cheer. The people of California fix the prices at 5 and 7 cents, the great Injustice In view of the fact
the ’sale o f newly-hatched chickens are not so well acquainted with the same as set by the Fishermen’s that the season promises to be cx-
for Easter gifts Is being waged by navy as they would like to be, and Unlon, while still others contended cellent for both sheep and wool,
the Society for the Prevention of the cruise of the battleships to this that 5 cents for small fish and 8 j A meeting of the executive com-
coast has long been looked forward cents for all over 30 pounds In mittee o f the Oregon Wool-Orowers'
cruelty to animals here.
to Never before have armorclads of weight was proper. What the dis- association will be held here for the
Brussels— The government of the the
Connecticut type,
displacing agreement will result In Is hard to purpose o f formulating a formal pro-
Congo Independent State has Issued more than 16,000 tons of water, been
foretell, but It Is probable the sea- test to the department. It Is thought
reply to the British white book , een along the Pacific Coast, and the
containing reports from British Con occasion o f their first visit Is to be son will open at the prices fixed by the request to graze the same num-
the
fishermen and the size of the ber this year will be granted as the
suls In the Congo and denies all the made a memorable event wherever
catch will soon determine whether or range In the reserve Is Improving
charges o f oppression.
they touch a port or cruise close not the rates will go higher. ,
from year to year on account of the
San Francisco— The police are enough to the Bhore to be seen by
husbanding of the grass by the for
watching two men suspected o f drug the cities and resorts that skirt the
estry department.
INSPECTOR DOES THE WORK
ging Samuel Gilmore, a race-track coast.
Malheur, Umatilla, Harney and
The splendid condition o f the
plunger, who had won $7000, rob
Baker county sheepmen hare Joined
ships
was
manifest
In
every
way.
bing him and killing him. His stom
1“ the protest and earnest efforts will
Outwardly they were the same spark Owner of Orchard Must Pay fer the be
ach Is being analyzed.
made to secure range for the sur
Spraying, Howaver.
ling, Impressive white and buff units
plus sheep.
Chicago— Joseph Sachsel, a whole of a powerful fighting force that
Salem— Connty Fruit Inspector E.
sale liquor dealer, and
Arthur pointed their way out of Hampton
Fruitgrowers Will Organize.
Freud, his cousin, were drowned In Roads on a home coast 3,000 miles C. Armstrong baa began a Dew phase
Marshfield— President Newell, of
Lake Michigan, Wednesday, when a away, with the President showing oi war npon San Jose scale by hiring a
small boat was capsized. Sachel's the way on his cruiser yacht, the gang of men to go into the orchard of the Oregon State Horticultural Board
w ife and Freud’s sister were watch Mayflower.
Internally,
the ships Rev. F. M. George, near Liberty, and and A. H. Carson, committeemen for
ing the boat.
were In better condition than when spray the trees. Heretofore enforce- f the Third district, will visit Coos
Milwaukee, Wls.— Ira B. Smith, they started, engines working with ment of the law has consisted of chop- county the last of this month for the
bat that Parpoae ° f f e,tlng ,n
form erly a member o f a prominent the smooth thrust and throw o f per ping down diseased treee,
J .
with the fruitgrowers of the district.
wholesale grocery firm of Milwau fect bearings and careful handling
and
boilers
making
steam
with
less
i™ been
M ten
d ered v^u
elesi C°
unty
Pohl visitors
w l" arran«
e a
kee, was Wednesday sentenced to
trees that
that h
have
rendered
valueless
meet|
nf[ In8pector
wben the
arrive.
tw o years In the Milwaukee house of consumption of coal because of the by disease and Deglect. The George p iaaa are now In progress in Coos
correction by Judge Ludwig for ob Increased efficiency In the firing- orchard is one of the most valuable in county for the organization o f a
The wash o f the waves
taining money under false pretenses. rooms.
Association.
along the waterline displayed from the vicinity oi Liberty, but has become County Fruitgrowers’
Chicago— A fter discovering that two to three feet of red armor belts infested with stale. Mr. George spray- Inspector Pohl Is engaged in visiting
H arry Mendosa had stolen $1000 and showed but comparatively little ed 10 acres, but left 20 seres unspisyed. | the orchards of the county and an-
worth o f jewelry while hanging paper sea growth, despite the long stay In Mr. Armstrong w ill have It sprayed nounces that he will cut down trees
in her house, Mrs. Isadore J. Kusel temperate and tropical waters.
and charge the cost to the owner. which are not properly sprayed by
notified the police and then called up
When the work in this orchard is com the owner after due notification.
Mendosa by telephone and held him
pleted Mr. Armstrong w ill put the
In conversation until he was ar WALL OF WATER TURN 4 LOOSE
Opens New Tunnel.
gang at work in other orchards in the
rested.
" Gold H ill— T. T. Barnard, superin
vicinity.
Chicago— Four hundred anxious Bursting Missouri River Dam Flooda
tendent of the Tin Pan mines on Galls
property-owners from Kenmore ave
creeks, has been authoiized by the com
Montana Towna.
Water for Merrill Rancher«.
nue successfully protested against
Klamath Falls— E. W. Smith, rail- _ pany to siart a tunnel, and purchase
Helena, Mont., April 15.— In every
the asphalting of that street. They
road conductor, has practically fin- j power drills and any other machinery
wanted It left In its present condi town and village on the Missouri
tion rather than turn It over to the river, In Northern Montana, the res ished the canal change at this city, | necessary. A ten-stamp mill, with Frue
motor cars, which tear up the pave idents are terror-stricken and are where the railroad grade crosses It, fan n ers, has been running continuously
ment, mnke a hideous noise and kill fleeing to the hills to escape the and has been awarded the contract with day and night shifts since Decem-
flood caused by the breaking o f the by the government of repairing the ber 19 with a oapacitj o( 30 tons a
their children.
-
—
70-foot dam at Hauser Lake this a ft Adams canal. This canal furnishes1
' day.
The property is opened by a se
Mining Industries of Montana are ernoon. The town of Craig, In Lewis water to landholders around M errill
ries
of
five tunnels on the vein, aggre
reviving.
and
has
been
takeu
over
by
the
gov
and Clarke county, 46 miles north of
gating over 1,000 feet in length.
The
ernment.
Helena,
Is
now
more
than
20
feet
Catholics o f San Francisco held
W ater w ill be turned Into the main new tunnel w ill open the vein under
under water, and from every Indica
special mass to pray for rain.
the apex of the mountain.
tion tens o f thousands o f dollars’ canal o f the Klamath project next
The bandits who shot Marshall M il worth o f property w ill be swept week.
ler at Kent, Wash., are surrounded away. The 400 Inhabitants of the
Some o f the lands are needing
Milsags Book Hearing April 26,
by a large posse.
Ralem— In accordance with a stipu
town are camping In the hills to water at this time on account o f the
dry weather. Indications point to a lation between the parties to the con
W hile "playing burglar” a 14- night. >
A t a late hour tonight General less successful year for the dry far tort, the Oregon Railroad commission
year-old boy of Woodstock, Oregon,
shot his f-year-old sister through the Manager Qerry auuuuuced that the mers unless rain comes soon.
has fixed April 25 as the date for the
water is receding, and he Is confi
heart.
hearing npon the application of the
Muat Furnish Beats.
dent that no damage will occur be
Travelers’ Protective association for ee-
It Is new against the law to bind
yond Craig. The latest estimate of
Salem— The . railroad
the feet o f women In China, and
. . . . . commission
,
. tablishment of a straight 2 U-C8nt rate
the loss Is from $300,000 to $400,- In a decision, which
follow
s
In
part,
.
.. __ .__ .
*
many s f the opium dens hare been
000.
censures the Corvallis & Eastern ,cr , m leaF® books
the Pr|nclP»
closed.
A heavily loaded Great Northern Railroad Co., for their passenger, «»d ® ln Oregon
The hearing will
The office of the anarchist paper train from Great Falls to Butte nar accommodations on the lines from j becommeoced at the office of the com-
La Questions Soclale, has been dis rowly escaped destruction by the Albany and Corvallis to Yaqulna and mission in the state house at 11 o ’clock
mantled and the printing material flood this evening at 6 o'clock. It Toledo:
'a. m.
removed.
was flagged Just in time by the tele
" I t Is ordered that the railroad
graph
operator
at
Cascade
and
re
company defendant Bhall in the fu
Troot for Union County.
Qovernor Hughes o f New York,
threatens to call out the m ilitia If turned to Great Falls, not, however, ture Bupply sufficient passenger cais
La Grande— Approximately 100,-
before
taking
aboard
a
flock
o
f
sheep
so
that
all
passengers
leaving
Corval-
necessary, to stop race track gamb
000 fish will be received ln Union
whose pasture was under water.
Us or Albany westbound and Yaqulna county wlthIn 30 daya to be uaed
ling In that state.
The Hauser Lake dam, which was and Toledo eastbound may have a as stocking material for the many
Admiral Sebree and the officers one o f the finest structures o f its seat and that the second-class coach
mountain streams ln this vicinity.
and crews of the cruisers California kind in the world, was completed ■hall be supplied with ventilators.
Members of the Eastern Oregon Fish
and Tennessee received a great wel last year at a cost o f more than $1,'
The railroad company will have 20 and Qame association have received
come at Everett, Wash., enroute to 200,000 and developed 25,000 horse days in which to make the necessary notlce that the ahlpmenta wlll be
Seattle.
power, which was utilised In operat alterations.
forthcoming in a short tim e,’ and
W hile the contralto soloist o f the ing the various power plants In Hel
that the parties to whom the cans
ena
and
the
Butte
mines
and
the
Equalize Rates to Klamath,
Chicago Symphony Orchestra was
are consigned must be In readiness
Copper
Company’s
singing at the Arm ory In Portland Amalgamated
Klamath Falls— Captain J. M. Me- to plant the fry.
one afternoon a canary drew the at smelter at Anaconda. The break will Intire, who has returned from San
tentlon of the entire audience by not Interfere with operations, as Francisco, where he met the South
Small Rush at Land Office
alighting on the sill o f an open win power la being furnished tonight ern Pacific freight officials, states
from the Canyon Ferry dam and the that a through freight rate w ill be
Roaeburg—Opening ol newly snrvey-
dow and singing lustily.
company's sub-station In Butte.
establlshed to Klamath Falla as soon ®fi '»nds tc entry has occasioned a
Seven jurors have been secured to
Superlateudent H. L. Burdick, of as the terminus o f the road is at email rush at the Roseburg land office
try Aba Ruef.
the Rocky Mountain Bell Telephone Dorris.
j the paet week. About 40 persons lined
It Is now reported that Admiral Company, at 10:30 o ’clock tonight
The M clntire Transportation com- np and numbered awaiting their turn
announced
that
the
water
at
Craig,
■vans Is on the mend.
pany w ill handle all freight into this
register, while at the eame time
4 6 miles from Helena, hnd reached a
Eight jurors have been secured to depth o f 22 H feet, and at Cascade, aectlon, and It will remain In charge sqnatter> are holding down the claims,
o f the Southern Pacific until deliv-1
«. u l fLa. a
try Flrey La Ford o f San Francisco, 69 miles distant, a depth of four feet. ered to the consignee.
.and a contest with these mast ensue
for bribery.
It Is estimated that the water will
The rates have been published a n d 1 be,ore‘ f,e
° D “ C,,’ m ran
Salem people saw a strange light reach the Boston & Montana smelter are much lower than over the Thrall- prove his right to It.
on
the
river
bank
at
Great
Falls
PoJtegema
line.
The
rates
from
Port
traveling In the air for about half
about midnight.
PORTLAND MARKETS.
an hour Sunday evening.
land and San Francisco are the same.
NEWS OFTHE WEEK
lo a Condensed Form for Our
Bosy Readers.
Seven hundred junks were sunk
Snowsllde Kills Japa.
and 2000 people drowned In Hankow
Vancouver, B. C., April 15.— Four
China, as the result o f a midnight
flood.
Japanese railway workmen were
Four "trusties" escaped from the killed and a dozen badly Injured by
Salem penitentiary. They had been an avalanche which swept them down
working en the asylum for feeble the mountain side o f Albert Canyon.
T w o days ago a thaw started In the
minded.
The B. R. Lewis Lumber company mountains and many slides occurred.
and the Idaho A Northern Railway, Forty Japanese were asleep In two
o f Coeur d’ Alene, are in the hands boarding-house cars on a aiding
when they were overwhelmed. The
o f a receiver.
slide picked them up. and. carrying
The selection of a Jury to open the them over a cliff, rolled them away
ballot boxes and examine the ballots Into the valley below. R e lief crews
o f the New York mayoralty oontest were quickly on the scene and the
o f 1905 has begun.
bodies o f the dead weresecured.
Three persons were killed, several
Admiral Evana Improving.
hundred Injured, about 10,000 made
Paso Robles Hot Springs, Cal.,
homeless nnd $10,000,000 worth of
property destroyed by the fire at April 15.— A fte r remaining quietly
Chelsea, a suburb of Boston.
In his room for several days, as a re
Nearly 5,000 acres o( hope have been sult o f the recurrence of pain In his
left knee, Rear-Adm iral Evana was
plowed np in England.
taken out today and wheeled to the
bath
house.
It was the first time
Several Mexican towns have been
that he has left his room since last
shaken by an earthquake.
Thursday. A fte r being given a sul
A t the Loe Angelea hearing Santa Fe phur bath and treatment, he was
officials have admitted rate discrimina taken back to his room. There was a
marked Improvement In his appear
tion.
ance. Hts face was lets drawn and
A new copyright treaty has been en In place of the pallor there was a
tered Into by * the United States and *ood fresh color
Mexico.
Asks Charge of Venue.
Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, ex
Gunnison, Colo., April 15.— Judge
premier of Great Britain, fe growing
Shackelford, ln chambers here today,
weaker.
heard arguments on application of
The Portngnsee premier has offered Rteve Adams, charged with the mur
his resignation, bnt the king has re der o f Arthur Collins, at Tellurlde,
for a change o f venue from San M ig
fused it.
uel county. O. N. Hilton, counsel for
Anna Gonld has sailed for Europe.
the Western Federation o f Miners,
filed affidavits from 80 residents of
Miseaachneetts Republicans
have Tellurlde In support of the conten
elected nninetrnrted delegatee to the tion that Adams could not have a
national oonvention.
fair trial In that city on account of
Roosevelt may send a special mes the prejudice against him there.
sage to congress on the question of the
nnmber of battleships to be bnilt.
German bnllding trades employers
have disagreed with their workmen and
60.000 of the latter are out of work.
Chicago has just received $803,340
as Its share of the net earnings of the
i railway companies for the past
Return Via Fu »i.
Washington, April 15.— The bat-
tleehlps Maine and Alabama, which
wlll be detached frem the Atlantic
fleet, their places to be taken by the
Wisconsin and the Nebraska, are to
come home by the way of the Sue*
canal, according to present plans.
They will leave San Francisco a
month ahead of tha fleet.
Oregon, Washington and Idaho Make
New Record for Wheat.
Total I SOT Grain Crop.
Buahela
Wheat ............................... 58,000,000
Barley ................................ 10,000,000
Oata ................................... 12.000.000
Total
....... 80,000,000
Shipments b> Water to FpHI I.
Wheat .............................. 37,700,000
Barley ...................... . . . . 1,057,000
Sh pmanta East by Rail to April I
Wheat ..............................
100,000
Barley ............................. 2,724,000
Oats ........ , ........................
500,000
8tocks on Hand April I.
Wheat ....................... .,...11,250,000
Barley .............................. 1,850,000
Oats ..................................... 2,240,000
Portland, April 14.— W ith the de
parture this month of seven char
tered ships now loading at Portland,
and five loading on Puget Sound, the
greatest season In the history o f the
North Pacific grain trade will be
practically over. There are a few
straggling ships coming along for
May-June loading, and at least two
more steamers wlll lead wheat for
the Orient, but the movement has
been so rapid this season that May 1
will find the business nearer cleaned
up than ln any previous "b ig crop"
year. When the returns are all ln
for April, it will be found that Ore
gon, Washington and Idaho for the
first time In their history, have
Bhlpped (flo u r included), 40,000,000
bushels o f wheat, and still have some
on hand to tide over the dull season
uDtil the new crop arrives.
The 1907 wheat crop o f the three
states was a record-breaker by near
ly 10,000,000 bushels, reaching a
grand total o f 58,000,000 bushels,
and on account of the good prices
prevailing throughout the season, it
mpved more rapidly proportionately
than any o f its predecessors.
Not
only was the wheat crop the largest
on record, but barley, which has been
steadily Increasing in prominence as
one of the great staples o f the Paci
fic Northwest, also established a new
mark with a crop o f nearly 10,000,-
000 bushels. Oats, exclusive o f the
crop grown ln the La Conner dis
trict on Puget Sound, Is credited with
a yield of 12,000,000 bushels ln the
three states.
These figures which show a grand
total o f 80,000,000 bushels of the
three leading cereals, are compiled
from accurate statistics, kindly sup
plied by the railroad companies,
which moved the big crop and by
prominent grain exporters In various
parts o f the three states. The figures
fall short of some o f the earlier esti
mates made on the crops, and natur
ally are several m illion bushels
smaller than the government figures
on oats and barley.
W ashington’s 40,000,000 bushel
crop o f wheat dwindled to about 35,-
000,000; that of Oregon was slightly
under 18,000,000, and Idaho’s was
somewhat over 5,000,000 bushels.
W ILL GO ABROAD.
RE-OPEN GATEWAY
FLAMES DEVOUR CHE* bEA.
Boston Buburq Swap! by Firo—Four
Bodies Found.
Boston, Mass., April 13.— Fire yes
terday devastated the manufacturing,
tenement and retail sections of Chel
sea, burning over one square mile of
territory and leveling many of the
city's best structures. Late laat sight
four bodies had been recovered from
the ruins. The fire started at 1U:40
a. m., and was not under control un
til 9 p. m., notwithstanding that half
of the Boston fire department’s
strength and steamers from a dozen
Tourists Buying Tickets to Portland other cities and towns went to the
aid of the Chelsea brigade.
Will Rective New Tickets to
The fire originated In the rear of
Sound on Request.
the
Boston
Blacking
Company’s
works on West Third street, near the
eastern division o f the Boston ic
Omaha, Neb., April 16.— By per Mulne Railroad, ln close proximity
mission of the Interstate Commis to the Everett City line. A terrific
sion, the Union Pacific has prepared gale from the northwest, which at
a tariff which is expected to over- times had a velocity of 60 miles un
come the result of a previods dec!- hour, carried burning shingles, em-
sion which had the effect o f closing bers and myriads of sparks to a score
the Portland gateway. The Northern of wooden buildings, most of them of
Pacific and Great Northern had not cheap construction.
The fire started almost from the
concurred ln previous tariffs and the
commission ruled that tickets sold extreme southwest section of the
under the rates so published were Il city, and cut a path to the end of
legal. The Union Pacific Is now per Maverick street at the extreme south
mitted to name Portland as the des eastern end of the city, which bor
tination, but if the traveler signifies ders ChelBea Creek. This is about
intention of going to Seattle, or fur one and a Half miles from where the
ther north, the conductor lifting his fire
began.
The flames spread
ticket will give him another reading through the heart of the retail bus
from Portland to the point to be iness section, which was about mid
reached.
way between the two extreme limits
In other words, the old method is reached by the fire.
resumed o f drawing exchange orders
Among the structures destroyed
on Portland to points In Washington. were 13 churches, two hospitals, the
The additional charge is absorbed by Public
Library, City
Hall,
fire
the Harrlman lines and they again schoolhouses, 20 business blocks,
enjoy the benefit of the long haul.
nearly a score of factories, and ap-
It is said that the whole question ward of 309 tenements and dwelling
of authorized routes to the Pacific bouses.
Coast Is not any more satisfactory
Among the places burned were;
now to the Northern Pacific than It
Frost Hospital, Children's Hospi
Is to the Harrlman system, and that tal, Fltz Public Library, Stanislaus
it is equally anxious to see the entire Polish Catholic Church, Chestnut
subject of gateways reconsidered.
street; First Baptist Church, Central
avenue; Central Unitarian Church,
Aid to Western Woolgrowers.
Hawthorne street; St. Luke’s Catho
Omaha. Neb., April 16.— Through lic Church (old building), Haw-
the efforts o f the woolgrowers o f thorne street; First Methodist Epts-
the West and Northwest, a storage- copal Church, Carey avenue; Elm-
in-transtt rate has been made by the atreet
Synagogue;
Walnut-street
Union Pacific, Southern Pacific, Bur- j Synagogue;
Chelsea
Presbyterian
lington and Chicago & Northwestern Church;
People’s
Afro-Methodist
railroads, which w ill permit wool to Episcopal Church, Fourth street;
stop for storage at Omaha. It may Universalist Church; Second Adven-
be baled here and shipped at the con- tist Church; New England Telephone
venlence o f buyers and growers. The & Telegraph Company's central of-
advantage to the woolgrowers is that nce; Austin & Young s cracker fac-
o f not being forced to sell their clip tory; chaplls & Sodden Car Com
at any price the eastern buyers may pany-a ahops; Rosenfelt Bros.’ three-
°® er-
I story rag-picking factory; the Tide
Three storage warehouses will be o il Company’s three Immense tanks
built here at once, with a capacity of ne;ir tbfe eaat end „ f Margin street.
50.000,000 pounds.
These storage]
st. Hose’s Roman Catholic Church,
facilities w ill be available to wool- Broadway, loss $25,000; St. Rose
growers who may put their clip In a Koman Catholic School, loss $40,-
warehouse and use the receipts as 000; state Armory, loss $100,000;
collateral on which to secure cash. Sacred Heart Convent, loss $40,000;
About 5,000,000 pounds o f Pacific y M c A buiiding. loss $75,009;
Northwestern wool passes through Boston Elevated Railroad station and
Omaha annually.
burn, loss $50,000; County Savings
Bank, Chelsea Savings Bank, Chelsea
BLUEJACK ETS ON SHORE.
Trust
Company, the Providence Co
________ a
operation Bank.
Once More Tread Boil of God’s Own
The funds of all these banks with
the exception of the County Savings
Country.
are
the
o - - r u ____
, __ ,, . ,
, __ __. u i i i i K Bank
are a
r i o still
l u m ln
e
v a u l t s vaults.
.
ft u e The
° “ “ Dey and securities of the County
bluejackets and marines landed from
Bank wer*» taken to Boston before
the American battleship fleet— 6000 tb"e""flb re a c h e d * the"buil'din*
fighting men fresh from a cruise of
•
more than 13.000 miles— marked
the ceremonies of official welcome to
CALL JAPAN TO A CC O UN T.
the State o f California.
Sixty-four
companies of sailormen. In their togs
of the sea, with wide flaring trousers Roosevelt Will Demand Facts Ab ut
reefed down ln canvas leggings, and
Mukden Affair.
16 companies of marines, soldierly
Washington, April 13.— The attack
and
straight,
formed
this
most
no-
. . ,
...
, ,
.
,
_.
on Consul-General Straight and the
able of the navy s land displays. The aervanta of the American Consulate,
landing party, equipped as Infantry. at Mukden> by Japanese rowdies led
armed with Krags. In light marching by a poatman haa 8tlrred the admln_
__®0“ teens filled, ^ istratien to action. It Is regarded as
equalled an army corps,
a much more serious affair than ap
The procession the men of the pears upon the surface, and prompt
navy formed was more than two action will undoubtedly be taken to
miles long. They marched from the obtaln tbe reparatlon that Japan has
waterfront to the City Park,
so far refused.
A conference upon the subject was
Roosevelt’s Policy Wisest
held at the White House late tonight
Paris, April 16.— The Temps today
by President Roosevelt, Secretary
expressed enthusiastic approval of .. ..
. Secretarv Root
It was as
President R oosevelts reasoning in sumed a°,'
at the conierence that Mr.
favor of providing additional ships
a report
fo r the A m erica n
navv
e m e e i - i l l v Straight
o i r s i g u i had
u » u made
inane n
re |i ur i o
u i f the
i ne
Vhl
„ Incident to Minister Rockblll, at Pe-
lfV!,1 rank
ren t
L th» a great
e
5- ,
kin, and that Mr. Rockhtll would
would lose
as
power,
__
t
v «-,* nniv
K.,» if
<f communicate the facts to the State
not
only if
if aha
she v.-o
was funhin
feeble, but
Department
without delay.
she had the reputation of being 1
To insure his doing so, cable mes
feeble. “ France should meditate on
sages were sent tonight to both Mr.
this,” the paper says.
I f America wishes to avoid war Rockhill and Mr. Straight asking for
with Japan, she must have a fleet all the facts. A reply is expected to
morrow.
A prominent cabinet officer
(
fci u
iau
cu
i. s
is the
m
u s
ai.u
in
.
t u
c r
x
ill
, , .
, , .
permanent
in
Pacific.
The
Am-
Union Pacific Asks Permission In
Make New Tarltl.
PRACTICALLY SAME AS BEFORE
President Will Leave Mailers Entirely
To His Successor.
Washington,
April
14.— Should
President Roosevelt’s present desires
be realized, he will spend the first
year after his retirement from office
In traveling outside the United
States.
Mr. Roosevelt's Itinerary,
however, has not been determined.
His plan Is to Bee some o f the rugged
and little frequented portions o f for
eign lands, as well as to travel the
beaten track o f the tourist.
That
the president will Indulge ln his
fondness for hunting big game Is be
lieved by those to whom he has con
fided his Intentions.
It was at the recent dinner of the
Boone and Crocket Club ln this city
that the president last told of his In
tentions for next year. He was told
of the opportunities for hunting In
Alaska, and urged to arrange for a
trip there. This, he said, would in
terfere with his plan for foreign
travel and would have to be consid
ered, If at all, at some future time.
Mr. Roosevelt is quoted as adding
at this time:
" I f W illiam H. T aft Is nominated
and elected President, which would
be very gratifying, It would make Im
possible criticism If I were abroad,
to the effect that I was dictating to
him and being followed, or that I
/. . . T
. .
had dictated and had been turned erican people are at present confused I ^ ..T ? n
as to the proper course to pursue.
1 tdon ‘ th nk 1 a" ,be' ray‘ nK, aDy
down ln my suggestions.”
but President Roosevelt s naval pol
nnL
w»>en ' « “ X
^
decision
icy suggests a luminous and wise to s e r t the fleet to the Pacific was
New Emblem for Democracy.
largely
determined
by
the
Insuffer
path which the country sooner or
able tactics of the Japanese ln offi
Denver, April
14.— A
monster later will follow.
Wheat— Track prices: Club, 84c
May Manufactura Sugar.
cial lnteicourse."
tiger,
constructed
of
papier
mache,
_
_.
......................... per bushel; red Russian,
82c; blue-
Eugene— The promotion department atem g7c. val,ey> g 6c
Millions In Sagebrush
will welcome the delegates to Denver
of the Eugene Commercial club has re- j
Barley__ Feed, $24.50 per ton ; when they come to the Democratic
Railroad Pays Half the Loss.
Hammond, Ind., April 16.-— Syl
retrod a quantity of sugar beet seed rolled. $27® 2s’; brewlDg, "$26.
Helena, Mont., April 13.-— Resi
National Convention July 7.
This vester Sparling, an employe o f the
from the Pacifio Sugar Construction j
Oats.—No. 1 white, $26.50@27 emblem has been selected instead of
dents of Big Timber, Mont., the town
company, which a year ago built a big per ton; gray, $26.
the prosaic donkey, as the striped Reld-Murdoch Company, of Chicago,
sugar factory in Glenn county, Califor-|
Mlllstuffs— Bran, $24.50 per ton; king o f the jungle lends himself ban patented a process that w ill con which was almost entirely destroyed
nia, for the purpose of testing the soil middlings. $27.50; shorts, country, more readily to the purposes of or vert the sagebrush of the great bar by the fire last month, have been
of Lane oonnty sa to Its adaptability to *27.50; city, $27; wheat and barley namentation. A special committee of ren wastes of the west Into millions notified by the Northern Pacific
o f money. A company of Hammond Railroad Company that they will be
the raising of sugar beets, and If th e ]0 j ' y— Timothy, W illam ette Valley, citizens Is at work devising plans business men will Incorporate for paid 50 cents on the dollar to coyer
for
the
suitable
decoration
o
f
the
teet li sa isfaetorystepsw .il at once he >17 per ton; v?m am ette Valley, or-
This action is taken
city. The decision Is to erect a mam $2 50,000 to erect a plant In Nevada their losses
taken to Induce some sugar beet m ans-. d|nary, j 15; Eastern Oregon, $17.50; moth figure of a tiger at Sixteenth which w lll make the utilization of from the fact that the disastrous fire
sagebrush possible. The product to which left hundreds of people home-
hetnrer ta build a plant in Eugene, .mixed, $16: clover. $14; alfalfa, $12; street and Broadway avenue
be derived from the shrub Is potash, less, was started by a spark from a
The eeed will be distributed among a alfalfa meal, $20.
Sixty-one per cent o f potash Is found Northern Pacific locomotive. The
number of representative farmers.
| Butter— Extras. 27Hc per pound;
Crushed
by
lee
Floes.
ln sagebrush ashes, whereas ordinary decision is not the outgrowth of civil
------------
I fancy 26c; choice, 25c; store, 16V4c.
St. Johns, N. F., April 14.— Bring wood ashes contains only 21
suits, but Is a voluntary action on
Work for Clean Dairies.
| Eggs— Loss and commission off,
the part o f the railroad officials.
ing tidings o f the sinking o f the
Marshfield Mrs. 8. A. Yonkam. the|1 ‘ ^ f ^ ^ n ^ T e a m tw.ns, 15He steamer Grand Lake, and the serloua
Find Two More Bodies
deputy dairy and food Inspector, of per pound; cream brick, 20c; Swiss Injury of several others caught In the
Boston, Ap ril 16.— The remains o f
Desire No Race Rims,
this place, is endeavoring to form blk., 20c; lireburger. 22Hc.
grip of Ice floes, the steam sealer.
San Francisco. April 13.— Speak-
among the creamery and oondensed j Poultry— Mixed chickens. 13c per New Foundland limped into port to two persons, a man and a woman.
monthly meeting of the
milk managers an association which lb.; fancy hens, 1 4 ® 1 4 H c ; roosters, day leaking badly. The Grand I.ake were found today in the ruins o f ) ers a*
ill buy milk only from dairymen old, 8c; fryers, lb., 20c; broilers, lb., was shut up in the relentless jaws Sunday’s fire at Chelsea, and to- Asiatic Exclusion League, held yes-
poultry
per o f two great Ice floes until her sides night a human skull was found ln terday afternoon ln the hall of the
who keep their dairies clean end nse , 22H ® 36c:
dressed
gave way and her engines were the cellar o f No. 62 Chester avenue. San Francisco Labor Council, round-
th e ’ sanltary measures demanded b y .P 0,,nfi- *c higher
Potatoes— Select, selling price, 70c crushed.
Her crew made their es The bodies o f three unknown persons ly scored those who have been dis
the Inspector. Any of the iresmery
cape. A catch o f 20.000 seals went had been recovered previously and semlnatlng reports that the league ex-
down with the Grand Lake.
This the death list Is now six. but the pected to accomplish Its purposes by
«roofding to th , B ,r„m rn t.
Multnoninh.
buying
p rto .
KSc: cargo was valued at $130,000 and authorities expect to find other inciting riots In the various cities
bodies In the ruins. Early today the and in San Francisco when the bat-
Yoakam ^has been appointed to have Clackamas, buying price, 65c per was Insured.
police arrested Dan'el Ross, who was tleship fleet arrives. These stories,
charge
dairy exhibit*
at * the hundred: new California, 5 ® 5 H c
*“ of * the
■
"
waving lighted tapera in a lumber-¡which emanated from Vancouver,
state fair.
per pound: sweet, 5He per pound.
Last Link to Atlantic.
yard, and he was h*ld on the charge and which caused Chief Blggy to In
Onions— Job price, $4.75® 5 per
Birmingham,
Ala.,
A
p
ril
14.—
The
vestigate
the
organization,
were
o
f attempted incendiarism.
hundred:
buying
price.
$4
25®
4
50
Eugana Buys Flags to Decorate.
branded as falsehoods.
Eugene— The Eugene Commercial per hundred: garlic, 15c per pound. official announcement by the Illinois
Apples— Select, $2.50 per box; Central Railroad that the new Bir
Irj jrction Removed.
clnb has arranged lo purchase 00 Amer
Student Slays Governor
fancy, $2; choice, $1.50; ordinary, mingham division w lll be opened for
San Francisco, April 16.— Judge
ican flags and 60 pennants, to be used $1.25
I-emburg, April 13.— Count An-
Seawell
haa
removed
the
last
hope
of
as decoration on Willamette street on
traffic
April
19.
calls
attention
to
the
Fresh Fruit»— Oranges. $2 50®.7
„ _____dreas Potoki, Governor of the Aus-
special day occasinna. The merchants per box: lemons, $2.75® 3.50.
completion o f the last link In the the defense ln the Benson-Hyde tro_p0,|ah pr0Tlnce of Oalicia. was
also will add their quota ol decora
Cattle — Best steers. $4.75® 5; great
____
cases
to
prevent
the
removal
o f state assassinofpd this afternoon by a stu-
Harrlman
transcontinental
tions. The first n»e of these new flat« medium,
$ t.2 5 ® 4 .7 5 ;
eommon. route, fo r by controlling the Union land records to the federal courts o f dent, Mleroslap Sjoseynskl by name.
cows.
best. $3.75® 4; Pacific, Illinois
and pennants w ill be for the spring $3.50® 4:
Central and Central
Washington. D. C.. where the records while giving an audience to a dele-
fertlval of music, to be held in Eugene, eommon, $3.25® 3.75; calves. $ 4® of Georgia, this system w lll extend will form Important evidence In the gallon o f students. The assassin
4.50.
April 14 and 15. The flags will belong
land fraud trials.
Yesterday after- fired three shots from a revolver, an
from the Pacific to the Atlantic
Sheep— Best wethers. $6 ® 6.50;
noon Judge Reawell dissolved the of which took effect. The Governor
to the city, and w ill be displayed on all
ewes, $5® 5.50; spring lambs, nomi
preliminary Injunction which he said filed soon afterward, but first asked
public occaa<ons.
Populism Wiped Out.
nal.
he had granted without full knowl-,his secretary to inform his majesty
Topeka, Kan., April 14.— The Pop
Hogs— Best. $6 ® 6.25; medium,
I at once: 'T ell him,” said the dying
edge
of the facts o f the case.
Trust Gats Can Factory.
ulist party in Kansas Is officially
$ 5 .7 5 ® «; feeders. $5.25®5.50.
man, " I was his faithful servant.”
Astoria— The formal transfer of
Hops— 1907. prime and choice. 4 dead. The Republican state aanvasa-
Banker Gets Five Years
the plant of the Kendall Can Com ® 6c per pound; olds, 1 ® 1 H c per ing board has refused Its candidates
Sixty nine Days in Trance
Pittsburg, Pa.. April 16.— W illiam
a place on the official ballot because
pany was made last evening, but the pound.
Los Angeles, April 13.— Mrs. Beu
details of the sale cannot be learned
W ool— Eastern Oregon, average the party at the last state electloa 18. Wortman, ex-president o f the Oak-
here.
It la understood that F. P.Ibest. 11 ® 1 Sc per pound, according ] did not poll 1 per cent o f the total | land Bavtngs A Trust Company, lah Hawkins, the woman who tell
state, as provided by the I pleaded guilty today to embezzle- Into a cataleptic trance on February
KeKdgll. of Portland, who was man- to shrinkage; Valley, 12® 15c, ac- vote of * the
'
new primary election law passed In I ment o f $14,000 o f the company’s 5, will tomorrow enter the 69th day
tef the local plant, becom
cording to quality.
Her condition is ap-
Northwest manager for the American
Mohair— Choice. 20 ® 20Hc
per January. The party In 190$ polled funds, and was sentenced to five o f her sleep.
jparentljr unchanged.
year* in th* penitentiary.
Can Company.
fewer than 1106 rotee.
pound.
—
•“ »-
w ^ |ffrt.i^im’SSS£-TaS