Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Lexington wheatfield. (Lexington, Or.) 1905-19?? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 9, 1905)
LEXINGTON WHEATFIELD S. A. THOMAS, Publichcr PROCLAMATION BY PRESIDENT LEXINGTON . .OREGON NEWS OFTHE WEEK Id a Condensed Form for Oar Busy Readers. A Resume of the Less Important but Not Less Interesting Events of the Past Week. Witte opposes an Anglo-Russian agreement. Soldiers in Warsaw fraternize with the rebels. The czar has signed a proclamation for free press and liberation of prison ers. Private car lines have refused to answer qutstions asked by the Inter state Commerce commission. Germany will terminate the Dingley tariff agreement with the United States, and thus cleare the way for a new trade treaty. t The court martial case of Commander Younc. of the Bennington, is being re viewed by the Navy department. It is understood the sentence of the court is a severe reprimand. Minnesota is now having her turn with land frauds. Benson, Hyde and Glover are accused with officials and lnmbermen of securing large tracts of timber to which they had no right. It is announced that the Willamette Vallev Railway company, which pro noses to build an electric line from Portland to Eugene, is to be ft conec tion for a new transcontinental road. St. Petersburg dispatches say that in the rioting since the czar signed the manifesto granting a constitution fully 10.000 have been killed and as many more seriously wounded in BO leading provincial towns. The navy is in great need of engin eers. The people of Norway are to vote on monarchy or republic. Beef packers say Garfield promised immunity from prosecution. China is preparing to establish constitutional form of government. A Newfoundland cruiser has driven American steamers from the fisheries. Martial law has ended anarchy in Odessa after 5,000 have been killed and wounded. Von Sternberg, Germany's new am bassador to the United States, has ar rived at his post. The czarina is leaving Russia for Germany until the present turmoil has passed, on account of her health. The new battleship Rhode Island is the swiftest in the American navy Her best time is 19.33 miles an hour Five of the seven counts in the first case against the Iroquois theater are held to be good by the United States court. The three Oregon representatives in congress refuse to resign and there is no law by which their salaries may be stopped. A committee of letter carriers of the United States has presented a memor ial to the postmaster general asking better pay. The freedom of Finland is restored by the czar's manifesto. Prosecutor Henej 's brother has been arrested for stealing timber. The government has called for bids for the Klamath irrigation work. A collision on the Panama railroad resulted in the death of one man. Witte is conceded to be the only man who can save Russia from anarchy. Fire at Pensacola, Florida, destroyed more than $100,000 worth of property. Charles A.' Stillings, of Boston, has been appointed public printer by the president. The boad of consulting engineers on the Panama canal is holding meetings to decide on. the type of canal to be built. A board of officers has been appoint ed to examine supplies purchased for the army said not to be up to the standard. Pobiedonostseff, the aged adviser of the czar, has resigned. He has been one of the strongest defenders of the autocracy. Germany claims the honor of secur ing freedom for the Russian people. The kaiser says he advised the czar to take the step. Von Buelow says Germany wants a trade treaty with the United States A general strike has been called in Finland. China's army made a good showing at the recent maneuvers. Calls on People to Celebrate Thanks giving in Time Honored Way. Washington, Nov. 3. The president today issued his proclamation naming Thursday, November 30, as a aay ior Thanksgiving. The proclamation fol lows : By the president of the United States of America, a proclamation: When, nearly three centuries ago, the first settlers came to the country which has now become this great re public, they faced not only hardship and privation, but terrible risks to their lives. In ' those grim years the custom grew of setting apart one day in each year for a special service of thanksgiving to the Almighty for pre serving the people through the chang ing seasons. The custom has now De- come national and hallowed by imme morial usage. We live in easier and more plentnui times than our forefathers, the men who with rugged strength faced the rugged days, and yet the dangers to national life are quite as great now as at any previous time in our history. It is eminently fitting that once a year our people should set apart a day for praise and thanksgiving to the giver of good, and, at the same time that they express their thankfulness for the abundant mercies received, should manfully acknowledge their shortcom ings and pledge themselves solemnly and in good faith to strive to overcome them. During the past year we have been blessed with bountiful crops. Our business prosperity has been great. No other people has ever stood on as high a level of wellbeing as ours now stands. We are not threatened by foes from without. The ' foes whom we should pray to be delivered from are our pas sions, appetites and follies ; and against these there is always need that we should warn. Therefore I now set apart Thursday, the 30th day of this November as a day of Thanksgiving' for the past and of prayer for the future and on that day ask that throughout the people gather in their homes ana places or worsnip and, in rendering thanks unto the most high for the manifold blessings of the past vear. consecrate themselves to a life of cleanliness, honr and wisdom, that this nation may do its allotted work on earth in a manner worthy of those who founded it and of those who preserved it. In witness whereof I have hereunto set mv hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at the city of Washington, this second day of November, in the year oi our Lord one thousand nine hundred and five, and of the independence of the United States the one hundred and thirtieth. THEODORE ROOSEVELT. By the president, ELIHU ROOT, secretary of state. MINIDOKA SALES POSTPONED. SLAIN IN HUNDREDS RUSSIA'S FIRST DAY OF LIBERTY Klshinefl's Streets Run Red With v Blood of Jews. MURDEROUS MOB BURNS TOWN Caucasus Scene of Guerilla Warfare Finland in Open Revolt Worst Ever Known. Lots in Townsites Will Be Placed on Market Next Spring. Washington, Nov. 3. In refutation of stories recently sent from Washings ton, the Reclamation service today makes the following announcement: "The secretary of the Interior, act ing upon suggestions of the governor and prominent citizens of Idaho, an nounces the postponement of sales of lots in the new townsiteB of Heyburn and Rupert, on the Minidoka project The dates of sale, Novemper 14 and 21 respectively, have been extensively ad vertised, and indications were that a large, attendance would be present Owing to the lateness of the season the possibility of bad weather and the lack of accommodations for visitors, it was deemed wise to postpone the sale until early next April. At that time pleasant weather can be counted upon water will have been turned into the new government canals, and more than 1,000 new settlers will have already es tablished themselves on the land and will be clearing off sagebrush and pui ting in crops. "The Minidoka tract today offers one of the best object lessons in the West of the wisdom of the reclamation law. and present conditions predicate that one of the most prosperous and popu lous agricultural communities in the world will soon rise up from out of the desert at this point in the Snake river valley." ' Culebra Cut is Flooded. Panama, Nov. 3. Heavy rains last week filled the Culebra cut with water to the extent of stopping the work of the steam shovels at the Cucaracha end of the cut. To make up for the time lost during the rainy season, Chief En gineer Stevens will follow the exampl of the Frenchmen, who, in the dry sea son, employed a double force of men All freight trains of the Panama rail road except one each way will hereafter run at night, so as to give the Canal commission's train more time on the main line during the day. More Fraud In Philadelphia. Philadelphia, Nov. 3. According to a report made to Mayor Weaver, tooay by W. Bleddyn Powell, the city archi tect, the city of Philadelphia has been defrauded of thousands ot dollars in the const met ion of six pavilions for consumptives on the ground of the Philadelphia hospital. London, Nov. 4. The Odessa corre spondents of the London Daily Mail and Daily Telegraph this morning wired their papers that Kishineff is in flames and absolutely destroyed. . They also add that three suburbs of Odessa have been devastated by mobs. It will be a week before all the hor rible tales of Jewish massacres through out Russia comes to light and then, when the full number of dead is known, its appalling total will be so heavy it will practically be beyond be lief. Odessa, Nov. 4. A dispatch from Kishineff says: A horrible massacre hAS occurred here. Hundreds have been killed. All the hospitals, phar macies and hotels are full of wounded and mutilated persons. A telegram from Nicolaieti says the whole town is in the hands of bandits who are devastating houses and shops and beating people to death without the slightest hindrance. The . author! ties hear similar news from other southern cities. London. Nov. 4. A dispatch to Reuter's Telegram company from Ha paranda, Sweden, says that the mili tary officers at Kotka, Viborg, Freder lckshamn. Lovisa and Borg have pledged themselves to assist the civili ans in defense of the fatherland. 1 company of Russian artillery, which had advanced toward Helsingfors, was forced to retreat without an engage ment. St. Petersburg, Nov. 4. Reports from the Caucasus state that guerilla warfare has taken place through parts of the country. Trains are held up, stations sacked and the bandits, when attacked, flee to their mountain strong holds, whence it is impossible for troops to dislodge them. Wealthy citi zens are offering enormous rewards for the capture of the bandits. Kishineff, Nov. .4. Kishineff 's streets run red with blood. Jews are being slaughtered by scores; homes pillaged, women despoiled. Never be fore has such a violent anti-Semitic outbreak been known, even here, where slaughters of Jews only recently horri fied the world. People Already Divided Into Parties and Blood Flows In Capital. St. Petersburg, Nov 1. All Russia today enthusiastically received the em peror's gift of freedom, which the greater part of the'people received with deepest joy, though in St. Petersburg, Moscow and other cities Socialists and revolutionists organized anti-government demonstrations and red flag pa rades, which, with the patriotic mani festations, led to a number of conflicts between "reds" and "whites," as the anti-government and royalist factions are respectively termed. On the whole, the day passed more quietly in Russia than had been expected, though col lisions between the people and the troops are reported from Kazan, Kish- men and roitava, ana two men were killed. In each of the two capitals, St retersburg and Moscow, the day was one such as the Ruscians never before have seen. The Slavic people, who, during the long war just closed, and the anxious period preceding the an nouncement of the new era of constitu tionalism, seemed self-restrained and apathetic, gave itself up fully to the exuberance of the moment and spent the entire day in parades and assem blies, which, for the firBt time ' in the history of Russia, were freely permit ted. Under the order of Count Witte and General Trepoff, the troops gen erally were wtihdrawn from the streets of the cities and the fullest rein given the people to let out their enthusiasm in demonstrations, which, so long as they were not destructive, were not in- terefered with. JETTY NEEDS CASH Engineers Want $1,250,000 to Complete Work. AVAILABLE FUND ALL EXPENDED Only Enough to Finish This Year's. Work No Economy in Piece meal Appropriations. JETTY IN URGENT NEED. CASTRO'S LAST OFFENSE. Chief Engineer MacKenzie's Strong Opinion. Washington, Nov. 1. "There is no river or harbor project in the United States so desperately in need of money right now as the mouth of the Colum bia river," paid General MacKenzie, chief of engineers, today, "in my opinion." he added, "construction of the Panama canal, from an engineer ing point of view, does not compare with the project we have undertaken on the Columbia river bar. This 40 foot channel project is one of the most difficult problems we ever had to solve Our plan of solving it is all right, but we must overcome such obstacles as are not found on any other project in this country: compared with them the ob stacles at Panama become . insignifi cant." General MacKenzie then pointed out why it is essential that a large sum should be appropriated at the coming session for continuing jetty construe' tion. The money on hand remaining from the last appropriation will last only a few months longer. When it is gone work must be suspended, unless congress in the mealtime shall provide further means for continuing opera' tions. If work stops on the jetty while it is incomplete vaBt damage will be done by heavy seas, not alone to the letty, but to the tramway, which ex tends some way beyond the end of the jetty. INVESTIGATE LAND OFFICES. Stops Cable Message From Foreign Ministers in Venezuela. Paris, Nov. 4. Advices received by the foreign office here say that the Venezuelan government suspended the despatch of cable messages to the United States, France and Great Brit ain for some time. Tne American and British ministers at Caracas have pro tested, but the French charge d'affairs has not protested, owing to the inter ruption of diplomatic relations between France and Venezuela, though the offi cials here understand that the Ameri can minister voiced the protest of France. The suspension occurred yes terday or the day before and lasted a day. The ground for the suspension was that the Venezuelan government had not received a reply to a cable message sent to an agent abroad. President Castro attributed the non- receipt of a reply to foreign influences, hence the suspension, which, it iff un derstood covered official dispatches The authorities here say the incident is an additional provocation, but that this does not change their intention not to adopt coercive measures until no chance remains of securing a pacific ad' justment. ; Britain Willing to Consider. Londno. Nov. 4. The British gov ernment has replied to the proposal of Germany for the withdrawal of foreign troops from the province of Chi Li, China, to the effect that Great Britain is wiliing to considerr with the other powers concerned the best means of withdrawing the troops gradually. Ne gotiations to this end are now going on An official of the foreign office said to day that the question was more serious to Great Britain than to the other pow' ers, since Great Britain had greater in teres'cs in"Chi Li. All May Vote in Austria. Vienna, Nov. 4. It is said on good authority that Emperor Francis Joseph has decided to grant universal suffrage to Austria and has instructed the pre mier. Baron Frankenthurn. to draft a measure on a comprehensive basis. V Washington, Nov. 2. -Every dollar appropriated for improving the mouthi of the Columbia river has been expend- including the $400,000 carried in the last river and harbor bill. The work which is in progress today is be ing done on credit, Congress having:, authorized the expenditure of $300,000' in excess of the amount actually appro priated, it being assumed that this- amount will be made available at the coming session. But the contracts now in force expire December 31, 1905, and on that date practically all of thist- $300,000 will have been consumed by contractB, so that, when congress act ually appropriates this money, it wilt go to pay for work completed, and not. for work yet to be done. Major Langfitt, on duty at the office- of the chief of engineers, says that ap- v proximately $1,250,000 is necessary to complete the jetty, which will extend it seaward about one mile beyond the- point where it now ends. He is satis fied, as is the chief of engineers, that the best results will be obtained by ap propriating this full amount at the coming session, so mat tne euy can be rushed to completion next season, if possible. Like General MacKenzie, be believei a suspension of work will mean considerable dauage, especially to the' tramway, a loss which would be large ly avoided if work could be resumed. next spring. The reasons why the money appro priated and authorized at the lad ses sion was expended so rapidly was to demonstrate that the completed jetty will increase the depth on the bar, to give Portland the benefit of a deep channel at the earliest possible day, and to open the way for an appropria tion this winter sufficient to enable the engineers to complete the jetty. President Issues Special Orders to Keep Commission. Washington, Nov. 1. Acting on recent letter of the secretary of the In terior, stating that he was convinced that defects existed in the organization and business methods of a number of the bureaus connected with his depart ment, and suggesting that the matter be referred to the Keep committee for investigation, the president has re quested the committee to enter upon the investigation at its earnest conven ience and that special attention be giv en to the methods of business employed in the general and local land, offices the office of the surveyor general, the Reclamation service and the Indian service. The inquiry will deal specially with the general and local land offices. One of the questions which will receive the attention of the committee is whether the services of receivers at local offices may not be dispensed with without det r:ment to good administration. Ex-Senator Sentenced. Sacramento, Nov. 1. Ex-State Sen ator E. J. Emmons, of Kern county, convicted of receiving a bribe in con nection with the investigation of build ing and loan associations by the legis lative committee, of which he was member, was today sentenced to five years' imprisonment in the penitentiary at San Quentin. Ex-Senator Bunkers is now serving a sentence for the same offense, and ex-Senators Wright and French are awaiting trial on similar charges. All four were expelled from the senate at its last session. Population of New York State Albany, N. i ., Jnov. 1. There are now 8,066,672 ' people in New York state. These figures were announced by the state enumeration bureau. In 1900 the population was 7,268,894, and in 1890 6,003,174. The population of Greater New York, as counted by the state enumeration bureau on June and announced, is 4,014,804, as com pared with 3.437,202 in 1900 and 2, 507,314 in 1890. NOT ALL PEACE. Russia Continues Scenes of Riots, Terror and Bloodshed. London, Nov. 2. Special dispatches in this morning's local newspapers rep resent the condition of affairs in Russia, as being extremely grave, eFpecially in the provinces. St. Petersburg, the- dispatches say, remains comparatively quiet. Late last night the streets of that capital were patrolled by strong: , forces of gendarmes and Cossacks, and no further disorders have been reported. According to the St. Petersburg cor respondent of the Daily Mail, the revo lutionaries demand the establishment' of a republic, and as the result of this. demand the strong arm of General: Trepoff has again been invoked. Thus, says the correspondent, brute force and popular sentiment are again facing each other. Even the appointment of" Grand Duke Michael as military dic tator, with General Trepoff as his right band, is discussed in official circles. , according to the correspondent who- adds that late last night the revolution ary leaders advised the populace to re- fram from precipitating a conflict. A dispatch to a news agency from Odessa describes that city as having ex perienced a dreadful day, the defence less populace being at the mercy of a howling and armed rabble of 50,000 men, calling themselves loyalists and led by disguised policemen and their wretched dupes. The dispatch says! "The Jews made a stout resistance. and their successful bravery entailed lamentable sacricfies. It is impossible to ascertian the casualties, but rumor puts the number of killed and wounded?. as high as 2,000, many by Inmbs, which the mobs used wholesale." Poland in Revolt. Warsaw, Nov. 2. Poland is aroused again, and another attempt is being; made to regain independence. Rioting is now in progress in every section of Russian Poland, and the people are shooting down without mercy soldiers of the czar attempting to interfere with, their freedom of movement and speech. Dozens of processions of Socialists and anti-Russians have been passing through the streets during the past 24 hours, and all efforts on the part of the au thorities to check them have so far been without avail. Canada's Greatest Lawyer. Toronto, Ont., Nov. 2. Christopher Robinson, Canada's greatest constitu tional lawyer, died last night of " penu monia. In the Behring sea arbitration it was said that it was his presentation of the case that brought a Canadian victory. I