Image provided by: Scio Public Library; Scio, OR
About The Santiam news. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1897-1917 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1910)
r ¿V. V A »r \ • * • ' * J 4 «TV.- • J r . V' 'a • > ‘f a .*->*•* m ’ * • »■ , 1 c . • 4-igh bo far ^•¿v/only Ameri- • ‘ ¿4n to the ban- . d gold. Sev- ‘-oViithlesaly slain. ?{im.ffectual ai de to protect Vera aws. President Diax iWstr at hrs aides are mak- c strongest fights of their r « • i«cd lo Diax bitterly com- .1» administrtion i» perseeu- wbo held opposite political »,-r'cnd imprisoning op- . These charges are v ^dissatisfaction of the ’•5* “/ J* i GOODS TO BE SOLD. MOUNT». Mad. Dogs call in th« Streets. • 4- » 1 Horte» Effort to Rsisa Money With Which to Get Release From Prison. ?■ Seven persona dead, a - ,ed in hospitals, dogs go- . a streets and horsm drop- ■tauslion ami a tempera- 1 . 'em wsrr the features <>f |f the hot wave which azo. »■‘.¿’egrecs in the morn- ¿climbed rapidly ami ’ followed. At noon rl»'x - i'-achi-d and at ’j’cloci ft touched UM 90 mark, . Dogs affih-ted by the heal attacked ‘seven |>crsona, who will be treated at the Pasteur institute to guard against rabies. In tenement district« women on tHBl and children »ought in vain for refuge from the »titling heat. In many dis tricts children ran about almost nude. ■ng near Eu- Thousands flockid to the lake and . with a 32- parks. New York City The entire contents of the Charm W. Morse residence at 172 Fifth avenue are to be sold kt auc- ■ The fittings of the house are Mrs. Morse’s personal property, which »he ix going to sell to obtain money with which to fight for the release of her husband, who is serving a term in the Federal prison at Atlanta. They include rug», furniture of every description, silver and hangings. Also there will be included in the sale a considerable amount of jewelry belong ing to Mrs. Morse, including pearl necklaces, gold toilet articles, etc. A rough guess at the value of the goods to be sold puts it at $200,000. Mrs. Morse is at present in Washington, on her way home from Atlanta. Loss of Life Frightful. ..^Miill employ girl» Vienna. The destruction of life and .ake tickets, believ- property by floods throughout Hungary ecome grafters. exceeds all records. The number of •w anti-betting law deaths has not been ascertained, but it ■cen declared valid, is believed they will aggregate 1,000. g at Coney Island. The damage done to crops and property A’■^ionat Harvester company will amount to several million kronen. ;tftat |$dcal» in 21 different lines The entire harvest is pireatemd with jlinuW, apd therefore is not a destruction. In the Kronstadt district 300 bodies have been recovered. In *»L «4» the Moidava district 100 persons per Thirty < Japanese driven from the ished as the result of the sudden col town of Darrington. WaML, will return lapse of houses, and in the Temesvar fk in the uiiUs there under pro- district 180 persona have been drowned. on of officers. Victoria, B. C.- An anti-foreign out break is anticipated in Yunan in Wrut- em China. according to advices just re ceived from Shanghai. Following the recent rioting at Chanting, which was suppressed and the leader» executed, a runibr was started that in order to pre vent further accident« on the new railroad bring built there, it had been found neccfiaacy to sacrifice to the gixi of railroad» a large number of boys and girl«. Some rv[x>rta had it that hundred« would be required to sacrifice, one report being 1,200 were needed. Chinese Fear Sacrifice. Burden Placed on Corea. ( arHorr» forest firew raging |r>the Weston's Record Beaten. Victoria, B. C.—Four new divisions nort^ and oast m Fort Wil- Chicago. “Honest“ John Ennis, . of the Japanese army ar« to be raised .OnUSHck One tow^ is com- who h>>pcs to lower Edward Payson by General Terauchi, war minister, grounded. ■ving his appointment as residi-r.t Weston’s ocean-to-ocean record from t Hpskell, of Oklahoma, was 105 to 1 100 days, delivered «{letter from general in Corea. It in estimated that York, to Mayor . the annual coat of maintenance of th’» *ncrs by a Federal •■<ur$ «layer Gaynor, of New Yorl Ing the capital of usee, of thia city, a day ahead of * force will be $6,000,000 to be borne by 1 Corea. 'eaton's schedule. ’ • arxn^' . , ' ' t « iiryan, also after / The welcome to Grant was CFS’ tumultuous; that to Dewey most elaborate and »tut-j welcome to Rixwevelt was. ' with a dramatic expec ago found po^tular ex typical phrase: “ Elba.” Grant on his return was , ical [xissibility, but as eve^S fon-doimi-d to defeat. Admira. ey w as a hero, not a national l< aiier. Bryan, prominent sa his part had been before the people, had never been en trusted by them with executive re sponsibility. Rooeevelt had been something of all these things statesman, and “soldier and sailor, too." Horn in the East, he had made an especial friend of the West His welcome brought men from all parts of the country. It was na tional. The first scat of public curiosity hav ing been satisfied, speculation now turns on what whan- Roosevelt will take in an acuto political situation within his own party, of which he had already been advised abroad by old aaaoeiates who hail carried him tidings. But on that score, sfieculation must rest unaatisficiL The Colonel had positive ly declared his intentions by wireleas the night beforo "I shall have nothing to say what ever in the immediate future about politica," and he kept his word. Therefore, there was nothing in the only speech he made here that could be construed as applying specifically to this or that phase of immediate state or national isauca. New Mexico Will Célébrât«. Albuquerque, N. M. News of the passage of the statehood bill was rr- ceived here with wild rejoicing, A big celebration has been planned for next Monday night, when speeches will be made around a bonfire by Republi can and Democratic leaders. This will be the first step towards a non-partisan constitutional convention. Mayor Iaw- ter has requested all merchants and private cilitens to display flags on their I buildings as aoon as the statehood bill is sign«! by the president and becomes a reality. Wickersham May Visit Alaska. Washington, D. C. Secretary Nag le, of the department of commerce and labor, who will visit Alaaks thia sum mer. has invited Attorney General t Wickersham to accompany him on the trip. The latter has not yet decided whether he will be able to go. Secre tary Nagle will make the trip from Seattle on the steamer Albatross, may go as far as the Seal islands. •* ’ v » t — •• f* I .'r-V- - « vX J V* 1 ' * -• » a * » -iV* . -<V' - ri- 1* -s. e company as the Ar «•» compai over the t defunct Amt’ll ire less Telegraph then running at a rtfor it» own se- curitieíTnT or one basis. “At this time,” says the inspector’s statement, "when officer» of the De Forest company were secretly conniv ing to abandon it anti leave the stock holders a mass of worthless securities, its stock had been forced to an alleged value of $12.50 a share, or $2.50 above par. “Another item in the statement sent out to stockholders was patents and patent rights, $5,520,233. The affairs of the company were recently audited by a firm of licensed accountants, who placed the book value of all patents at $220,233. "The officers of the company have sold to the jxiblic th<>u»and» of shares, claiming all the while that they were holding their own »hares and putting the money received from the public into the plants of the company. One of the officers is - believed to have cleaned up $5,000,000 and possibly $10,000,000 at prices ranging from $1O to $50. Water Route to Be Used. North Yakima, Wash. — Two of the large department stores of Kennewick will order their fall stocks of gixxis shipped from New York by water to the isthmus of Panama, via railroad to the Pacific, and up the Col umbia river. This is nearly an “all water rout«.“ A considerable saving in freight rates can be made in thia way. The first large shipment over this route was made this spring, when the entire shearings of the Coffin Bros ’ sheep were consigned to Boston by water. Great Gold Strike Made. Vancouver, It. C. — Arrivals at Stewart. B. C., in the Queen Char lotte islands, today sent dispatches to this city confirming th« new» of the phenomenal strike of free milling gold in the Bitter Creek district, 15 miles inland, that is causing a stampede of everyone from the entire Northern country. A gold reef has been found and traced for 20 miles, with the end not in sight Samples of the ore for 3,000 feet essayed $49 a ton.