Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About The Ione proclaimer. (Ione, Or.) 1???-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1909)
IONE PROCLAIMER MhM Cvwy frleav IQNE OREGON EVENTS OF THE DAY Nevsy Items atbered from All Pam of the World. Leas Important but Not Lass Inter esting Happenings from Points . Outside tho State. Two mttsbtn of tho Co ban cabinet may flgbt a duel. Oklahoma baa commenced suits - against tbrao trusts. Bomb throwing and other distorb- anceeeontlnue in Spain. President Taft delivered addreaaaa at Hooaton and Dallas, Tax. Tha esar of Roaaia waa waleomad Jo Italy with gnat an thulium. Wilbur Wright la teaching army officers in the use of the Wright asro plana. Mores in tba Phillppinas ara suceese fnl in smuggling modern rifles into tba A magnetic storm on tba Atlantic seriously crippled tbo cable service across tba ocean. Tha Portola f estiva ended at San Francisco with a parada of floats and a dance on tha streets. Officer of a.Nsshvills, Terra., bank have been arrested for taking deposits when tba institution waa insolvent. Tba national convention of the W C. T. U. at Omaha baa declared for local option aa a step toward prohibi tion. Tba Copper River railroad in Alaska has 82 miles of tba 200 completed. Mora than a.OUU man ara at work on tba line. The New York iee trust Is on trial for its life. Guatemala ta still accused of aiding Nicaragua rebels. San Francisco ii almost Joy mad over the Portols festival. Oklahoma bankers think tba bank guarantee law Is a failure. The entire Spanish cabinet hat re igned and Liberals til most of the places. Marjorle Gould scorns all foreign suitors, and. aavs an- American will do for her. The M nnieipa association of Portland insists that moral conditions there are worst than ever. Tha eovernment baa dropped the land fraud prosecution against Dr. . U. iterria, of California. Lovett has beea elected president of the Union Pacific, and wilt practically be Uarrlman't successor. 1 Deaths by tuberculosis are said to be on tha decrease on account of the fight that ta being made against tha disease A aiaa died at Hastings, Neb., claim Ing to be Schlatter, the dlviaa healer, but la believed to have beea aa im poster. Senator Newlands, of Nevada, pro poeee that all Western congressman unite to obtain funds for waterways and irrigation. A Swedish professor, aeenaed af bombo-tarowlnf, haa become insane. Lot Angelea women have won their Sght agaiast smoking on street ears. Rnsala la preparing to enforce her rule aver Finland by arms if aeeeeeary. The American Federation of Labor haa denounced the execution of Ferrer. A great celebration was held la York town la commemoration of tha surrea der af Lord Corawallia. President afeCrea, of tho Pennsyl vania road, prsdtO another panie if mora anti-railroad !egu.atloa Is passed. A band af Chippewa Tauant ara re ported to be starving in aiontaua, and the government la rushing supplies to them. me upiin una ervw w vjw men i British trading veesel war murdered by New Britain savages and tha ship looted and burned. Estrada, tho Nlearaguaa revolution let, bolda aba eastern coast of that eoua try, and la making good headway easiest tha gevernmeat foreea Tha motor of Wright t aeroplane slopped short during a flight but be landed safely. The gasoline tank bad not been tiled before ttartlag. Preeldeat Bidder, af too Am-rtenn Newspaper Publishers' aeaoeiatroe, says that Taft haa beea aptsinfenaed rfardlng tba tariff oa print rat, and that a trade war with China wit raJL Baa franeieee marta UO.000 :mban to tba Fortola festival. The hast af the tve eoeapsi Oregon eaavieta ana aaaa rasas torea. There hi nob apeeahuiea as to who will ho the text aUnieter ta Chlaa. onwai unmwswe omasa aa owe rTwat laaa and Lea Aagolos havo failed. - Japanese odltora ta eawtoto BOMB FOR JAPANESE. Eureka, Cel.. Wrought Up Over Out rage at Night. Eureka, Gal., Oct M. Tba town- la worked op over tha throwing of a bomb at aa early boor this morning. Tba Tsuchiya Brothers, Japanese, opened a store la this city a few days ago ami at 2:46 this morning someone exploded 'a bomb in the entraoca of the store. Tho explosion demolished tha a tore front and broke windows In nam bar of buildings nearby. Tba report was hoard for miles and people wan in groat fear on til tbey learned tba cause. The owners of tba store were sieep ine In tba roar and whan tba explosion occurred one of them ran to tho fronfV and aaeing tba damage and fearing bodily barm, started to ran. Two po licemen, thinking bo was tba bomb thrower, started in pursuit, firing their revolvers aa they ran. Tba Japanese stopped whan tha shooting began and no harm waa dona. -There Is no claw to who fired tba bomb, and no evidence is at band to incriminate anyone. Tba store bad been in operation hare bat throe days, and is the first Oriental store to be established bora tinea the exclusion of Chinese from Homboldt county in 1887. It la believed sorneooe opposed to tha invasion of tha buaineaa field by Japanese Axed tbo bomb. JUSTICE PECK HAM PASSES. United States Supreme Court Loaaa Eminent Member. Albany. N. Y., Oct. 26. Rufua W. Peekham, justice of tba United States Snprama court, died at his summer noma at Altamount at 8:16 Sunday night Death was doe to a com plication of dissects heart trouble, Brigbt'a dis ease, and hardening of the arteries con tributing. . Justice Peckbam had been in 111 health for some time, bat his condition was not considered serious until recent ly. Followingadjoornmontof tha Hay term of tho United Stat-e Supreme court, ha came on from Washington with aire. Peckbam to spend tba sum mer at Altamount, expecting to return for tba beginning of tha October tons. A faw days ago bis eonndition be came soeb that bis physicians said he waa likely to dio at any time, or might linger for several months. Up to a faw daye ago Justice Peekham exhibit ed considerable strength and waa able to be about the boose. Tba circulatory dlstorbanee, which contributed to bla death, waa first notiosd about six years ago. Justice Peekham was appointed In 1896 and was tbo last of Cleveland's selections. REBELS GAIN VICTORY. Nicaragua Loaea One) Hundred Dead and Throe Honored Injured. B Icefields, Nic, Oct 26. The tag Blanco, which arrived bare from Gray town, bring news of tba first Import ant battle of tba revolution. General Cbamorro's army fought an ' engage ment on Friday with 1,000 of President Zelaya's troops at a point below Bona San Carlos oa the Sea Joan river. Tba revolutionists won a decisive victory, 100 of tbo government traopa being killed and 800 wounded. Oeo- aol ChajBorro'a lota at wars slight. Tba tnaurgonta captured two Krupp siege guns and 400 riflaa. Tba defeat doubtless will havo a de terrent effect ia recruiting for tbo gov ernment aervios at Managua, and ia likely also to bring additional rein force men la to tho standards of the rn- eurgents. Tba steamer Tola, belonging to the Brnory eompany, alto haa reached bora with tba details of tha captors by tbo revolutionists of Capo G ratine Dies. This point was easily token, not more than five or six anon being killed, and a small number wounded. This gives tba revolutloniata control of the entire Atlantic coast, Canada to Claim Pole. Ottawa, Out, Oct M. That tho Canadian govern saeat ta to sand aa ox pedltioa early neat aprlng to tba North Polo la eaearoand of tbo veteran Arctic explorer, Captain Joseph B. Beraicr, was tho sunn an taai sat made by 8 far Wilfrid Laarier at tbo Canadian club banquet hi th la city tendered to Captain Berater. Cantata Banter said he bad claimed for Canada "to detail and by wtodeaele" every bit of hand to tba pole. With reference to the polar trips of Peary and Geek ahi taatato said tbey did eat lake nam sat km of any. OwUhb " " wwiapi nw rwnw Santiago, Chile, Oct MV A groat lananetrattoa waa bold hare today to honor of Gaeerei Jose de Saa Martha, aalabratod Soaataa-Ani iIiiii general brilUeat vretorjthe 'hteipe? April 1ft, 181S, virtually crave tba Saamiarda Chile. Tbiiaaanftt eg 'AIRSHIP DEFIES GALE FKoch Aviator Sends Machine lo - Face of Wind. SPEEDS AT 100 MILES AN HOUR Breathless Crowd Implore Him Vain to Descend Machlno Un Fdar Perfect Control. Blackpool, Oct. 23. Tha capabilities of the aeroplane in the hands of a dar ing pilot were demonstrated today when Hubert Latham, the French aviator, gave an exhibition that first entertaiaed and tKsa terrified the spectators. Ia the monoplane Latham battled against a sale blowing 30 miles an hoar, and he twice circled the coarse. As the machine struggled ia the teeth of the gale it appeared at times to stand atUl in the air. When, however, Latham same about in the wind the monoplane wu driven at a rate est! mated to be between 80 and 100 miles aa hour, At o)ns time he barely escaped being carried out to mi, and the spectators ceased to cheer and besought the aviator to some down. When - Latham did alight he was not permitted to at tempt a further flight while tha high wma eeatuued. Wright Key fly Five Hundred Milan. Paris, Oct. 23. Orville Wria-ht haa outlined his views on the aubieet of mecnanieai flight. "There is not as much dnnirer in flv ing at were u m automobile raeins ' be said. " We now turn out motors that will rua reanlarlv for a short time. 49 iimea out 01 00, and in 10 vears, or flye years, or even two years, I think there will be aa aeroplane motor absolutely remote. We will soon build a machine for speed, to be used with our present mo tor, to show what ean be done. It will go fatter than any machine you have seen over here." How far can von fly In one of vour present macninenT" be waa asked. Ia Berlin," he answered, "I took up aa a passenger, a man who weighed 226 pounds. I had 75 pounds af gaso line oa board. I could replace the weight of the man with easollne and that would give me 300 pounds of fuel. uat I esnld flv 600 miles. Yea, aav en who eaa raa aa auto mobile can flat- It Is not ncarlv as dif ficult sr dsnrcrous as automobile ras ing. Cody fcuuBoea America. New York. Oct 28. Can tain 8. T Cody, the Aaeriean aviator, who has been teaching British army oncers how to ny, feat resnuneed his American citi aenshlp and tskea out naturalisation na para aa a British subject, according to a message reteived here fvom Doncai ter, England, where he is atteadia an airship meetiar. . A large erovd cheered Oodav when he waa gives his sataraliaation naners. but he refused to lower the American flag wniea was nvmg over bis headquarters. It waa said atme time ago that Cody was tarormed that he would have to become a British aubieet if he desired to aoia Sis pnuuoa there. BAOHSL0B BITJfTBBS LOSS. Mass Marry ar Xndiaa Land Acreage Will Be Out Down. Pendleton, Or.. Oct S3. Hereafter a maa who ta not married will not be oar mitted to rent lead of the Indians en the Umatilla reservation, according to ruiea jun promulgated by the depart meat of Indias affairs. Aa exception it made la the rase of a young man who resides with his parents oa iee reservahoa. Hlngle men who are reatera at present will not be eaated. but they must get married before the expiration of their oreeeat leasee er only be permitted to lease 20 instead of 040 acres. Provision is abe made for the eliml natloa of graft ins, which has prevailed to a great extcat. Some of the store wily Indinns have beea able to reap rich eommitaions from weald-be renter who were willing to pay la order to secure leases on oertaia lands. Here after tho renters mast make public bids. saa nnv ens round paying eommisstoes io secare leases will be denied the prlv ileae of leasias aav hud an the leaae- vetioa. - Hawaii Psaaeato Dims Honolulu, tL ts. W. A. Perel- rtreasv the immlgrsttea agent who aa- eempaaied Immigration Commianioeer A I Atkinson to Maneharla ta hie , search for-ftaJoUu tamlgreats, declares that ever inn.mo mUsaiaa peasants want te come to Hawaii Whee the ReaaUat who arrived here oa the Siberia were tinted handrees af fanuHee aleaded for a thane to eon. Grnt deetltathra ex ists among Ihe famiHee brought here by the Siberia. Soeae f the hnuaigTaats ara Mean a ak. lata wu Mm. Japaa and Bmwtev Calcutta atoafea awvere., Caleetto, Oct tfc-Tbe feeee sV ever saeh a wide area to sanay years. The fatalities are i st tiled at IM ami NEW CURE FOR CONSUMPTION Clinic for Treatment to Be Opened In Nsw York City. New York, Oct 28. A elinie for the cure of tuberculosis by electric cur rents af high potentiality and high ''frequency" Is to bo opened within few daya at the Throat and Lung hos pital in East Twenty-seventh street It is tbo first clinic of the kind and as- ordlnar to Dr. Frederick de Kraft of 148 Seventieth street who will be In charge of-it may result In rofotution- imrinr treatment for tuberculosis. If not estobliah a positive cure for it It Is largely to Dr. De Kraft's sue- cess in the treatment of consumption with what is knowu'a tba Oudin slse- trie current that tbo establishment of the elinie is due. "I have not invented a cure for con- sumption," said Dr. Da Kraft "but I have improved the methods of applica tion of the electric currents of high po tentiality and frequency and with oth ers bave established that consumptives. even when ia the advanced stares of the disease, can be cured by electricity. "There are possibilities in the use of the Oudin, D'Arsonval and Tesla cur rents that may atir the wrld. Just what these possibilities are, I do not care to say at prsasnt" - MALARIA RAGES IN -INDIA. Death Rate Mounts High Conference to Be Held In Simla. , Calcutta, Oct 26. An Important official conference will asssmbls at Simla thla month, charged with the duty .of examining the whole question of malaria and drawing up a plan of campaign for too consideration of the government of India and the local gov ern menta. This special inquiry has beea instituted by the governor general la council as the result of a DroooeaJ put forward by the sanitary commis sioner that a permanent organisation should be formed to investigate ay ste rna tically the problem connected with the disease. The official communique on the subject points out that the num ber of deatba ascribed to fever through out India approximates 4,600,000, rep resenting a mean death rata of nearly 20 par 1,000, and though this total is greatly in excess of the actual figure, owing to the general practice of ascrib ing to "lever" deatba which are In re ality due to other causes, yet it has been estimated, from indications afforded by certain special toquiries and by tba dis pensary re tame, that the actual death rate from malaria) fever M about 6 par 1,000. This represents about 1,180.- 000 deatba, and aa the mortality in malarial fever ia ordinarily low such a death rate indicates a terrible amount of sickness, much of it preventable. CONVICT CAMPS PROBED. Some Qood. Some Bad, Pound by I li ve ati gating Committee. Boos ton, Tex., Oct. 28. According to tbo testimony of convicts before the senatorial committee on iaveetlgatton at the penitentiary farms and camps in Texaa, deplorable conditions prevail to several camps, while to otners the op posite is true. In one of the farm a, according to the evidence of those ques tioned, not only is sanitation poor, but those imprisoned are cruelly treated. At the Lignite mine at Calvert, the committee found most astoundine: con- ditione. It is stated. According to the testimony conditions on the farms have beea found poor for the greater part, with ill-kept bonkhooeea and no ato-re- gation of these ill. Food baa been complained of. But many of the farme have their redeeming features. Where one poor eondluoa obtains it la off set by aa Improvement, as that in the main, the week's tovestlgatioa found much to esmmsad. Delaware Shows Speed. Rockland, Msl. Oct. ft. The bat tleship Delaware, the first American righting ship of the Dreadnought tone. made a apteadkl showing ea her screw ataiKkwdiaation ma ever the aaeaeored mile course to Penobscot bay today. exceeding bar speed reoolremanta by nearly a arte. While her eee tract calls for a spaed of 81 knots aa hour, the Delaware today attained a maxi mum apace of I4.W knota and a mean of 11.44. Three rone were mails to 19 knots, three at 20.5 and Ave at tha mexiaia of tl.M knots. Msgwale Storan Rage a. New York, Oct. 16. A aaoaouocod save tic atorm aattouely taYectod ana of the AUsntk cables today. At am ta BwMwetJe esvreato arero so sa to eliminate Urn cabas ea. mots. This is the third serious exnar- teace wita taeee se-ealled el ie en the Allaalli oahlas AnTsasry. K T.. Oct, mV Dr. fteeert "in, asms tsa j efl tae aaato award of fwartHea, saammitd today abas aas sartlth.t,l,t give far abe rtoat im abe i mi FIGHT FOR DE LARA Labor Takes Up Cause of Alleged Mexican Anarchist. MONEY TO FIGHT EXTRADITION: Expose Despotic Methods of DUi Claim De Lara' la Pure SocUilit, Seeking Better Government. ' Los Angelas. Oct. 91. The nmnlu. tion ia this city today of tha De Lara.' Defense league, to handle the fund now being raised to aid L. Quiterres da Lara in his effort to escape deportation to Mexico oa the charge of being an alien and an anarchist, is one of the most im portant of the day's developments to tha ease. . A fund sufficient to seers the release of De Lara haa been pledged, and will be plaeed in the hands of tha defense league, of which A. O. Lympos ia presi dent, and Mrs. Vary Oar butt treasurer. The mass meeting under the auspices -of this league, which was planned yes terday, will be held Saturday night. Previous to that time meetings of aav. eral local labor unions will be held and resolutions presented declaring that un just methods are being used to deport De Lara. Officials of tho 'typographical and other local unions teem deeply In terested la the ease, and are taking ac tive steps to aid she prisoner. At the mass meeting on Saturday night, John Kenneth Turner, companion of De Lara on his trip to Mexico one year ago, and author of magaaino ar ticles entitled ' ' Barbarous Hexieo," will be one of the principal speakers. He has announced that he will tell oa this occasion wby, ia his belief, the -Mexican government mar be seeking to havo De Lara deported. Clarence Meily and A. B. Holstoik at torneys for De Lara, stated today thatT their defense, when the hearing ia called eany next week, will be that De Lara ; ia a socialist, and sot an anarchist, and that his ftteranees have beea in behalf of betti.. government, and not ageiabt any established government. It was , stated by tha attorneys today that De uara la preparing to make application for naturalisation papers of this gov-. ernment. ' The prisoner haa beea permitted to have conferences with hit attorneys to- . day, and it practically outlining his owa defense, being an attorney himself. secret Herviee Oneraliva QeorM W. Haxea stated today that he waa not- taking any official action ia the De Lara ease, but was watching it eare- HUfTRAOBTTB mBAOHBS AXTKBJOA Brurltah tw T.iili IT . . v , Wearing Badge af Mai ' New York, Oct. 81. A a little group of New York women ring " banners labeled "Votes' for ffnmen," toon oa toe wmte mar Hue pier to night and welcomed to America Hra. Emmeline Gould Pankhurst, leader of the suffragettes of Great Britain. In accordance with tho ruling! of the sua- T toms autnorltiea, lest than 0 persoae were admitted oa the dock, and the re ceptee to the woman who haa served two terms of imprisonment for her ac- ' tivity to the causa, waa devoid of clamor. She was hurried to the tuf- iragetie Baauqaartcrt at 001 Fifth eve- " BUS. Mrs. Pankhurtt Is slish't of etntnre ; aso aaa a wealth of browa hair, which is just .turning gray, She looked a typical Eajrliih woman, and was ' dressed becomingly la dress of dark ' material. ''I am coming to America," she said ' "Pb the subject of equal , , ana to si any tne Sit- -nation in this country. I think we are away ahead of vou ia this matte. . . As aha talked, Mrs. Pankhurst dls- explamed that ft was a distingoishing ' msrk worn by those English women who have been imprisoned for the cause. "I suffered solitary confinement," aha eontiuMd. "ami k.s ..u. .. of sxereiae oat of twenty-four. During the other twenty-three I waa sonnaed v ia a little ceU eight by tea feet. I had eell No. 47 ea the second floor ef Hollo war nriana r .v wOB Dnsoa nrh Kit t A: a . vi- ar wita me. "The movement ia progressing satis- ' faetonly to England' shs went an. . P'w'eTeB rroaa practically two-thirds of the members of parlia- iseat te Vote f or as aa soon aa a bill , m prepared by the government. ' ' , SocUty Soldiers avmred. St Petersburg, Oct 1L The threat. alng Sttaatioa to Ptalaad haa spread ' dsm.y in Bt P-tenberg wotity, owi.g . to the proeneet ef the rraek rrieaa, ef the award being called apoa to pam the winter mlhl -.. J-fk' lbs caatoameata ef s inland, laatead of oartiein.ti.. i. u.. " "r woai apoa the rstara of the evert te this city. e oroert hav Lmm . dHanetah . . ,HT - achy, aessnlln tm 57 staff, - Cd to fteat f tw charea of f. "rfy.Wd.y. Tba wiaoowa to werelatoree. I. t