IIHGS OF THE WEEK 60,000 COME W EST. Spring Colonist Travel Breaks Previous Records. All Chicago, June 6.— During the brief period between March 1 and April 15, this spring, between 40,000 and 50,000 colonists, according to the various rail­ road managers, found new homes in the Pacific Northwest, in California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Utah, Colorado and Wyoming. The spring movement o f colonists is General Resume o f Important Events regarded as having broken the record of the spring o f 1909 by from 15 to 20 Presented In Condensed Form per cent. With the exception o f fig­ fo r Our Busy Readers. ures which were prepared by the man­ agement o f the Harriman lines, all fig­ ures of the colonist movement into Two San Jose women were found the Northwest are estimates. The fig­ dead beneath their over-turned auto. ures presented by the Harriman lines The International Horae Show is may be regarded as conservative and open in London, and King Edward is as being close to the actual movement. I Corresponding figures over the Bur- badly missed. I lington, the Northern Pacific and the Maya Indians in Yucatan have re­ Great Northern could not be obtained, belled against Mexico and sacked the as no detailed account is made of such town o f Valladolid. movement. The figures of the Har­ Railroads have agreed to withdraw riman lines show that during the six all proposed rate increases, pending a weeks of the spring movement a total of 16,542 persons found homes in the general conference. various states and territories men­ Congress has authorized Oregon and tioned. During the same period of Washington to fix the boundaries be­ 1909 only 13,947 colonists moved tween the two states. through the various gateways fed by Chairman Nelson, o f the Ballinger- the Harriman roads. This is an in­ Pinchot investigatin commission, says crease for the six weeks o f 2,595 col­ onists, or approximately 16 per cent. conservation has run riot. This comparison, however, does not The Illinois Central railroad has tell the whole story, as the movement been bilked about $2,000,000 by crook­ during 1909 continued 14 days longer ed officials and big shippers in col­ than the present movement. Reduced lusion. rates were in effect last year from Lightning struck the spectators at a March 1 to April 30. For some reason ball game in Pony, Montana, badly in­ unexplained the railroads decided this juring many and tearing off one wo­ year to reduce the colonist period from man’s corset and shoes. two months to six weeks. According­ The corruption fund which defeated ly, comparison can be made only be­ the fisheries bill in the Illinois legisla­ tween the entire period this year and ture has been traced to its source, and the corresponding six weeks of the The in­ it seems certain that the bribe-giver eight weeks’ period of 1909. crease in the total movement of the will be convicted. entire period this year was not suffi­ While swinging by his arm from cient, however, to make the move­ the limb of a tree, in Dillon, Mont., ment greater than that of last year. Frank Harkness, aged 12, struck the point of a pair of sheep shears, hung FARMERS GUIDED IN LOVE. on a nail in the tree with the blades outwards, the steel piercing the boy’s Kansas Professor Issues Bulletin on heart and instantly killing him. Matrimonial Reform. When George Cooke, paymaster for Current Events oí Interest Gathered From the World at Large. INDUSTRIAL B E L O P IH I OF IHE « $125,000 ON BIG RESERVOIR. 800,000 ACRES FOR M ARKET. Drews Valley Dam Will Be Finished Agents o f Oregon & Western Colon­ by Early Next Spring. ization Co. Go to Ins-uct Lands Vale— W. P. Davidson of the Oregon Lakeview— The Oregon Valley Land & Western Colonization company, has company has awarded the contract for acquired 800,000 acres in interior Ore­ the construction o f the Drews valley gon, accompanied by Curtis L. Mosher dam to E. S. Burney, involving $125,- and Frank L. Reider, of Portland, 000. The work is to be finished by left Vale last week in an automobile May 1, 1911. This insures water for for Burns and interior Oregon. Cur­ tis L. Mosher stated that they are on irrigating purposes next season. a trip across the state to classify the The dam will be 65 feet high, with a land holdings for the market. base o f 140 feet and the top 12 feet From Burns their way lies by the wide. It will be built o f rock entirely, way o f Prineville, Lebanon, Albany and on to Portland, where they expect the lower part being faced with solid to arrive within 30 days. Mr. Mosh­ masonry, while the upper part will be er, who is manager of the company’s faced temporarily with lumber, the publicity department, stated that he cost of cement at this time making had already taken 40 views in the such action advisable. When com­ Malheur valley, most o f which are to pleted the dam will hold 6,000 acre be used in the advertising campaign in feet of water. bringing settlers into Oregon. I t is expected that the contract for building the flumes will be let next NEW BERRY IS PRODUCED. week. Work throughout the project will be pushed from now on. The main flume in Drews creek canyon will Benson's Oregonian Strawberries be about two miles in length, it being Have Rich Mellow Flavor. 12 feet wide and 6 feet in depth. Silverton— A fter seven years o f ex­ Practically all o f the lumber is ready, perimenting by C. A. Benson, of Sil­ and the work is well in hand. verton, Or., a new strawberry has come into existence. It is known as Central Oregon Auto Road. “ Benson’s Oregonians.” The berry Bend— Agreements have been drawn has a rich, mellowy flavor, which is up between a number o f homestead lo­ very distinctive, entitling it to a name cating firms here for the building and apart. The berry was produced by clearing of 30 miles of highway which, cross-pollinating the native wild vari­ when completed within a few weeks, eties with some of the best Eastern will make Bend the radial point o f a tame ones. The berries have an unusually deli­ 275-mile automobile road, the equal of which is not to be found any place in cious flavor for their size, or any other size, for that matter. They are large, the state. The work in contemplation embraces oval shaped and a glossy red in color. a strip 30 miles long in Northeastern There is an absence of the dry, pulpy Lake county, through which a roadway taste so common in the large berries. will be cut to connect the present Mr. Benson has shipped a few to Chi­ Bend-Burns road with the road from cago and has found them excellent for Silver Lake to Burns. The road now long hauls, though only a very few being used by locators for a distance of j have been marketed. 90 miles east of Bend is one of the Oregon Lands on List. finest auto highways in the state. With the completion of the new road, Washington — It is estimated that work on which has already been start­ more than a million acres of land have Topeka, Kan., June 6.— “ Farmers ed, autos leaving Bend will be able to been restored to entry from the forest the Hans Rees Sons’ Tannery, Ashe­ ville, N. C., reached the company’s know much more of a specific and re­ swing around a circuit totaling 275 reserves of the Pinchot regime since office, after drawing $5,000 out of the liable nature about preparing their miles. The route lies east and south : Secretary of the Interior Ballinger in­ bank to meet payrolls, he found to his hogs for the livestock market than from here to the northwestern corner augurated his ideas of conservation utter astonishment that the money was they do about preparing their sons and o f Harney county, thence south and and made them effective. Ballinger holds that many o f the not in the suitcase where he had placed daughters for the matrimonial market. west to Silver Lake, thence north and withdrawals were made without legal it. He believes he was a victim o f a All these important matters are left to west to Bend. ! authority and that vast stretches that chance and accident because we have shrewd broad daylight robbery. [ never could be available for forest Berry Growers Will Lose. been laboring under the foolish delu­ I t is believed that sentiment in the Hood River — The unusually warm were included in President Roosevelt’s sion that love is blind and not to be in­ South is turning against prohibition. weather of the past few days will re­ I sweeping withdrawals o f land from fluenced by instruction or reason.” President T a ft views the increase of This is the text of an official “ score sult in great loss to the berry growers entry. The following restorations are an­ Socialism with considerable apprehen­ card on matrimony,” issued by W. A. o f the Hood River valley. The num­ Pocatello, Idaho, 22,326 sion. McKeever, professor of philosophy at ber of pickers in the field are not able nounced: acres; San Isabel, Colo., 100,065 acres; King George has called a conference the Kansas State Agricultural college, to cope with the situation and as a re­ Wallowa, Or., 23,635 acres. sult hundreds of crates of strawberries o f party leaders to settle the house of in a bulletin just issued to farmers of are left on the vines and must be the state. lords dispute. Complains That Stock is Killed. As a foundation for matrimonial re­ picked as overripe and sold at small An equestrian statue of General Cus­ form which Professor McKeever will figure. The crate shortage will also Salem— Frank L. Smith o f Portland ter has been unveiled at Monroe, Mich­ inaugurate in Kansas, the qualifica­ cause many to lose a portion of their has filed vigorous complaint against igan, Custer’s home. tions of the young man and young wo­ crop. F ifty thousand crates have been the Oregon Railroad & Navigation James M. Lynch has been re-elected man who apply for marriage licenses distributed by the Hood River box fac­ company, in which he alleges that president of the International Typo­ should be passed upon by the probate tory to date, and the fact that the stock shipped over that road is treated judge of each county, he says. This berry season is nearly two weeks ear­ in a cruel manner, that it is half graphical union by 22,000 majority. official, he contends, should be empow­ lier than usual has crowded the factory starved and even killed in transit. A ll union teamsters and 250 union ered by state law to hold an examina­ to meet demands. Many o f the grow­ Smith says his damage has been great machinists of Portland, Or., are on tion and inquire into the fitness of men ers refused to sign up for crates early during the past few months, and wants strike for higher pay and shorter hours. and women seeking marriage. in the season so as to give the local to know what relief can be had factory a basis to work on and these through the railroad commission. A A wealthy man o f Ottawa, 111., has will be the heaviest losers. It is esti­ recent shipment from Council, Idaho, bequeathed $50,000 to aid worthy SH IP BRAKE IS REJECTED. mated that the crop this year will be he says, was on the road from seven to young men, provided they do not study about 100,000 crates. Solid trains of ten days. theology. Attachment Would Retard Vessel Also strawberries will leave Hood River for Mrs. Helen Flagg Young, superin­ When Speed is Sought. the East in a few days. Huge Raft Goes to Sea. tendent o f schools o f Chicago, was Astoria— Containing between 5,000,- Washington, June 6. — Although it given a reception by five thousand State Bank Ready for Business. 000 and 6,000,000 feet o f lumber, the was demonstrated by trial on the bat­ teachers of that city. Riddle— The new state bank o f Rid­ first cigar-shaped log raft to go out of tleship Indiana that what is known as A suit for $100,000 damages for the “ ship brake” would undoubtedly dle has just opened for business. The the Columbia river this season is in false imprisonment has been begun by stop a vessel in somewhat less time most modern safes and furniture have tow of the steamer George W. Fenwick a Los Angeles man against the Bums than where it was not empolyed, the been installed. J. B. Ridddle, pioneer for San Francisco. The raft was dis­ & Sheridan Detective agency. device has been found unsuitable for and founder of the town, is president. patched by the Hammond Lumber com­ The bank is backed by Eastern capital. pany. Two or three more of these Excessive heat has injured the raisin naval usage. The Atkins Real Estate company mammoth rafts composed of piling will The naval board which conducted the grape crop of California. test holds that the brake, which re­ has opened offices and is already doing be sent to the Bay City by the Ham­ It is reported that Madriz has lost sembles a'barn door on either side of a large business, as intending purchas­ mond company this season. The sec­ all his artillery and 400 prisoners. the ship, would soon become clogged ers are arriving on nearly every train. ond one is under construction. Ex-governor Folk o f Missouri, would with barnacles unless constantly em­ This usually quiet town is attracting Big Log Drive. like the Democratic nomination for ployed. It would also increase the much attention from Eastern people, danger from torpedo attack, be a grave who are looking for safe investments. president in 1912. Coburg The Booth-Kelly company menace in close evolutions and retard The climate and soil at Riddle are not has started the largest log drive down A banker o f Minneapolis has been the speed o f the ship. surpassed by any locality in the state. the McKenzie river that ever floated fined $5,000 for smuggling two pearl down that stream. There are 10,000,- necklaces at Hoboken, N. J. Orchard Company Adds More Land 000 feet in the drive. It will take $20,000,000 In Stores. T a ft would appoint Roosevelt chair­ Medford—J. A. Westerlund, presi­ almost a month to bring it to Coburg. Albany, N. Y., June 6.— The May man o f a commission to tour the world Department Stores company, of New dent o f the Western Oregon Orchards in the interest o f uiversal peace. PO R TLA N D M AR K E TS. York, capitalized at $20,000,000, was company, has purchased the C. R. A prisoner at San Quentin, Cal., incorporated today to conduct general Pidgeon place of 160 acres o f fruit Wheat—Track prices: Bluestem, 84 haunted by the face o f his victim, has department stores. O f the capital land for $6,000. This tract joins the confessed to killing a man in a boxcar stock, $5,000,000 is to be 7 per cent company’s large holdings and makes Or/ 85c; club, 80@81c; red Russian, 78c; cumulative preferred, and $15,000,000 its orchard probably one of the larg­ valley, 84c. at Spokane. Barley— Feed and brewing, $21®22. The papers say that the est on the coast, namely, 3,003 acres, Interest is growing rapidly in the common. Corn— Whole, $33; cracked, $34 ton. proposed long-distance aeroplane races company intends to take over the prop­ o f which 1,250 acres are planted to Hay— Track prices: Timothy, W il­ in the United States, and many big erty of the Schoenberg Mercantile com­ pears and apples. The oldest and first lamette valley, $20fn21 per ton; East­ pany, o f St. Louis; the May Shoe and planted trees will this year bear their purses will be offered. first crop. Mr. Westerlund intends to ern Oregon, $22(325; alfalfa, $15(316; The trial of the “ golden rule” chief Clothing company, of Denver; and the plant about 80 acres o f the Pidgeon grain hay, $17(i/il8. May company, of Ohio. The company of police o f Cleveland, Ohio, on charges Oats— No. 1 white, $26®27 per ton. tract next winter to apples and pears. of immorality and drunkeness have paid an organization tax o f $10,000. Fresh Fruits — Strawberries, 90c (3 failed almost entirely. $1.50 per crate; apples, $1.50®3 per Fruit Prospects Good. Hair Cut From Corpses. A British army officer in an Am eri­ Cottage Grove -N e v e r better were box; cherries, 75c(d $1.26; gooseber­ Victoria, B. C., June 6.— Women in can aeroplane crossed the English the promises for a large crop in Cot­ ries, 3®4c per pound. the United States who purchase switch­ Potatoes — Carload buying prices: channel and then returned, without es o f black hair will be interested to tage Grove territory than at present. Oregon, 40c per hundred; sweet pota­ alighting, in 90 minutes. know that a crusade has been begun by Early in the season it was predicted by toes, 4c per pound. Suit has been commenced to set the Chinese government against farmers and fruitgrowers that the Vegetables— Artichokes, 60(375c per aside railroad land grants in Oregon Chinese who supply human hair for crop would be of the bumper propor­ ’ dozen; asparagus, $1.25fi/2 per box; aggregating 3,000,000 acres, and now shipment to America. It seems that tions, and this prediction is besoming \ head lettuce, 50c® 1 per dozen; hot­ valued at about $50,000,000. a charitable institution of Canton a certainty. The heavy and frequent house lettuce, 50c m l per box; green East and Middle West railroads have which buries large numbers o f paupers spring rains, warm weather and sun­ ; onions. 15c per dozen; radishes, 15® filed notice of an increase in freight whose relatives are unable to provide shine have been as if especially ordered | 20c; rhubarb, 2c per pound; spinach, rates, nearly every road in the country coffins found the hair dealers exhuming for this section, and the fruit crop will 8(o 10c; rutabagas, $1.25®1.50 per now having given such notice. corpses to recover the hair, and when more than make up for last year. | sack; carrots, 85c®$l; beets, $1.50; this action was reported to the author­ , parsnips, 75c®$l. It is reported that an American en­ Railway Extending Lines, ities action was taken against them. Putter— City creamery, extras, 29c; gineer operating with the Estrada Eugene—Construction has begun on fancy outside creamery, 28(0 29c; store, forces in Nicaragua has been captured the College Hill loop o f the street Ecuador Recalls Army. 20c. Butter fat prices average lj^ c by Madriz, and the government has Washington, June 6.— The State de- j railway system. Rails have been dis­ per pound under regular butter prices. been asked to procure his release. partment is officially advised that the tributed along Willamette street past Eggs— Current receipts, 23(323'4c; Charles H. Treat, ex-treasurer of the movement of the Ecuadorean army Hill Crest. Ties are distributed along ordinary candled, 25c; extra, 26c. Manager O’Connor says from the Feruvian frontier began yes- | the street. United States, died of apoplexy. Pork—Fancy, 126113 c per pound. terday. President Alfaro, in his mes­ that cars will be running over the en­ Veal— Fancy, 9 '..(it 10c per pound. Four principal British colonies in sage to the Ecuadorean congress, called tire route by July 4, if there are no un­ Lambs— Fancy, 9®12c per pound. South Africa have formed a union. in extraordinary session, stated that foreseen delays. Poultry— Hens, 19c; broilers, 28(3: A tidal wave swept the Oregon coast Ecuador warmly accepted the offer o f j 30c; ducks, 21 hi 25c; geese, 121 c; Berry Men Cry fo r Help. at Tillamook, damaging the tramway mediation by the governments of the | turkeys, live, 20m 22c; dressed, 25c; o f the life-saving station. United States, Brazil and Argentina, | Salem— The Mutual Canning com- j squabs, $3 per dozen. and that he had expressed his apprecia­ pany is deluged with strawberries, and Cattle— Beef steers, good to choice, Twenty-five Western railroads were tion to the mediating powers. has called on City Superintendent of $5.75(35.90; fair to medium, $4.50m enjoined from putting into force on Schools Powers for help to handle the 5; cows and heifers, good to choice, June 1, a general advance in freight crop. Mr. Powers has arranged to ex­ $4.50(35; fair to medium, $4(34.76; First Nome Boat Arrives. rates. Nome, Alaska, June 6.— The steam- \ cuse about 150 boys and girls whose bulls, $3(34; stags, $3(35; calves, President T aft told Bryn Mawr stu­ ship Corwin, which left Seattle May standings are such that they will not light, $6(3)7; heavy, $4(35.50. dents that educated women make the 10, arrived yesterday after a hard bat­ be affected by the loss o f two or three Hogs- Top, $10(310.25; fair to me­ best companions, also that unmarried tle with the Behring Sea ice, in which, weeks of school. dium, $9(310;. women are not necessarily failures. however, she sustained no serious dam­ Sheep— Best wethers, $4.50(34.75; Breaking Much Sod. An effort is being made to bring age. A ll were well on board. The fair to good, $4(34.25; best ewes, about a conference of representatives usual demonstration was made, the en­ Enterprise — Farmers report that $3.75(34; lambs, choice, $5.50(36; fair, of the United States, Great Britain, tire population of the camp going to more sod land has been broken this $4.75® 5.25. Japan and Russia with a view of agree­ the beach to greet the first boat. Nome year than in the previous two seasons. Hops — 1909 crop, 11® 14c; olds, ing on the terms o f a treaty for the has been cut off from direct communi­ Much of the work is being done by nominal; 1910 contracts, nominal. protection of fur seals in the North cation with the active warld since last new settlers 'who have been arriving Wool -Eastern Oregon, 14(317c; val­ Pacific ocean. fall. in large numbers for 12 months. ley, 16m 18c; mohair, choice, 32®33c. SIX S T A T E S FAVOR INCOME TAX Five * Reject, Tw o Postpone—Final Result in Three Years, Washington, June 4 . — Six states thus far through their legislatures have ratified the income tax amend­ ment to the constitution, five have re­ jected it and two have postponed ac­ tion. Most of the states will act during the coming winter or the winter fol­ lowing, and the fate of the amendment will be definitely known in two or three years at the very latest. I f 12 states vote adversely on the amend­ ment it w ill be defeated, but it re­ mains to be seen whether 12 states will venture into the opposition column. Friends o f the income tax express the fullest confidence that the amend­ ment ultimately will be adopted, and believe that one or two of the states now on record against it Will reverse their attitude when new legislatures are chosen. The six Btates that have voted to ratify this amendment are Alabama, South Carolina, Illinois, Maryland, Kentucky and Mississippi. The states voting adversely are New York, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, V irginia and Louisiana, while Georgia and New Jersey have postponed a vote until the next session of their legislatures. Senator Norris Brown, o f Nebraska, who has kept close tab on the income tax fight, and who was one o f the fore­ most advocates of the income tax while the tariff bill was before congress last session, predicts that the income tax amendment w ill be a part of the constitution within three years. He believes that more than three-fourths of the states will support it, and says it will be indorsed in every state where the income tax is made a politi­ cal issue in the legislative campaign. He concedes that Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and some of the New England states will be among the op­ position, but all o f this was expected when the fight opened. New York, however, he believes will in the end fall in line and vote to ratify the amendment. According to Senator Brown, all the stales of the West without exception, will ratify the income tax amendment, most of them during the coming Win­ ter. He predicts also that the South­ ern states will ratify it within two years. Virginia failed to ratify be­ cause the speaker of the Virginiajhouse was able to bring about an adverse vote. This vote, Brown believes, may be reversed, particularly i f the income tax is made an issue in Virginia. The same thing may be done in Massachu­ setts, though the chances there are not particularly favorable, he opines. INCREASE OF WAGES T O KAISER High o f Cost Living Affects ial Household. Imper­ Berlin, June 4.— A semi-official de­ claration was issued today explaining the causes o f the financial stress under which the emperor finds himself and the requirement for an increase in the civil list o f the king 'o f Prussia as agreed upon by the leaders o f the Prus­ sian Diet yesterday. I t has been decided to introduce a bill to bring His Majesty’s allowance up to $5,000,000. The public is reminded that the Prussian crown surrendered! to the state in 1820 properties yielding at that time nearly $2,000,000 annually and the value of which has been great­ ly augmented since. The increased cost o f living renders the present al­ lowance inadequate, the statement says. Each year his support of the court theaters alone costs the emperor $700,- 000, and in recent years he has in­ creased the salaries of the middle and lower employes of the imperial house­ hold by a total of $250,000. Spring Clean-Up $1,176,000. Nome, Alaska, June 4.— The Spring gold clean-up of the Nome district is estimated at $1,175,000. A large por­ tion o f this will come from third beach mines. Candle creek will contribute $300,000 and the creeks o f the Kou- garok will yield $200,000. The first sluicing of the year began here yester­ day but telephone messages from points further from the ocean say the weather is still too cold for work. There will be no lack o f water this summer. The Spring output o f the Innoko and Idita- rod is estimated at $1,250,000. Boat Burns O ff Alcatraz San Francisco, June 4 . — The City of Rafael, a small stern wheel freight boat plying between this city and San Rafael, burned to the water’s edge in the middle of the bay off Alcatraz Island shortly after 11 o’ clock last night. So rapidly did the flames spread several members o f the crew leaped overboard and were picked up by launches and two fireboats which went out to assistance o f the burning vessel. Considerable excitement was caused by report the that the burning vesse was one of the large ferry boats. IGNORE RATE ACT FIRE BLIGHT IN APPLE TREES A Brief Description o. the and Its Cure. Disease By H. S. Jackaon, Onufun Agricultural Colle$r«t, Corvallis. Railroads Prepare to Raise Com­ modity Tariffs July 1st. Shippers Take Immediate Steps to Secure Injunction— Roads Pre­ pared for Stubborn Fight. Chicago, June 2.— Ignoring the ac­ tion of the government in obtaining a court order restraining an increase in rates, Eastern railroads today filed with the Interstate Commerce commis­ sion at Washington tariffs of increased commodity rates to take effect July 1. Hearing of the unexpected action of the Eastern railroads, shippers, repre­ sented by the Illinois Manufacturers’ association, took immediate steps to secure action by the government simi­ lar to that taken with respect to West­ ern increases. J. M. Glenn, secretary of the associ­ ation, issued a circular similar to the one issued by his association in the Western cases and sent copies of it to all congressmen and senators and to the attorney general and to the presi­ dent. The members of the association ex­ pect as a result a bill will be filed in one of the Eastern cities to restrain the Eastern railroads from putting the new rates into effect. No class rates are affected and not more than 50 per cent, possibly only 40 per cent, o f the commodity rates are involved. The increases will be im­ posed upon all shipments in the terri­ tory between the Mississippi river and the Atlantic seaboard and north of the Ohio river to the Canadian border. It is stated that approximately 60 per cent o f the business in the vast territory over which the increase will pertain is done on commodity rates. {T R U S T STO O D BY EM PLO YES Havemeyer Left Orders to Care for Crooked Weighers. New York, June 2.— That the late H. O. Havemeyer, ex-president of the American Sugar Refining company, gave directions two weeks before his death in 1907 to “ take care o f the boys” was part o f the testimony heard today in the trial of three officials of the company charged with complicity in a conspiracy to defraud the govern­ ment o f customs duties. Ernest W. Gerbracht, refinery super­ intendent; James F. Bandernagel, ex­ cashier of the refinery, and Charles P. Heike, secretary-treasurer o f the com­ pany, are the three on trial. “ Take care o f those boys; get coun­ sel for them; see them through it,” were the orders Gerbracht said he re­ ceived from Havemeyer when he in­ formed him after the first arrest of checkers that the men insisted on their innocence. “ Taking care of the boys,” Ger­ bracht later testified, had extended to paying their wages from the day they left the company’s service until the present time. The salary of Oliver Spitzer, ex-dock superintendent, who was pardoned from the Atlanta penitentiary by Pres­ ident Taft, Gerbracht said, was paid to Mrs. Spitzer while her husband was in prison and he believed she was still getting it. $40,000 RACE PROPOSED. Fat Purses Offered for Three-C or­ nered Aeroplane Flight. St. Louis, June 2.— A. B. Lambert, president o f the Aero club o f St. Louis, announced tonight plans for an aeroplane race over a triangular course from Chicago to Indianapolis, thence to St. Louis, thence to Chicago. The purse is expected to be about $40,000. O f this amount, the three aero clubs in St. Louis, Chicago and Indianapolis will provide $5,000 each, and the balance will be made up from the 70 or more towns along the pro­ posed course. The race probably will be held in October. Verdict Staggers Road. Aberdeen, Wash., June 2.— Re-ar­ rangement o f plans for entering this city, with the possibility that the rail­ road may end at Cosmopolis, is rumor­ ed concerning the Grays Harbor & Pu­ get Sound (Union Pacific) railway as the result o f the entirely unexpected verdict o f $71,000 secured in a con­ demnation suit by the Vulcan Iron Works, o f Aberdeen. Whethef this verdict will be accepted is not yet stated, nor has it been determined to appeal, word being awaited from head Harriman officials in this state. Hail Damages Nashville. Nashville, Tenn., June 2.— A hail and wind storm which lasted less than ten minutes today and which swept a territory in and near this city less than a mile wide and four miles long caused damage to the amount of many thous­ and dollars. The Reid-Avenue Christ­ ian church was so badly wrecked that it will have to be torn down. Many trees were uprooted and streetcar traf­ fic was demoralized. Three streetcars on a viaduct narrowly missed being tossed to the ground below by the wind. Conductor Takes Blame. Oakland, Cal., June 4.— W. J. Hol- dorf, the Oakland traction conductor, in a signed statement to his employer, has taken all responsibility fc the Leona Heights wreck on Memorial Jay, in which four persons were killed and a score o f others seriously injured. He surrendered himself to the police and was today charged with manslaughter Each Shot Hits Bullseye. and released upon his own recogniz­ Norfolk, Va., June 2.— A new world’s ance, pending the verdict of the cor­ record for big gun shooting has been oner’s jury, which will meet June 7. made by Coxswain John R. Edwards, of the new battleship South Carolina. Theft Covered by Storm. With her No. 4 after turret 12-inch Salinas, Kan., June 4 . — During a guns he made 16 "bullseye” target thunder storm last night three men hits out o f 16 shots in 4 :51. Edwards broke into the postoffice at Kanopolis, is under 21 years old, is on his first 30 miles west o f here, loaded the safe enlistment His home is in Roadhouse, on a truck and took it some distance III. It is said aboard the South Caro­ away, where it was cracked open. Six lina that the gunnery, just completed, hundred dollars in cash and $1,000 in will make her No. 1 in the navy. stamps were taken. Madero Will Be Diaz's Rival. Italians Stone Princes. Monterey, Mex., June 2.— I t the Detmold, Lippe, June 4 . — Prince first official issue of the orgrn of the Leopold IV, the reigning prince of Anti-Re-Electionists club. El Republi­ Lippe, and his brother. Prince Julius, cano, published yesterday, Francisco were stoned by a gang o f Italian la­ Madero, a wealthy Haciendado of Neu- borers while motoring yesterday. va, Leon, announced himself as a can­ Prince Julius received a wound on the didate for president, and Dr. Francis head. Later several of the assailants W. Gomez asks support as vice-presi­ dent on the Anti-Re-Election tick et were arrested. Fire blight is the most serious of all the diseases which attack the pear and apple. It is a contagious disease of bacterial origin which, under proper conditions, may attack any part of the tree. Besides the pear and apple, the quince, wild crab apple, hawthorns, mountain ash, serviceberry and some other pomaceous trees are subject to attacks of this disease. Myriads of germs are present in all freshly blighted portions of the tree and in the sticky ooze exuding from rankers. The germs live almost en­ tirely in the sappy portion of the bark, though in some vigorous-growing vari­ eties of pears the germs have been known to invade the sap wood to a limited extenL Fire blight occurs in more or less severity in nearly all parts of the United States where pears and apples are grown. In Oregon fire blight has appeared in two general localities — one in the Southwestern part of the state, includ­ ing the Rogue River valley, the other in the Northeastern part. Beginning in the spring the first ap­ parent damage produced by the disease in an infected orchard is the blighting o f the blossomB. Infection is brought about by insects, principally bees, which have visited a case of hold-over blight and become covered with the organisms contained in the sticky ex­ udation, inoculating the flowers in their search for nectar. The organ­ isms divide and multiply in the nectar and are able to enter the living tissues through the unprotected nectaries. Having entered the tissues they quick­ ly blight the blossoms, pass down the blossom-stem and into the fruit spur, killing the tissues and cutting off the leaves from water supply, causing them to shrivel and dry, thus produc­ ing “ fruit spur blight.” The latter occurs several weeks after blossom in­ fection. In very serious cases nearly all the fruit spurs may be blighted in this way and the trees set no fruit. Usually the germs die out and do not grow into the tw ig or branch on which the spur occurs, but occasionally the germs may continue into the bark of the branch at the base of the fruit spur and form a typical canker. Fruit spurs on the larger branches are a fruitful source of body infection and many cases of blight canker originate in this way. The name “ fire blight” is given to this disease because of the characteris­ tic appearance of pear foliage on twigs or branches which have been killed by the organisms. The leaves turn black as though scorched by fire and fre­ quently remain on the tree during the following winter. It should be noted that this color o f the foliage is charac­ teristic of the pear when it has been killed during the growing seaaun. I f a grower not familiar with the pear blight desires to known how the “ twig blight” looks let him girdle a twig in mid-summer and watch the results. The cankers are also quite character­ istic, but are very variable in appear­ ance. The disease progresses most rapidly in the fleshy outer layer of the bark and at first produces a watery appearance in the affected area. Later the tissues of the bark are more or less broken down and the cankers become dark in color. Besides the blight cankers found on the limbs and trunks, one frequently finds in some varieties o f pears and Spitzenberg apples a larger canker at the surface of the ground extending up on the trunk for some distance and down the large roots. This condition is called “ collar rot,” and may result from a blight canker A pear tree when badly cankered is easily recognized at a distance in the early autumn by the general reddish cast to the foliage On the apple the foliage o f tw ig and fruit spur blight turns brown and dry. One of the most fruitful sources of infection has been by the pruning shears or saw. In pruning, i f an active canker is cut into, the tools be­ come infected and serve as inoculating instruments to spread the disease. The only method known o f control­ ling fire blight is to cut out all cases of cankers wherever they appear. Spraying with fungicides is o f only supplementary value and the various blight cures are worse than useless. Experience has shown that it is of little permanent value to attempt to cut out the fruit spur and tw ig blight as they appear. Unless these forms of the disease extend into the branches on which they occur and a canker is formed the disease usually becomes naturally limited and the germs gradu­ ally die. The efforts o f the grower should be directed to cutting out all cases o f blight canker and body canker during the fall, winter and early spring, when the cankers have become more or less limited in their growth and are not actively spreading. Summer cutting is intelligently ap­ plied is frequently of great value, particularly where there is only a little blight. In the autumn before the leaves fall is a good time to do the cut­ ting, as all cases o f tw ig blight are easily observed. The trees should be particularly ex­ amined for cases of the collar rot. It is this form o f the disease that causes many trees to be killed outright. In cutting out cankers it is neces­ sary that the tools be kept moist with some good disinfectant. I f this is not done each cut will reinocúlate the germs into the bark at the edges of the canker and the labor may thus be useless. Corrosive sublimate in a solution of one part to one thousand o f water has been found to be the most satisfactory disinfects®. The solution is a violent poison. It must be kept in glass. Information Free to Orchardists. The Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology o f the Agricultural College at Corvallis, Oregon, will be glad to answer inquiries relating to insect pests or plant diseases at any time. Always include with your in­ quiries as full a description o f the trouble as possible and send specimens for examinstion. Address Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology. Oregon Agricultural College, Corval­ lis, Oregon.