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About The Santiam news. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1897-1917 | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1912)
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AND PROGRESS OF OUR HOME STATE th« Hood Rivet With the Commercial Club, Automobile Club and business organisations of the city exerting ev ery effort to make the occasion the biggest of its kind that the Hood Riv er Valley has ever witnessed, the lit tle apple city ia planning to entertain hundreds of guests which are cxprct«-d here during the first week of May, when the orchard« are in full bloa»>m. From jiresent indications the blossoms will be in full bloom by the first week of May and there will be more of them than ever before. The board of director« of the Com mercial (Tub have aettl«»d on definite plans. Letters have been written to the O.-W R. A N . North Bank, and river boat line official«, asking their co-operation. It is planned to have special trains run from Portland. Members of the Automobile (Tub will meet the visitors at the station ■nd give them excursions through the orchards. BEE EXHIBITS FOR FAIR. Cash Prizes Will tie Given State Fr,/ Exhibit». Hold Up Train In Mississippi Blow Express Safa. • nd Corinth. Miss. Mobil« A Ohio !>•>- •enger train No. 4, northbound, was held up and the express safe blown Move On Foot To Reviva Indù»!«-» In open and robbed seven miles south of Marion County. Corinth by four men heavily armed Salem 1‘ueslbility of the develop I •nd masked. ment of 2.000 acres of Willamette Rkradbounds have been telegraphed Valley land and the inauguration of I for and a posse has been organised to the first gigantic step toward placing take up the punmiL It ia reported th« safe contained the flax industry on a flrm basis in | this «ection of the valley Is pre«ag«*l 960.<XM in currency. Where th« robbers board«*! the train by the visit here of Western Manager ia not known. Engineer Wilden and Smith, of the American l.inseed Oil Fireman Kaufman first learned of company, and H. A. Brewer. their jirerence when two of the turn With Secretary Olcott and State crawled over the tender with revolvers Treasurer Kay tn- vi -. i '..A were takrn drawn and command«*! that the train to the homo of Eugene Bosse, the be brought to a halt at a point de»ig pioneer flax grower of the Pacific nated. The command was obeyed. In th« meantime other member« of Coast. Smith made s proposition to Bosse to make arrangements for the the band had gained entrance to the di-velopment of 2,000 acre« of land, to expreaa ear and after subduing Ex- t>e sown to flax and to do it immedi prese Meaaenger Snoddy, set th« ex- ploaive, which was touche«! off when ately. The American Linseed Oil company the train came to a stop. After taking the contents of the has established a branch industry In ' is now nrcc««ary nec«--«ary to send «•fe. the four took to the Wtxxfl with Port 1 ami. It ia a large quantity of the flax from out attempting to rifle the mall dr mo Michigan, but the repreat nt alive« lest the passenger« No attempts will be made to pene here declared that the Oregon flax ■urpaaaea the world in quality and trate the densely wooded river bot that great quantities of it can be uacd tom where the men are believed to be in hiding, until the arrival of a detail by the company. of railroad officers and bloodhounds from Jackson. Tenn., who are coming FERTILIZING YAMHILL PRUNES -.. i aboard a special. OREGON MAY GROW FLAX. APPLE DAY PLANS MADE. Hood River Entertains Lavishly First Weak of May. ROBBERS GET »00 000 LOOT Best Oregon Agricultural College, Cor- vallis—In a letter from Secretary Frank Meredith, of th«- State Board of Agriculture, in charge of the state fair exhibits, to Prof. >1. F. Wilson, of th« entomology department at U m Oregon Agricultural college, a list of twenty-three cash prize» «mounting to about 9110.00, to be offered at the coming State Fair for exhibits in api culture. It is through the efforts of the State Beek«>ej>ers' association that space for the exhibits and the fund« for the prizes haver been secured. The entries will elose September 1, and the entry fees have been fixed at ten per cent of the first premium. The exhibits must be in place by ti a. m. September 2, and it has bren de creed that all exhibits must have been produced in the apiary of the exhibit or during the year 1912. Premiums will be restricted to ex hibits from within the state of Ore gon. No premiums will be paid unless there is competition, and none will be awarded where the exhibits are not individually worthy. The judge will in no case give first prise to a second grade product, even though there art- only two exhibits. The honey must be pure nectar, sugar or syrup honey being barred, and the judges will ojien the packages to satisfy themselves on this point. Sections less than three- fourths full will also be barred. EUGENE-COOS LINE RUSHED. Grade Work Westward Will Be Com menced Thia Week. Eugene Upon the arrival of four carloads of mule«, Fuller A Company, sub-contractors on Jthe Southern Pa cific line to Coos Bay, began grading operations westward from Eugene. Thia company has ha<1 perhaps 200 men scattered along 13 miles of right of way all winter, clearing the land ready for the grading work with the settling of weather this spring. Pow er graders will be put to work aa soon as possible. Twohy Bros., contractors, have made a good start on the 2300-foot tunnel at Noli Pass, and this week complet«*! the transportation of ten wagon load» of compressor machinery, so that the tunnel men may use air drills. I>ecd« for M-ctions 'of right of way west of Noti Pass are being filed eV- cry few days. Bu Idirg for Raising Buga. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor- valli» An insectary haa just been built in the college orchard at O. A. C-, for the purpose of studying the life history of a large number of in sect pests infesting the orchard«, truck gardens, and flower beds of Ore gon, with a view to finding the most effective methods of combating them A long list of experiments have been planned by the entomology depart ment fur the coming season. Work on Big Dam Started. A a tori a The Bidwell-Hayden com pany. to whom wax given the contract fur building the big -jam for the 100,- OOO.iMMi gallon reservoir at the head work« of Aatoria'a water ayatem. have taken out a donkey engine and two large boiler« to he uaed in connection with their operation«. The flrm will operate a rock cru«her. The actual construction work will be commenced as *<K>n a« the cam,* is completed. Bridge Over lhe Grand Ronda. La Grande — Steel for the new bridge «panning the Grand Ronde riv er at Riveraide park la expected any day. The bridge will be 15 feet in length and will have a walk on either aide ait feet wile. College E xperlmenting in Improvirg Quality and Production. BRIBERY PROBE STARTS. Oregon Agricultural College, Cor- Four M.«ico Representative« Form- vallia Fertility experiments in the Arraigned prune orchards of Yamhill county are I Santa Fe. N. M With the formal __________ being run by the division ___ of ________ borticul- tore of the Oregon Agricultural col arraignment of Representative Manuel lege, covering b<’th the bottom land Cordova, Julian Trujillo, Ixiuis R. orchards and hill orchards. The ex- Montoya and J. II Lucero, arrested jierimenta ir.flj ide not only the use of 1 ,,n • charge of soliciting a bribe of fertilisers, but also various methods 95,1X10 for their collective votes for of tillage, the thinning of the fruit. United State« senator, the Inveatiga- pruning and like matters, to see if tion by the lower house into the al the general outlook and quality of the c.>rruptk»n was begun The accuacd legislators, who are to prune can be improve«!. An elaborate set of experiments is be tried flrat by a committee of 16 ap also being conduct«! in this connec pointed by the »peaker, have employed tion aa to prune evaporation. In the counsel to defend them againat the fertilizing work, for example, it is charge, which they now deny. Their detired to ascertain not only if the defenae will be that they were led into size of the fruit can be increased by the trap aa a result of a political con this means and the quality improv«*!, spiracy. b.-lieving they were going to but what relation fertilisation will attend a caucus at the time they visit- bear to the evaporation of the fruit. ed a room in the hotel, where it 1» al The relation of various cultural and leged they received 1500 each on their orchard management methods have to promise to vote for a certain candi th«> evaporation of the prune will be ; date for «cnator. The investigation of the alleged closely studied. bribery of the four member« will be pushed vigorously by the committee Apple Growers Get Busy. Albany Forty members of the Al- and all the «eiaion« will be public. The men were formally »creed with bany Apple Grower« association met here in the Commercial club rooms to warrant« charging them with a felony discu«« matters important tn the fruit They are in the cuatody of the sheriff industry of Linn county. The meet of Santa Fe county. ing wa« presided over by H. Bryant, SMUGGLES DIAMONDS IN HAT president of the association, and talk« of interest relative to the protection of fruit trees from rodlin moth and San Francisco Woman Admits Her Offense to Officers. San Jose sca'e were made by various member«. New York Mrs. Banche Carson, a The annual Albany Apple Fair, fashionably dress«*! widow of San which will l>e held in November, was Francisco, had diamond earrings con- discussed at length and efforts will be cral«-d in her hat when she passed cus made to make this year's event the tom inspection un her arrival from In biggest in the history of Linn county. dia. according to a report«*! admission The president was authorised to ap mwle to authoriti«*«. point a committee from the associa Mrs. Carson declared only a package tion to work in conjunction with a of unstrung jwarls, for which she paid similar committer from the Commer duty on the valuation of |H50. Cus cial club toward making it a success. tom officers brought the woman from Ix>ganberriea, which arc fast be her hotel for further examination, coming a profitable small fruit, was asserting that the pearls were Wurth the subject of considerable discussion, 97.5' and as a result, many acres will be The woman broke down and ad planted this year. mitted. it was said, that she had hid den two diamond earring« in her hat Orchard Bulletin Almoat Gone. ami had other jewelry which altogeth Oregon Agricultural College, Cor er the authorities valued at 920,000. vallis -The issue of Prof. C. I. Lewis' Mr«. Carson was h.ld, charge«! with bulletin No. Ilion orchard manage smuggling, in 93.000 bail. ment. published in 20,000 copies, by Mrs. Carson gave her address as 925 the Oregon Agricultural College Ex Gough street, San Francisco. periment »tation. ia now rapidly living Morgan May Buy Tsmpls. exhausted, in epite of the fact that the Oregonian published the matter New York — Following J. P. M<«r- entire, in an edition of 30,000 copies. gan's long aojourn in Egypt this win- The pressure of preaent call* for the ter, reports have reached thia city to bulletin will probably be relieved the effect that he is negotiating for somewhat when the magaxine "Better the purchase and removal to America Fruit" printa it alao in an edition of of the famous ruin« of the Temple of 15.000 copies. Philae. The temple is threatened with destruction owing to the rise in Pear Growing In America. the level of the upper Nile as a result Oregon Agricultural College, Cor of the enlargement of the Assouan vallis - Prof. C. I. I^wia, chief of the dam. The cost of the work would be diviaion of horticulture at the Oregon more than 14.000. (MX). Agricultural college, is the author of Great Earth Block to Ba Pumped a 100-page brochure containing 60 fine illustrations, many of them photo San Franclaco—The exposition offi graph« taken in Oregon, which ia to cial« have awarded the contract for be iaeued shortly by the International the filling in of a submerged part of Correepondenee schools aa a course on the world'« fair site. Work ia to be "Pear Growing in America." Prof. begun at once. One million cubic Lewie haa «pent «evcral year« in ape- yard« of earth ia to be pumped from cial atudy on thi« «object. the bottom of the bay by auction dredge«, the area to be Ailed covering Graaham Fair Data« Fixed. several blocks. Gre«ham At a meeting of the board 300 Adrift on lea Floe». of director« of the Multnomah County Fair aseo-iation, the date« for the St, Petersburg -Three ice-breaking fair thia year were definitely fixed for steamers are en mute from the Neva October 2-6. So far aa known these in the direction of the ialand of Nar- date« will not conflict with those of gen, to the northwest of Revel, in any otver fair or featival to be held the Gulf of Finland, where SOO fl »her- thia ye ir. and it ia balievad that the men are adrift on floating ice. They agneu tural dieplaya will be at their are In imminent danger of loving their beat a >out that time. livaa. HALTS MOB WITH GUN. Hoquia-n Millman Kseps Out Disturb ers Plant Running, Hoquiam. Wash. When a deloga tion of I. W W. labor agitators ar rived at the Coates shingle mill to in duce a strike they were met by J. A. Law!«, manager of the mill, who waited until the leader was within five ’ feet of him. and then drew a revolver and stood off the whole gang. The Coates mill is still running, al Prize Yearling Steer From University though short handed. As a result of a free for-all fight be 0* Idaho Bringt »I 20 Pound tween Greek strikers and American Oregon Man Boye, non-strikers at the Northwestern plant, charges have ' been preferred ■gainst (Tty Attorney Callahan by Portland Development of the live the Hoquiam Trude« Council. stock industry of the Northwest and tn the fight a Greek wax about to hit a »jw cial police officer on the head of Portland as the distributing center for all the beef, jxirk and mutton prod with a hammer when txzn Miller, an old time citizen, threw a brick which ucts of Oregon Washington and Idaho put th« Greek out of commission. was given further imjwtus by the magnificent exposition at the stock Miller asy« that he tried to do the yards which was attend«*! by every Greek a favor by preventing him from one of the 23* guests from the Inland committing murder. City Attorney Empire who arrived in the city on a Callahan iaaued a warrant for the ar rest of the Greek, but refu««*d to Issue •peclal train, as well as by more than »000 residents of the city. < ne for Miller. The conspicuous ribbon badges of This Is the basis of the charge againat Callahan, which will ba the Inland Empire delegation were everywhere in evidence The Central threshed out by the city commission Idaho and Eastern Washington visi er«. tors were an imjiortant factor in the Th«« making of the charge« mark« days’ program, and their stock exhib the introduction of the Trade« Council its proved important features of the Into the 1. W. W. fight again«t the day's prise distributions ami sale«. mills. Heretofore th« Federation of i It wa« a University of Llaho entry Labor ha« not ha>l a hand in the affair J a yearling Hereford that brought For three days Police Judge ('oghlan I the record price for a steer on foot has been trying Greeks on misde I ever paid w««t of Chicago. When meanor charges. He has been refusing ' George Warren, of Warrenton, Ur., them trial by jury and fining thrm 95 paid 9L2<> a pound for the big prise and 910. Judge ('oghlan'« refusal has ' winner of the show he jxid more than brought up the question of th« consti «ver ha« I' «11 paid ‘ In th« history of tutional right of trial by jury, and the world, with the single exception has resulted in a declaration that of the steer "Advance." which Coghlan'« husine«« will be boycotted, brought 91.50 a pound at Chicago 12 end the commissioners who placed him year« ago. there recalled. The animal weigh«*) 1,0H0 pounds, The recall of the commissioners la ■nd Mr. Warren wrote hia check for al«> threatened if City Attorney ('alia 91.2M. Then he got busy figuring han is nut dismissed. what the price of |«irtcrhuu«c steak« would be if sold at the u«ual propor CITIZENSHIP IS NEEDED. tionate advance over the price at which he bought. He exj>ecl« to I m > Porto Ricans Want Naturalization Pa- amply repaid for hi« investment by exhibiting his purchase at future fairs per». Declare« Brown. and livestock shows. New York Attorney General Fos As this sale n>bbe<! the University ter V. Brown, of Porto Rico, wa« in of Idaho of its prixe offering, official« New York en route to Washington, of the college laiught from Benson where he will hand his resignation to Bros., of Union, Or., a yearlng White President Taft. He will then return Shorthorn at 17 cents a pound. W. L. to his home in Chattanooga, Tenn., to Carlyle, dean of the Agricultural col resume his law practice. lege, declares that he will develop this Brown spoke enthusiastically of the ste.-r Into a prize-winner for next progress and prosjienty of Porto Rico, year's show. where he ha« been stationed two All the Lake and Eastern Oregon years. jxMiple were rlatrd over the showing "I don't think there is a single mate by their stock. Although the state In the Union today where the judges did not use the ribbon system jxxqile are so happy aa the Porto Ri in awarding prizes, announcement of cans are with the government they the results Main were mad«« known. have," he said. "There is only one With th«< beat portion of the prises complaint they make against the Uni di»tribut«-d among the Inland Empire ted States K'tnfernment. and that, I stockmen, and the record sale of the think, is a just one. They feel they whole western hslf of the Unit«*! have a right to American citisenahlp. States going to one of their schools, That feeling was expressed and fa the |-co ji Ie of that district had reason vored In the platforms of both parties to be rial«*!. They lost no opportun in this country, and both President ity in voicing their delight to every Roosevelt and President Taft urged one on the ground«. the conferring of such citizensip It was a busy day for the inland There is no reason, especially in view Empire party. (Juite a few of them of the«« long standing promisee, why had liecn detained at the banquet the Porto Rican« should not be made citi night tw-fore until after midnight, and zens. Without It, they frcl today some of the«« were a little tardy in that a Porto Rican ia a man without a reaching the special cars provide«! for country." transjxirting them to the show grounds. Some miss«*) the ears and CENTRAL STATES SHIVER. came trailing to the show later in the morning. Blinding Storm of Snow and Sl««t Upon arrival at the exposition the f weeps Across Continent. visitors were given an informal re Chicago A blinding storm of «now ception by members of the Livestock and sleet swept aero»» the North Cen- Exchange and the Pacific Northwest tral states Thursday, heaping disaster Livestock association, under whose the show was given. upon transportation and communica auspices Sjirechca were dispens«*! with, as tion facilities. Half a hundred cities were »hut off everyone was too eager to get a look from communication with the rest of at the fine sheep, cattle and swine. The visitors just had time to chase the world. Miles of trlegraph and through the stock |>«-n« and lna|M*-t the telephone poles were blown down or wire« covered with ice until they prize-winners casually before the auc broke. The snow changed In many tion sale started. Throughout the re places to sleet, which was blown like mainder of the morning interest cen- shot before a gale that increased to ter«*! in the sale« ring. Lunch was served on the grounds nearly 50 miles an hour. Zero wea ■nd again opjxirtutiity was given for ther was reached in several places. viewing the exhibits liefurc the after- noon ««I«« open«*!. The early after- Two Killed In Strikers' Riot. fKM>n brought a constant stream of vis Berlin The termination of the itors from Portland and other nearby strike in the Westphalian c>al fields, towns. !n view of the small attend where nearly 200,000 miners laid down ance last year, officials of the associa their Viol« on March II, was marked tion feel jubilant over the presence of by two fatalities in attacks by strik so many Portland ptxiple, neary half ers on non-strikers working in the pita of whom were women. at Hagen. A third man wa« wound«d, probably fatally. In the Samar dis Knox la Well Satisfied. trict the strikers have also abandon«*! On Board the Unit«*! States Cruiser the movement and gone back to work, Washington, at sea — Secretary of but the miner« in Upper Silesia are State Knox, who. with his party, leaving the pita in increased numbers came on board at Puerto Barrios. Inland Empire Visitors Take Show By Storm. Fortifications Cut Down. Washington, I). C. —A bill msklng appropriation for fortifications was passed by the senate. It carries 94,- lHfl.235, about a million and a quarter lees than the appropriation of last year. Guatemala. lx>und direct for I .a Gua- ira, Venezuela, ia well satisfied with the results of his visits to Central American capitals. The secretary of state expects to arrive at La Guaira within two days, and In all probabili ty. will reach Norfolk, Va.. April 17 on his return journey. China Gets Anaton« Flour. • 5.000 ia Sent to China. Anatone. Wash - The Anatony mill la preparing a special flour for Orien tal trade, to be shipped direct to China. The sacks bear a special trademark of Chinese characters. Washington. D. C.- The American Red Croa» society «ent 95,000 to China for the relief of the famine sufferers in the new republic. Thia make« a total of 155,000 sent alnce January 1.