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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (April 2, 1908)
■ A* NEWBERG GRAPHIC Then L o o t Express Safas o f Valuobloa. LH W O O O W M è, NEWBERG............... . .OREGON NEWS OFTHE WEEK i C ietan tH F m h r Oír lay Mm. A R muitw o f tho Leas Important but N ot Loss Into rooting Events o f tho Post Wook. Stanford it adonta wont to remoro President Jordon. The Germon wonts Grlooom for om ine teed ot H ill. • H ie Notioool end Mexlosn Control railroad» o f Mexico hove merged. There is no m oteiiol change In the condition of Sene to Penrose, of Penn sylvania. Sir Henry Oxmpbell-Bonnermonn, Britieh premier, is in o very ferities! condition. Many Japanese ore being canght ot Son Diego making their woy into this country from Mexioo. The onxiliory ernioer Prairie ogroend ot League iolond navy yard. Ho damage woe dona. Tho absconding teller and auditor of the Pitta burg Harm era' Deposit Nation a l bonk arc bold in $260,000 boil eaoh. Twenty Toledo, 0 ., lumbermen bare t sentenoed to verve six months in ja il for violating the city ’s anti-trust Iowa. A Rom ion anarchist tried to throw o bomb at the polios of New York daring o riot of unemployed. A companion woa killed and he woa fatally wounded. Newton, Kan., March S I.— A . D. Bailey, an exprem messenger of the Welle-Fargo company, wee killed by an unknown person on Santa F t train No. 116, bet seen Florence and Newton, early Sunday morning. The murder wae very brats!, with robbery me the object. Both the torsi and the through mice were ransacked and at least $1,- 000 in money and soma jswalry taken. The amount the robbers secured is not known. The dead body of Messenger Bailey was found at 4 o’clock 8unday morning whan the train reached Newton. I t wae stretched on the floor oi the oar, the bead beaten to a palp and lying in a pool of blood. The back o f the skull was orushad and the and of the car where it was lying was spattered with blood. The plood spatters reached to the oeiling. There wae no evidence of 'any etrug- gle, the indications pointing to the commission of the murder while the meeaengrr was asleep, before he could offer resistance. . Bailey was seen alive at Strong C ity. A t Peabody someone opened the oar door juet enough to throw out a package of waybill« and then dosed it quickly. The one tom of the meaeenger haa been to go to sleep soon after leaving Flor ence and it ia possible that he did ; this Sunday n ig h t A fter being struck while sleeping, and rendered uncon scious, his body rolled to the floor, and the robber, after beating' him an the head, oovered it with the dead man’ s ooat. One blow was »truck at the man’a faoe with some sharp instrument, apparently a hatchet, which broke the jaw bone. From the dead man’ s pock ets the keys were removed and the safes ransacked. Then the keys were put back into B ailey’s overcoat, the coat folded and pot ha his grip, where it found later. O RD ER R A T E S C U T . The aaaaaain of W . D. Stevens has pleaded insanity. Commission Finds O . R. & N. Tolls A re Excessive. Sscretary Taft w ill deliver the Me Portland, March 81.— I t is under morial day oration at Grant’s tomb, stood the Oregon Railroad commission New York. w ill Boats in the complaint of the Port President Jordan defends the Stan land chamber of commerce against the ford faculty and denounces the atodenta’ O. R . A N . company and w ill iasne an movement aa a revolt. order this week requiring a material Congressmen French, of Idaho, redaction in class rates over the main propheaiee that no immigration meae- and branch lines of that road through out the state. nxe w ill pass oongreaa this eemion. The extent to phich existing tariffs A score of penoas were hurt by a w ill be affected by-, the ruling of the heavy wind im the vicinity of New commission cannot be learned, but the Boston .{Iowa, and Mrdieon, Illinois. effeot may be to disturb transcontinent The largest clock in the world w ill be al rates and, probably, to requlreanad n et on a soap factory at Thomaaton, justment all along the line in the inter Conn. Ti.e dial ia 28 feet la diameter. est both of the railroad and the shipper. Pitta burg bankers admit that the I f the decision of the commission ia at paying toller and auditor of (ha Farm- tacked by the Harriman interests it wlU be semi led undoubtedly on the ground era’ Deposit National bank have stolen that its enforcement would necessitate $1,106,000 during the peat three years. not only a wholesale revision by the The Britieh boose of commas» has railroad of its tariffs hot would serious b ill providing that all docks ly disturb interstate business. named advanced 80 minutes in order to use be ad vi I t ie expected that the findings of the daylight by promoting early ris commission w ill be made the basis of ing. litigation on the part of the railroad The general amenably of Virginia has company positively to teat the powers adopted a resolution removing Judge J. of the railroad com mi salon which, un W . G. Blackatone, o f the Eleventh cir der the act by which it was created, ia cuit, from office on grounds of immor authorised to fix rates. The members ality and groaa neglect of official doty. of the commission were cautious and. thorough in their inveatigation of the ... Indana Democrats have declared complaint of excessive freight chargee : themselves for Bryan. Ik is said the commissioners feel confi Rhode Island Republicans w ill send dent that their findings w ill be found to be fair and reasonable and such aa j yninstructed delegates. cannot be considered an abritrary exer Tramps are causing mneh trouble on cise of the authority with which they N il Pacific ooaat railroads. are clothed. v Iowa Democrats have indorsed Bryah Closely Guard Adams. ; and the Nebraska platform. Tellnride, Colo., March 31.— A m the The Illinois Republican convention result o i the attempt to murder Gene has indorsed Cannon and declared for ral Bulkley W ells, general manager of W i f f revision. the Smuggler-Union mines and mille at Adm iral Evans has answered the Pandora, Sheriff Fitspatrick ie taking aritica of the battleships, saying the precautions to guard the jail in which belt is not tod-low. Steve Adams, charged with the assasa- Railroads have ijegMed tp attack the nation of Arthur L. Collins. General The rate laws of Illin ois and Missouri un Wells* predaoeaaor, ie confined. feeling against Adams is becoming more der the Supreme court decision. bitter from day to day. The' oohdftion of Senator Penrose, of Feeling against Adams has also been Pennsylvania, ia m id to be very grave engendered, it ie said, because of the and little hope is held out for recovery. fact that during the past two weeks ful A aovare earthquake in the City of ly a score or more of miners and others Mexico greatly terrified the people, who w ire deported during strike days cracked numerosa walla and stopped have returned to the district. docks all over the city. W illiam s, Democratic leader of the house, has Offered to support some of Rooeevelt’a measures if he w ill secure come Republican votes, , The State department is without de tails of the reasons for Emperor W il liam refusing to receive Dr. H ill as amaamdor from the United States to Germany. RoeTa bail has been reduced from $1,116,000 to $790,186. / Louisiana’ s state primary law been declared unconstitutional. haa The fleet at Magdalena bay ia making rapid program with lte target practice. La PoDette aays Standard Oil and Morgan control the money o f the na tion. / United States Senator Penrose ia critically 111 at his home In Philadel phia. China haa invitad the battleship fleet to visit her porta. Drury Lane theater, ana of the moat famous in London, has been completely de it toyed by firs. Meny Days to Reach Bodies. Salt Lake City, Utah, March 31.— A special to the Herald from Hanna, Wyo., says: Seventy-one men are known to have lost their Uvea in Mina No. 1 of the Union Pacific Coal com pany, although 64 names are obtaina ble. Seventy-one coffins have been rushed to Hanna. The rescuing party is working heroically, but the bodies w ill possibly not be reached for several days, at ft w ill ha necessary to close the west Nope and smother the fires be low the tenth level and then draw off the large quantities of gas. Exiles Purchase Grave. Paris, March 31— The body of the lata Gregory Gerachonin, the Russian terrorist leader, who died recently in Switaerlend, wae buried today in Mont parnasse cemetery In a grave purchased by Russian exiles in Paris. Four tbonaand persons followed the hearae. The prooeaaion . was beaded by a ear carrying a mass of huge wreaths tied with red ribbons, which w en sgpt by American Socialist organisations, who wars represented by Anna Btrunsky. Six firemen were hart while fighting Another Plot Discovered. fire et Seventeenth and Valencia Port An Prince, March 81.— A fresh San JTraneisoo. conspiracy against the government haa Sen Francisco police have stopped a beeo discovered In this city. The leader play called “ Millionaire’ s Revenge,” o f the plot, General Larrsqne, who wae arrested on Marrh 14 on suspicion of founded on the Thaw conspiring against the president and John W . Stewart hew been appointed who was released with four others on United Stall " “ ‘ “ to March 24, took refuge this afternoon I the late In the Trench legation. a E X P L O S IO N IN M IN E . M ESSENG ER IS ROLLED. OREGON STATE IIENS OF INTEREST IN F O R M A T IO N IS C O S T L Y . C O W S ARE G O O D M ILK E R S . Than 810,000 Fxpended fo r Blooded Stock at O . A . O. Farm Enlightening Vetera. Shew Big Yields.' Salem— The sending out of the pun- Corvallis— An Ayrshire oow on the phlete containing the measures to be oollege farm, in the milk period of a voted upon at the general election in little more than tan months just closed, June, together with the arguments for has yielded 11,679 poundsX»f milk. The and againat them, haa been begun by amount of butter fat was 466.69 the secretary of state. Already over j pounds, equivalent of 644.47 pounds of 60,000 have been sent out to voter« | butter. A t 80 oenta par pound the whose names have been submitted to groaa value was $168.84. I t ooat to feed bar during the period $ 40 , leaving the secretary of state. The state printer haa prepared 100,- a net profit of $128.84. Her diet was 000 of them pamphlets in all at a coat alfalfa, w ith a very light ration of bran of $6,873.76. Of this amount the par- and* rolled oaks during til« summer, eons submitting the measures and argu and 16 pounds of vetch and oats bay, ments w ill have to pay $2,797.34 as 30 pounds of kale and eight pounds of ___ _ — __ ____ by j law. ____ The ___ bran and rolled barley during winter. their proportion, aa fixed total amount ool looted by the secretary I The animal la 6 years old, and came of state from the filers of the arguments 1 from the farm of Mrs. Honeyman, of la $2,900. An adjustment w ill ha made Portland. A 6-year old Holstein from the on a par page basis, and those who have paid more than their share w ill receive Frakas herd at Scappoom yielded over a refund, w hile the others who have 18,000 pounds of milk during a similar not paid their fo il percentage w ill have period, which closed in December, making a batter product ot over 620 to remit the difference. The postage (or the sending out of pounds. She has freshened, and ia these arguments w ill ooat shoot $8,000, now giving 70 pounds of milk par day. and the ooat of $6,878.76 w ill have to ibe addad to it before (he actual Horae Show at Salem. of getting oat the messore» can Salem— Elaborate preparation« are oertained, the amount of postage, the under way to make the horse show to eost for clerks engaged in mailing, ha bald in this city Saturday, .V A pril 4, about $260, and the coet of securing Hie the banner bona mir of the yi year in the names of voters. Willamette valley. A ll the oi tisane of Secretary of State Benton, it ia esti the Capita) City are taking bold of the mated, has saved about $8,000 in the work incident to each an undertaking getting up of the pamphlet by hla ar with a vim that angora w ell for the sue- rangement of the measures. ooaa of the affair. The finance commit tee Is masting with the very b elt of SEND P A M P H L E T S TO V O T E R S snooees and encouragement, and w ill easily have collected over $600 in cash, besides many valuable cups, etc., to Secretary Ban son Has Mailed 28,000 offer as prises, before its labors are Coplea in Four Days. headed. Over 23 beaatiful cape are Salem— In four days 25,000 copies of already eubecribed by the enterprising initiative and referendum pamphlets ; firms of Salem. Many of the leading have been mailed to registered voters j horsemen of the state have signified in Oregon by Secretary of State Beneoa. j their intention of entering their high Theee pamphlets weighed over 4)4 class animals, and everything points tone, filling 106 m ail sacks, such as towards a most aocoeaaful, profitable are need for paper m ail. The postage and educational meeting Salem Satur day, A p ril 4. was $760. The work of »ending out theee Five K Had on Railroads pamphlets is only one-quarter done, however, for there w ill be at least Salem— The report just leaded by the 100,000 registered voters in the state, railroad commission shows that in Feb and eaoh must receive a copv. Secre ruary five persona were killed and 26 tary Benson haa five clerks engaged in injured on the railroads of the state. this work, addreaaing envelopes, pat Theee are tabulated aa fotlowa: Pas ting in the pamphlets, sealing, ate. sengers, 3 killed and 23 injured; train- They can send out about 6,000 pamph 1 men, 3 inujred, and other employe«, 2 lets a day, and at the present rate w ill killed. The accidents daring the have the work done in 16 days, or by \ month are estimated to have a the 11th of A pril, if the registration iosa In engines, cars and tracks at $3,- UMs reach the secretary fast enough. 600. Thera was one derailment daring In order to aid the postal clerks, Mr. the month. Benson ia having tha pamphlets put into separate sacks for each commup- Boosting' State Fair. * ity, aa tar aa possible, thus savlag Salem— F. A . Welch, secretary of handling in the poetoffioe. the state board of agriculture, is rush ing preparations for the state talr, to be held here in September. Postal Weather Quod fo r Farming. cards advertising the tair have been Salem— Not for many years have tha aent broadcast over the United States, farmers of this part of the Willamette and it is probable that a greater influx valley bad aa favorable a season aa j of visitors than ever before w ill attend this for tail 'and winter work. W ith 1 this year. Clatsop, Columbia, Lana scarcely an exception all the farmers! I and Clackamas counties have already got tbair plowing and eeading done in | • aent notifications that they want large season and the work of pruning and '< sections reserved for their exhibits. spraying orchards was favored by fair weather daring the winter. The out Plan Condenser at Brooks. look now is for excellent crops of all Salem— Negotiations are in progress kinds. Tha winter was a mild one and livestock came through in fine condi for the establishment of a m ilk con tion, notwithstanding the scarcity and densing plant at Brooks, seven miles ooneequent high price of hay and m ill north of this city. I t ia understood that Portland men are back of the en feed. terprise and that they era ready to in stall the plant aa soon aa they are as Klamath at Rose Festival. sured that the condenser w ill get the ' Klamath Falla— Klamath county w ill m ilk from 1,000 cows. M. L . Jones, have a float in the parade at the Port a prominent dairyman at Lake Labish, land rose festival, and the committee haa indicated a willingness to supply in charge are asking for suggestion! m ilk from 300 cows. from all citlsens of Klamath county. Difficulty is being encountered in plan . PO R TLAN D M ARKETS. ning a float that w ill be fully repre sentative of ail tha county’s resources. Wheat — Clqb, 82A83o; blueetem, The chamber of oommerce haa appoint 84@86c; valley, 82@83c; red, 80@81e. ed Judge George T. Baldwin, John Barley—Feed, $26 per ton; rolled, Ellis end T . W . Stephens as a commit $28080 per ton. tee, and they w ill ask the cooperation Oste— No. 1 white, $27®?8 per ton of all in securing a significant Klamath Corn — W hole, $83.60; cracked, county float. $84.60. Hay— Valley timothy, N c. 1, $17 per Must “ Dip” Mangy Csvuses ton; Eastern Oregon timothy, $19(3*20 ; Pendleton— Every horse on the Uma clover, $14(3116 ; cheat, $16; grain hay, tilla reservation range ia to be dipped $14@$15; alfalfa, $12013. during the month of May, according to Fruite— Apples, $103.60 per box, ac an edict issued by Dr. 8. W . McClure, cording to quality; cranberries, $8011 of this city, who is bead of the bureau per barrel. of animal industry in the Northwest. Vegetables — Asparagus, 12* c par The purpose of the wholesale dipping pound; beans, 20c par pound; cabbage, ia to eradicate mange, whloh is preva cauliflower, $202.26; cel lent among the Indian horses. The In ery, $4.60 per orate; cucumbers, $2.76 dians w ill ha required to round op I per dosen; parsley, 26c per dosen ; pep- their own ponies, a ll other expense be -1 pera, 20c per pound ; radishes, 80c per ing defrayed by the department of In- f dosen ; rhubarb, 8c per pound ; spin dtan affaire. aoh, 86c per orate; sprouts, lOe per pound ; squash, l@ l)£ o per pound; Trains Boon to Klamath. turnips, 86c per seek; cairote, 86c per Klamath Fella— That the California sack; beets, $1 per sack. Northeastern is to be completed to Kla Onion»— Oregon, $4 per hundred. math F all« tbia year is evidenced by Potatore —40066a per hundred, de the rapid progresa being made in con livered Portland; sweat potatoes, $4 struction and tracklaying. By the Drat per hundred of A pril the track w ill be finished to Butter— Fancy creamery, 25@.*0q per Dorris, and already two campe have pound. * been established between Dorris and Poultry— Average old hens, 14£16o the Klamath river, where the grade per pound; mixed obiokene, 12018o; aeróse the iw u np lands w ill be finished spring ohtokene, 16<$20c; turkey«, live, for a stretch of 8,000 feet by the mid il6& 1 7c; dreesed, choioe, 16020; geme, dle of A pril. lilv e , 8010c; desks, 16r<ql7e; pigeons, 7 5 c 0 $ l; equabs, R1.60Q2. to Seattle. • — — Freeh ranch, 16Q16e per Belem— Governor Chamberlain haa received a communication from tha Veal— 76 to 126 pounds, 8@9c; 1x6 Seattle chamber of commerce urging to 160 pounds, 7e; 160 to 200 pounds, him to come to that city in Jana and 6 0 6 * 0 . welcome the fleet upon Its arrival Pork— Block, 76 to 160 pounds, 7(31 there. Governor Chamberlain has ax- 7 )4 «; packer«, 6 @ 6 * c . himself as being dee Irons of Hope— 1907, prima and choice, 4(& complying with the request, hut states 6 )4 «: olde, 1(3*23. that it Menu at present as if he would W ool— Eastern Oregon, average beet, be unable to do so, owing to a number 12016c per pound, aooordingto shrink of important matters coming up at that age; valley, 16@18c, according to qual ity ; mohair, ehotm, 26c par ponnd. Man Flgntlng Fire Caught In Under ground Workings. Butte, Mont., Marsh 80.-JL special to the Miner from Hanna. Wyo., w e : . This caihp wae visited o j another big holocaust Saturday afternoon and tha lives of 20 man ware snuffed out by an explosion of gaa in Mine No. 1, of the Onion Paoific Cool company . A lira had bean raging below tha 10th level ainea last Saturday, and tha fores of 200 miners bad bean laid off for the day as a precaution. Superintendent Alexander Briggs and Foremen Joseph Burton, Alfred Dodds, James Knox, o* Minas 1, 2, and 8, with a crew of 18 or 17 man, all axperienoed miners, with gaa men and firs-fighters, want down into tha workings early in the morning to fight the conflagration, which waa rapidly sating its way through the workings. A t 2 o’clock tne men above tha work ings, the idle men in the homes and tha townspeople w ire startled by an awful roar, followed by a, heavy boom and the shaking of earth and trembling oi . . . . . ______ . , A ll knew what had happened, and there was a rush to the mine. Both entranoes bad oaved in. and tha mins timbers had been blown giaat distances about tha outside workings. / The second explosion was more severe than the tint, being felt in all parts of the town, and it ia feared that 60 to «0 names have been addad to the death list. BO M B FO R W E L L S . Attempt Made to Blow Up o f Telluride Mine. Tellnride, Colo., March 80.— Eluding the night guard stationed at tha Smug gler-Union mine, at Pandora, two miles ■oath of Tellnride, end the eearchight which ie constantly thrown about the pramtaae during the night from the high tower o f tha m ill as a precautionary measure, an unknown parson gained ac cess to the reeldenoe oi General Bulkley W ells, general manager of the Smug gler-Uni« n Mining company, Saturday night and planted dynamite under hit bed. The dynamite was exploded by lighting a fuse on the outside of tbe bhilding about 8 o’clock Sunday morn ing when the intended victim asleep. He wae hurled against the oeiling and alighted under a worn oi debris, but eacaped with toms scratches and bruises and impaired bearing. Although a systematic search has been made by Sheriff -Fitspatrick and deputies, aided by hundred« of citisene, no cine has been found to the perpe trator of the deed. One man who is obarged with having «aid that Welle would be killed has been arrested. General W elle took a leading part in tbe suppression of labor troubles in this state in 1904 and 1906, and waa prominently identified with the reoent proeecutlon of the officers ot tbe West ern Federation of Miners at Boise on tha charge of complicity in tha aaeeee- 1 nation of ax-Govamor Frank Btennen- berg, of Idaho. H AS M OOIFIED IT S R U U N G . Interstate Commission Will Re-open Portland Gateway. San Francisco, March SO.— A tele gram was received at the general office of the Southern PaoiUo company in tbia city today from Charles S. Fee, passen ger traffic manager, who ie at present in Chicago, announcing that the reoent aetion of the Interstate Commerce com mission, which waa interpreted as clos ing the Portland gateway and necessi tating a higher passenger rate by the Southern Pacific to Seattle and other Northern points, via Portland, haa been modified. Tbe objection of the com mission, it appears, related only to the manner of publishing through rates, and revised tariffs conforming to the oommiseion’s wishes w ill be issued ■« soon aa possible. This new ruling w ill be received with greet eatlstaotion in Portland, which was being adversely affected by the higher passenger rate« obarged from tbe Seat to, Seattle via Portland than were oharged to Seattle over the Great North erly. The Southern Psclofl ia equally pleased, for it has been known that its earnings and prestige have suffered by the ruling whloh has now been modi fied. CUT IS DESTROYED Heavy Earthquake Followed k j fin la R u in . NO LUÍS I f UFE IS REPORTED Thirty-four Shocks Recorded Within Twenty-four Hours at Mexican National Observatory. Mexico, City, March 28.— Chiiapa, a town of 16,000 inhabitants in the etate of Guerrero, haa bean shaken by an earthquake and burned. \ Tha »books, two in number, occurred early last evening and ware followed by.fi re, which originating in a doaan places among the tumbling buildings, joined in a conflagration that swept tho town. - Governor Damian Florae, chief ntivc of the etate of Guerrero, who ia at present in this city, bad at 9 o’clock this evening just teoeived the first offi cial advices from Obllape. The mes sage says that, although a number of the buildings of the town were leveled to the ground, no lives wars lost. The police quarters and |the mayor’s office were destroyed and the jail badly dam- aged. Great flasnres ware qpade in tha streets and open fields. In the neighboring town of Ometepec tha jail waa destroyed and 30 prisoners made their escape. Troops are guard ing the public buildings that are stand ing in Cbilapa, but perfect order pre vails. Later retnrps from Chiiapa show, however, that the dispatch received by Governor Flores waa nitre conservative. Tha town I waa practically destroyed, though,no lives wars lost. Moat of the buildings that ta r e leveled ware resi dences. Thirty-four shocks have been record ed daring the past 24 boors by tha aaia- mograph.at the national observatory at Tabnyaca. Most of them shocks, how ever, were imperceptible except to tha cal teat needle of the instrument. N O R T H P O LE IS S H IF TIN G . Making America Warmer and Colder. Victoria, B. C.. March 28.— That the north pole ia shifting and tha climate ia changing, making tha Northern terri tories of this continent warmer and Norther Asia colder, Is the theory to ■upport which M o m B. (Jotworth, ot York, England, has bean withering evi dence hi Alaska, from where he has re turned on hie way to England. A curious effect of thia change, it is ■aid, may be a number of boundary difficulties between Canada and the United States, especially in tbe Eastern partfon. Thia boundary is fixed by latitude, and if the north pole is really moving, tbe latitudes change also, ren dering it advisable that the boundary be speedily marked everywhere by permanent monuments, where it has not yet been so marked already. The movement, Cot worth aaye, ia caused by tha Immense.accumulations cf ice along tha Canadian shore of the Arctic ocean, and especially in Baffln’a land and Greenland. M INERS HELD IN C H E C K . Paaca Committee Restrains Strikers From Rioting. Juneau, Alaska,March 28.— Although there haa been no violence as yet at the Treadwell mines, the 800 men on a strike are only prevented from making an outbreak by the oom raise ion of 20 men from the onion who have been celled the peace oommittee. The tension ie eo high that tha least word w ill bring about trouble. The union leaden have asked tbe men to refrain from «Irinking, but idleness la irksome end the men ere chafing under the delay of a settlement, especially in view of the tact that the oompany haa declared that never again w ill there be any of the preeent leaden employed by the company. r Says Donna is Prejudiced. Cannot Deport Bignam i.. San Francisco, March 80.— Abraham Ruef today filed an affidavit thiongh San Francisco, March 28.— Paul Big which he seeks to disqualify Superior nami, tbe anarchist arretted yesterday Judge Frank H . Dunne from presiding for inciting to assassination and to de in the so called Parkaide trolley fran struction of the fleet, when examined chise bribery caeea, in which Reef ie before Acting Comm leaiooer of Im m i a joint defendant with W . I. Brobeok, gration Crawford, stated bat ha came G. H . Umbsen and Joseph Green. In to this country from Italy in 1904. I f his affidavit Ruef allege« bias and pre-j this ie a tact it w ill plate him outside Judies on the of ___________________ Judge Dunne and tha Federal deportation laws relating to __„ part ______ forth many instances in which be I anarchists. Mi. Crawford haa wired to says Dunne showed antipathy, bias and j B »ton to ate if there is any record of prejudice egatnet tha d« fondant' in for him * ‘ there. '* More anarchists w ill be mar trials. arreoted in tbe next few days in the Latin quarter oharged with vagrancy. English Hopmen Protest. Tourist Ratea to the Ooest. Worcester, England, March 80.— A largely attended meeting of hopgrowers St. Paul, Minn., March 28.— The was held in this city this afternoon and peaMuger officials of tbe Northern and a resolution was paeead protesting Ip Pacific and Soo roads w ill make special dlgnantly against what waa described summer tourist r a t « of $60 for tbe reg ■a tha “ damping of America’! «orpins ular trip from the Tw in Cltiea to Seat hopvin this country.” Enormous quan tle, Taeoma, Portland and other North tities of hops are aaid to be due to ar Paoific Coast points. Tbia pats the rive bare in a few days. They are be northern lines on a par with the aouth- ing offered at from 18)4 26 shillings ern line«, which have granted special ■ hundred weight, whloh ia l a « that rate« to California points. Tha regular half the English price. trip from Chios go to North Ooaat cltiea via tha Twin Cltiea w ill bs $72.60. Alabama Law la Killed. Montgomery, Ala., March 80.—Judge Groat Strike la Ordered. rh« mss G. J o n «, of the United States K a n «* City, March 28.— Thirty-five court, today held the Alabama penalty thousand members of the United Mine- railirad laws unconstitutional; also workers of America, employed in dis 'hat the anita brought by the railroads trict« Nos. 4, 21 an«i 26, comprising are ndt in violation of the eleventh Missouri, Arkansas, Kansas, Oklahoma constitutional amendment, not being and Texas, w ill go on strike A pril 1, soils against the Nate. - Several of the following a «leel»ion reached at meet minor claims were also declared to be ings of division vies presidents held invalid. hers today.