(T . . OREGON STATE ITEMS DF INTEREST "Til TOPEKA ON ROCKS. BACK IN THE OLD BUT. BIG SALE OF GOATS. Polk FORTUNES IN ORCHARDS. County Sends Eight Hundred Angoras to Washington. Independence Last week 700 fine buck lamhB, (or which a good price was paid, were shipped from Independence to Wyoming lor breeding purposes. This week 800 fine Angora goats were shipped from here to the state of WaBb ington, The goats were held here sev eral days awaiting cars for shipment. Hundreds of men have looked at the band and all pronounce it the finest large collection of goats ever seen in the West. The purchasers were Car son & Littlejohn, of Steilacoom, Wash. The goats were bought up by Booth by Sc Lewis. Goat and sheep raisers of Folk coun ty are learning that it pays better to raise the pure bred than common ani male, for the demand for Polk county Angoras and Lincoln and Cotswold sheep now exceeds the supply. The Riddell and Stump sheep and goat farms, in particular, have national fame, especially since carrying away premiums at the St. Louis fair. Fancy prices are received for much of the live stock shipped out of Polk lately. As much as $100 is often obtained for a single "billy" goat, and as high as $5 a pound has been realized for the mo hair. What seemed to be extravagant in vestments iu imported sheep and goats a few years ago are now bringing their reward. The goats just shipped out will be p it on the big Btock farm of Carson & Littlejohn, near Steilacoom. "I hope to see the Angora goat busi ness built up in Washington like it is in this state," says Mr. Carson. "We have only about 30,000 goats in Wash ington, and we may just as well have a million." Coal Mine Bonded. Med ford The recently discovered coal mine on Rim Rock of Roxy Anne, the mountain east of Medford, has been bonded to the proprietors of the Blue Ledge copper mine, who will put a force of men supervised by R. P. Lit tle, at work running three tunnels into the mountain to determine the extent of the measures, R. 8. Towne, of the Blue Ledge, company, having concluded the coal was of good enough quality to nse in the smelter of the Blue Ledge Mr. Towne has also made arrangements to drill for oil on tne land bonded by the coal mine people. Two Great Holes Torn In Vessel at Point Arena. San Francisco, Sept. 11. The Pacific Coast Steamship company a steamer City of Topeka dragged her way into port at noon today, two great holes in her side and the men at the pumps. Tne steamship had run on the rocks at Point Arena in the early morning and Fruit Grower's Opinion of Hood River Apple Land. Hood River The prices now made public by independent buyers for Hood had come within an ace of going to the River Newtown and Spitzenberz aonles bottom. have caused rpple growers to do some figuring. A well known apple man, who is an authority on this subject, in talking about the matter, said: "At the prices this year for the dif It was 3 o'clock this morning when the vessel, fcound to San Francisco from Eureka crowded with passengers, waB cautiously feeling her way through a thick ton near Point Arena. For some ferent sizes of Spitzenbergs, which were reason yet unexplained, the lighthouse $3. 12.75. $2 50 and $2.25 per box. whistle was as silent as the grave. A ' - - I , .' J . I growers obtained an average price of strong current was runuuK bUU me $2.40. Placing the yield of 7-year-old greatest caution was being taKen aboard Spitzenbera trees, planted 65 trees to the steamer. the acre, at five boxes to the tree, we Suddenly with a crash the steamer will cat 865 hnxea to the acre. A 20- impaled herBelf on the rocky reef acre orchard on this basis will produce which juts out from the land at this 6,500 boxes, which, at the average point, the rocfcs whicn nave sent a price of $2.40, gives us $15,600 for our many good vessel to the depths. In an season's work. instant the passengers hurried in their The prices for Newtowns so far an night attire to the deck, but Captain nounced are $2 25, $2 and $1.75 per Swanson with quick orders prevneted a box. This gives us an average of $2 serious panic per box. But the Newtown is more pro lific than the Spitzenberg, and produces seven boxes to the tree instead of five, giving ub 55 boxes to the acre, or 9,100 boxes for a 20 acre orchard. As can easily be seen, the earnings on a 20- acre Newtown orchard this year at these prices will be $18,200. "While these figures are large, they are based on the yield of comparatively young trees which have not yet reached their full bearing maturity. A full bearing orchard can be safely depended on, T think, to produce 500 boxes of apples to the acre, as I know of several in the valley that now do it. Figuring on a basis with trees in full maturity, and with a large proportion of the crop composing the larger sizes, as it does this year, it is not very difficult to de termine tha profits of the apple busi ness in the future." The vessel paused a moment in the rocks, and then, caught by a great wave, rose higher in the air and settled high er up on the racks. The situation looked desperate, and life preservers were seized and the lifeboats swung into position. Another great wave caught the ship and threw her clear of the reef. The captain manned the pumps, reassured the passengers and brought the vessel safely into the harbor. She shows two gaping wounds and will be out of com mission for a considerable period. ANFLOOS KNOWS NO SULTAN. Beet Harvesters Needed. La Grande -Preparations are going forward to start the fall run at the sug Berber Chief Gives Short Reply to British Consul's Protest. London, Sept. 11. The Times' Tan gier correspondent says there is consid erable anxiety at the foreign legations and in official circles regarding the events at Mogador, from which there CHAMPION STAR FINDER. Woman of Harvard l'nlverlty Hal Thin Dtxtlnotion. To be accredited as the discoverer of more stars than any other living as tronomer must be gratifying. Especial ly should this be the case when the lucky discoverer is a woman. Such distinction belongs to Mrs. .W'llllamina Paton Fleming of the Harvard observ atory. The results of her investiga tions have interested the entire astro nomical world. In addition to her achievements In this line she Is distinctive In being the only woman occupying an official posi tion at Harvard University. Eight hitherto unobserved stars In the novae have been discovered by her. Of fifth-type stars she has found eighty- four, as compared with fifteen located with almost countless Images of stars, and which make a complete record of the heavens since 1886. Every night when the weather permits the Harvard observatory scans the heavens, both In the northern and southern hemispheres. University Instructor Resigns. University of Oregon, Eugene Pro fessor James Hyde, who has been head of the department of mines and mining, has resigned and will be at the head of a large mining concern in Mexico. Professor Hyde has been with the uni versity for three yearB, and was obliged to resign on account of trouble with his eyes. Dr. II. B. Leonard has been elected as an assistant instructor in mathematics. He is a University of Chicago graduate, and comes to Oregon from the Unitersity of Colorado. Denaturized Alcohol Plant, Portland By January 31 there will be located within ten miles of Portland a plant manufacturing denaturized al cohol, the establishment of which will mean an expenditure of $100,000. The plant is to be started as soon as land lor the purpose is secured. This state ment was authorized by J. B Laber, secretary of the board of trade, who says the board has been working on the proposition for some time, but cannot disclose the identity of the promoters until the preliminaries are arranged. ar factory about September 20. ers are anxious for a good rain as the present drouth will render the digging Blow and unsatisfactory. To get suffi cient help at the present time is a grave problem and lively hustling in that line is being done. The yield is so heavy that a much larger force than usual will be required to handle the crop. It is predicted that unless more help can be procured than the present outlook justifies, many tons of beets will remain in the ground for the want of harvesters. Grow- has been no news since the dispatch of by her compeers in science. Incldental- PORTLAND MARKETS. Will Fight for Damages. Eugene The petition in the matter of opening the Lucky Boy road, in the Blue mountain mining district, to pub lic travel has been granted by the lane county Commissioners' court. The claim of the Lucky Boy Mining com pany for $1000 damages was turned down, and the attorneys for the com pany state that they will fight for the amount in the courts. They were wil ling to compromise the matter, and it is said they would have accepted $5, 000. Sells Big Ranch. Eugene E. J. Crow, who has been in the etockraising business in the Spencer butte country, six miles south of Eugene, for the past 25 years, mak ing a Buccess of it and acquiring 1,100 acres of land, has sold his farm to O. B. Bennett and W. L. Fields, of Cob' rado Springs, for $18,000. Mr. Crow will reside in Eugene and retire from active business life. Students Are Hop Picking. Chemawa The 450 of the Indian boys and girls at the school here are all out picking the hops in the nearby yards. The boya go into camp while the girls are in the care of the teach ers, and come back to the school each evening. The school management could have placed out 1,500 more girls and boys in the hop fields of the neighborhood. Wheat Club, 6263c; bluestem, 6566c; valley, 6568c; red,6061c. Oats No. 1 white, .$22.5023.50; gray, $21.50(922.50 per ton. Barley Feed, $2021 per ton; brewing, $21.5022; rolled, $22. Rye $1.35 per cwt. Corn Whole, $27; cracked, $28 per ton Hay Valley timothy, No. 1, $10 11 per ton; Eastern Oregon timothy, $1214; clover, $77.50; cheat, $7 7.50; grain hay, $7; alfalfa, $10; vetch hay, $77.50. Fruits Apple!, common, 2550c per box; fancy, 7ocll.H5; grapes 50c $ 1.25 per crate; peaches, 75c $1.10; pears, 50c$l; plums, fancy, 5075c per box; common, 2575c; blackberries, 56c per pound; crab apples, $11.25 per box. Melons Cantaloupes, 25c$l per crate; watermelons, lc per pound; ca sabas, $2.50 per dozen. Vegetables Beans, 57c, cabbage, l?i2oper pound; celery, 90o per dozen ; corn, 1 Mc per dozen ; cucum bers, 15c per dozen; egg plant, 10c per pound; lettuce, head, 25c per dozen; onions, 1012c per dozen; peas, 4 5c; bell peppers, 1215c; radishes, 1015c per dozen; spinach, zwdc per pound; tomatoes, 2550c per box; parsley, 25c; squash, $11.25 per orate; turnips, 90c$l per Back; car rots, $1 1 .25 per sack; beets, $1.25 1.50 per sack. Onions New, 1H10 per pound. Potatoes Oregon Burbanks, 7080c; sweet potatoes, 2 Jc per pound. Butter Fancy creamery, 2527c per pound Eggs Oregon ranch, 2626c per dozen Poultry Average old hens, 130 14c per pound; mixed chickena, 13 13Mc; spring, 1415c; old roosters, 910c; dressed chickens, 14 15c; tur keys, live, 1621c; turkeys, dressed, choice, 2122cj geese, live, 810c; ducks, 1315c. Veal Dressed, 58c per pound. Beef Dressed bulls, 3c per pound cows, 435c; country steers, 56c. Mutton Dressed, fancy, 78o per pound; ordinary, 56c; lambs, fancy, 88c. Pork Dressed, 7$c per pound Hops 1906 contracts, 172Uc per pound; 1905, nominal; 1904, nominal. Wool Eastern Oregon average best, 1519c per pound, according to shrink' September 4, asking for aBBistance, were received. "The troops were only persuaded to embark from here, the correspondent declares, "by promises of an opportun ity for deserting on their arrival at Mo eador. A resident of Mogador, who arrived here by steamer, says that the Berber Chief Anfloos has captured the town, has forced all the Jews into the Jewish quarter and is putting his own people into the vacant houses. One British subject protected a Jewish merchant, who had refused to abandon his house and had been forcibly evicted. When the consul protested and asked Anfloos if he had the sultan b authority, An floos replied that he acknowledged no sultan. This passenger reports that the entire garrison of Mogador went to Anfloos, but that apparently no lives bad been lost." iy she has found 200 new variables. In recognition of her work Mrs. Fleming has Just been elected a member of the Royal Astronomical Society of Lon don. She Is the first American woman and the third of her sex to receive such an honor. "More star discoveries are accredited to Mrs. Fleming than to any other per son In the history of science," Is the remarkable assertion recently made concerning the work of this woman. Ami the assertion appears to be true. For that reason she attracted the at tention of the savants of the Royal As tronomical Society of London, Members of that body as a rule are cold blooded. They do not admit any BOARDED BY MEXICANS. Master of American Fishing Smack Compelled to Show Cargo Woshington, Sept. 11. The State department has received a dispatch from the manager of the Gulf Fisheries company requesting that action be tat en for the protection of the American vessels fishing in the Gulf of Mexico. Upon the arrival yesterday at Galves- ton of the Hatteras, a fishing smack be' longing to the Gulf Fisheries company, from American waters, her commander stated that he was held up by a Mexi can gunboat August 25, while several miles off the triangular reef in the middle of the Gulf of Campeche, thit armed Mexican marines boarded his vessel and required him to show his papers, and to display a part of bis cargo of fish, which he said he had caught in the open sea It was said at the State department UBS. FLEMING AT HEB WOBK. one to equality with themselves unless the right to comradeship bus been clear ly established. Mrs. Fleming has passed the fortieth milestone of life's Journey, but, unlike manv persona who devote themselves to tonight that the case would be referred scientific ends, Is affable and charming to the solicitor for an investigation and 0f personality. report. Gomez is for Republic. Manila, Sent. 11. Dominador Go mez, at a political rally yesterday, de clared that England, France and Ger many would recognize a fuipino re public. Gomez made the above declar ation in response to a request for an ac counting of money collected. It is further Baid that the money has been used in Bending cablegrams to Europe, to create a sentiment in favor of a Fili pino lepublic and that favorable replies had been received. Gomez, late Thurs daywas released from jail on bail. He waa arrested for Blander. In her pronunciation of words slight burr reminds the hearer that she Is a Scot in fact, she Is a native or Dundee, in the land of oatcakes. She was educated there and tuught school there for five years. Her father, Robert Stevens, was man whose inclination leaned to sclen tlflc research and he was the first In that section to take an Interest In the then new daguerreotype process of pho- tography. The daughter, however, was not content to remain amid the rigid environments of the old world. More than twenty years ago she came to America and soon obtalnod a position at Harvard observatory as computer. For some time her work there was of NEW RUSSIAN LEADER. RevolutlonlHt Turning to Uregrorr Maxlme, Now in Thl Country. One of the most prominent of the Russian revolutionists Is Gregory Max lme, who Is now In this country, with a price of 15,000 roubles on his head. Maxlme was one of the leading citizens of Riga, where he owned a newspa per, now suppress ed by the govern ment. The revolu tionary movement struck that place la 1905 and the Baltic Gregory MAXiME. republic was pro claimed, with Maxlme as Its first pres ident In December It was suppressed . by the government and every effort waa made to apprehend Maxlme. He es caped, however, making his way from one revolutionary body to another, un til he reached Manchuria. He pushed on to the Pacific coast and from Vladi vostok sailed for a Chinese port. Thence he passed over to Japan, from which country he came to the United States. The untimely end of the little repub lic has anything but dampened the young Russian's ardor. The example he set he believes to have been of in calculable value to the whole empire. and he declares that the seed sown ou the Baltic will spread all the way to Siberia. Unlike Count Wltte, Maxlme scoffs at the Douma. "A helpless and useless parliament," he terms It, and when he stated that "soon It will be smarting under rebuffs" his words truly had the ring of prophecy. Although an exile In America, Max lme works night and day for his people at home. The newspaper he owned at Riga has been suppressed, and while the autocracy reigns he dare not cross the Russian boundaries, yet he fre quently expresses the belief that It will not be long before he can return to his home unmolested. Wltte cast aside, Gnpon dead and Gorky practically an Impossibility now. It Is to Gregory Maxlme that the Rus sians of this country are fast turning as the logical leader of their cause. Sen Inland Cotton In Ceylon. A firm In Colombo offered to give flea island cotton free to anyone who would plant It in Ceylon, and they report that seed sufficient to plant 3,000 acres has been applied for. Tnree thousand acres means 3,000 bales of sea Island cotton, of 300 pounds net each. The firm had to buy the seed abroad, as obstacles were placed in the way of Its purchase In Ceylon by the hign price demanded as soon as It became known what It was wanted for. The price In Ceylon has been , as high as GO cents per pound, against 10 cents asked In England. Philadelphia Record. Jewish Refugees Comine London, Sept. 11. Two thousand the simplest character, but, as the value Jewish women and children, Russian of her services was recognized, she was refugees, passed through London Sun- quickly advanced from one post to an- day. They are on the way to New other. In 1897 sne was appointed cura York, their expenses being paid by tor of the astronomical records of the the Russian Relief association, as near- university and since then her work has ly all are pennilesa. Their grown male been directed to a study of the heavens, age; valley, 2022c, according to fine-1 relatives W6re nearly all murdered in At present she has in charge more neaa; mohair, choice, 28 30c pound, the recent Jewish massacre in Russia, than 150,000 glass plates, each covered What the Vllllan Said. "Yeh," said the first gallery god, de scribing the melodrama, "the hero done the villain up all right, but the villain, wouldn't admit it" "Chee!" exclaimed the other. "No," the first continued. "De last words he said was, 'I am undone.'" Philadelphia Ledger. What has become of the old-fashioned man who said he could whip his enemy on a sheep skin? If a groery store clerk Intends to rob you at all, be wll rob you when he sella you cantaloupes.