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About The Estacada news. (Estacada, Or.) 1904-1908 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 22, 1906)
The Estacada News ESTACADA OREGON NEWS OF THE WEEK I Condensed Form lor Onf B u y Readers. T O E N D C H IL O L A B O R . M U C H DAMAGE REPORTED. S e n a to r B everid ge, o f Indiana, Also H as M e a t Inspecdod M e asu re. Floods in O reg o n and W ashington D estro y H om es and B ridges. Richmond, Ind., Nov. 20. — At a meeting here t«xiay of representatives of the Young Men’s Christian associa tion of Indiana and Ohio, Senator A l bert J. Beveridge stated that on the opening day of the coining session of congress he Intended to introduce a b ill prohibiting the labor of children throughout the country and a bill to make more rigid the present meat in spection lawr. He said the child labor bill w ill provide that no railroad, steamboat or other carrier of interstate commerce should transport or accept for transportation the product of any fac tory or mine that employed children under 14 years of age. The bill, he said, would provide that every carrier of interstate commerce should require an affidavit from every factory or mineowner shipping its pro ducts that it did not employ children under 14 years of age, the form of the affidavit to be prescribed by the depart ment of Commerce and Labor or the Interstate Commerce commission, with heavy penalties, both civil and crim inal, for violation of the law. The bill, if it becomes a law, he believes will stop the practice of ruining future citi zenship by working children of tender age in factories and mines. There is no other way, said the sena tor, to reach this growing evil. A Fed eral statute cannot be passed directly controlling the factories and mines in the states. That is the province of the states. But congress has absolute power over the railroads, boats, ships and other agencies of interstate com merce, and unlimited power under the constitution to provide that they shall not carry the products of factories and mines that employ children. M O N E Y IN G ran d Rondo F a rm e rs M a rk e t C ro p s st Good P rices. Blf Com pany Finds E igh teen-F oot N e a r Ashland. Castle Rock, Wash., Nov. 10. — The Cowlitz river lias become a raging tor rent, carrying houses, liarns, logs and other drift down in the flood. Many families are homeless and have savep but few belongings from their ruined homes and are temporarily quartered with friends on higher ground. The Northern Pacific bridge across the Cow litz at Olequa is washed out. N o rth e rn P acific apd G re a t N o rth e rn The town of Castle Rock is in a state R a ilro a d * T ie d U p— T h re e of chaos. Electric lights are out be Lives A re L o st. cause of the flood. The town marshal has closed the saloons to add to the public safety. The people are meeting the situation in a philosophic way and Seattle, Nov. 15.— Floods in the are not becoming panic stricken. White, Stuck and Green rivers, which began Tuesday night, have swept away North Yakima, Wash., Nov. 16.— miles of railroad trackage, inundated After falling slightly the Yakima and all the valley towns, rendered hundreds Naches rivers are again rising and the of farmers homeless and cost three lives damage to property of all kinds is up to date. Until the Western Union growing worse. A il communication last night succeeded in getting a wire to Portland, Seattle was entirely cut with the outside by rail is cut off. off from the outside world by either Every county bridge in the valley is railroad or telegraph lines. Tlie tele under water and the city is isolated phone company kept up two lines, but this was tlie only means of communica from the surrounding country. The fears of the poeple are that the tion Seattle has had. Tlie three men lost’ in the floods were Naches river may change its course and come down the old river bed to the drowned while lighting to break up log west of the city. I f this happens the jams that threatened railroad and coun damage w ill be inestimable, as the ty bridges. It w ill he two weeks before the best fruit orchards and some of the fin est homes in the valley lie direct in its Northern Pacific is able to resume reg ular train operations. The Great course. Northern is tied up for a shorter per Wenatchee, Wash., Nov. 16.— The iod, for trouble on that road is due to flood »till rages unabate«!. Added to an avalanche of mud that swept out a tlie destruction by the rain and water portion of track. Auburn, Kent, O’ Brien, Renton the wind ia blowing. The damage done Oriellia and half a dozen smaller towns by tlie flood between Cashmere and in the valleys of three rivers are under Wenatchee, in tlie Wenatchee valley water. Resident« of O’ Brien were cannot be estimated at the present compelled to abundon their homes and time, but it w ill be heavy. The We flee to the hills. A t Kent a raging tor- natchee and the Columbia rivers, are rent is running through the town and higher than they have ever been before Auburn w ill suffer extensive damages The former is eight inches higher than unless the waters recede immediately it* former record. The 60 employes of the Denny Ken ton Clay works plant at Renton were Portland, Nov. 16.— Streams through cut off by the flood and had to remain out the state which have been swollen cooped up in the warehouse until they by the recent rain storms and the Chi could be rescued by bouts. While* Stock and Green Rivers Drive Farmers From Homes. C O A L M IN E O P E N E D . POTATOES. FLOODS IN NORTH Vein SMALLER TOWNS UNDER WATER G R A B B IN G U P O IL L A N D . F e d eral A u thorities T a k e Cognixance o f A ction o f S tan d ard O il. San Francisco, Nov. 14.— The Call today says: It became known in Fed eral circle* yesterday that recent loca tion* of land in Kern county by agent* of the Standard Oil cum|>uny have been made the aubject of inveatigation by government officials. Aa a result it ia asserted indictments w ill follow. The land was taken up hy the petroleum combine, ostensibly for the gypsum de posits, hut in reality for oil purposes. That the character of the land had been carefully studied is shown hy the fact that a flowing oil well lias already been developed. The inquiry is being made through the office of United States Attorney Devlin, of San Francisco. Federal agents have been at work for several weeks in Kern county. From their preliminary reports it iB beileved that the manner in which the land was se cured w ill warrant indictments on the part of the Federal grand jury. The information secured by these agents w ill he placed in the hands of United States Attorney Robert T. Dev lin, who in turn w ill forward it to Washington to the attorney general. Ashland— There is no little interest La Grande— Farmers who planted potatoes last spring are reaping a boun and enthusiasm in this section of the tiful harvest in the Grand Ronde val state over the opening up of what ap ley. The gross income from this year’ s crop is placed at $50,000 on the output pears to be permanent coal deposits. A R aaum a o f th a Laaa Im p o rta n t but of potatoes from this valley. It is es Coal croppings have been discovered for N o t Laaa In tarastln g E ven t* timated that 100 cars w ill be necessary 30 or 40 miles along the Cascades from o f th a P aat W eak . to ship this season’ s crop. These fig the state line northward, but no depos ures are computed on the basis of 1,000 its of sufficient extent to justify devel acres with an average yield of 60 sacks Threatening letter* have been sent to opment have been found in the pros to the acre. This has been the yield the pope. on unirrigated lands on the “ Sand- pecting heretofore. Some iime ago the The king and queen of Denmark are ridge” section, and the estimate is con company that is opening the Blue Lead viaiting the kaiaer. servative. More than half of the entire copper mines in this section, after se potatoe acreage of thè valley is in the curing leases on a considerable area of Jerome w ill ask for a special jury to vicinity of Imblen and Alicel. hear the case of H. K . Thaw. land, began prospecting on the Furrey Fields that have produced 60 sacks to place on the east side of Bear creek, French m ilitary officer* are giving the acre— and very many tracts have about seven miles from Ashland. auto* rigid teata for uae in war. done better than that— give a net re They began by running two tunnels Root aaya Roosevelt w ill not run turn of $27.50 per acre. The gross re into the mountain. One of these is again and he himaelf is not a candidate ceipts from an acre at the present price now 270 and the other 240 feet into the of 65 cents per sack amounts to $39. mountain, and an 18—foot vein of coal for president. One of the prominent growers figures lias been opened up. The coal has The discharge of colored troo ]» has the cost of production per acre at been tested and appears to be of excel been suspended and white officers may $11.50, as follows: Cultivating, $3; lent quality. The tunnels are seven get into trouble. digging, and sacking, $3; sacks, $3; feet square and run parellel 70 feet Church inventories have been re seed, $1; hauling, $1.50. apart. They are well timbered and sumed in France without disturbance, The heaviest yield so far reported is are being connected by cross cuts every S ELL NO M O R E ALASKA C O A L. although troops are held in readiness*. that of A. J. Surby, of Cove, who has 75 feet, for ventilation and to extract secured 300 sacks from an acre. At the The Federal court at Denver declares the coal. They extend into the moun G overnm ent S top s S ale P ending Ac present market price, Mr. Surby’s in tain from the west to the east on a 7 Governor Peabody had the power to tion on Leasing Bill, come for an acre is $195, of which per cent incline. suppress the Telluride riots and has Washington, Nov. 14.— The secretary about $183.50 is net. A six-acre field dismissed the Moyer suit for damages About 25 men are being employed on the Oregon Red Apple company’s and the work is being pushed night and of tlie interior today issued a general for imprisonment. ground, north of La Grande, gives a day. order withdrawing from entry all pub Other crews are employed in President Roosevelt has been called yield of 200 sacks per acre. These po building coal bins, scales, grizzlies and lic coal lands in Alaska. How much upon to order a searching inquiry into tatoes are grown entirely without irri screens for sorting the coal. the collision of the Jeanie and Dix land it affected no one knows; indeed, gation, and on account of their superior within sight of Seattle. The number of B O M B IN S T . P E T E R S . quality are rated 10 cents higher than no specific tracts could be withdrawn, missing is given as 49. T o Im p ro v e Federal P ro p e rty . the open market. as Alaska is still unsurveyed and the Salem— Francis W. Grant, superin The returns from the six acres will H ill is now in full control of the Bur C ro w d in C ath ed ral in R om e Rush in extent of its coal deposits unknown. tendent of construction of public build he $900. The patch was planted as a Panic fo r O u tlets lington and will merge the manage But tlxis general order w ill shut off all ings of the United States Treasury de ment of the road with that of the Great Rome, Nov. 20. — A bomb was ex matter of getting the ground in suitable partaient, has been in the city to in entries of land known to contain coal. condition for cultivation. Northern. This will allow him to run ploded in St. Peter’s Sunday. The sped the plans, look over the grounds It is issued in line with the policy re- through trains from Chicago to the edifice was crowded, and an indescrib and draft prospective plans, specified Coast. ceently adopted in the states, and w ill able scene of confusion followed. There C o l. H o fe r T e ll» H i» H opes. tions and make estimates upon the prevent wealthy corporations from cor President Roosevelt had* started for were no fatalities. University of Oregon, Eugene— Col proposed improvement of the grounds As soon as the echoes of the tremen onel Hofer, of Salem, addressed the as nering Alaska’ s coal resources. Porto Rico. surrounding the Federal building dous roar had ceased a canon sought by It i^ probable that further efforts Jerome says Insurance grafters cannot reassuring words to quiet the people, sembly at tlie university. He was full this city, which have remained in an nook wind in the mountains are thought of enthusiasm over the development of unfinished condition ever since the w ill be made to secure legislation re be prosecuted. F O R R IV E R S A N D H A R B O R S . but in vain. They fled in all direc the state of Oregon, and predicted that erection of the building, three years to have reached their highest point. pealing the coal land law and substi The loss in the Yakima valley is es tions. Women and children screamed the growth would be marvelous if there ago, and for which improvement con Some have commenced to fall and the tuting a law which authorizes the gov and tried to protect their families in were two competing railroads in the gress lias appropriated a fund of $10, Willamette was stationary last night G re a t N ational A gitation to Im prove ernment to lease its coal lands. timated at $400,000. the crush. The church is so large, state. He was of the opinion if these 000 . W aterw ays E veryw h ere. I t is probable that the river at Port A tract of 1,700 acres north of V al ________ America and Britain may unite to however, that there was ample room two railroads enter the state, that Coos land w ill commence to full today. Ex A national congress of American com dez, Alaska, lying on the glacial flats atop Congo atracitles. for the crowd to scatter, and no one bay would see the terminus on one and cept along the lower Columbia, the mercial bodies interested in the devel below tlie Valdez glacier, lias been set Pin F a ith to C h e r r ie * . Bank robbers secured $1,700 from the was injured. No trace of the perpe that country would shortly develop a La Grande— Cherries, of the ship danger from high water is thought to opment of internal waterways and har apart as a rifle range for tlie use of trator of the deed has been found. bank at Lohamla, Okla. city of 150,000, and Portland would be ping varieties, have proven one of the be over in Oregon. bor improvements w ill meet in Wash troops at Fort Liseum. Since Saint Anacleutus, who was or the other center for the end of the rail ington on the sixth ami seventh of De Three pcrsonB were cremated in a ho most profitable products of the Grand dained by Peter himself, erected an road system. Two such thriving cities cember. Oregon w ill he represented Ronde vàlley, and for that reason there tel fire at Goldfield, Nev. P LA N TE R S SH O R T O F LABOR, R E L IE F F U N D IS L O O T E D . »ratory in 90 A. I). on the site of the would be of great benefit to the state. by a delegation from the Portland w ill be many new cherry orchards put Refugees In the flooded valleys near present basilica to mark the spot where chamber of commerce. out in the spring. George Thomas, of Seattle are in dire need of food. C uban S u g a r M en A ak M agoon to the remains of St. Peter are buried, no The purpose of tlie congress is main Cove, w ill plant 1,000 trees. Mr M oney S ent M a y o r S ch m itz la N o t B en ton Announces C hanges. such dastardly occurrence is noted in Aid Im m ig ratio n. Accounted F o r. John Barrett, minister to Colombia, ly to prevail upon the United States Thomas is one of the most extensive Salem— In addition to the appoint w ill spend the Christmas holidays with the history of the church. Havana, Nov. 14.— Certain members cherry growers in the valley, and now San Francisco, Nov. 16.— The Chron authorities to puss a ’ measure calling ment of Walter Drennan, to succeed F. Sunday was the anniversary of the friends at Portland. for an appropriation of fifty millions of the Agrarian league, which is com has about 20 acres of cherry orchard in icle says today: dedication of the basilica to St. Peter, T. Wrightman as head of the corpora annually for river and harbor improve Hearst and Joe Pulltxer, Jr. engnged and it was beautifully decorated for the tion department, Secretary of State- full bearing. During the past season posed of prominent planters, accom A new investigation iB progressing in ment. Even should such a measure elect F. W . Benson has announced that these trees yielded at the rate of $325 In a fist fight. Neither w ill say any occasion. the Course of development« in the local pass it would still be but a fraction of panied by a number of steamship per acre. S. A. Kozer will be promoted to chief thing about the affair. graft scandal. It now appears that what other great nations are expending agents, held a conference with Gover clerk to succeed F. K . Lovell, and that S T O R M IN S O U T H . The Cowllt* river is falling fast and C hance fo r H om estead ers. The nor Magoon today on the question of Kozer w ill be succeeded by II. II. Cor many sums of money, large and small, annually upon their waterways. reports show that the damage in that North Bend— Land in the Coquille that were sent from different states to movement is a national expression of the probable scarcity of labor in the ey, of Baker C ity. Kozer is now’ audit rich valley w ill reach $260,000. Five Lives L o tt and M uch D am age lo ing clerk. the knowledge that water competition The remainder of the office valley is still held at normal figures San Francisco for the relief of the suf is the one great cheapener of railroad handling of the maturing sugar crop. P ro p e rty by W ind . The Hawaiian sugar crop for 190« force of Secretary of State Dunbar w ill There have been booms in various Tlie planters urged the necessity of promises to be the biggest in the hiato Memphis, Tenn., Nov. 20.— Eight be regained until after the session of the places along thé coast when land went ferers from the calamity never reached freight rates— railways that compete Some of these with rivers for traffic do not pay ex making use of the $1,000,000 appro ry of the territory. I t will probably persons are known to have lost their legislature. There w ill be no change to high figures; but in the valley many the relief committee. priated by tlie late Cuban congress for amount to more than 460,000 tons. lives, scores of others are injured and in the force of janitors until after the sales have been made at fair prices amounts, which aggregated a large travagant dividends upon watered stock. In those sections of the country the stimulation of immigration, and Farms are being sold in the valley as sum, were mailed to the tare of Mayor wherein the railroads are compelled to pointed out that Cuba was suffering A Black Hand society in New York property and crops suffered great dam legislature. low’ as $25, $30 and $40 an acre, and has exploded several bombe in the age, the extent of which, because of the the man who knows how to farm can Schmitz. F. J. Heney, Detective W il carry freight in competition with river severely from the competition of other E ag e r fo r a N ew C ounty. Italian tenement dintrict, («battering meager reports yet obtainable, cannot There liam Burns and about 100 government craft the rates are from one-third to nations seeking immigration and the Hood River— At a big mass meeting make good money on the land. windows and blowing doom from thier I kj estimated at this time, as a result are still good homesteads to be taken agents have been making an investiga one-sixth of those ruling where water importation of labor to Panama. held here for the purpose of ascertain of a terrific wind and rain storm Sun hinges. The next sugar crop promises to be day. The storm, w hich originated on ing public feeling in regard to the up in Coos county, but it is hardly tion. President Roosevelt is the mov competition is not a factor. I t is told Idaho people w ill ask Federal aid to the gulf, swept northwestward through movement to create a new county, to probable that the same can be said ing spirit behind the inquiry, and he of a cotton section in Texas that the very large, and the planters expressed relieve the coal shortage. declares that no man guilty of diverting canalizing of a very insignificant stream grave fears that the present labor sup portions of Alabama, Central and i>e known as Cascade county, the senti year from now. so as to be available for flat bottomed ply would be insufficient to handle it. the relief funds shall escape justice, Western ment was unanimous and committees Governor Magoon, of Cuba, denies Northern Mississippi and Tlie governor arranged to hold fur Halsey Real E state H ig h e r. The cases come within the jurisdic canal boats, lowered the freight rates that he is dissatisñed with his position. Tennessee, in its onward course razed will be appointed to circulate petitions Halsey— Halsey has slept long and tion of the Federal authorities because so radically as to make a saving to a ther conferences with the planters. scores of substantial buildings, partial to l>e presented to the next legislature A big dock fire at Naplse destroyed ly demolished hundreds of others, w ith that object in view'. A number of well while the great, busy world about of the interstate character of the postal small community of three million dol property valued at nearly $1,000,000. caused complete demoralization of rail prominent men here spoke on the ques it has been making rapid strides, leav service, which, it is alleged, was crim lars annually. As a matter of fact the N early T w enty M issing. canalized stream carried but a small Nowhere in Linn inally tampered with. La Porte, Ind., Nov. 14.— Coroner Mrs. Maud Crefflold has l>een found road traffic and cut off telegraphic com tion, and statistics were presented ing it far behind. percentage of the traffic upon which A considerable sum of money was al Carson lias received no complete list of dead in her ceil at Beattie from heart munication with many points in the which show that the new’ county can be county has there been so little demand governed more economically than the for real estate as in and about Halsey, so sent through the express com;>anies this large saving was effected, but the the dead and missing in the wreck of affected territory. failuie. Cotton in the fields blown down by same treritory is under present condi but within the last six months things and Wells-Fargo, which com;'allies are fact that the stream was available for the Baltimore A Ohio railroad. The Btatndard Oil stock has gone down have changed. Real estate is higher now investigating the disappearance of traffic compelled the railways to meet lits contains 30 names, and it is believ the w ind was beaten Into the ground tions. rapidly on account of the government than ever before known in the history $10,680 sent in one package from the the water competition. and badly damaged. Besides the loss ed nearly 20 are yet to be obtained. It inquiry. The Rivers and Harbors congress w ill be several days before the coroner T o Clean U p Linn O rc h a rd s . of the town. The noise of the saw and citizens of Searchlight, Nev., which the of life and property damage which is The San Francisco grand jury is still known to have occurred, a number of Albany— At a meeting of the Linn hammer has awakened the citizens from relief committee says it never received, w ill discuss tlie improvement of the can return a verdict. Tlie freight crew and which the company says was deliv Oregon and Washington waterways and insists that the first section carried no probing into the alleged stealing of re points directly in the pathway of the County Horticultural society held in their peaceful slumbers. ered to the representative of the com the removal of obstructing bars at the lights, but the train sheet of the oper storm cannot bo communicated w ith, Albany, the question of cleaning up the lief funds. mittee to whom it was addressed. The entrances of the harbors and w ill seek ator at Suman indicates that green >ld orchards and developing first-class PO RTLAND M A R K ETS. Harriman and Gould may be indict and complete reports are received it is crime of forgery is said to be included to impress upon the congress of the na lights were displayed. apples in the Willamette valley was As the charred ed by a grand jury at Salt Lake in the feared tliai the loss of both life and Wheat — Club, 64c; bluestem, 67c; in the offense of the raiders of the re tion the importance of these improve bodies are taken from the wreck they discussed by Fruit Inspector F. C. projK»rty w ill I k * greatly Increased. coal inquiry. lief contributions. It is said that in ments to the farming and mercantile are being labeled and sent to the under Armstrong and Professor F. R. Lake, valley, «tie; red, 61c Oats — No. 1 white, $24.50@25.50; the aggregate the stealings w ill amount population. President Penna in his inauguration secretary of the State Horticultural so- takers. Police S cen t P lo t gray, $28.50(824. at Rio Janeiro advocated increased to $1,000,000. Rome, Nov. 20. — The local police iety. It is asserted that Linn county Burley— Feed, $21.50 per ton; brew armament for Brasil. Indicta Jo hn D . A llo w s N o S ilv e r E x p o rts . have been informed that several people ould raise just as fine apples as Hood River if the fruit men would only take ing, $22.50; rolled, $28. N ew Zealand Favors C an ada. Findlay, O ., Nov. 15.— The grand Lima, Peru, Nov. 14.— Although Thomas C. Platt is said to have made who were in the habit of renting win Rye— $1.40(31.45 per cwt. the proper steps to eliminate pests. Ottawa, Ont., Nov. 16.— The Canadi jury today found indictments against there exists no law to the contrary, the out his resignation as United States dows along the route usually taken by Corn — Whole, $25.50; cracked, an commission reports that substantial John D. Rockefeller and three other royal processions have been approached The society decided to have a fruit ex government today refused to allow a senator from New York. $26.50 ]>er ton. hibit December 15 next. preferences are given to Canadian goods persons in connection with the Stand local firm of hankers to ship 12,000 sil by mysterious persons who wish to rent Hay— Valley timothy, No. 1, $11 (it over those of the United States in the Citiiens of Honolulu have 8ul«crit>cd not only windows, but entire rooms for ard Oil inquiry, which was reo|>ened ver sols (about $60,000) to London. 12 per ton ; Eastern Oregon timothy, new tariff adopted by New Zealand. money to return the Royal llawaiain the day when the king of Greece ar C ra w fo rd fo r Judge. upon the reconvening of that Isslv in Furthermore, the authorities are search $ I4 # 1 6 ; clover, $7#8; cheat, $7.50(2 band members to their homes. Salem— Governor Chamberlain ha* rives here. The police believe this is On many classes tlie tariff on United adjourned session yesterday. What ing the baggage of passengers leaving 8.50; grain hay, $7.50(28.50; alfalfa, States goods w ill be 20 or 30 per cent these indictments allege or who are the the country, and all silver coin in ex The trial of the sugart rust, charged vldence of an anarchist plot, like announced that he w ill appoint T. H. $11.50; vetch hay, $7(2 7.50. raw told, of La Grande, to succeed above that on Canadian goods. On bi four other defendant« in addition to Mr. cess of 10 sols is being seized. The Madrid aginst King with accepting rebates, has l>egun in the one at Fruits— Apples, common to choice, The price of silver in Pern is advancing, the United States Circuit court in New Victor Emmanuel and the King of Roiiert Knkin a* circuit judge in the 50(275e per box; choice to fancy, $ 1 (2 c y c le , gas and oil engines, gum boots, Rockefeller, was not given out. printing paper, railways and tramways, bench warrants issued on the indict and the ministry of finance has been Greece. King George of Greece is ex Tenth judicial district, when Judge Ea- York. 2.50; grapes, 60c#$1.25 per crate; kin goc* to the Supreme bench in Jan sail cloth, canvas, surgical ami dental ments were placed in the linmls of in conference with local hankers, finan pected here November 23. The government has begun a suit to uary. Other men who were in consid pears, 75c#$1.25; cranberries, $10(3 instruments United States products w ill Sheriff Grover, who this afternoon took ciers, merchants and memliers of con 10.50 per barrel; quinces, $1 (21.25 per dissolve the Standard Oil company. eration for tlie circuit judgeship were lie taxed a duty of 20 per cent while them anil went to Clevelannd. B lizzard In C o lo ra d o . gress to discuss action in the premises. box; persimmons, $1.50 per box. the Canadian products w ill enter free. A San Francisco grand jury has in Trinidad, Colo., Nov. 20.— The worst Turner Oliver and W . M. Kiamsey, of Vegetables— Cabbage, 1 (21 ^ c per Iai Grande, and D. W . Shea hail, of dieted Ruef and Schmita for extortion. blizzard experienced here in a decade is C om m end T e ach ing S ystem . M o re Peonage Indictm ents. pound; cauliflower, $1.25 per doaen; Believed C a s tro I * D ead . now raging. The storm started venter Enterprise. Crawford w ill serve under celery, 75( 2 86c per doaen; lettuce, New York, Nov. 15.— After two days’ Mobile, Ala., Nov. 14.— Another in- A civil war among the Moqui Indians this appointment until July, 1908. day and gradually grew in severity un Fort de France, Martinique, Nov. 16. inspei'tion, the English teachers who lictinent charging conspiracy to Com head, 20o per doaen; onions, 10 # 12 ^4 c in New Mexico has been suppressed by til today, when it assutm*d the propor per doaen; pumpkins, 14£c per pound; — The Dutch cruiser Kortenaer arrived came here to study Unite«! States meth- mit peonage was returned last night cavalry. Big O p tion on T im b e r Lands tions of a blizzard, It is almost im spinach, 4( 2 5c per pound; tomatoes, here hxiay from Willemstadt, island of sls of eduoation have discovered several by the United States grand jury at Pcn- Both paertie* in Colorado are re possible to make headway along the Ataoria— An option covering the sale 80(250c ¡s r box; parsley, 10(815c; Curacao, with the story that at the good ideas which they intend to sug socola, Fla., against W. S. Harlan, solved to work for the repeal of woman streets. The Colorado <fc Southern of 9,040 acres of timber lands, .8,200 squash. 1(31 * 41 ' per pound; turnips, ime of her departure from Curacao, it gest to the authorities in England. manager of the Jackson Lumber com suffrage. railroad reports the storm extending acres lieing located in the northern 1H)c(g$ 1 per sack ; carrots, 90c#$l per was reported there persistently that They like our system of medical inspec pany, of Lockport, A la .; Robert Galla Into the Panhandle of Texas. The part of Tillamook county and 6,840 sack; lieets, $1.25(31.50 per sack; President Castro was dead, but that his tion, our law which requires children gher Woods, foreman of the company; The Southern Pacific will add a thin! Santa Fe reports blizzards along its acres in the southern part of Clatsop horseradish, 9 # 10c per pound; sweet leath was being concealed by the Ven- !s-tween the ages of 14 and 15 ytars to Oscar Sanders, an interpreter, and John through train between Portland and line clear to Kingsley, Kan. In North county, at $2« per acre, has lieen filed potatoes, 2(22X per pound. eanelan government in onler to main attend evening schools if they work in Atw ell, a deputy sheriff of Walton Ban Francisco. The Kort«*naer the daytime, our discipline, which they county. The indictments relate to a ern New Mexico the blizzard is the for record in the county clerk’s office. Onions — Oregon, 75c(2$ 1 per hun tain itself in power. The lands belong to A. \V. Priest and dred. has received orders to hasten her prep- all describe as “ easy,” and certain conspiracy to detain against their w ills The high water wrecked the ware worst. the option for 80 days was given to R. house of the Western Idaho Sugur com rations and to leave Fort de France for features of our kindergarten work. and commit to a condition of peonage Potatoes — Oregon Burbanks, fancy, V. Jones and R. E. Fox, of Portland, 70#86c; common, 60(370c. S cho larsh ips fo r Em ployes' Sons. La Guayra, Venezuela, if the death of More teachers w ill arrive this week. pany at Nampa. two foreigners. New Westminster, B. C., Nov. 20.— and »old hy them to Godfrey von Platen. Blitter— Fancy creamery, 25(3 27 l*c President Castro is confirmed. Two were killed and two others are The Canadian Pacific Railway company Ahead o f S chedu la. W ould Line C an al W ith C o n c re te , per pound. dying as a result of a Uittle with rob Bodies T o Be E xhu m ed. has decided to endeavor to advance R ac*» fo r th * Land O ffic e . Colon, Nov. 15.— The first trip of an Egg»— Oregon ranch, 85c per doaen. bers in San Francisco. Louisville, K y., Nov. 14.— A plan higher education among the sons of Chicago, Nov. 16.— Zaslaw Palovicx, American president outside of the for a concrete maratime highway across North Rend— Tlie announcement by Poultry — Average old hens, 10# 11c Japan 1 has just launched a battleship their employes, ami Is now offering the land department that contest filings per pound; mixed chickens, 10(31 l c ; who was injured in the recent wm-k boumlaries of the United State* was the isthmus of Panama, to be used as a of 19,000 tons. I t is equal and perhaps two scholarships to I k » competed for by would ho received in a number of In spring, 10# 11c; old roosters, 9(210c; on the Baltimore A Ohio railroad at successfully concluded vesteniay after substitute for the ditch as at present superior to anything afloat. employes’ sons under 21 years of age. dian allotment claims has caused many dressed chickens, IS # 14c; turkeys, Woodville, Ind., died today. His death noon at half past one, when the battle projected, has been submitted to Pres Much ship Louisiana, having on beard Presi ident Roosevelt by Colonel Alexander Three Americans and six Mexicans The scholarships cover four years tui horse races from points in Curry county live, 1 7 lic; turkeys, dressed, choice, makes the total fatalities 51. It is 2 0 # 23c; gel's«', live, 9#91$c; ducks, lisxatisfartion has been raused among dent Roosevelt and his party, dropped Hoagland. known throughout the were killed by a premature explosion tion in the faculty of applied science to the land office in Rnselnirg. in McGill university. The examina a 1 legist only such Indians and half- 14#l5e. the survivors of the wreck over the fact anchor in the harbor of Colon. The United State* as the "Father of the of dynamite at Douglas, Arimna. tions will be held under the supervis breeds as liclong to trilies or live on Veal— Pressed, 5)4#8<4c per pound. that the dead, the majority of whom Louisiana, which arrived ahead of Curfew.” The plan is now in the Finland authorities have seised about ion of the faculty of McGill university. reservations are entitled to allotment Beef — I tressed bulls, 2(32 tyo per were Roman Catholics, hail been buried schedule time, was convoyed by the hands of the canal commission. It con 0,000 rifles and 118,000 cartridges in- Loral church Tennessee and the Washington. They templates the building of a concrete claims. pound; cows, 4 # 5 c; country steers, without religious rites. for Russian revolutionist«. officials have arranged with the railroad anchored during a heavy rainfall. Kansas In G rip o f B lizzard . 60S 4c. highway 30 feet above sea level. M u ch W heat at W aaton. Topeka, Kan., Nov. 20. — The bliz Mutton — Pressed, fancy, 8#9c per to have the Imdiee dug upand reburied. A ll railroads in the United States are G en eral W illiam G. Ely. Weston— It is estimated that about a pmnd; ordinary, 6#7c. ready to give employes a raise of 10 zard Is general over Kansas late to M o re B o e rs on W a rp a th . T o ta l W aah h o f U nltad S ta te *. Pork— Pressed, 6#8e per pound. N o rw ich , Conn., Nov. 15.— G eneral par cent in order to prevent trouble at night. According to advices received piarter of a million bushels of w heat Cape Town, Nov. 14.— According to at the railroad offices here, snow com are stored in the warehouses in this vi- Hope— 190«, choice, 14<« 15c; prime, Washington, Nov. 16.— The total W illia m G . E ly died suddenly a t his the latest information received here, tha present time. menced falling hen» at a late hour. At inity. The local market has been 12(<« 18c; medium. 10f«'12c per pound wealth of the country in 1904 was home here last n ight of heart tronhle. the colony has been invaded by two Prealdent Roosevelt is seeing the many points In the western part of the dull, awaiting a solution of the car sit-1 Woo l" Eastern Oregon average l>est, $10«,881,415,000. according to figures H e commanded the E igh teenth Connec new parties of Boer freebooters in addi i naca I at its worst, as he desired. A state the cattlemen were caught un nation. It is thought that nearly five-1 IS# 18e per pound, according to shrink- j issue«! by the census bureau t«xlmy. In tic u t volunteers in th e C iv il w a r, and tion to the men operating under Fer pouring rain has fallen since his arriv prepared. So far railroad traffic in sixths of the crop is still in the hands age : valley, 20o* 21e, according to fine- 1890 th* total wealth wa* $«5,037,091 ,- w a* hrevetted brigadier general a t ita reira. The police have had an ineffect al ou the isthmus. Southern Kansas lias not been affeeted. of the growers* «low . ness; mohair, choice, 26(« 28c. 1197; in 1900, $«8,528,348,798. ual brush with the Ferrerai party. ,v